| Bishop of Bath and Wells | |
|---|---|
| Bishopric | |
| Anglican | |
| Incumbent: Peter Price |
|
| Province: | Canterbury |
| Diocese: | Bath and Wells |
| Cathedral: | Wells Cathedral |
| First Bishop: | Athelm |
| Formation: | 909 |
The Bishop of Bath and Wells heads the Church of England Diocese of Bath and Wells in the Province of Canterbury in England.
The present diocese covers the vast majority of the (ceremonial) county of Somerset and a small area of Dorset. The Episcopal seat is located in the Cathedral Church of Saint Andrew in the city of Wells in Somerset. The Bishop's residence is The Palace, Wells.
The current bishop is the Right Reverend Peter Price, the seventy-seventh Bishop of Bath and Wells, who signs Peter Bath: et Well:. At present the Bishop is permitted to sit in the House of Lords as one of the Lords Spiritual.[1]
Contents |
Somerset originally came under the authority of the Bishop of Sherborne, but Wells became the seat of its own Bishop of Wells from 909. King William Rufus granted Bath to a royal physician, John de Villula, Bishop of Wells and Abbot of Bath, who was permitted to move his episcopal seat for Somerset from Wells to Bath in 1090, thereby becoming the first Bishop of Bath. He planned and began a much larger church as his cathedral, to which was attached a priory, with the bishop's palace beside it.
In 1197, Bishop Savaric FitzGeldewin officially moved his seat to Glastonbury Abbey with the approval of Pope Celestine III. However, the monks there would not accept their new Bishop of Glastonbury and the title of Bishop 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 became Bishop of Bath and Wells under a Papal ruling of 3 January 1245.
By the 15th century, Bath Cathedral was badly dilapidated. Oliver King, Bishop of Bath and Wells, decided in 1500 to rebuild it on a smaller scale. The new cathedral was completed just a few years before Bath Priory was dissolved in 1539. Then Henry VIII considered this new cathedral redundant, and it was sold to the people of Bath to form their parish church. 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 the Anglican Communion.
Fictional bishops of this title repeatedly appear in the BBC television comedy Blackadder. In The Foretelling, the first episode of The Black Adder, Edmund falsely claims the bishop as one of the people he killed in battle. The episode Money from Blackadder II features a psychotically violent and self-described "colossal pervert" bishop of this title, called "The Baby-Eating Bishop of Bath and Wells". Others are mentioned in at least two skits by Monty Python and yet another in the BBC radio comedy Absolute Power.
Neil Gaiman's 2008 work The 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.
| Tenure | Incumbent | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Diocese of Wells | ||
| 909 to 914 | Athelm | Monk of Glastonbury; translated to Canterbury |
| 914 to 923 | Wulfhelm | translated to Canterbury |
| 923 to 938 | Alphege |
|
| 938 to 956 | Wulfhelm II | |
| 956 to 973 | Birthelm | Monk of Glastonbury; 959 translated to Canterbury but deposed & returned to Wells the same year |
| 973 to 975 | Cyneweard | Abbot of Middleton |
| 975 to 996 | Sigar | Abbot of Glastonbury |
| 996 to 999 | Aelfwin | |
| 999 to 1013 | Lyfing | Translated to Canterbury |
| 1013 to 1021 | Aethelwine | Expelled |
| 1021 to 1023 | Brihtwine | Expelled |
| 1023 to 1024 | Aethelwine | Restored |
| 1024 to 1025 | Brihtwine | Restored |
| 1025 to 1033 | Merewith | Abbot of Glastonbury |
| 1033 to 1060 | Dudoc | |
| 1061 to 1088 | Gisa | |
| 1088 to 1090 | John of Tours, Bishop of Wells | Becoming Bishop of Bath |
| Diocese of Bath | ||
| 1090 to 1122 | John of Tours, Bishop of Bath | |
| 1123 to 1135 | Godfrey | Chancellor to the Queen |
| 1136 to 1166 | Robert | Monk of Lewes; died in office |
| 1166 to 1174 | vacant | |
| 1174 to 1191 | Reginald fitz Jocelin | Translated to Canterbury |
| 1192 to 1197 | Savaric FitzGeldewin | Archdeacon of Northampton and abbot of Glastonbury; removed the bishopric |
| Diocese of Bath & Glastonbury | ||
| 1197 to 1205 | Savaric FitzGeldewin | |
| 1206 to 1219 | Jocelin of Wells | Canon of Wells; becoming Bishop of Bath |
| Diocese of Bath | ||
| 1219 to 1242 | Jocelin of Wells | died in office |
| 1242 to 1244 | vacant | |
| 1244 to 1245 | Roger of Salisbury | Chanter of Salisbury[2] |
| Diocese of Bath & Wells | ||
