Archbishops of Canterbury
Archbishops of Canterbury
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597
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Augustine
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604
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Laurentius. Nominated by St. Augustine as his
successor. Had a rocky ride when King Ethelbert of Kent was succeeded by his
pagan son Eadbald. Remaining calm Laurentius eventually converted Eadbald to
Christianity, thus preserving the Roman mission in England.
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619
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Mellitus
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624
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Justus
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627
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Honorius. The last of the group of Roman
missionaries who had accompanied St. Augustine to England.
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655
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Deusdedit
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668
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Theodore (of Tarsus). The Greek theologian
was already in his sixties when he was sent to England by Pope Vitalian to
assume the role of archbishop. Despite his age he went on to reorganise the
English Church creating the diocesan structure, uniting for the first time
the people of England.
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693
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Berhtwald. The first archbishop of English
birth. Worked with King Wihtred of Kent to develop the laws of the land.
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731
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Tatwine
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735
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Nothelm
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740
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Cuthbert. Established England as an important
base from which Anglo-Saxon missionaries were despatched abroad.
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761
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Bregowine
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765
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Jaenberht. Backed the wrong horse in the King
of Kent against King Offa of Mercia. He saw the importance of Canterbury
reduce as power shifted to Offa's cathedral in Lichfield.
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793
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Ethelheard, St. Originally chosen by King
Offa of Mercia, to make Lichfield into the premier archbishopric in England.
Ethelheard appears to have messed things up a little in the politics of the
day, and unwittingly succeeded in reinstating Canterbury's traditional
superiority.
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805
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Wulfred. As with his predecessors Wulfred's
rule was frequently disrupted by disputes with the kings of Mercia and was at
one stage exiled by King Cenwulf.
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832
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Feologeld
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833
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Ceolnoth. Maintained Canterbury's superiority
within the Church of England by forming close relationships with the rising
power of the Kings of Wessex, and abandoning the pro-Mercian policies of
Feologeld.
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870
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Ethelred
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890
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Plegmund. Appointed Archbishop by Alfred the
Great. Plegmund played an influential role in the reigns of both Alfred and
Edward the Elder. He was involved in early efforts to convert the Danelaw to
Christianity.
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914
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Athelm
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923
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Wulfhelm
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942
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Oda. Oda's career serves to demonstrate the
integration of Scandinavians into English society. The son of a pagan who
came to England with the Viking 'Great Army', Oda organised the
reintroduction of a bishopric into the Scandinavian settlements of East
Anglia.
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959
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Brithelm
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959
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Aelfsige
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960
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Dunstan. He was originally Abbot of
Glastonbury from 945, and made it a centre of learning. He was King Edred's
chief advisor and virtually became the kingdom's ruler. Following the death
of Edred in 955, his nephew King Edwy drove Dunstan into exile for refusing
to authorize his proposed marriage with Ælfgifu. After Edwy's death in 959,
Dunstan became Archbishop of Canterbury from 960. He is said to have pulled
the devil's nose with a pair of tongs. His feast day is 19th May.
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988
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Ethelgar
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990
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Sigeric. In the reign of Ethelred II the
Unready, Sigeric was promoted from humble monk to the top job of archbishop.
He is associated with the policy of paying Danegeld in an attempt to buy off
Scandanavian attacks.
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995
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Aelfric
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1005
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Alphege. In 1012, he was captured by the
Danes who had invaded Kent, and was held at Greenwich. He refused to pay his
own ransom, and, during a drunken feast at which the Danes threw left-over
bones and skulls at Alphege, he was murdered by a Dane whom he had converted
to Christianity earlier in the day., The Danish leader, Thorkill, was disgusted
by the murder and changed sides, bringing 45 ships to Æthelred 's service. In
1033, Canute moved Alphege's bones from St Paul's Cathedral to Canterbury
Cathedral.
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1013
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Lyfing
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1020
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Ethelnoth. One of the most distinguished of
the Anglo-Saxon archbishops. The first monk of the Canterbury monastery to be
elected archbishop.
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1038
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Eadsige
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1051
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Robert of Jumieges. One of a small number of
Normans who came to England with Edward the Confessor in 1041. His scheming
and elevation to archbishop fuelled a civil war between Edward and Earl
Godwine of Wessex. Robert was also the ambassador who promised the succession
to Duke William (The
Conqueror) of Normandy.
