TheBishop of Bath and Wells heads theChurch of EnglandDiocese of Bath and Wells in theProvince of Canterbury inEngland.
Bishopric | |
anglican | |
![]() Arms of the Bishop of Bath and Wells:Azure, a saltire per saltire quarterly quartered or and argent[1] | |
Incumbent: Michael Beasley | |
Location | |
Ecclesiastical province | Canterbury |
Residence | Bishop's Palace, Wells |
Information | |
First holder | Athelm |
Established | 909 |
Diocese | Bath and Wells |
Cathedral | Wells Cathedral |
Website | |
www |
The present diocese covers the overwhelmingly greater part of the (ceremonial) county ofSomerset and a small area ofDorset. TheEpiscopal seat is located in theCathedral Church of Saint Andrew in the city ofWells in Somerset.
The bishop is one of two (the other is theBishop of Durham) who escort the sovereign at thecoronation.
The Bishop's residence isThe Palace,Wells. In late 2013 theChurch Commissioners announced that they were purchasing theOld Rectory, a Grade II-listed building inCroscombe for the Bishop's residence.[2] However this decision was widely opposed,[3] including by the Diocese,[4][5] and in May 2014 was overturned by a committee of theArchbishops' Council.[6][7]
History
editSomerset originally came under the authority of theBishop of Sherborne, butWells became the seat of its ownBishop of Wells from 909. KingWilliam Rufus granted Bath to a royal physician,John of Tours, Bishop of Wells and Abbot of Bath, who was permitted to move his episcopal seat forSomerset from Wells toBath in 1090, thereby becoming the firstBishop of Bath. He planned and began a much larger church ashis cathedral, to which was attached a priory, with the bishop's palace beside it.
In 1197 BishopSavaric FitzGeldewin officially moved his seat toGlastonbury Abbey with the approval ofPope Celestine III. However, the monks there would not accept their newBishop of Glastonbury and the title ofBishop of Bath and Glastonbury was used until the Glastonbury claim was abandoned in 1219. His successor,Jocelin of Wells, then returned to Bath, again under the title,Bishop of Bath. The official episcopal title becameBishop of Bath and Wells under a Papal ruling of 3 January 1245.
By the 15th century Bath Abbey was badly dilapidated.Oliver King, Bishop of Bath and Wells, decided in 1500 to rebuild it on a smaller scale. The new abbey-church was completed just a few years before Bath Priory was dissolved in 1539. ThenHenry VIII considered this new church redundant, and it was offered to the people of Bath to form their parish church; but they did not buy it, and it was stripped of its glass and lead.[8] The last bishop in communion with Rome was deprived in 1559 but the succession of bishops has continued to the present day.
The diocese and the episcopate are today part of theAnglican Communion.
List of bishops
editPre-Reformation bishops
editBishops of Wells | |||
---|---|---|---|
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
c. 909 | c. 923–925 | Athelm | Formerly amonk atGlastonbury Abbey.Consecrated circa 909.Translated toCanterbury between 923 and September 925. |
c. 923–925 | c. 926–928 | Wulfhelm | Consecrated between circa 923 and 925. Translated toCanterbury between January 926 and 928. |
c. 926–928 | 937 or 938 | Alphege | Consecrated between January 926 and 928. Died in office. Also recorded as Ælfheah. |
937 or 938 | 956 | Wulfhelm II | Consecrated in 937 or 938. Died in office. |
956 | 973 | Byrhthelm | Formerly amonk atGlastonbury Abbey. Consecrated in 956. Translated toCanterbury in 959, but deposed and translated back to Wells in the same year. Died in office on 15 May 973. |
