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Encyclopedia > Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry

The Bishop of Lichfield is the Ordinary of the Church of England Diocese of Lichfield in the Province of Canterbury.


The diocese covers 4,516 km² (1,744 sq. mi.) of the counties of Staffordshire, Shropshire, Warwickshire and West Midlands. The see is in the town of Lichfield where the seat is located at the Cathedral Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary and Saint Chad.


The diocese of Mercia was founded 656 by Diuma. Subsequently becoming the Diocese of Lichfield, it became linked variously with the dioceses of Coventry and Chester. The current bishop is the Right Reverend Jonathan Gledhill, the 98th Lord Bishop of Lichfield, who signs Jonathan Lichfield.


List of the Bishops of the Diocese of Lichfield, England and its precursor offices

(Dates in italics indicate de facto continuation of office)



Tenure Incumbent Notes
Diocese of Mercia
656 to 658 Diuma
(Dwyna; Duma)
658 to 659 Ceollach
(Cellach)
A Scot, he resigned and returned to Scotland
659 to 663 Thumere
(Trumhere)
Abbot of Ingethling
663 to 669 Jaruman
Diocese of Lichfield
669 to 673 Ceadda Translated to York; Saint Chad
673 to 675 Winfred
(Winfride)
Deprived by Theodore, Archbishop of York
675 to 691 Sexwulf
(Saxulf; Sexulf)
Abbot of Medeshamstede (Peterborough); Saint Sexwulf
691 to 721 Headdi
(Headda; Eatheadus of Sidnacester)
721 to 737 Aldwini
(Aldwyn)
737 to 752 Witta
(Huitta)
752 to 765 Hemele
(Hemel)
765 to 768 Cuthred
(Cuthfrid)
Died in office
768 to 785 Berhthun Died in office
785 to 786 Higbert
(Sigbert)
786 to 799 Archbishop Adulf
(Adulphus)
Created Archbishop by Offa
799 to ??? Adulf
(Adulphus)
Title of Archbishop laid aside
??? to ??? Humbert
812 to 834 Herewin
834 to 837 Higbert
(Sigbert)
837 to 845 Æthelwald
(Ethelwold)
845 to 864 Hunberght
(Humbert II)
864 to 872 Kinebert
(Kenferth)
872 to 898 Cumbert
(Cumbert; Cineferth)
Saint Cumbert
898 to 901 (or 928) Tunbriht
(Tunberht; Tunbright; Tunfrith; Tumfriht)
?901 to 928 Wigmund Omitted from Haydn's
928 to 944 Ella
944 to 953 Ælfgar
953 to 954 Kynsy
(Kinsey; Kinsius)
964 to 977 Wynsy
(Winsey; Winsius)
977 to 990 Elphege
990 to 1007 Godwin
1007 to 1027 Leofgar
(Leosgar)
1027 to 1038 Brihtmar
(Brithmar)
1038 to 1054 Wulsy
(Wolfius)
1054 to 1067 Leofwin Abbot of Coventry
1067 to 1075 Peter Removed see to Chester
See at Chester
1075 to 1085 Peter
1086 to 1102 Robert de Limesey Prebendary of St Paul's; removed See to Coventry
See at Coventry
1102 to 1113 Robert de Limesey Died in office
1117 to 1121 vacant For 4 years
Diocese of Coventry and Lichfield
1121 to 1127 Robert Peche
(Robert Pecham)
Chaplain to King Henry I; died in office
1127 to 1129 vacant For 2 years
1129 Roger de Clinton, Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry
1149 to 1161 Walter Durdent
1161 to 1181 Richard Peche
1181 to 1183 vacant
1183 to 1184 Gerard la Pucelle
1184 to 1188 vacant
1188 to 1198 Hugh Nonant
1198 to 1208 Geofrey de Muschamp
1208 to 1215 vacant
1215 to 1224 William de Cornhill
1224 to 1239 Alexander de Stavenby
1239 William de Rule
(William de Raleigh)
Elected by both the chapter of Coventry and that of Lichfield but being also elected Norwich he accepted that office
1239 William de Manchestre Dean of Lichfield; elected by the Chapter of Lichfield but did not take office
1239 Nicholas de Farnham Elected by the Chapter of Coventry but did not take office
1239 to December 1241 Hugh de Pateshull Lord Treasured; accepted after much controversy between the two chapters and at the king's request; confirmed 25 December 1239; died in office
December 1241 to 1245 vacant
   December 1241 to 8 December 1241    Richard Crassus Elected but died before consecration
   1243    Robert de Monte Pessulano Elected but refused the appointment, finding the election disagreeable to the king
1245 to 1258 Roger Weseham Dean of Lincoln; apppointed by the pope
1258 to 1296 Roger de Meyland
(Roger de Longespée; Roger de Molend)
1296 to 1322 Walter de Langton Lord Treasurer and Lord Chancellor
1322 to 1360 Roger Northburgh
(Roger de Northbrugh)
Archdeacon of Richmond and Lord Keeper and Lord Treasurer
1360 to 1386 Robert Stratton Canon of Lichfield
1386 to 1386 Walter Skirlaw Dean of St Martin's; translated to Bath & Wells
1386 to 1398 Richard Scroope
(Richard Scrope)
Translated to York
1398 to 1415 John de Burghill
(John Burghill)
Translated from Llandaff
1415 to 1419 John Catterick
(John Keterich)
Translated from St David's; translated to Exeter
1419 to 1419 James Cary Translated to Exeter but died before taking office thereof
20 November 1419 to 13 March 1447 William Heyworth
1447 to 1452 William Booth Prebendary of St Paul's, London; translated to York
1452 to 1453 Nicholas Close Translated from Carlisle; Chancellor of Cambridge
1453 to 1459 Reginald Bolars
(Reginald Butler)
Translated from Hereford
1459 to 1492 John Hales
(John Halse)
Prebendary of St Paul's, London
1492 to 1496 William Smith Archdeacon of Surrey; translated to Lincoln
1496 to 1503 John Arundel Dean of Exeter; translated to Exeter
1503 to 1524 Godfrey Blyth
(Geoffry Blyth)
Dean of York
1524 to 1539 Roland Lee
(Rowland Lee)
Chancellor and Prebendary of Lichfield and Lord President of Wales
Diocese of Lichfield and Coventry
1539 to 1543 Roland Lee
(Rowland Lee)
1543 to 1554 Richard Sampson Elected schismatically; translated from Chichester; Lord President of Wales
1554 to 1559 Ralph Bayne
(Ralph Baines)
Deprived and died soon after
1560 to 1580 Thomas Bentham Fellow of Magdalene College, Oxford
1580 to 1609 William Overton Prebendary of Winchester and Salisbury
1609 to 1610 George Abbot Dean of Winchester; translated to London
1610 to 1614 Richard Neile
(Richard Neale)
Translated to Rochester
1614 to 1619 John Overal Dean of St Paul's, London; translated to Norwich
1619 to 1632 Thomas Moreton Translated from Chester; translated to Durham
1632 to 1643 Robert Wright Translated from Bristol
1643 to 1661 Accepted Frewen Dean of Gloucester; translated to York
1661 to 1671 John Hacket Canon-resident of St Paul's, London
1671 to 1692 Thomas Wood Dean of Lichfield
1692 to 1699 William Lloyd Translated from St Asaph; translated to Worcester
1699 to 1717 John Hough Translated from Oxford; translated to Worcester
1717 to 1730 Edward Chandler Prebendary of Worcester; translated to Durham
1730 to 1749 Richard Smalbroke Translated from St David's
1749 to 1768 The Honourable Frederick Cornwallis Canon of Windsor; Dean of St Paul's, London (1766); translated to Canterbury
1768 to 1771 The Honourable John Egerton Translated from Bangor; translated to Durham
1771 to 1774 Brownlow North Dean of Canterbury; translated to Worcester
1774 to 1781 Richard Hurd Master of the Temple; translated to Worcester
1781 to 1823 The Honourable James Cornwallis Dean of Canterbury; becoming the Earl of Cornwallis
1823 to 1824 The Honourable James Cornwallis, the Earl of Cornwallis Died in office
4 February 1824 to 31 March 1836 The Honourable Henry Ryder Translated from Gloucester; died in office
15 June 1836 to 24 January 1837 Samuel Butler Becoming Bishop of Lichfield
Diocese of Lichfield
24 January 1837 to 4 December 1839 Samuel Butler Died in office
30 December 1839 to 11 October 1843 James Bowstead Translated from Sodor & Man
6 November 1843 to 19 October 1867 John Lonsdale Archdeacon of Middlesex and Principal of King's College, London; died in office
13 December 1867 to 11 April 1878 George Augustus Selwyn Translated from New Zealand; died in office
13 May 1878 to ???? William Dalrymple Maclagan, DD Vicar of St Mary Abbot, Kensington
???? to 1953  
1953 to 1975 Arthur Stretton Reeve, DD
1975 to 1984 Kenneth John Fraser Skelton, CBE, MA Bishop of Matabeleland; Rector of Bishopwearmouth, Sunderland; retired
1984 to 2003 Keith Norman Sutton
2003 to present Jonathan Glendhill




