Diocese of Worcester: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 20:08, 16 October 2018
Diocese of Worcester Church of England | |
Province: | Canterbury |
---|---|
Bishop: | Dr John Inge |
Cathedral: | Worcester Cathedral |
Organisation | |
Suffragan bishop(s): |
Bishop of Dudley |
Archdeaconries: | Dudley, Worcester |
No. of parishes: | 180 |
No. of churches: | 284 |
Details | |
Website: | cofe-worcester.org.uk |
The Diocese of Worcester is an ancient diocese of the Church of England, within the Province of Canterbury. It covers Worcestershire, part of northern Gloucestershire and some parts of Staffordshire in the Black Country. The diocese if presided over by the Bishop of Worcester, and its centre is Worcester Cathedral, in the city of Worcester.
The diocese was founded in around 679 by St Theodore of Canterbury at Worcester to minister to the kingdom of the Hwicce, one of the many petty-kingdoms amongst the English of that time. The original borders of the diocese are believed to be based on those of that ancient kingdom.[1]
Cathedral
The Cathedral Church of Christ and St Mary the Virgin, commonly called Worcester Cathedral, is the seat of the Bishop of Worcester. It stands in the centre of the City of Worcester, which city has grown up aroud it. It is a vast gothic edifice of the 12th century, whose tall spire is visible across the city.
Worcester Cathedral has been described as possibly the most interesting of all England’s cathedrals, especially architecturally. The first cathedral was built in 680, then Bishop Oswald built another in 983, and established a monastery attached to it. Wulfstan rebuilt the cathedral in 1084 after the Norman Conquest, which was the beginning of the present building.
During Anglo-Saxon times, Worcester was one of the most important monastic cathedrals in the country, a centre of great learning and of the richest diocese in the kingdom, a tradition continued in the Middle Ages, refected in the wealth of the cathedral library.
In 1540 King Henry VIII dissolved the monastery and the cathedral continued under a Dean and Chapter. The cathedral was badly damaged in the Civil Wars, which began and ended at Worcester, and was much restored after the Restoration in 1660, and in a major Victorian restoration from 1864-75.
Organisation
Currently the diocese has 190 parishes with 281 churches and 163 stipendiary clergy. It covers an area of 671 square miles.
The diocese is divided into two Archdeaconries:
- The Archdeaconry of Worcester
- The Archdeaconry of Dudley
From its creation, the diocese included what is now southern and western Warwickshire (an area known as Felden). On 24 January 1837 the north and east of Warwickshire (Arden) which formed the archdeaconry of Coventry in the then Diocese of Lichfield and Coventry was transferred to the diocese of Worcester.[2] In 1905 an area in northern Warwickshire was split off as the Diocese of Birmingham, and in 1918 an area approximating to the rest of Warwickshire was made the Diocese of Coventry.
Early History
The Church of Worcester is believed to have been founded in the late 7th century. It seems to have benefited in the 8th century from the support of the kings of the Mercians. Through this royal support the Bishopric found itself in a position from which it was able to gradually extend its control over several of the other prominent minsters in the area during the seventh and eighth centuries. Consequently In the ninth century the bishopric of Worcester can be seen to be the most powerful ecclesiastical power in Mercia during this time. From this position the church was able to use their great wealth to buy privileges for themselves from the kings of Mercia. Later in the period it was from Mercia, and in particular Worcester, that King Alfred began to recruit priests and monks with which to rebuild the church in Wessex during the 880s (Asser, ch. 77). It has been argued that these priests bought with them a new attitude towards the churches place within society and the churches relationship with the monarchy. Consequently, we can see from the Bishopric of Worcester the emanation of a new ecclesiastical ideology that would develop over time to become the accepted Anglo-Saxon church.
Worcester Archive
The Charters of Worcester are one of the key sources for historians studying the period and are a major reason for the insight that we have regarding the early Anglo-Saxon Church. The Charters exist within the Worcester archive which is itself the largest Anglo-Saxon archive of its kind. It contains many texts, ranging from late 7th to the 11th centuries, providing for us an unprecedented continuous history of the Church. This archive takes physical form in that 2 distinct cartularies. The first cartulary, cartulary A (Cotton Tiberius A xiii), contains in it the majority of the charters that make up the archive. It is from these that we are able to develop a coherent picture of land ownership and societal responsibilities during the Anglo-Saxon period and beyond. A prominent example of this is no. 95 of cartulary A which shows the 8th-century king of Mercia, Ceolwulf II, granting the Bishopric of Worcester exemption from royal dues in exchange for money. This example shows not just the dues and power of the king himself but also the wealth and power of the Church, the sophisticated system of bartering and exchange that existed at the time and also the legal system of recording important transactions.