973 or 974 | 975 | Cyneweard | FormerlyAbbot ofMilton. Consecrated in 973 or 974. Died in office on 28 June 975. |
c. 975–979 | 996 | Sigar | FormerlyAbbot of Glastonbury (c. 970–975). Consecrated between 975 and 979. Died in office on 28 June 996. |
996 | 998 or 999 | Ælfwine | Consecrated in 996 or 997. Died in office on 29 August in 998 or 999. |
998 or 999 | 1013 | Lyfing | FormerlyAbbot ofChertsey Abbey. Consecrated in 998 or 999. Translated toCanterbury in 1013. |
c. 1013–18 | c. 1021–24 | Aethelwine | Consecrated between 1013 and 1018. Expelled circa 1021/1023 and 1024 in favour of Brihtwine. |
c. 1021–24 | unknown | Brihtwine | Expelled. |
unknown | unknown | Aethelwine (again) | Restored but expelled a second time. |
unknown | before 1024 | Brihtwine (again) | Restored. Died in office before 1024. |
before 1024 | 1033 | Merewith | Consecrated before 1024. Died in office on 11 or 12 April 1033. |
1033 | 1060 | Dudoc | Consecrated on 11 June 1033. Died in office on 18 January 1060. |
1061 | 1088 | Gisa | Previouslychaplain to KingEdward the Confessor. Elected bishop after 18 January 1060 and consecrated on 15 April 1061. Died in office in 1088. Also recorded as Giso. |
1088 | 1090 | John of Tours | Consecrated Bishop of Wells in July 1088. Became Bishop of Bath when he moved the see from Wells to Bath in 1090. |
Bishops of Bath | |||
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
1090 | 1122 | John of Tours | Moved the see from Wells to Bath in 1090. Died in office between 29 and 30 December 1122. Also recorded as John de Villula. |
1123 | 1135 | Godfrey | Formerly chaplain to Queen ConsortAdeliza. Nominated on 25 March and consecrated on 26 August 1135. Died in office on 16 August 1135. |
1136 | 1166 | Robert | Previously a monk atLewes Priory. Consecrated on 22 March and received possession of thetemporalities circa 22 March 1136. Died in office on 31 August 1166. |
1166 | 1174 | See vacant | |
1174 | 1191 | Reginald fitz Jocelin | PreviouslyArchdeacon of Wiltshire. Elected bishop in late April 1173 and consecrated on 23 June 1174. He becameArchbishop-elect of Canterbury on 27 November 1191, but before appeals against his election were heard, he died on 26 December 1191. |
1192 | 1197 | Savaric FitzGeldewin | FormerlyArchdeacon of Northampton (1175–1192). Elected bishop by the monks ofBath Abbey between 27 November and 26 December 1191 and consecrated on 20 September 1192. Also becameAbbot of Glastonbury in 1193. He moved theEpiscopal seat fromBath toGlastonbury in 1197. |
Bishops of Bath and Glastonbury | |||
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
1197 | 1205 | Savaric FitzGeldewin | After moving theEpiscopal seat fromBath toGlastonbury in 1197, he was styled Bishop of Bath and Glastonbury. Died in office on 8 August 1205. |
1206 | 1219 | Jocelin of Wells | PreviouslyCanon ofWells. Elected bishop on 3 February and consecrated on 28 May 1206. He was styled Bishop of Bath and Glastonbury until 1219, thereafter Bishop of Bath. |
Bishops of Bath | |||
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
1219 | 1242 | Jocelin of Wells | Previously styled Bishop of Bath and Glastonbury until 1219, thereafter Bishop of Bath. Died in office on 19 November 1242. |
1242 | 1244 | See vacant | |
1244 | 1245 | Roger of Salisbury[9] | FormerlyPrecentor ofSalisbury (1227–1244). Elected bishop by the monks ofBath Abbey on 6 February 1243 and consecrated on 11 September 1244. Became Bishop of Bath and Wells on 3 January 1245. |
