Chairman Emeritus
Emeritus is a suffix added to the title of a person retired from active service, but retaining rank or title. An example is a retired professor who has the title Professor Emeritus. A person who is retired but retains an honorary title corresponding to the position that was held immediately before retirement. e.g. an emeritus professor is a retired professor.
The pension of a Honorary Captain is close to 15000/-INR
This is the Latin plural of Emeritus. In universities, a professor who has been with that school for many years and is now retired is often awarded the honorary title of Professor Emeritus. (Some schools use Emerita if it's a female, where others use Emeritus for both males and females.) But if we are referring to more than one of these retired professors, we would use the plural for both: Dr. Smith and Dr. Jones are both Professors Emeriti at Harvard University.
You must remember that even though he is retired that he is still a bishop and a priest. Ordination ispermanent and therefor retired or not he deserves the title and respect of his position. It might be the case though that he wants to be called by a different title in which case it would be best to oblige.
The title "Captain", or the abbreviation CAPT would be appropriate. The salutation in a letter might read "Dear Sir" or "Dear CAPT Smith". When a politician or military officer retires, he's allowed to use the form of address of the highest rank held.
Respectfully, it would be "Dear Chief Doe", commonly, it would be "Dear Mr. Doe".
He is not a citizen of the US; however, he is a citizen of the UK and an honorary citizen of Italy.
In answer to your question, as chairperson of the board, you may address yourself as you see fit. Chairman, Chairwoman or Chairperson would all be acceptable. My personal preference is Chairman, as the title was not specifically intended to specify gender. It was intended to specify rank.
According to Wikipedia:As of January 2009[update], in the Roman Catholic Church there are 630 archdioceses (including 13 patriarchates, two catholicates, 536 metropolitan archdioceses, 79 single archdioceses) and 2,167 dioceses in the world.Now, each diocese keeps track of its own monsignors (monsignor is just an honorary title given to priests), so to get a total of active and retired monsignori, you would need to contact each individual diocese and archdiocese in the world.
In actual cases of retirement, they would be prone to addressing themselves by their rank. A retired Master Sergeant, for example, would be MSG (Ret.).
The proper way to address a label for a retired priest would be "Reverend [First Name] [Last Name]." The title "Reverend" is appropriate for a retired priest as a sign of respect for their past role in the clergy.
A "circuit" judge refers to a judge, usually appointed or confirmed by the governor of a state, to hear cases at the Circuit Court level. An "associate" judge is simply an honorary title. An "associate" judge may be a retired judge, or an inactive judge who occasionally hears cases. An "associate" judge would still have to be qualified to hear cases at whatever level of the court system he is functioning in.