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1052
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Stigand. Became archbishop after the
expulsion of Robert of Jumieges, as such he was never recognised by the
church in Rome. A worldly and very wealthy man he was at first accepted by
William I The Conqueror, but in 1070 was deposed by Papal Legate.
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1070
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Lanfranc. A native of Italy, he left home
around 1030 to pursue his studies in France. He was responsible for
presenting the case to the Pope for William of Normandy's claim to the
English crown. It was William I The Conqueror who appointed him archbishop in
1070. Lanfranc was responsible for reforming and reorganising the English Church
and rebuilt the Cathedral on the model of St Stephen's in Caen where he had
previously been Abbot.
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1093
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Anselm. Another Italian who had left home in
search of better things and had found Lefranc as Prior at the Norman Abbey of
Bec. He followed in Lefranc's footsteps first as Prior and then as
Archbishop. His strongly held views on the Church-State relationship would
greatly influence Thomas a Becket and continue to rumble on for centuries
ensuring a greater control of the Church from Rome.
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1114
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Ralph d'Escures
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1123
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William de Corbeil
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1139
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Theobald. Yet another monk from the Norman
Abbey of Bec. He was created Archbishop by Stephen. The relationship between
the King and Archbishop strained over the years culminating in Theobald
refusing to crown Stephen's son Eustace. He drew Thomas a Becket into his
service
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1162
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Worked as a banker's
clerk before entering the service of Archbishop Theobald of Canterbury in
1145. He was a close friend of Henry II and was Chancellor from 1152 until
1162, when he was elected archbishop. He then changed his allegiance to the
church, alienating Henry. In 1164, he opposed Henry's attempt to control the
relations between church and state – preferring the clergy to be judged by
the church and not by the state – and fled to France. There was a
reconciliation between Henry and Becket and he returned in 1170, but the
reconciliation soon broke down. After an outburst from the king, four knights
– probably misunderstanding Henry's instructions – murdered Becket in front
of the altar of Canterbury Cathedral on 29th December 1170. He was canonised
– as St Thomas Becket – in 1172, and his shrine became the most popular
destination of pilgrimage in England until the Reformation. His feast day is
29th December.
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1174
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Richard (of Dover)
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1184
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Baldwin. Despite being described as gentle
and guileless, he did take action when needed, galloping up and saving
Gilbert of Plumpton from the gallows, forbidding such hangman's work on a
Sunday. Also saw action in the Crusades, he died five weeks after his 200
knights had fought at Acre.
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1193
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Hubert Walter. Rector of Halifax in 1185. He
travelled to the Holy Land with Richard the Lion-Heart on the Third Crusade
1190 and, when Richard was taken prisoner by emperor Henry VI, Walter brought
the army back to England and raised a ransom of 100,000 marks for the king's
release. He was Dean of York from 1186 to 1189, then Bishop of Salisbury, and
he became Archbishop of Canterbury in 1193. On Richard's death in 1199, he
was appointed Chancellor
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1207
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Stephen Langton. He was consecrated
archbishop by Pope Innocent III, which annoyed King John so much that he
refused to admit him into England. The quarrel between King and Pope lasted
until John submitted in 1213. Once in England he proved to be an important
mediator playing a key role in negotiating Magna Carta.
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1229
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Richard le Grant
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1234
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Edmund of Abingdon. He taught theology at
Oxford before becoming archbishop. Following quarrels with Henry III and the
monks of Canterbury he went to see Rome, and died!
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1245
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Boniface of Savoy
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1273
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Robert Kilwardby. Educated in Paris, he
taught theology at Oxford before becoming archbishop. Created Cardinal Bishop
of Porto in 1278.
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1279
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John Peckham. A highly respected theologian
who taught at Paris and Rome. He tried in vain to reconcile the differences
between Edward I and Llwelyn Ap Gruffudd.
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1294
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Robert Winchelsey. Made an enemy of Edward I
(Longshanks) when he refused to pay taxes without the Pope's permission.
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1313
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Walter Reynolds
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1328
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Simon Meopham
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1333
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John de Stratford. He was a chief advisor to
Edward III and played a key role in the onset of the Hundred Year War. The
King accused him of incompetence after the failure of his 1340 campaign.
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1349
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Thomas Bradwardine. One of the most learned
men ever to be archbishop. He accompanied Edward III to Flanders in 1338 and
helped to negotiate terms with Philip of France after the Battle of Crécy in
1346. He was elected archbishop while in France in 1338, but promptly died of
the Black Death only days after his return to England
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1349
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Simon Islip
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1366
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Simon Langham. Forced to resign from the post
in 1368 by Edward III. He was again elected archbishop in 1374, but the Pope
would not let him go and he died at Avignon.
