Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/anglican-ecclesiastical-offices

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Archdeacon of Bournemouth

Figurehead of Diocese of Winchester


Summary

Figurehead of Diocese of Winchester

The archdeacon of Bournemouth is a senior ecclesiastical officer within the Diocese of Winchester. The archdeacon is responsible for the disciplinary supervision of the clergy within the archdeaconry, which consists of six deaneries in the southern part of the diocese: Bournemouth, Christchurch, Eastleigh, Lyndhurst, Romsey and Southampton. Before 2000, the title was archdeacon of Winchester.

History

A similar area of the diocese was previously supervised by the ancient archdeacons of Winchester, while the north (now the new Winchester archdeaconry) was previously overseen by the archdeacon of Basingstoke.

List of archdeacons

High Medieval

:Senior archdeacons in the Diocese of Winchester

  • bef. 1087–aft. 1078: William of Chichester
  • bef. 1107–bef. 1116 (res.): Henri I de Blois (later Bishop of Verdun)
  • bef. 1128–bef. 1139: Richard
  • bef. 1139–1142 (res.): Josceline de Bohon
  • bef. 1153–1153 (res.): Hugh de Puiset :Archdeacons of Winchester
  • bef. 1154–aft. 1178: Ralph
  • bef. 1181–aft. 1205: Roger (I)
  • bef. 1213–aft. 1229: Bartholomew
  • ?–1231 (d.): Roger (II)
  • bef. 1236–aft. 1236: P. (I)
  • bef. 1237–1253 (d.): Hugh des Roches
  • bef. 1254–aft. 1256: P. (II)
  • bef. 1257–aft. 1261: Amaury Guiscard
  • aft. 1263–bef. 1275: Henry de Helingeye
  • bef. 1280–aft. 1283: Richard de la More
  • aft. 1285–aft. 1303: Philip of St Austell alias Cornwaleys

Late Medieval

  • 10 June 1304 – 1304 (res.): Michael de Helleston
  • 31 July 1304–aft. 1324: James Sinabaldi de Florentia or de Pulcis
  • 1 April 1325–bef. 1328 (d.): Philip Sapiti
  • 1328–1343 (d.): John de Podio Barzaco
  • 1343–bef. 1345: Stephen de Malo Leone
  • 1343: Ayquelinus Guillelmi de Sparra (opposed Malo Leone)
  • 1345–bef. 1361 (d.): Robert de Burton
  • 18 June 1361–bef. 1361 (res.): John de Wolveleye
  • 18 October 1361–bef. 1372 (res.): Robert de Wykford
  • 19 October 1372 – 29 November 1381 (res.): Nicholas de Wykeham
  • 27 March 1382–bef. 1387 (d.): John Bloxham
  • bef. 1386–23 February 1389 (ren): William Forrester (opposed Bloxham)
  • 1387–1395 (res.): Roger Walden
  • 16 October 1395–aft. 1404: Nicholas Daniel
  • bef. 1428–aft. 1435: Nicholas Bildeston (simultaneously Dean of Salisbury for part of that time)
  • ?–bef. 1450 (res.): Stephen Wilton
  • 21 February 1450–bef. 1459 (res.): John Pakenham
  • 24 July 1459–bef. 1475 (d.): Vincent Clement
  • 5 March 1475 – 1478 (res.): John Morton
  • bef. 1485–1486 (res.): Robert Morton
  • 22 February 1487 – 1492: William Smyth
  • bef. 1495–bef. 1502 (res.): Robert Frost
  • 29 April 1502 – 8 October 1511 (res.): John Frost
  • 22 October 1511 – 20 March 1520 (res.): Hugh Ashton
  • 27 March 1520–March 1527 (exch.): John Fox
  • March 1527–31 December 1529 (res.): Richard Pate
  • 20 January 1530–October 1552 (d.): William Boleyn