Bishops of Bath and Wells | |||
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
1245 | 1247 | Roger of Salisbury[9] | Following a papal ruling, the episcopal title changed to Bishop of Bath and Wells on 3 January 1245. Died in office on 21 December 1247. |
1248 | 1264 | William of Bitton I | FormerlyArchdeacon of Wells (1238–1248). Elected bishop before 24 February and consecrated on 14 June 1248. Died in office on 3 April 1264. |
1265 | 1266 | Walter Giffard | Elected bishop on 22 May 1264 and consecrated on 4 January 1265. AlsoLord Chancellor (1265–1266). Translated toYork on 15 October 1266. |
1267 | 1274 | William of Bitton II | FormerlyArchdeacon of Wells (c. 1263–1267). Elected bishop on 10 February and consecrated after 17 April 1267. Died in office on 4 December 1274. |
1275 | 1292 | Robert Burnell | FormerlyArchdeacon of York (1270–1275). Elected bishop on 23 January and consecrated on 1275. BecameArchbishop-elect of Canterbury (1278–1279) andBishop-elect of Winchester (1280). AlsoLord Chancellor (1274–1292). Died in office on 25 October 1292. |
1293 | 1302 | William of March | FormerlyDean ofSt. Martin's-le-Grand andLord Treasurer. Elected bishop on 28 January and consecrated on 17 May 1293. Died in office before 19 June 1302. |
1302 | 1308 | Walter Haselshaw | FormerlyDean of Wells (1295–1302). Elected bishop on 7 August and consecrated on 4 November 1302. Died in office on 11 December 1308. |
1309 | 1329 | John Droxford | John Drokensford; formerlyKeeper of the wardrobe and actingLord Treasurer. Elected bishop on 5 February and consecrated on 9 November 1309. Died in office on 9 May 1329 |
1329 | 1363 | Ralph of Shrewsbury | Elected on 2 June and consecrated on 3 September 1329. Died in office on 14 August 1363. |
1363 | 1366 | John Barnet | Translated fromWorcester. Appointed on 24 December (or about 28 November) 1363 and received thetemporalities on 6 April 1364. Translated toEly on 15 December 1366. |
1367 | 1386 | John Harewell | Previously Chancellor ofGascony and chaplain to theBlack Prince. Appointed bishop on 14 December 1366 and consecrated on 7 March 1367. Died in office between 29 June and 14 July 1386. |
1386 | 1388 | Walter Skirlaw | Translated fromCoventry & Lichfield. Appointed on 18 August and received thetemporalities on 3 November 1386. Translated toDurham on 3 April 1388. |
1388 | 1400 | Ralph Ergham | Translated fromSalisbury. Appointed on 3 April and received the temporalities on 13 September 1388. Died in office on 10 April 1400. |
1400 | 1401 | (Richard Clifford) | Appointed on 12 May 1400, but, before consecration, translated toWorcester on 19 August 1401. |
1401 | 1407 | Henry Bowet | FormerlyCanon ofWells. Appointed bishop on 19 August 1401 and consecrated on 20 November 1401. Translated toYork on 7 October 1407. |
1407 | 1424 | Nicholas Bubwith | Translated fromSalisbury. Appointed on 7 October and received thetemporalities on 2 December 1407. Died in office on 27 October 1424. |
1424 | 1443 | John Stafford | FormerlyDean of Wells (1423–1424). Elected bishop between 14 November and 19 December 1424. Consecrated on 27 May 1425. AlsoLord Treasurer (1422–1426) andLord Chancellor (1432–1450). Translated toCanterbury on 13 May 1443. |
1443 | 1465 | Thomas Beckington | FormerlyArchdeacon of Buckingham (1424–1443). Appointed bishop on 24 July and consecrated on 13 October 1443. Also theKeeper of the Privy Seal (1443–1444). Died in office on 14 January 1465. |
