Bishopric: | Exeter |
Border: | anglican |
Coat: | Diocese of Exeter arms.svg |
Coat Size: | 200 |
Coat Caption: | Arms of the Bishop of Exeter: Gules, a sword erect in pale argent hilted or surmounted by two keys addorsed in saltire of the last[1] |
Incumbent: | vacant (bishop-designate: Mike Harrison; acting bishop: Jackie Searle, Bishop of Crediton) |
Province: | Canterbury |
Residence: | The Palace, Exeter |
Established: | 905 (founded at Tawton) 912 (translated to Crediton) 1050 (translated to Exeter) |
Cathedral: | Exeter Cathedral (1112–present) |
First Incumbent: | Werstan Leofric (first Bishop of Exeter) |
Diocese: | Exeter |
The Bishop of Exeter is the ordinary of the Church of England Diocese of Exeter in the Province of Canterbury.[2] The See has been vacant since Robert Atwell's retirement on 30 September 2023. On 4th June 2024 it was announced that Mike Harrison, currently Suffragan Bishop of Dunwich in Suffolk, will take up the role in autumn 2024.[3]
From the first bishop until the sixteenth century the Bishops of Exeter were in full communion with the Roman Catholic Church. However, during the Reformation the Church of England broke away from the authority of the Pope and the Roman Catholic Church, at first temporarily and later more permanently. Since the Reformation, the Bishop and Diocese of Exeter has been part of the reformed and catholic Church of England. The bishop's residence is The Palace, Exeter.
Roman episcopal organization survived the fall of the Roman Empire in south-western Britain, which became the British kingdom of Dumnonia. In about 700, Aldhelm, abbot of Malmesbury wrote a letter to King Geraint of Dumnonia and his bishops.[4] However, by this time eastern Devon had been conquered by the Anglo-Saxons and was part of the diocese of Bishop of Winchester, covering the whole of Wessex. In around 705 The diocese was divided in two and Aldhelm was appointed the first Bishop of Sherborne, covering eastern Devon. Over the next two centuries western Devon was conquered.[5]
In about 909 the diocese of Sherborne was divided and the Diocese of Crediton was created to cover Devon and Cornwall.[6] Crediton was chosen as the site for its cathedral possibly due it having been the birthplace of Saint Boniface and the existence of a monastery there.[7]
In 1046, Leofric became the Bishop of Crediton. Following his appointment he decided that the see should be moved to the larger and more culturally significant and defensible walled town of Exeter. In 1050, King Edward the Confessor authorised that Exeter was to be the seat of the bishop for Devon and Cornwall and that a cathedral was to be built there for the bishop's throne. Thus, Leofric became the last diocesan Bishop of Crediton and the first Bishop of Exeter.[7]
The two dioceses of Crediton and Cornwall, covering Devon and Cornwall, were permanently united under Edward the Confessor by Lyfing's successor Leofric, hitherto Bishop of Crediton, who became first Bishop of Exeter under Edward the Confessor, which was established as his cathedral city in 1050. At first the Abbey Church of St Mary and St Peter, founded by Athelstan in 932, rebuilt in 1019, etc., finally demolished 1971, served as the cathedral.
The bishop of Exeter signs his name as his Christian name or forename followed by Exon., abbreviated from the Latin Episcopus Exoniensis ("Bishop of Exeter").
See main article: article and Exeter Cathedral.
The present cathedral was begun by William de Warelhurst in 1112, the transept towers he built being the only surviving part of the Norman building, which was completed by Marshall at the close of the twelfth century. The cathedral is dedicated to St Peter.
As it now stands, the cathedral is in the decorated style. It was begun by Peter Quinel (1280–1291), continued by Bytton and Stapeldon, and completed, much as it has since remained, by John Grandisson during his long tenure of 42 years.
In many respects Exeter cathedral resembles those of France rather than others found in England. Its special features are the transept towers and the choir, containing much early stained glass. There is also an episcopal throne, separated from the nave by a choir screen (1324) and a stately West front. In a comparison with certain other English cathedrals, it is perhaps disadvantaged by the absence of a central tower and a general lack of elevation, but it is undoubtedly very fine.