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1368
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William Whittlesey
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1375
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Simon Sudbury. He was blamed for government
mismanagement and unjust taxation which led to the Peasants' Revolt of 1381,
led by Wat Tyler. The 'revolting'
rebels dragged him from the Tower of London and beheaded him. His mummified
head is displayed in the vestry of St. Gregory's church in Sudbury, Suffolk.
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1381
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William Courtenay. He led the opposition
within the English Church to John Wyclif, dubbed by some to be 'the morning
star of the Reformation', and the Lollards, and was influential in driving
them out of Oxford.
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1396
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Thomas Arundel. The combination of his high
aristocratic birth and driving ambition made him one of the most powerful men
in England. His political connections led first to his banishment by Richard
II in 1397, and then to his restoration by Henry IV two years later.
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1398
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Roger Walden.
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1399
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Thomas Arundel (restored).
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1414
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Henry Chichele. He helped to finance the war
against France, organised the fight against Lollardy and founded All Souls
College in Oxford.
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1443
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John Stafford. It was said of him if he had
done little good he had done no harm.
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1452
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John Kempe. Initially Henry V's Keeper of the
Privy Seal and Chancellor in Normandy, he also served two terms as Chancellor
of England. Before becoming Archbishop of Canterbury he was Bishop of;
Rochester (1419-21), Chichester (1421), London (1421-5) and York (1425-52).
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1454
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Thomas Bourchier. Also served as Chancellor
of England from 1455 to 1456, during an illness of Henry VI and while Richard
of York was Protector.
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1486
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John Morton. Originally an Oxford-trained
lawyer he fled to Flanders, to the court of Henry Tudor, after Richard III
attempted to imprison him in 1483. Henry VII summoned him home after his
victory at Bosworth in 1485 and made him archbishop. After this he applied
much of his energy to financial matters of state giving his name to the
'Morton's fork' principle of tax assessment: ostentation is proof of wealth -
stricken appearance is proof of hidden savings.
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1501
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Henry Deane.
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1503
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William Warham. He expressed doubts as to the
wisdom of Henry VIII marrying Catherine
of Aragon, the widow of Prince Arthur, but presided at their coronation. He
did nothing to help Catherine against Henry's efforts to have their marriage
declared null, but was less than happy with the increasingly anti-papal royal
policy adopted after 1530.
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The martyrdom of
Thomas Cranmer, from an old edition of Foxe's Book of Martyrs
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Archbishops of Canterbury since the Reformation |
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1533
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Thomas Cranmer. Compiled the first English
Book of Common Prayer. First Protestant Archbishop of Canterbury. In 1551,
his 42 Articles laid down the basis of Anglican Protestantism. Burned at the
stake for heresy and treason in opposing Bloody Mary. His feast day is 16th
October.
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1556
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Reginald Pole. Returned from a self imposed
exile in Italy following the accession of his Catholic cousin Queen Mary I.
He died within a few hours of her in November 1558.
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1559
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Mathew Parker. He was apparently surprised
when Elizabeth I decided that her
mother's (Anne Boleyn) old chaplain would make an ideal Archbishop of
Canterbury. Presided over the very difficult opening years of the new
religious settlement.
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1576
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Edmund Grindal. He had been exiled under
Queen Mary I because of his Protestant beliefs and was therefore the obvious
choice for the top job in the Church of Elizabeth I. His defiance of her
wishes in 1577 however, led to his suspension under house arrest. He failed
to recovered favour by the time of his death.
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1583
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John Whitgift. A former Cambridge don, he
first attracted the attention of Elizabeth I by his strict disciplining of
the non-conforming Puritans. Yet another archbishop who annoyed the lady,
with the thought that a clergyman should attempt to decide theology for her
Church.
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1604
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Richard Bancroft. Was born and intially
educated in Farnworth, near modern day Widnes, he graduated from Cambridge
and was ordained around 1570. Whilst still Bishop of London, he drafted the
rules for the translation of what would eventually become the 'most popular
book in the world' ...The King James Bible.
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1611
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George Abbot. He found favour under James I,
his reputation as a churchman however was dented when he accidentally killed
a gamekeeper whilst out hunting with a crossbow.