1465 | 1491 | Robert Stillington | FormerlyArchdeacon of Taunton (1450–1465). Appointed bishop on 30 October 1465 and consecrated on 16 March 1466. Also intermittentlyLord Chancellor between 1460 and 1473. Died in office before 15 May 1491. |
1492 | 1494 | Richard Foxe | Translated fromExeter. Appointed on 8 February and received thetemporalities on 4 May 1492. Translated toDurham on 30 July 1494. |
1495 | 1503 | Oliver King | Translated fromExeter. Appointed on 6 November 1495 and received the temporalities on 6 January 1496. Died in office before 1503. |
1504 | 1518 | CardinalAdriano Castellesi | Translated fromHereford. Appointed on 2 August and received possession of the temporalities on 13 October 1504. Deprived of the see byPope Leo X on 5 July 1518. |
1518 | 1523 | CardinalThomas Wolsey | Archbishop of York (1514–1530) andLord Chancellor (1515–1529). Appointedin commendam the see of Bath and Wells on 27 July 1518, but exchanged it to the see ofDurham on 26 March 1523. |
Sources:[10][11][12] |
Bishops during the Reformation
editBishops of Bath and Wells during the Reformation | |||
---|---|---|---|
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
1523 | 1541 | John Clerk | FormerlyMaster of the Rolls (1522–1523) andDean of Windsor (1519–1523). Appointed bishop on 26 March and consecrated on 6 December 1523. Acceptedroyal supremacy in 1534. Died in office on 31 January 1541. |
1541 | 1547 | William Knight | FormerlySecretary of State toHenry VIII (1526–1528) andPrebendary ofSt Paul's (1517–1541). Nominated bishop on 9 April and consecrated on 29 May 1541. Died in office on 29 September 1547. |
1548 | 1553 | William Barlow | Translated fromSt David's. Nominated on 3 February 1548. Resigned before 4 October 1553. Later becameBishop of Chichester in 1559. |
1554 | 1559 | Gilbert Bourne | FormerlyPrebendary ofSt Paul's andLord President of Wales and the Marches. Nominated bishop on 13 March and consecrated on 1 April 1554. Deprived between 18 October 1559 and 11 January 1560. Died on 10 September 1569. |
Sources:[12][13][14] |
Post-Reformation bishops
editPost-Reformation Bishops of Bath and Wells | |||
---|---|---|---|
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
1560 | 1581 | Gilbert Berkeley | Nominated on 11 January and consecrated on 24 March 1560. Died in office on 2 November 1581. |
1581 | 1584 | See vacant | |
1584 | 1590 | Thomas Godwin | FormerlyDean of Canterbury (1567–1584). Nominated bishop on 25 July and consecrated on 13 September 1584. Died in office on 19 November 1590. |
1590 | 1592 | See vacant | |
1593 | 1608 | John Still | FormerlyMaster of Trinity College, Cambridge (1577–1593). Nominated bishop on 13 January and consecrated on 11 February 1593. Died in office on 26 February 1608. |
1608 | 1616 | James Montague | FormerlyDean of Worcester (1604–1608). Nominated bishop on 21 March and consecrated on 17 April 1608. Translated toWinchester on 4 October 1616. |
1616 | 1626 | Arthur Lake | FormerlyDean of Worcester (1608–1616). Elected on 17 October and consecrated on 8 December 1616. Died in office on 4 May 1626. |
1626 | 1628 | William Laud | Translated fromSt David's. Nominated bishop of Bath & Wells on 20 June and confirmed on 18 September 1626. Translated toLondon on 15 July 1628. |
1628 | 1629 | Leonard Mawe | Nominated on 14 July and consecrated on 7 September 1628. AlsoMaster of Trinity College, Cambridge (1625–1628). Died in office on 2 September 1629 |
1629 | 1632 | Walter Curle | Translated fromRochester. Elected on 29 October and confirmed on 4 December 1629. Translated toWinchester on 16 November 1632. |