Bishops of Worcester
The Bishop of Worcester presides over the diocese. The title can be traced back to the foundation of the diocese in the year 680, and has been continuous ever since.
In the Anglo-Saxon period the diocese was the richest in the land, owning estates across the county, and in the later Anglo-Saxon period it became common for the Archbishop of York to hold York and Worcester in plurality because the ravanged lands of York, after the Norse had done their work, did not provide a sufficient income for an archbishop to live as was expected.
The bishop's official residence is the Bishop's Office, The Old Palace, Deansway, Worcester, Worcestershire.[3] The bishops had two earlier residences: Hartlebury Castle near Kidderminster from the 13th-century to 2007 and a palace at Alvechurch until it was pulled down in the 17th-century.
List of bishops
Pre-Conquest
Bishops of Worcester | |||
---|---|---|---|
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
680 | 691 | Bosel | Resigned the See |
691 | 693 | Oftfor | |
693 | 717 | Ecgwine of Evesham | Also recorded as Ecgwin, Egwin and Eegwine |
718 | c 744 | Wilfrith (I.) | Also recorded as Wilfrid |
c 743 | c 775 | Milred | Also recorded as Mildred and Hildred |
775 | 777 | Wærmund | |
777 | c 780/81 | Tilhere | |
781 | c 799 | Heathured | Also recorded as Hathored and Æthelred |
c 799 | 822 | Denebeorht | Also recorded as Deneberht |
822 | c 845/48 | Heahbeorht | Also recorded as Heahberht and Eadbert |
c 845/48 | 872 | Ealhhun | Also recorded as Alwin |
873 | 915 | Werferth | Also recorded as Waerfrith, Wærferth, Werfrith and Waerfrith |
915 | 922 | Æthelhun | |
922 | 929 | Wilfrith (II.) | |
Floruit|fl.929 | 957 | Koenwald | Also recorded as Cenwald and Coenwald |
957 | 959 | Saint Dunstan | Previously Abbot of Glastonbury; translated to London; and later to Canterbury |
961 | 992 | Saint Oswald of Worcester | Held both Worcester and York ( 971–992) |
992 | 1002 | Ealdwulf | Previously Abbot of Peterborough; held both Worcester and York (995–1002) |
1002 | 1016 | Wulfstan (I.) | Translated from London; also Archbishop of York (1002–1023) |
1016 | 1033 | Leofsige | |
1033 | 1038 | Beorhtheah | |
c 1038/39 | 1040 | Lyfing (1st term) | Deprived from Worcester; also Bishop of Crediton and Cornwall (1027–1046) |
1040 | 1041 | Ælfric Puttoc | Also Archbishop of York, 1023–1041; deprived from both |
1041 | 1046 | Lyfing (2nd term) | Restored to Worcester |
1046 | 1061 | Ealdred | Translated from Hereford; later to York |
1062 | 1095 | Wulfstan (II.) | |
Source(s):[4][5] |
Conquest to Reformation
Bishops of Worcester | |||
---|---|---|---|
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
1096 | 1112 | Samson | |
1113 | 1123 | Theulf | Nominated in 1113; consecrated in 1115 |
1125 | 1150 | Simon | |
1151 | 1157 | John de Pageham | |
1158 | 1160 | Alured | |
1163 | 1179 | Roger | Also recorded as Roger of Gloucester |
1180 | 1185 | Baldwin | Translated to Canterbury |
1185 | 1190 | William of Northall | |
1191 | 1193 | Robert FitzRalph | Previously Archdeacon of Nottingham |
1193 | 1195 | Henry de Sully | Previously Abbot of Glastonbury Abbey |
1196 | 1198 | John of Coutances | |
1199 | 1212 | Mauger | Elected in 1199, but quashed by Pope Innocent III; later postulated to the See; consecrated in 1200 |
1213 | 1214 | Randulf of Evesham (bishop-elect) | Elected in December 1213, but quashed by the Papal legate, Niccolò de Romanis, in January 1214 |
1214 | 1216 | Walter de Gray | Translated to York |
1216 | 1218 | Sylvester | Also recorded as Sylvester of Evesham |
1218 | 1236 | William de Blois | |
1237 | 1266 | Walter de Cantilupe | |
