Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

William Barlow (bishop of Lincoln)

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Church
  
Church of England

Denomination
  
Anglican

Successor
  
Richard Neile

Elected
  
1608

Name
  
William Barlow

Predecessor
  
William Chaderton

Term ended
  
1613

Role
  
Bishop of Lincoln

Diocese
  
Diocese of Lincoln

Buried
  
Buckden Palace

Died
  
1613


Other posts
  
Bishop of Rochester 1605–1608 Dean of Chester

Education
  
Trinity College, Cambridge

Place of burial
  
Buckden Towers, Buckden, United Kingdom

Books
  
The Summe and Substance of the Conference: Which it Pleased His Excellent Majestie to Have with the Lords, Bishops, and Other of His Clergie at Hampton Court, January 14, 1603 (1604)

William Barlow (died 1613) was an Anglican priest and courtier during the reign of James I of England. He served as Bishop of Rochester in 1605 and Bishop of Lincoln in the Anglican Church from 1608 until his death. He had also served the church as Rector of St Dunstan's, Stepney in Middlesex and of Orpington, in Kent. He was also Dean of Chester Cathedral, and secured prebends in Chiswick and Westminster.

As a trusted member of the court, he was appointed to the directorship of the "Second Westminster Company" charged by James with translating the New Testament epistles for the King James Version of the Bible. He participated in the early planning for the translation, and had supported the scholarship of linguist Edward Lively, among other contributions to the project. Barlow's scholarly career had begun at St John's College, Cambridge, where he had graduated in 1584, earned a Master of Arts in 1587, and was admitted as a Fellow in 1590. His publications showed his talents both for scholarship and preferment.

Barlow was buried at St. Mary's Parish Church Buckden

References

William Barlow (bishop of Lincoln) Wikipedia