Robert Wright (bishop)
Robert Wright (1560-1643) was an English Bishop.
Life
Wright was born of humble parentage in St Albans, Hertfordshire, in 1560, and probably attended the refounded free school there (now St Albans School), where preference was given to poor scholars of the borough. He matriculated at Trinity College, Oxford in 1574 at the age of 14, was elected to a scholarship in 1575, and graduated as a B.A. in 1580, becoming a fellow the next year. He proceeded to obtain an M.A. in 1584, a B.D. in 1592 and a D.D. in 1597.
In 1601, Wright was made Canon Residentiary and Treasurer of Wells, a post he held until 1632. He was appointed chaplain to both Queen Elizabeth I and James I. In 1613 he was appointed the first warden of the newly established Wadham College, resigning three months later as the college required the warden to remain celibate, but Wright had obtained Royal dispensation to marry. A son, Calvert, was born in 1620 and baptised at Sonning Church in Berkshire where Robert had been vicar since 1604. In 1623, he was appointed as Bishop of Bristol, and was later translated to the See of Lichfield and Coventry in 1632.
He died at the seat of the Bishops of Lichfield, Eccleshall Castle in Staffordshire, in September 1643 but, as the castle was under siege by Parliamentarians at the time, could not be properly buried.
External links
- Royal Berkshire History: Robert Wright
- D. J. Oldridge, 'Wright, Robert (1560–1643)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004
- Wardens of Wadham College
Academic offices | ||
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Preceded by First Warden |
Warden of Wadham College, Oxford April 1613 - July 1613 |
Succeeded by John Fleming |
Church of England titles | ||
Preceded by Rowland Searchfield |
Bishop of Bristol 1623–1632 |
Succeeded by George Coke |
Preceded by Thomas Morton |
Bishop of Lichfield 1632–1643 |
Succeeded by Accepted Frewen |
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