Archdeacon of Barnstaple
Appearance
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Archdeaconry of the Church of England
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The Archdeaconry of Barnstaple or Barum is one of the oldest archdeaconries in England. It is an administrative division of the Diocese of Exeter in the Church of England.
History
[edit ]The Diocese of Exeter was divided into four archdeaconries in Norman times, probably during the bishopric of Osbern FitzOsbern (1072–1103):[1]
In 1782, it was noted that the archdeaconry contained the deaneries of Barum (Barnstaple), Chumleigh, Hertland, Shirwell, South Molton and Torrington.[2]
The archdeaconry currently comprises the following deaneries:
- Deanery of Barnstaple
- Deanery of Hartland
- Deanery of Holsworthy
- Deanery of Shirwell
- Deanery of South Molton
- Deanery of Torrington
List of archdeacons
[edit ]High Medieval
[edit ]- Allured (first archdeacon)
- ?–1143: Ralph (I)
- c. 1155: William de Auco
- bef. c. 1184–aft. c. 1185: Roger
- bef. 1203–?: Thomas
- 30 September 1209–?: Ralph de Werewell
- John
- bef. c. 1219–?: Ralph (II)
- ?–8 February 1227 (d.): Isaac
- Walter de Pembroke (afterwards Archdeacon of Totnes)
- 21 January 1263 – 1264: Henry de Bracton
- 25 May 1264–?: Richard Blund (afterwards Archdeacon of Totnes;
- possibly son of Richard Blund, Bishop of Exeter)
- 6 November 1265–May 1267: Godfrey Giffard (also Archdeacon of Wells from 1267; later Bishop of Worcester)
- May 1267–?: John de Bradleigh
- January 1271–?: Thomas de Hertford
- 28 August 1279–?: Philip of Exon
Late Medieval
[edit ]- ?–1308: Ralph Germeyn
- 13 October 1308 – 1309: William Melton (later Archbishop of York)
- 4 January 1309 – 1309: William Fitsrogo
- 30 March 1309 – 1312: John Wele
- ? ("a short time"): Bartholomew de Sancto Laurentio
- 26 March 1312 – 3 December 1314 (res.): Walter Giffard
- 7 February 1315 – 1318 (d.): Richard de Morcester (afterwards Archdeacon of Exeter)
- 22 September 1318 – 1329: Richard de Wideslade
- 10/15 December 1329 – 1330: William Zouche
- 17 December 1330 – 1349: John de Nassington
- 8 April 1350 – 1351: John de Reynham
- c. 1352: Hugh de Monyton
- 23 February 1355 – 2 September 1358: John de Derby
- 2 September 1358–c. 1367: William de Mugge
- bef. 1371 or 23 February 1384–c. 1387: Henry Whitefield
- bef. 1395 or 8 September 1399 – 1400: Robert Rygge
- 17/22 August 1400 – 1400: Richard Aldtyngton
- 1 November 1400 – 1429 (res.): John Orum
- 2 August 1429 – 1442 (d.): John Waryn
- 3 August 1442 – 1445 (res.): Richard Helyer
- 16 June 1445 – 1449 (res.): Michael Tregury (afterwards Archbishop of Dublin)
- 25 January 1450 – 1459: Roger Keys
- 12 July 1462–October 1475 (d.): William Fulford
- 27 October 1475 – 1476 (res.): John Stubbes
- 10 December 1476 – 1478 (res.): Owen Lord
- 18 February 1478 – 8 October 1485 (d.): Robert Barforth
- bef. 1492–c. 1506: William Elyot
- ?–1508: John Vesey (later Dean of Windsor and Bishop of Exeter)
- 3 August 1508–c. 1512: Richard Norton
- c. 1512–1515 (res.): John Young
- 12 April 1515 – 1518 (d.): John Tyake
- 19 January 1518 – 26 April 1528 (d.): Richard Tollett
- 26 April 1528 – 29 May 1544 (d.): Thomas Brerwood
Early modern
[edit ]- 16 June 1544 – 1554 (deprived): John Pollard (also Archdeacon of Wilts until 1544, Archdeacon of Cornwall until 1545)
- 20 April 1554 – 1582 (res.): Henry Squire
- 7 January 1583 – 1585: Robert Lawe
- 24 April 1585 – 1605: William Tooker
- 27 November 1605 – 21 November 1645 (d.): William Helyar
- 1645–1660: Vacancy during the English Commonwealth.