Anglican Hierarchy in Great Britain
The Church of England
    Provinces Dioceses
    Canterbury Bath & Wells | Birmingham | Bristol | Saint Edmundsbury and Ipswich | Chelmsford | Chichester | Coventry | Derby | Ely | Exeter | Gibraltar in Europe | Gloucester | Guildford | Hereford | Leicester | Lichfield | Lincoln | London | Norwich | Oxford | Peterborough | Portsmouth | Rochester | Saint Albans | Salisbury | Southwark | Truro | Winchester | Worcester
    York Blackburn | Bradford | Carlisle | Chester | Durham | Liverpool | Manchester | Newcastle | Ripon and Leeds | Sheffield | Sodor & Man | Southwell | Wakefield
The Church in Wales
    Wales Bangor | Llandaff | Monmouth | Saint Asaph | Saint David's | Swansea & Brecon
The Scottish Episcopal Church
    Primus Aberdeen and Orkney | Argyll & the Isles | Brechin | Edinburgh | Glasgow & Galloway | Moray, Ross & Caithness | Saint Andrews, Dunkeld & Dunblane
edit this box (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Template:Anglican_Bishops_%26_Archbishops_-_Great_Britain&action=edit)





Sources

  • Haydn's Book of Dignities (1894) Joseph Haydn/Horace Ockerby, reprinted 1969
  • Whitaker's Almanack 1883 to 2004 Joseph Whittaker & Sons/A&C Black, London

See also

  • Lists of office-holders







  Results from FactBites:
 
Encyclopedia: Bishop of Coventry (2150 words)
The Bishop of Saint Edmundsbury and Ipswich is the Ordinary of the Church of England Diocese of Saint Edmundsbury and Ipswich in the Province of Canterbury.
The Bishop of Lichfield is the Ordinary of the Church of England Diocese of Lichfield in the Province of Canterbury.
The Bishop of Argyll and the Isles is the Ordinary of the Scottish Episcopal Diocese of Argyll and the Isles.
Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (182 words)
The Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield was the bishop of a former see of the Church of England.
The title of Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield did not first come into use until 1121, when Robert Peche was enthroned.
Cahill, M. (2001), 'The diocese of Coventry and Lichfield 1603–1642', (PhD dissertation, University of Warwick).
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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