The Bishop of Cornwall was the bishop of a diocese which existed between about 930 and 1050. Nothing is known about bishops in the post-Roman British Kingdom of Cornwall, but by the mid-ninth century Wessex was gaining control over the area, and between 833 and 870 a bishop at Dinuurrin, probably Bodmin, acknowledged the authority of the Archbishop of Canterbury. There may have been another bishop at St Germans.[1] By the end of the century Cornwall was part of the diocese of Sherborne, and Asser may have been appointed the suffragan bishop of Devon and Cornwall around 890 before he became bishop of the whole diocese.[2] When he died in 909, Sherborne was divided into three dioceses, of which Devon and Cornwall were one. In Æthelstan's reign (924-939) there was a further division with the establishment of a separate Cornish diocese based at St Germans.[3] Later bishops of Cornwall were sometimes referred to as the bishops of St Germans. In 1050, the bishoprics of Crediton and of Cornwall were merged and the Episcopal see was transferred to Exeter.[4] [5]
Bishops of Cornwall | |||
---|---|---|---|
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
between 833 and 870 | before 893 | Kenstec | Bishop "in the Cornish race in the monastery which in the language of the British is called Dinuurrin"[6] |
between July 924 and 931 | bet. 946 or 953 and November 955 | Conan | |
955 or 956 | between 959 and 963 | Daniel | |
between 959 and 963 | between 981 and 990 | Wulfsige Comoere | |
between 981 and 990 | between 1002 and 1009 | Ealdred | |
between 1002 and 1009 | 1011 or 1012 | ? Æthelsige | |
1011 or 1012 | between 1019 and 1027 | Buruhwold | |
1027 | 20, 23 or 25 March 1046 | Lyfing | Also Bishop of Crediton and Bishop of Worcester |
1046, possibly consecrated 19 April | 1050 | Leofric | Also Bishop of Crediton |
In 1050, Leofric transferred the united sees of Crediton and of Cornwall to Exeter.[7] | |||
align=center colspan="4" | Source(s): |
. Frank Stenton. 1971. Anglo-Saxon England. Oxford University Press. 3rd. 978-0-19-821716-9. 439.
. Thomas Charles-Edwards. Wales and the Britons 350–1064. 431. Oxford University Press. Oxford, UK. 2013. 978-0-19-821731-2.