1266 | 1268 | Nicholas of Ely | Formerly Archdeacon of Ely;translated to Winchester |
1268 | 1302 | Godfrey Giffard | |
1302 | John St German (bishop-elect) | Elected in March 1302, but quashed in October 1302 | |
1302 | 1307 | William Gainsborough | |
1307 | 1313 | Walter Reynolds | Translated to Canterbury |
1313 | 1317 | Walter Maidstone | |
1317 | 1327 | Thomas Cobham | Previously Archbishop-elect of Canterbury in 1313 |
1327 | Wulstan Bransford (bishop-elect) | Elected bishop but was quashed; later elected in 1339 | |
1327 | 1333 | Adam Orleton | Translated from Hereford; later to Winchester |
1333 | 1337 | Simon Montacute | Translated to Ely |
1337 | 1338 | Thomas Hemenhale | Translated from Norwich |
1339 | 1349 | Wulstan Bransford | |
1349 | 1353 | John of Thoresby | Translated from St David's; later to York |
1352 | 1361 | Reginald Brian | Translated from St David's |
1362 | 1363 | John Barnet | Translated to Bath and Wells; and later to Ely |
1363 | 1368 | William Whittlesey | Translated from Rochester; later to Canterbury |
1368 | 1373 | William Lenn | Translated from Chichester |
1373 | 1375 | Walter Lyghe (bishop-elect) | Elected in 1373, but quashed in 1375 |
1375 | 1395 | Henry Wakefield | |
1394 | 1401 | Robert Tideman of Winchcombe | Translated from Llandaff |
1401 | 1407 | Richard Clifford | Previously Bishop-elect of Bath and Wells; later translated to London |
1407 | 1419 | Thomas Peverel | Translated from Llandaff |
1419 | 1426 | Philip Morgan | Translated to Ely |
1425 | 1433 | Thomas Poulton | Translated from Chichester |
1433 | 1435 | Thomas Brunce (bishop-elect) | Elected bishop, but never consecrated; later became Bishop of Rochester |
1434 | 1443 | Thomas Bourchier | Translated to Ely; and later to Canterbury |
1443 | 1476 | John Carpenter | Nominated in 1443; consecrated in 1444; resigned the See in 1476 |
1476 | 1486 | John Alcock | Translated from Rochester; later to Ely |
1486 | 1497 | Robert Morton | Nominated in 1486; consecrated in 1487 |
1497 | 1498 | Giovanni de' Gigli | |
1498 | 1521 | Silvestro de' Gigli | |
1521 | 1522 | Giulio di Giuliano de' Medici (apostolic administrator) | Later became Pope of Rome |
1522 | 1535 | Girolamo Ghinucci | Deprived of the See by Henry VIII at the Act of Supremacy |
Source(s):[4][6][7][8] |
During the Reformation
Bishops of Worcester | |||
---|---|---|---|
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
1535 | 1539 | Hugh Latimer | Resigned the See. Martyred under Mary I on 16 October 1555. |
1539 | 1543 | John Bell | |
1543 | 1551 | Nicholas Heath (1st term) | Translated from Rochester; deprived of the See |
1552 | 1554 | John Hooper | Also Gloucester, 1550–1553; deprived of the See. |
1554 | 1555 | Nicholas Heath (2nd term) | Restored to the See; later translated to York |
1555 | 1559 | Richard Pate | Deprived of the See. |
Source(s):[4][8][9][10] |
After the Reformation
Bishops of Worcester | |||
---|---|---|---|
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
1559 | 1570 | Edwin Sandys | Translated to London; and later to York |
1571 | 1576 | Nicholas Bullingham | Translated from Lincoln |
1577 | 1583 | John Whitgift | Translated to Canterbury |
1584 | 1591 | Edmund Freke | Translated from Norwich |
1593 | 1595 | Richard Fletcher | Translated from Bristol; later to London |
1596 | 1597 | Thomas Bilson | Translated to Winchester |
1597 | 1610 | Gervase Babington | Translated from Exeter |
1610 | 1616 | Henry Parry | Translated from Gloucester |
1617 | 1641 | John Thornborough | Translated from Bristol |
1641 | 1646 | John Prideaux | Deprived of the see when Parliament abolished bishops on 9 October 1646 |
