John Bird (bishop)
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John Bird (died 1558) was an English Carmelite friar and subsequently a bishop.
He was Warden of the Carmelite house in Coventry, and twice Provincial of his order.[2][3] He attracted the attention of Henry VIII by his preaching in favour of the royal supremacy over the English Church.[4]
Life
He was one of the divines sent in 1531 to confer and argue with Thomas Bilney, the reformer, in prison; and in 1535 he was sent by Henry VIII along with Richard Foxe, the royal almoner, and Thomas Bedyll, a clerk of the council, to Catherine of Aragon, now divorced by Henry, to try to persuade her not to use the title queen.Template:Sfn
He was suffragan to the Bishop of Llandaff (titled Bishop of Penrydd (then spelled Penreth), after Penrydd in Pembrokeshire[5] and was then translated to become Bishop of Bangor. He then was appointed as the inaugural Bishop of Chester. The new diocese had both administrative and financial problems: Bird tried to address the finances, and dispensed with archdeacons, but succeeded only in making disadvantageous agreements with the Crown and with leaseholders.[6]
After the accession of the Catholic Queen Mary he was deprived of his bishopric on 16 March 1554 since he had married.[7] He at once repudiated his wife, and soon afterwards Edmund Bonner, Bishop of London, appointed him as his suffragan, and on 6 November 1554 presented him to the vicarage of Great Dunmow in Essex.[8]
Near the end of 1558, he died in an obscure condition and was buried in Chester Cathedral.Template:Sfn
Notes
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- ↑ Parish of Penrhudd in Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales. An Inventory of the Ancient Monuments of Wales and Monmouthshire: VII – County of Pembroke (Google Books)
- ↑ Christopher Haigh, Reformation and Resistance in Tudor Lancashire (1975), pp. 7–10.
- ↑ John Gough Nichols (ed.), The Diary of Henry Machyn, London, 1848, p. 58.
- ↑ Template:DNB
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- Attribution