William Covell (died 1613) was an English clergyman and writer.
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He was born in Chadderton, Lancashire, England, and proceeded M.A. at Queens' College, Cambridge in 1588.[1]
In the 1590s Covell took part in the controversy about how far the newly-reformed Church of England should abandon the liturgy and hierarchy of the past, to which debate he contributed several broadly anti-puritan works. In his later career he allied himself with Archbishop John Whitgift and afterwards with his successor, Richard Bancroft, who like Covell was Lancashire-born.
William Covell died in 1613 at Mersham, Kent, where he was rector.
Covell's interest to modern scholars now largely depends on one polemical work published in 1595, Polimanteia.[2] In the course of this work, dedicated to the 3rd Earl of Essex, Covell briefly mentioned contemporary authors such as Thomas Nashe, Samuel Daniel and William Shakespeare.