1632 | 1646 | William Piers | Translated fromPeterborough. Nominated on 19 November and confirmed on 13 December 1632. Deprived of the see when the English episcopy was abolished by Parliament on 9 October 1646. |
1646 | 1660 | The see was abolished during theCommonwealth and theProtectorate.[15][16] | |
1660 | 1670 | William Piers (restored) | Returned when the see was restored in 1660. Died in office on 30 April 1670. |
1670 | 1672 | Robert Creighton | FormerlyDean of Wells (1660–1670). Nominated on 2 May and consecrated on 19 June 1670. Died in office on 20 November 1672. |
1673 | 1684 | Peter Mews | FormerlyDean of Rochester (1670–1673). Nominated on 23 November 1672 and consecrated 6 February 1673. Translated toWinchester on 22 November 1684. |
1685 | 1690 | Thomas Ken | FormerlyCanon ofWinchester (1669–1685). Nominated on 24 November 1684 and consecrated on 25 January 1685. Deprived of the see on 1 February 1690 for not taking theoaths to the sovereigns. Died on 19 March 1711. |
1691 | 1703 | Richard Kidder | FormerlyDean of Peterborough (1689–1691). Nominated on 11 June and consecrated on 30 August 1691. Died in office on 26 November 1703. |
1704 | 1727 | George Hooper | Translated fromSt Asaph. Nominated on 23 December 1703 and confirmed on 14 March 1704. Died in office on 6 September 1727. |
1727 | 1743 | John Wynne | Translated fromSt Asaph. Nominated on 19 September and confirmed on 11 November 1727. Died in office on 15 July 1743. |
1743 | 1773 | Edward Willes | Translated fromSt David's. Nominated on 13 September and confirmed on 12 December 1743. Died in office on 24 November 1773. |
1774 | 1802 | Charles Moss | Translated fromSt David's. Nominated on 23 April and confirmed on 2 June 1774. Died in office on 13 April 1802. |
1802 | 1824 | Richard Beadon | Translated fromGloucester. Nominated on 27 April and confirmed on 2 June 1802. Died in office on 21 April 1824. |
1824 | 1845 | George Henry Law | Translated fromChester. Nominated on 8 May and confirmed on 8 June 1824. Died in office on 22 September 1845. |
1845 | 1854 | Richard Bagot | Translated fromOxford. Nominated on 15 October and confirmed on 12 November 1845. Died in office on 15 May 1854. |
1854 | 1869 | The Lord Auckland | Translated fromBishop of Sodor and Man. Nominated on 2 June and confirmed on 1 July 1854. Resigned as bishop on 6 September 1869 and died on 25 April 1870. |
1869 | 1894 | Lord Arthur Hervey | FormerlyArchdeacon of Sudbury (1862–1869). Nominated on 11 November and consecrated 21 December 1869. Died in office on 9 June 1894. |
1894 | 1921 | George Kennion | Translated fromAdelaide in Australia. Nominated on 24 August and confirmed on 17 October 1894. Resigned on 1 August 1921 and died on 19 May 1922. |
1921 | 1937 | Basil Wynne Willson | Nominated on 6 October and consecrated on 1 November 1921. Resigned on 1 October 1937 and died on 15 October 1946. |
1937 | 1943 | Francis Underhill | Nominated on 6 October and consecrated on 30 November 1937. Died in office on 24 January 1943. |
1943 | 1945 | William Wand | Translated fromBrisbane. Nominated on 23 September and confirmed on 27 October 1943. Translated toLondon on 22 August 1945. |
1946 | 1960 | Harold Bradfield | Nominated on 5 March and consecrated on 1 May 1946. Died in office on 1 May 1960. |
1960 | 1975 | Edward Henderson | Translated fromTewkesbury. Nominated on 1 July and confirmed 19 July 1960. Resigned on 31 May 1975 and died in 1986. |
1975 | 1986 | John Bickersteth | Translated fromWarrington. Nominated on 15 October and confirmed on 12 December 1975. AlsoClerk of the Closet (1979–1989). Retired in 1986. |
