Wulfwig
Wulfwig | |
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See | Bishop of Dorchester |
Term ended | 1067 |
Predecessor | Ulfus Normanus |
Successor | Remigius de Fécamp |
Orders | |
Consecration | 1053 |
Personal details | |
Died | 1067 |
Denomination | Catholic |
Wulfwig (Wulfinus) was a medieval Bishop of Dorchester, when the town was seat of the united dioceses of Lindsey and Dorchester.
Life
Wulfwig appears in a charter of 1045 as royal chancellor, but its reliability of doubtful. In 1053 he succeeded Ulf in the bishopric of Dorchester. His predecessor was living and had been irregularly deprived, and Freeman suggests that the record of this fact in the chronicle may indicate some feeling against Wulfwig's appointment, but there seems to have been no opposition. Wulfwig apparently shared the scruple about the canonical position of Archbishop Stigand, for he went abroad to be consecrated. His appointment is thought to mark a momentary decline in Norman influence, and he was the last of the old line of Dorchester bishops, for his death occurred when the English ecclesiastical preferments were passing into Norman hands. His will is extant and is witnessed by a large number of persons, beginning with the king.[1]
Wulfwig was consecrated in 1053[2] on the continent.[3] and died in 1067.[2] He was buried in Dorchester.[3]
Citations
- ^ Alice Margaret Cooke, "Wulfwig", Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 63
- ^ a b Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 215
- ^ a b "List 1 Bishops". Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae. British History Online. Retrieved 29 October 2018.
References
- British History Online Bishops of Lincoln accessed on 28 October 2007
- Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I. (1996). Handbook of British Chronology (Third revised ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-56350-X.
External links
- Wulfwig 10 at Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England
Christian titles | ||
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Preceded by Ulfus Normanus | Bishop of Dorchester 1053–1067 | Succeeded by |
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- Cuthwine
- Wilfrid
- Headda
- Aldwine
- Torhthelm
- Eadbeorht
- Unwona
- Wernbeorht
- Hræthhun
- Ealdred
- Ceobred
- see removed to Dorchester
- Remigius de Fécamp
- Robert Bloet
- Alexander
- Robert de Chesney
- Geoffrey Plantagenet
- Walter de Coutances
- Hugh of Avalon
- William de Blois
- Hugh of Wells
- Robert Grosseteste
- Henry of Lexington
- Richard of Gravesend
- Oliver Sutton
- John Dalderby
- Anthony Bek
- Henry Burghersh
- Thomas Bek
- John Gynwell
- John Bokyngham
- Henry Beaufort
- Philip Repyngdon
- Richard Fleming
- William Grey
- William Alnwick
- Marmaduke Lumley
- John Chadworth
- Thomas Rotherham
- John Russell
- William Smyth
- Thomas Wolsey
- William Atwater
- John Longland
- Henry Holbeach
- John Taylor
- John White
- Thomas Watson
- Nicholas Bullingham
- Thomas Cooper
- William Wickham
- William Chaderton
- William Barlow
- Richard Neile
- George Montaigne
- John Williams
- Thomas Winniffe
- Episcopacy abolished (Commonwealth)
- Robert Sanderson
- Benjamin Lany
- William Fuller
- Thomas Barlow
- Thomas Tenison
- James Gardiner
- William Wake
- Edmund Gibson
- Richard Reynolds
- John Thomas
- John Green
- Thomas Thurlow
- George Pretyman (later Pretyman Tomline)
- George Pelham
- John Kaye
- John Jackson
- Christopher Wordsworth
- Edward King
- Edward Hicks
- William Swayne
- Nugent Hicks
- Aylmer Skelton
- Leslie Owen
- Maurice Harland
- Kenneth Riches
- Simon Phipps
- Bob Hardy
- John Saxbee
- Christopher Lowson
- Stephen Conway, Bishop of Ely (acting)
- David Court (acting)
- Stephen Conway
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