The bishops of Exeter, like the general population of the diocese, always enjoyed considerable independence, and the see was one of the largest and richest in England. The remoteness of the see from London prevented it from being bestowed on statesmen or courtiers, so that over the centuries the roll of bishops possessed more capable scholars and administrators than in many other sees. The result was a long and stable line of bishops, leading to active Christian observance in the area.
The diocese contained 604 parishes grouped in four archdeaconries: Cornwall, Barnstaple, Exeter, and Totnes. There were Benedictine, Augustinian, Premonstratensian, Franciscan and Dominican religious houses, and four Cistercian abbeys.
This wealthy diocese was forced to cede land during the reign of Henry VIII, when Vesey was obliged to surrender fourteen of twenty-two manors, and the value of the see was reduced to a third of what it had been. Vesey, despite his Catholic sympathies, held the see until 1551, when he finally had to resign, and was replaced by the Bible translator Miles Coverdale. Following the accession of Mary, in 1553, Vesey was restored, but died soon after in 1554. He was succeeded by James Turberville, the last Catholic Bishop of Exeter. Turberville was removed from the see by the Reformist Elizabeth I in 1559, and died in prison, probably in or about 1570.
Henry Phillpotts served as Bishop of Exeter from 1830 to his death in office in 1869. He was England's longest serving bishop since the 14th century. The diocese was divided in 1876 along the border of Devon and Cornwall, creating the Diocese of Truro (but five parishes which were at the time in Devon were included in this diocese as they had always been within the Archdeaconry of Cornwall). The diocese covers the County of Devon. The see is in the City of Exeter where the seat is located at the Cathedral Church of Saint Peter which was founded as an abbey possibly before 690. The current incumbent is Mike Harrison.[8]
Bishops of Crediton | |||
---|---|---|---|
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes |
c.909 | 934 | Eadwulf | |
934 | c.952/53 | Æthelgar | |
953 | 972 | Ælfwold I | |
973 | 977 | Sideman | Died on 30 April 977 or 1 or 2 May 977. |
c.977/79 | c.986/87 | Ælfric | |
c.986/87 | ? | Ælfwold II | |
? | c.990 | Alfred of Malmesbury[9] | |
? | c.1011/15 | Ælfwold III | |
c.1011/15 | c.1019/23 | Eadnoth | |
1027 | 1046 | Lyfing | Also Bishop of Cornwall and Worcester; died in March 1046. |
1046 | 1050 | Leofric | Consecrated on 19 April 1046; also Bishop of Cornwall; became the first Bishop of Exeter in 1050. |
In 1050, Leofric transferred the see to Exeter. | |||
Source(s):[10] [11] | |||
Dates of reign | Name | Portrait | Arms[12] | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1050-72[13] | Leofric | Pre-heraldic | ||
1072-1103 | Osbern FitzOsbern | Pre-heraldic | ||
1107-38 | William Warelwast | Pre-heraldic | ||
1138-55 | Robert Warelwast | Pre-heraldic | ||
1155-60 | Robert of Chichester | Pre-heraldic | ||
1161-84 | Bartholomew Iscanus | Pre-heraldic | ||
1186-91 | John the Chanter | Pre-heraldic | ||
1194-1206 | Henry Marshal | Pre-heraldic | ||
1206-14[14] | Vacant | |||
1214-23 | Simon of Apulia | |||
1224-44[15] | William Briwere | |||
1245-57[16] | Richard Blund | |||
1258-80[17] | Walter Branscombe | |||
1280-91[18] | Peter Quinel | |||
1291-1307[19] | Thomas Bitton | |||
1308-1326 | Walter de Stapledon | |||