1986 | 1991 | George Carey | FormerlyPrincipal ofTrinity Theological College, Bristol (1982–1988). Nominated and consecrated bishop in 1986. Translated toCanterbury in 1991. |
1991 | 2001 | Jim Thompson | Translated fromStepney. Nominated and confirmed in 1991. Retired in 2001 and died in 2003. |
2002 | 2013 | Peter Price | Translated fromKingston-upon-Thames. Nominated in 2001 and enthroned in 2002.[17] Retired on 30 June 2013. |
4 March 2014 | May 2021 | Peter Hancock | Translated fromBasingstoke, 4 March 2014.[18] Nominated in December 2013 and installed on 7 June 2014;[19] retired May 2021.[20] |
2022 | onwards | Michael Beasley | PreviouslyBishop of Hertford. Election confirmed on 29 June 2022.[21] |
Sources:[14][22] |
Assistant bishops
editAmong those who have served as assistant bishops of the diocese are:
- 4 October 1852 – 10 May 1853 (res.):George Spencer, commissary during Bagot's illness, and formerBishop in Madras[23]
- late 1860s (Eden's illness):James Chapman, Coadjutor-Bishop, Rector ofWootton Courtenay, a Prebendary of Wells and formerBishop of Colombo[24]
- 1891–1900:[25]Charles Bromby, formerBishop of Tasmania (lived atClifton withhis son)
- 1931 – 1942 (d.):Charles de Salis,Archdeacon of Taunton until 1938, and formerBishop of Taunton[26]
- 1940 – 1943 (res.):Edmund Sara, formerCoadjutorBishop of Jamaica and laterAssistant Bishop of Hereford[27]
- 1950–1967 (ret.):Fabian Jackson, Rector ofBatcombe and formerBishop of Trinidad[28]
- 1956 – 1973 (ret.):Douglas Wilson, Canon Treasurer of Wells and formerBishop of Trinidad[29]
In popular culture
editTelevision
editBlackadder,BBChistoricalsitcom, features a fictional bishop played byRonald Lacey of this title in the second series' fourth episode "Money", in which the bishop is portrayed as an obese, blasphemous, self-confessed pervert who eats children.[30][31][32]
Monty Python features two skits in which the Bishop of this title is mentioned.[33]
Radio
editAbsolute Power, BBC radio comedy features such a Bishop.
Literature
editNeil Gaiman's 2008 workThe Graveyard Book features a character named the Bishop of Bath and Wells – he is one of a trio of ghouls who spirit the main character away.[34][35]
Ralph of Shrewsbury, Bishop of Bath and Wells, appears as a character in the 1994 fantasy novelThe Dragon, The Earl and The Troll, by Gordon Dickson.
References
edit- ^Debrett's Peerage, 1968, p.121
- ^Ovens, Ruth (22 January 2014)."Revealed bishop's new £900k house".Wells Journal. Archived fromthe original on 1 February 2014. Retrieved29 January 2014.
- ^"Hundreds sign petition against Bath and Wells bishop move".BBC News. 11 February 2014. Retrieved4 June 2014.
- ^"Bishop attacks Wells palace move as church split opens".Wells Journal. 24 January 2014. Archived fromthe original on 25 January 2014. Retrieved29 January 2014.
- ^"Diocese of Bath and Wells 'cannot support' bishop's palace move".BBC News. 25 January 2014.
- ^"Bishop of Bath and Wells to stay in Bishop's Palace home". 2 May 2014.
- ^"Determination of objection to regulation transaction: House of Residence of Bishop of Bath and Wells"(PDF). Archbishops' Council. 1 May 2014.
- ^"Today's Abbey (1499 onwards)". Bath Abbey. Retrieved29 May 2013.
- ^abNOTE: He is not the more notableRoger of Salisbury who died in 1139.
- ^Greenway, D. E. (2001)."Bishops of Bath and Wells".Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300, Volume 7: Bath and Wells. British History Online. Retrieved21 August 2011.
- ^Fryde et al. 1986,Handbook of British Chronology, pp. 222–223, 228–229.