Early modern

  • 1552–bef. 1554 (deprived): John Philpot (deprived in 1554 and burnt for heresy, 18 December 1555)
  • 12 March 1554–bef. 1572 (d.): Stephen Cheston
  • 1 June 1572–bef. 1575 (res.): John Ebden
  • 29 March 1575 – 26 August 1609 (d.): Michael Reniger
  • 1609–20 July 1631 (d.): Ralph Barlow (also Dean of Wells from 1621)
  • 22 September 1631 – 2 June 1653 (d.): Edward Burby
  • 1660–bef. 1661 (d.): George Roberts
  • 16 March 1661–bef. 1666 (res.): Thomas Gorges
  • 26 April 1666 – 29 March 1684 (d.): Walter Dayrell
  • 18 April–11 July 1684 (d.): Robert Sharrock
  • 29 July 1684–bef. 1700 (d.): Thomas Clutterbuck
  • 16 November 1700–bef. 1702 (d.): George Fulham
  • 26 November 1702 – 25 March 1743 (d.): Ralph Brideoake
  • 12 April 1743–bef. 1749 (res.): Robert Eden
  • 20 April 1749 – 10 April 1750 (res.): Nicholas Lechmere
  • 21 August 1750–bef. 1756 (res.): Robert Lowth
  • 17 January 1756 – 11 July 1759 (d.): Robert Eden (again)
  • 23 July 1759 – 19 January 1795 (d.): Thomas Balguy
  • 6 July 1795 – 30 September 1807 (d.): Matthew Woodford
  • 18 December 1807 – 11 August 1814 (res.): Thomas de Grey
  • 2 September 1814 – 6 December 1819 (res.): Augustus Legge
  • 9 December 1819 – 19 October 1829 (d.): Gilbert Heathcote
  • 16 November 1829–bef. 1847 (res.): Charles Hoare
  • 16 November 1847 – 1860 (res.): Joseph Wigram

Late modern

  • 1860–20 December 1884 (d.): Philip Jacob
  • 1884–1900 (res.): George Sumner (also Bishop suffragan of Guildford from 1888){{Who's Who | access-date = 16 January 2014
  • 1901–19 February 1903 (d.): Arthur Lyttelton (also Bishop suffragan of Southampton since 1898){{Who's Who | access-date = 16 January 2014
  • 1903–1920 (ret.): William Fearon{{Who's Who | access-date = 16 January 2014
  • 1920–29 October 1935 (d.): Alfred Daldy{{Who's Who | access-date = 16 January 2014
  • 1936–1943 (res.): Edmund Morgan{{Who's Who | access-date = 16 January 2014
  • 1943–1947 (res.): Hedley Burrows{{Who's Who | access-date = 16 January 2014
  • 1947–1962 (ret.): Leslie Lang, Assistant Bishop{{Who's Who | access-date = 16 January 2014
  • 1962–1973 (ret.): Roy Beynon (afterwards archdeacon emeritus){{Who's Who | access-date = 16 January 2014
  • 1973–1984 (res.): David Cartwright{{Who's Who | access-date = 16 January 2014
  • 1984–1999 (ret.): Alan Clarkson (afterwards archdeacon emeritus){{Who's Who | access-date = 16 January 2014
  • 1999–2000: Adrian Harbidge (became Archdeacon of Bournemouth){{Who's Who | access-date = 25 December 2012 :In 2000, the ancient archdeaconry was renamed Bournemouth; the old Basingstoke archdeaconry was renamed Winchester. :Archdeacons of Bournemouth
  • 2000–2010 (ret.): Adrian Harbidge (previously Archdeacon of Winchester)
  • 2011–2020 (res.): Peter Rouch{{Who's Who | access-date = 25 December 2012
  • During 2021, rather than fill the Archdeaconry of Bournemouth, it was given to the Archdeacon of Winchester in plurality.
  • 25 June 2023present: Jean Burgess

References

Sources

References

  1. [https://archive.today/20130223164255/http://www.winchester.anglican.org/parish-life/parishes/ Diocese of Winchester – Parishes] (accessed 25 December 2012)
  2. (1980). "A History of the County of Wiltshire, Volume 11". University of London.
  3. [http://www.myjacobfamily.com/favershamjacobs/philipjacob.htm Jacob family – Philip Jacob] (Accessed 16 January 2014)
  4. "Winchester - News - Archdeacon Peter to leave the Diocese of Winchester".
  5. "Diocese of Winchester — Covid-19 news, prayers and intercessions (Section: February 2nd update)".
  6. "Service Listings (click "see more")".
  7. (3 March 2023). "Archdeacon Jean Burgess to take up new role as Archdeacon of Bournemouth".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Archdeacon of Bournemouth — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report