| 1245 to 1247 | Roger of Salisbury | becoming Bishop of Bath & Wells |
| 1248 to 1264 | William of Bitton I | Archdeacon of Wells |
| 1265 to 1266 | Walter Giffard | Canon of Wells, Lord Chancellor; translated to York |
| 1267 to 1274 | William of Bitton II | Archdeacon of Wells |
| 1275 to 25 October 1292 | Robert Burnell | Archdeacon of York, Lord Chancellor and Lord Treasurer; died in office |
| 1293 to 1302 | William of March |
Dean of St. Martin's, Lord Treasurer |
| 1302 to 1308 | Walter Haselshaw | Dean of Wells |
| 1309/1310 to 1329 | John Drokensford | Keeper of the wardrobe and deputy to the treasury |
| 1329 to 1363 | Ralph of Shrewsbury | |
| 1363 to 1366 | John Barnet | Translated from Worcester |
| 1367 to 1386 | John Harewell | Chancellor of Gascony, chaplain to the Black Prince |
| 1386 to 1388 | Walter Skirlaw | Translated from Lichfield & Coventry; translated toDurham |
| 1388 to 1400 | Ralph Ergham | Translated from Salisbury |
| 1401 to 1402 | Richard Clifford | Appointed but translated to Worcester before consecration |
| 1402 to 1407/8 | Henry Bowet | Canon of Wells; translated to York |
| 1407 to 1424 | Nicholas Bubwith | Translated from Salisbury |
| 1424/5 to 1443 | John Stafford | Dean of Wells, Lord Treasurer; translated to Canterbury, Lord Chancellor |
| 1443 to 1465 | Thomas Beckington | Warden of New College, Oxford; keeper of the privy seal |
| 1465/6 to 1491 | Robert Stillington | Archdeacon of Taunton, Lord Chancellor |
| 1492 to 1494 | Richard Foxe | Translated from Exeter; translated to Durham |
| 1495 to 1503 | Oliver King | Translated from Exeter |
| 1504 to 1518 | Cardinal Adriano de Castello | Translated from Hereford; deprived by Pope Leo X |
| 1518 to 1522 | Cardinal Thomas Wolsey | Archbishop of York, Lord Chancellor; held Bath & Wells in commendam; resigned |
| 1523 to 1541 | John Clerk | Master of the Rolls, dean of Windsor |
| 1541 to 1547 | William Knight | Secretary of State, Prebendary of St Paul's |
| 1548 to 1553 | William Barlow | Translated from St David's; deprived by Queen Mary |
| 1554 to 1559 | Gilbert Bourne | Prebendary of St Paul's, Lord President of Wales; last bishop in communion with Rome |
| 1560 to 1581 | Gilbert Berkeley | Died in office |
| 1581 to 1584 | vacant | |
| 1584 to 1590 | Thomas Godwin | Dean of Canterbury; died in office |
| 1590 to 1592 | vacant | |
| 1593 to 1608 | John Stil | Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, Prebendary of Westminster |
| 1608 to 1616 | James Montague | Dean of Worcester |
| 1616 to 1626 | Arthur Lake | Dean of Worcester, Master of St Cross |
| 1626 to 1628 | William Laud | Bishop of St David's; became Bishop of London |
| 1628 to 1629 | Leonard Mawe | Master of Trinity College, Cambridge |
| 1629 to 1632 | Walter Curle | Bishop of Rochester; became Bishop of Winchester |
| 1632 to 1670 | William Piers | Bishop of Peterborough |
| 1670 to 1672 | Robert Creighton | Dean of Wells |
| 1673 to 1684 | Peter Mews | Dean of Rochester; became Bishop of Winchester |
| 1685 to 1690 | Thomas Ken | Prebendary of Winchester; consecrated 25 January 1685; deprived for not taking oaths to the sovereigns |
| 1691 to 1703 | Richard Kidder | Dean of Peterborough; died in office |
| 1704 to 1727 | George Hooper | Bishop of St Asaph |
| 1727 to 1743 | John Wynne | Bishop of St Asaph |
| 1743 to 1773 | Edward Willes | |
| 1774 to 1802 | Charles Moss | Bishop of St David's; died in office |
| 17 April 1802 to 21 April 1824 | Richard Beadon | Translated from Gloucester; died in office |
| 8 May 1824 to 22 September 1845 | George Henry Law | Translated from Chester |
| 14 October 1845 to 15 May 1854 | The Honourable Richard Bagot | Translated from Oxford; died in office |
| 2 June 1854 to 6 September 1869 | The Right Honourable Robert John Eden, the Lord Auckland, 3rd Baron Auckland | Bishop of Sodor & Man; resigned |
| 11 November 1869 to 1894 | Lord Arthur Charles Hervey | Archdeacon of Sudbury |
| 1894 to 1921 | George Wyndham Kennion | |
| 1921 to 1937 | St John Basil Wynne Willson | |
| 1937 to 1943 | Francis Underhill | |
| 1943 to 1945 | John William Charles Wand | |
| 1946 to 1960 | Harold William Bradfield | |
| 1960 to 1975 | Edward Barry Henderson | |
| 1975 to 1988 | John Monier Bickersteth | |
| 1988 to 1991 | George Leonard Carey | Became Archbishop of Canterbury |
| 1991 to 2001 | James Lawton Jim Thompson | Resigned |
| 2001 to present | Peter Bryan Price | |
|
|