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William King (bishop)

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Church
  
Church of Ireland

Name
  
William King

Predecessor
  
Narcissus Marsh

Successor
  
John Hoadly


In office
  
1703 — 1729

See
  
Archdiocese of Dublin

Role
  
Author

Ordination
  
1679

William King (bishop)

Died
  
May 1729, Dublin, Republic of Ireland

Books
  
An essay on the origin of evil, The Origin of Evil

Education
  
Trinity College, Dublin

Previous post
  
Bishop of Derry Bishop

William King, D.D. (1650–1729) was an Anglican divine in the Church of Ireland, who was Archbishop of Dublin from 1703 to 1729. He was an author and supported the Glorious Revolution. He had considerable political influence in Ireland, including for a time what amounted to a veto on judicial appointments.

Contents

Early life

King was born in May 1650 in County Antrim and was educated at The Royal School, Dungannon, County Tyrone, and thereafter at Trinity College, Dublin, graduating BA on 23 February 1670 and MA in 1673.

Career

On 25 October 1671, King was ordained a deacon as chaplain to John Parker, archbishop of Tuam, and on 14 July 1673 Parker gave him the prebend of Kilmainmore, County Mayo. King, who lived as part of Parker's household, was ordained a priest on 12 April 1674.

His support of the Glorious Revolution in 1688 served to advance his position. He became Bishop of Derry in 1691. He was advanced to the position of Archbishop of Dublin in 1703, a post he would hold until his death. He gave £1,000 for the founding of "Archbishop King's Professorship of Divinity" at Trinity College in 1718. Much of his correspondence survives and provides a historic resource for the study of the Ireland of his time. He died in May 1729.

King's years as a bishop were marked by reform and the building of churches and glebe houses, and by the dispensing of charity. His political influence was considerable: he was always consulted on judicial appointments and at times seems to have had an effective veto over candidates he considered unsuitable. His influence later declined after the appointment of Hugh Boulter as Archbishop of Armagh. He was a vocal opponent of Wood's halfpence during the 1720s.

Works

As a man of letters he wrote The State of the Protestants in Ireland under King James's Government in 1691 and De Origine Mali in 1702, translated into English with extensive notes by Edmund Law in 1731 as An Essay on the Origin of Evil; it was also subject to a well-known critical discussion by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, published as an appendix to Leibniz's Théodicée.

References

William King (bishop) Wikipedia