- 31 August 1660 – 1662: James Smith
- 1662–1679 (d.): Joshua Tucker
- 29 August 1679 – 1703 (d.): William Read
- 24 September 1703 – 1709 (d.): Robert Burscough
- 9 September 1709 – 11 August 1724 (d.): Thomas Lynford (also Canon of Westminster)
- 1724–1731: Lewis Stephens (afterwards Archdeacon of Chester)
- 28 October 1731 – 1744 (d.): John Grant
- 16 March 1745 – 26 October 1791 (d.): William Hole
- 3 November 1791 – 1798 (d.): Roger Massey
- 14 March 1798 – 3 July 1799 (d.): John Andrew
- 25 July 1799 – 28 June 1805 (d.): Peregrine Ilbert
- 16 August 1805–? (res.): Jonathan Fisher
- 3 November 1807 – 1826 (d.): Thomas Johnes
- 1826–1830 (res.): John Bull
- 1830–1847: George Barnes
- 1847–1865: John Bartholomew [3]
Late modern
[edit ]- 1865–1885: Henry Woollcombe
- 1885–1890: Herbert Barnes
- 1890–24 December 1908 (d.): Albert Seymour
- 1908–9 July 1930 (d.): Robert Trefusis, Bishop of Crediton
- 1930–26 June 1935 (d.): Frank Jones
- 1935–1945: Edgar Hay
- 1946–1958: Denis James
- 1958–1962: Guy Sanderson [4]
- 1962–1970: Arthur Ward (afterwards Archdeacon of Exeter)
- 1970–1988: Ronald Herniman
- 1989–2002 (ret.): Trevor Lloyd
- 2003–2014 (ret.): David Gunn-Johnson
- 1 September 2014 – 2015: Mike Edson (Acting)
- 23 March 2014 – 6 September 2020: Mark Butchers [5] [6]
- September 2021 onwards: Verena Breed[7]
References
[edit ]- ^ Watkin, Hugh R., The History of Totnes Priory, Vol.2, Torquay, 1917, p.981
- ^ Thesaurus ecclesiasticus provincialis; or, a survey of the diocese of Exeter: printed and sold by the editors, B. Thorn and Son. Sold also by Messrs. Rivington and Sons, and T. Evans, London; Fletcher, Oxford; and Merril, Cambridge, 1782
- ^ Gardiner, Francis–Barnstaple: 1837–1897
- ^ "Sanderson, Rt. Rev Wilfrid Guy", Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920–2008; online edition, Oxford University Press, December 2007 accessed 27 November 2012
- ^ Diocese of Exeter – New archdeacons for Totnes and Barnstaple announced Archived 18 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine & ad clerum (Accessed 2 January 2015)
- ^ "New Principal for South West Ministry Training Course". 22 April 2020.
- ^ "New Archdeacon of Barnstaple Says Amazing Things Can Happen in Small Parishes". 11 April 2021.
Sources
[edit ]- Le Neve, John; Hardy, Sir Thomas Duffus (1854). Archdeacons of Barum or Barnstaple . Fasti ecclesiae Anglicanae. Vol. 1. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 405–408 – via Wikisource.
- Horn, Joyce M. (1964), Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1300–1541, vol. 9, pp. 19–21
- Gribble, Joseph Besly–Memorials of Barnstaple: being an attempt to supply the want of a history of that ancient borough; 1830; pp 483–486 (Google eBook)