Walter Blandford: Difference between revisions
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He became [[Bishop of Oxford]] in 1665, and [[Bishop of Worcester]] in 1671. |
He became [[Bishop of Oxford]] in 1665, and [[Bishop of Worcester]] in 1671. |
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He also had a distinguished series of positions as chaplain, first with [[John Lovelace, 2nd Baron Lovelace|John Lord Lovelace]]. He served as chaplain to [[Sir Edward Hyde]], later the Earl of Clarendon and highly influential statesman. He was also one of the bishops brought into the household of |
He also had a distinguished series of positions as chaplain, first with [[John Lovelace, 2nd Baron Lovelace|John Lord Lovelace]]. He served as chaplain to [[Sir Edward Hyde]], later the Earl of Clarendon and highly influential statesman. He was also one of the bishops brought into the household of Hyde's daughter, [[Anne Hyde|Anne, Duchess of York]]. Following in this position [[George Morley]], Blandford had no more success than others in heading off the Duchess’s ultimate conversion to [[Catholicism]].<ref name = Johnson/><ref>J. R. Henslowe, ''Anne Hyde, Duchess of York'' (1915?), p. 293; [http://www.archive.org/details/annehydeduchesso00hensuoft online text].</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 17:09, 15 January 2009
Walter Blandford (1616-1675) was an English academic and bishop.
Life
He was born at Melbury Abbas.
A Fellow of Wadham College, Oxford at the time of the Parliamentary Visitation of 1648, he compromised sufficiently to retain his position. Later, he succeeded John Wilkins, being Warden of Wadham College, from 1659 to 1665.[1] He was Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford in 1662, and succeeded in establishing a degree of calm after the turbulence that had accompanied the Restoration of 1660.[2][3]
He became Bishop of Oxford in 1665, and Bishop of Worcester in 1671.
He also had a distinguished series of positions as chaplain, first with John Lord Lovelace. He served as chaplain to Sir Edward Hyde, later the Earl of Clarendon and highly influential statesman. He was also one of the bishops brought into the household of Hyde's daughter, Anne, Duchess of York. Following in this position George Morley, Blandford had no more success than others in heading off the Duchess’s ultimate conversion to Catholicism.[3][4]
References
- Dictionary of National Biography
Notes
- ^ http://www.wadham.ox.ac.uk/about-wadham/college-history/wardens-of-wadham.html
- ^ http://www.ox.ac.uk/about_the_university/oxford_people/key_university_officers/vcs_of_oxford.html
- ^ a b James William Johnson, A Profane Wit: The Life of John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester (2004), note 4 p. 364, note 30 p. 390.
- ^ J. R. Henslowe, Anne Hyde, Duchess of York (1915?), p. 293; online text.
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