1326-27 | James Berkeley | |||
1327[20] | John Godeley | |||
1327-69 | John Grandisson | |||
1370-94[21] | Thomas de Brantingham | |||
1395-1419 | Edmund Stafford | |||
1419[22] | John Catterick | |||
1420-55[23] | Edmund Lacey | |||
1455-56[24] | John Hales | |||
1458-65[25] | George Neville | |||
1465-78 | John Booth | |||
1478-87[26] | Peter Courtenay | |||
1487-92[27] | Richard Foxe | |||
1493-95 | Oliver King | |||
1496-1502[28] | Richard Redman | |||
1502-4[29] | John Arundel | |||
1505-19 | Hugh Oldham | |||
Dates of reign | Name | Portrait | Arms |
---|---|---|---|
1519-51[30] [31] [32] | John Vesey | ||
1551-53[33] | Myles Coverdale | ||
1553-54[34] | John Vesey | ||
1555-60 | James Turberville | ||
Post-Reformation Bishops of Exeter | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
From | Until | Incumbent | Notes | ||
1560 | 1571 | William Alley | Also recorded as William Alleyn | ||
1571 | 1578 | William Bradbridge | |||
1579 | 1594 | John Woolton | |||
1595 | 1597 | Gervase Babington | Translated to Worcester | ||
1598 | 1621 | William Cotton | |||
1621 | 1626 | Valentine Cary | |||
1627 | 1641 | Joseph Hall | Translated to Norwich | ||
1642 | 1646 | Ralph Brownrigg | Deprived of the see when the English episcopacy was abolished by Parliament on 9 October 1646; died 1659. | ||
align=center | 1646 | align=center | 1660 | The see was abolished during the Commonwealth and the Protectorate.[35] [36] | |
1660 | 1662 | John Gauden | Translated to Worcester | ||
1662 | 1667 | Seth Ward | Translated to Salisbury | ||
1667 | 1676 | Anthony Sparrow | Translated to Norwich | ||
1676 | 1688 | Thomas Lamplugh | Translated to York | ||
1689 | 1707 | Sir Jonathan Trelawny, Bt. | Translated from Bristol; later translated to Winchester | ||
1708 | 1716 | Ofspring Blackall | |||
1717 | 1724 | Lancelot Blackburne | Translated to York | ||
1724 | 1742 | Stephen Weston | |||
1742 | 1746 | Nicholas Clagett | Translated from St David's | ||
1747 | 1762 | George Lavington | |||
1762 | 1777 | Frederick Keppel | |||
1778 | 1792 | John Ross | |||
1792 | 1796 | William Buller | |||
1797 | 1803 | Reginald Courtenay | Translated from Bristol | ||
1803 | 1807 | John Fisher | Translated to Salisbury | ||
1807 | 1820 | George Pelham | Translated from Bristol; later translated to Lincoln | ||
1820 | 1830 | William Carey | Translated to St Asaph | ||
1830 | Christopher Bethell | Translated from Gloucester; later translated to Bangor | |||
1831 | 1869 | Henry Phillpotts | |||
1869 | 1885 | Frederick Temple | Translated to London | ||
1885 | 1900 | Edward Bickersteth | |||
1901 | 1903 | Herbert Edward Ryle | Translated to Winchester | ||
1903 | 1916 | Archibald Robertson | |||
1916 | 1936 | Lord William Cecil | |||
1936 | 1948 | Charles Curzon | Translated from Stepney | ||
1949 | 1973 | Robert Mortimer | |||
1973 | 1985 | Eric Mercer | Translated from Birkenhead | ||
1985 | 1999 | Hewlett Thompson | Translated from Willesden | ||
1999 | 2013[37] | Michael Langrish | Translated from Birkenhead | ||
2014 | 2023 | Robert Atwell | Translated from Stockport;[38] retired 30 September 2023.[39] | ||
2024 | onwards | Mike Harrison, bishop-designate | Currently Bishop of Dunwich; to be translated autumn 2024. | ||
Source(s): |
Among those who have served as assistant bishops of the diocese have been:
. Barbara Yorke . Wessex in the Early Middle Ages. 60, 85, 95. Leicester University Press. London, UK . 1995. 978-0-7185-1856-1 .