1646 | 1660 | Vacant during the Commonwealth and the Protectorate | |
1660 | 1662 | George Morley | Translated to Winchester |
1662 | John Gauden | Translated from Exeter | |
1662 | 1663 | John Earle | Translated to Salisbury |
1663 | 1670 | Robert Skinner | Translated from Bristol |
1671 | 1675 | Walter Blandford | Translated from Oxford |
1675 | 1683 | James Fleetwood | |
1683 | 1689 | William Thomas | Translated from St David's |
1689 | 1699 | Edward Stillingfleet | |
1699 | 1717 | William Lloyd | Translated from Lichfield and Coventry |
1717 | 1743 | John Hough | Translated from Lichfield and Coventry |
1743 | 1759 | Isaac Maddox | St Asaph |
1759 | 1774 | James Johnson | Translated from Gloucester |
1774 | 1781 | Brownlow North | Translated from Lichfield and Coventry; later to Winchester |
1781 | 1808 | Richard Hurd | Translated from Lichfield and Coventry |
1808 | 1831 | Folliott Cornewall | Translated from Hereford |
1831 | 1841 | Robert Carr | Translated from Chichester |
1841 | 1860 | Henry Pepys | Translated from Sodor and Man |
1860 | 1890 | Henry Philpott | |
1890 | 1902 | John Perowne | |
1902 | 1905 | Charles Gore | Translated to Birmingham; and later to Oxford |
1905 | 1918 | Huyshe Yeatman-Biggs | Translated from Southwark; later to Coventry |
1919 | 1931 | Ernest Pearce | |
1931 | 1941 | Arthur Perowne | Translated to Bradford |
1941 | 1956 | William Wilson Cash | |
1956 | 1971 | Lewis Charles-Edwards | |
1971 | 1982 | Robin Woods | |
1982 | 1996 | Philip Goodrich | |
1997 | 2007 | Peter Selby | Previously Bishop of Kingston-upon-Thames (1984–1992). Also Bishop to HM Prisons (2001–2007) |
2007 | present | John Inge | |
Source(s):[4][10][11] |
Outside links
References
- ↑ Della Hooke, The Kingdom of the Hwicce (1985), pp.12-13
- ↑ London Gazette: no. 19460, pp. 167–170, 24 January 1837. Retrieved 9 February 2013.
- ↑ Provincial Directory: Worcester. Anglican Communion. Retrieved on 10 December 2008.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 "Historical successions: Worcester". Crockford's Clerical Directory. http://www.crockford.org.uk/listing.asp?id=480. Retrieved 14 July 2012.
- ↑ Fryde et al. 1986, Handbook of British Chronology, pp. 223–224, and 278.
- ↑ Fryde et al. 1986, Handbook of British Chronology, pp. 278–280.
- ↑ Greenway 1971, "Bishops of Worcester - Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300: Volume 2, pp. 99–102.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Jones 1962, "Bishops of Worcester", Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300–1541: Volume 4, pp. 55–58.
- ↑ Fryde et al. 1986, Handbook of British Chronology, p. 280.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Horn 1996, "{{brithist|35280 Bishops of Worcester]", Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541–1857: Volume 7, pp. 105–109.
- ↑ Fryde et al. 1986, Handbook of British Chronology, pp. 280–281.
Books
- Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S. et al., eds (1986). Handbook of British Chronology (3rd, reprinted 2003 ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-56350-X.
- Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300, Vol 2: Monastic Cathedrals (Northern and Southern Provinces) - Greenway D E, 1971
- Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541–1857, "Ely, Norwich, Westminster and Worcester Dioceses" - Horn J M, 1996
- Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300–1541, Monastic Cathedrals (Southern Province) - Jones B 1962
Dioceses of the Church of England |
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Province of Canterbury: |