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1633
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William Laud. His High Church policy, support
for Charles I, censorship of the press, and persecution of the Puritans
aroused bitter opposition. He was responsible for moving the altar from a its
central position to the east end of churches. His attempt to impose the
Prayer Book in Scotland precipitated the Civil War. He was impeached by the
Long Parliament in 1640, imprisoned in the Tower of London, condemned to
death, and beheaded.
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1660
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William Juxon. A friend of William Laud, he
had attended Charles I at his execution in 1649 and spent the years until the
restoration of Charles II in retirement. His appointment as archbishop in
1660 being a reward for loyal royal service.
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1663
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Gilbert Sheldon. Another former advisor to
Charles I, he attempted to unite the thinking of the Anglican and
Presbyterian branches of the Church.
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1678
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William Sancroft. Following an unsuccessful
attempt to convert King James II to Anglicanism, he and the king fell out. He
openly and publicly defied royal orders to accept the King's Declaration of
Indulgence for Dissenters and Catholics. A man of integrity it appears, as he
played no part in Glorious Revolution and argued that the oath he had taken
to James precluded him taking another to William III and Mary II.
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1691
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John Tillotson. He succeeded Sancroft as
archbishop, having carried out the duties of the office since 1689 when
Sancroft had refused to take the oaths that recognised William and Mary as
rightful monarchs.
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William of Orange |
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1695
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Thomas Tenison. A 'friend' of those who
invited William of Orange to England in 1688. He warned about the threat to
Anglicanism from a Stuart restoration.
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1716
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William Wake. He attempted to persuade the
French Gallican Church to break with Rome and ally itself with the Church of
England. In later life he gained a reputation for corruption, appointing
members of his family to financially lucrative positions within the Church.
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1737
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John Potter
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1747
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Thomas Herring. As Archbishop of York he was
influential in raising funds to support George II against to Jacobite
rebellion. So effective was he that he was rewarded with the 'top job' in
1747.
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1757
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Matthew Hutton.
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1758
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Thomas Secker.
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1768
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Hon. Frederick Cornwallis.
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1783
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John Moore.
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1805
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Charles Manners Sutton.
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1828
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William Howley.
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1848
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John Bird Sumner.
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1862
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Charles Thomas Longley
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1868
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Archibald Campbell Tait. The first Scotsman
to hold the most senior post in the Church of England, he did much to
organise the Church throughout the colonies. His biography was published by
his son-in-law, the future archbishop Randall Thomas Davidson.
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1883
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Edward White Benson
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1896
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Frederick Temple. Followed the well worn path
from Oxford to Rugby to Canterbury.
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1903
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Randall Thomas Davidson. Born in Edinburgh
into a Presbyterian family, he studied at Oxford, and became chaplain to
Archbishop Tait (his father-in-law) and also to Queen Victoria.
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1928
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Cosmo Gordon Lang. Born in Fyvie,
Aberdeenshire, he was Principal of Aberdeen University and entered the Church
of England in 1890. He was both counsellor and friend to the royal family.
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1942
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William Temple. The son of Frederick Temple
he deviated the well worn path from Oxford to Canterbury via Repton. He was
an outspoken supporter of social reform in crusades against money lenders, slums
and dishonesty.
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1945
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Geoffrey Francis Fisher. He also followed the
now deeply rutted path from Oxford to Repton to Canterbury. As archbishop he
crowned Queen Elizabeth II in Westminster Abbey
in 1953.
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1961
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Arthur Michael Ramsey. Educated at Repton,
where his headmaster was the man he would succeed as archbishop - Geoffrey
Fisher, he worked for Church unity with an historic visit to the Vatican in
1966. He also attempted to forge a reconciliation with the Methodist Church.
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1974
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Frederick Donald Coggan.
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1980
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Robert Runcie. Oxford educated, he served
with the Scots Guards during WWII, for which he was awarded an MC. He was
ordained in 1951 and was Bishop of St.Albans for 10 years before being
consecrated Archbishop of Canterbury. His office was marked by a papal visit
to Canterbury and the war with Argentina, after which he urged
reconciliation.
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1991
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George Carey. Born in London, he left school
at 15 without any qualifications. After National Service in Egypt and Iraq,
he felt called to the priesthood. A supporter of the ordination of women, he
represented the liberal and modern aspects of the Church of England.
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2002
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Rowan Williams. The first Welshman to be
selected to the Church of England's top job for at least 1000 years, he was
elected the 104th archbishop on 23rd July 2002.
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