Royal Bank of Scotland is to sell 314 branches to a consortium backed by the Church of England in a deal forced on the bank because of its taxpayer bailout.
It will see Williams & Glyn's, a bank brand that has been dormant for nearly 30 years, soon return to the UK high street to become a new competitor in the market.
The consortium includes Corsair Capital, Centrebridge Partners and the Church Commissioners for England - the church's pension fund.
The deal will give the church a role in high street banking after the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby slammed controversial payday lenders for their rates before learning that the church had actually invested in Wonga, the country's best-known payday firm.
The Archbishop of Canterbury wants banking to have a moral compassThe new player, whose executives include former trade minister Lord Davies, has pledged to put lending to small business at its heart, give more funds to the community and cap its bonuses at 100% of annual salary.
RBS confirmed the investors would pay £600m for part of the business with the remainder being raised in a stock market listing at a future date.
RBS chairman Sir Philip Hampton said: "We are delighted to be working in partnership with these investors to establish a new challenger bank for UK customers.
RBS chairman Sir Philip Hampton"Williams & Glyn's will play an important role in the UK banking landscape and will be an excellent new addition to the market, with a particular strength in small business banking - a sector that is so crucial to the UK's economic recovery.
"Much has been done already in building the standalone business, and today's announcement provides more certainty for our customers and employees ahead of a flotation."
Sky News revealed in July that the Corsair bid was being backed by the Church Commissioners for England in an attempt to establish an ethical dimension in the group's vision for the small business-focused bank.
An earlier deal to sell the network, codenamed Project Rainbow, which comprises all RBS-branded branches in England and NatWest branches in Scotland, fell through last year when Santander UK pulled out citing concerns about IT systems.
Santander had initially agreed to pay £1.65bn for the branches, which include £19bn of assets.
Lord Davies, who is vice chairman of Corsair Capital, said today: "We are delighted to have been selected by RBS.
"The Consortium views this as an opportunity to create a genuine challenger bank, which will be a vibrant, healthy competitive force in UK banking and a new financial services provider to the UK public and small and medium sized businesses.
"There is a great history in the Williams & Glyn's brand and the business has an opportunity to be at the forefront of the UK banking industry whilst making an active contribution to the community from its strong regional network."
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