- ^abJones, B. (1964)."Bishops of Bath and Wells".Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300–1541, Volume 8: Bath and Wells Diocese. British History Online. Retrieved21 August 2011.
- ^Fryde et al. 1986,Handbook of British Chronology, p. 229.
- ^abHorn, J. M.; Bailey, D. S. (1979)."Bishops of Bath and Wells".Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541–1857, Volume 5: Bath and Wells Diocese. British History Online. Retrieved21 August 2011.
- ^Plant, David (2002)."Episcopalians".BCW Project. Retrieved25 April 2021.
- ^King, Peter (July 1968). "The Episcopate during the Civil Wars, 1642–1649".The English Historical Review.83 (328). Oxford University Press:523–537.doi:10.1093/ehr/lxxxiii.cccxxviii.523.JSTOR 564164.
- ^"Bishop of Kingston to be Bishop of Bath & Wells".The Diocese of Southwark. Archived fromthe original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved21 August 2011.
- ^Diocese of Bath and Wells – Bishop's Synod address (24 March 2014)Archived 27 March 2014 at theWayback Machine &Welcome to Christ Church Winchester, 9 March 2014Archived 27 March 2014 at theWayback Machine (both accessed 4 April 2014)
- ^"New Bishop of Bath and Wells Peter Hancock installed".BBC News. 7 June 2014.
- ^"Bishop Peter announces retirement as he continues recovery from leukaemia".Diocese of Bath and Wells. 12 March 2021. Archived fromthe original on 12 March 2021. Retrieved13 March 2021.
- ^Diocese of Bath & Wells [@BathWells] (29 June 2022)."Bishop Michael Beasley has officially become the 80th Bishop of Bath and Wells..." (Tweet). Archived fromthe original on 2 October 2022. Retrieved2 October 2022 – viaTwitter.
- ^Fryde et al. 1986,Handbook of British Chronology, pp. 229–230.
- ^"The late Bishop Spencer".Church Times. No. 182. 28 July 1866. p. 242.ISSN 0009-658X. Retrieved16 March 2020 – via UK Press Online archives.
- ^"The late Bishop Chapman".Church Times. No. 878. 21 November 1879. p. 731.ISSN 0009-658X. Retrieved26 December 2019 – via UK Press Online archives.
- ^"Bromby, Charles Henry (BRMY833CH)".A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- ^"De Salis, Charles Fane".Who's Who. A & C Black.(Subscription orUK public library membership required.)
- ^"Sara, Edmund Willoughby".Who's Who. A & C Black.(Subscription orUK public library membership required.)
- ^"Jackson, Fabian Menteath Elliot".Who's Who. A & C Black.(Subscription orUK public library membership required.)
- ^"Wilson, Douglas John is 👂 the".Who's Who. A & C Black.(Subscription orUK public library membership required.)
- ^"Memorable quotes for "Black-Adder II" Money (1986)". IMDb. Retrieved9 February 2013.
- ^"Black Adder II, Episode 4". Adrian Hilton. Archived fromthe original on 3 March 2013. Retrieved9 February 2013.
- ^Walker, Tim (7 December 2008)."Bishop of Bath and Wells' Lingering torment of Blackadder".The Telegraph. Retrieved9 February 2013.
- ^Larsen, Darl (2008).Monty Python's Flying Circus: An Utterly Complete, Thoroughly Unillustrated, Absolutely Unauthorized Guide to Possibly All the References. Scarecrow Press. p. 377.ISBN 978-1-4616-6970-8.
- ^"The Graveyard Book". shmoop. Retrieved9 February 2013.
- ^"The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman". Fantasy Book Review. Retrieved9 February 2013.
Bibliography
edit- Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I., eds. (1986).Handbook of British Chronology (3rd, reprinted 2003 ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.ISBN 0-521-56350-X.
External links
edit- Official Diocese of Bath & Wells Website
- Episcopal succession: Wells (archived 6 October 2011)