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John Robinson (bishop of London)

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Diocese
  
Diocese of London

Name
  
John Robinson

Predecessor
  
Henry Compton

Nationality
  
English

Successor
  
Edmund Gibson


Term ended
  
1723 (death)

Elected
  
c. 1714

Role
  
Diplomat

Consecration
  
1714

John Robinson (bishop of London) John Robinson bishop of London Wikipedia

Other posts
  
Bishop of Bristol 1710–1714

Born
  
7 November 1650 Cleasby, North Yorkshire (
1650-11-07
)

Buried
  
All Saints Church, Fulham

Died
  
April 11, 1723, Hampstead, United Kingdom

Place of burial
  
All Saints Church, Fulham, United Kingdom

Education
  
Brasenose College, Oxford

John robinson day in the city


John Robinson (7 November 1650 – 11 April 1723) was an English diplomat and prelate.

Contents

Pastor elder john iii preaching dr john robinson service


Early life

Robinson was born at Cleasby, North Yorkshire, near Darlington, a son of John Robinson (died 1651). Educated at Brasenose College, Oxford, he became a fellow of Oriel College, and in about 1680 he became chaplain to the British embassy to Stockholm. He remained in Sweden for nearly thirty years. During the absence of the minister, Philip Warwick, Robinson acted as resident and as envoy extraordinary, and he was thus in Sweden during a very interesting and important period, and was performing diplomatic duties at a time when the affairs of northern Europe were attracting an unusual amount of attention.

Among his adventures not the least noteworthy was his journey to Narva with Charles XII in 1700.

In 1709 Robinson returned to England, and was appointed Dean of Windsor and of Wolverhampton; in 1710 he was elected bishop of Bristol, and among other ecclesiastical positions he held that of Dean of the Chapel Royal. In August 1711 he became Lord Privy Seal, this being, says Lord Stanhope, "the last time that a bishop has been called upon to fill a political office." Echoing his Scandinavian connections, the motto on his coat of arms is written in runic characters.

In 1712 the bishop represented Great Britain at the important congress of Utrecht, and as first plenipotentiary he signed the treaty of Utrecht in April 1713 that ended the War of the Spanish Succession. Just after his return to England he was chosen Bishop of London in succession to Henry Compton.

In 1718 he fostered a plan for the union of the English and Swedish churches, supported by Count Gyllenberg, Swedish Ambassador to London. The plan fell through because of the opposition of most Swedish bishops, although Svedberg of Skara and Gezelius, Bishop of Turku (Finland) were in favour. The reason for the opposition was that the Church of England was too Calvinist for them [1].

He died at Hampstead, having been a great benefactor to Oriel College, and is buried at All Saints Church, Fulham, London.

Writings

Robinson wrote an Account of Sweden together with an Extract of the History of that Kingdom. By a person of note who resided many years there (London, 1695). This was translated into French (Amsterdam, 1712), and in 1738 was published with Viscount Molesworth's Account of Denmark in 1692. Some of his letters are among the Strafford papers in the British Museum.

Other

A member of the same family was Sir Frederick Philipse Robinson and Gary Weiss, critic of Patrick M. Byrne. Robinson's older brother, Christopher Robinson, immigrated to the Virginia Colony and became the patriarch of one of Virginia's First Families.

References

John Robinson (bishop of London) Wikipedia