The Dean of Windsor is the spiritual head of the Canons of St George's Chapel at Windsor Castle, England. The Dean chairs meetings of the Chapter of Canons as primus inter pares. The post of dean of Wolverhampton was assimilated to the deanery of Windsor, around 1480.[1]
Contents
1List of deans
1.1Late medieval
1.2Early modern
1.3Late modern
2See also
3References
4Sources
List of deans
Late medieval
1348 William Mugge
1380 Walter Almaly
1403 Thomas Butler
1412 Richard Kingston
1417 John Arundel
1452 Thomas Manning
1462 John Faux
1470 William Morland
1473 William Dudley
1476 Peter Courtenay
1478 Richard Beauchamp
1481 Thomas Danett
1483 William Bealey
1484 John Morgan
1495 Christopher Urswick (also Archdeacon of Wilts, Archdeacon of Richmond until 1500, Archdeacon of Norfolk from 1500, Rector of Hackney from 1502 and Archdeacon of Oxford from 1504)
Early modern
1505 Christopher Bainbridge
1507 Thomas Hobbs
1510 Nicholas West
1515 John Vesey
1519 John Clerk
1523 Richard Sampson
1536 William Franklyn
1553 Owen Oglethorpe
1556 Hugh Weston
1557 John Boxall (deprived)
1559 George Carew
1572 William Day
1595 Robert Bennet
1602 Giles Thomson
1612 Anthony Maxey
1618 Marco Antonio de Dominis
1622 Henry Beaumont
1628 Matthew Wren
1635 Christopher Wren
1658 Edward Hyde
1660 Bruno Ryves
1677 John Durell
1683 Francis Turner
1684 Gregory Hascard
1708 Thomas Manningham
1709 John Robinson
1713 The Lord Willoughby de Broke
1729 Peniston Booth
1765 The Hon Frederick Keppel
1778 The Hon John Harley
1788 John Douglas
1791 The Hon James Cornwallis
1794 Charles Manners-Sutton
Late modern
1805-1816 Edward Legge
1816-1846 Henry Hobart
1846-1854 George Neville-Grenville
1854-1882 Gerald Wellesley
1882-1884 George Connor
1884-1891 Randall Davidson
1891-1917 Philip Eliot
1917–1944 Albert Baillie
1944–1962 Eric Hamilton
1962–1971 Robin Woods
1971–1976 Launcelot Fleming
1976–1989 Michael Mann
1989–1997 Patrick Mitchell
1998–present David Conner
See also
Anglicanism portal
Dean and Canons of Windsor
References
^Victoria County History - Staffordshire; Vol. 3, no. 44: M. W. Greenslade, R. B. Pugh (editors), (1970): Victoria County History: A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 3, no. 44, Colleges: Wolverhampton, St Peter.
Sources
Fasti Wyndesorienses: The deans and canons of Windsor. Historical monographs relating to St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle Volume 8. Sidney Leslie Ollard (1950)
British History Online – A History of the County of Berkshire: Volume 2 – Deans of Windsor
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Deans in the Church of England
Province of Canterbury
Birmingham
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Canterbury
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Christ Church (Oxford)
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York
Royal Deans
Dean of the Chapel Royal
Westminster
Windsor
v
t
e
Deans of Windsor
Late Medieval
William Mugge
Walter Almaly
Thomas Butler
Richard Kingston
John Arundel
Thomas Manning
John Faux
William Morland
William Dudley
Peter Courtenay
Richard Beauchamp
Thomas Danett
William Bealey
John Morgan
Christopher Urswick
Early modern
Christopher Bainbridge
Thomas Hobbs
Nicholas West
John Vesey
John Clerk
Richard Sampson
William Franklyn
Owen Oglethorpe
Hugh Weston
John Boxall
George Carew
William Day
Robert Bennet
Giles Thomson
Anthony Maxey
Marco Antonio de Dominis
Henry Beaumont
Matthew Wren
Christopher Wren
Edward Hyde
Bruno Ryves
John Durell
Francis Turner
Gregory Hascard
Thomas Manningham
John Robinson
The Lord Willoughby de Broke
Peniston Booth
Frederick Keppel
John Harley
John Douglas
James Cornwallis
Charles Manners-Sutton
Late modern
Edward Legge
Henry Hobart
George Neville-Grenville
Gerald Wellesley
George Connor
Randall Davidson
Philip Eliot
Albert Baillie
Eric Hamilton
Robin Woods
Launcelot Fleming
Michael Mann
Patrick Mitchell
David Conner
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Subprefecture and commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France Bressuire Subprefecture and commune Chateau de Bressuire and the Eglise Notre-Dame Coat of arms Location of Bressuire Bressuire Show map of France Bressuire Show map of Nouvelle-Aquitaine Coordinates: 46°50′27″N 0°29′14″W / 46.8408°N 0.4872°W / 46.8408; -0.4872 Coordinates: 46°50′27″N 0°29′14″W / 46.8408°N 0.4872°W / 46.8408; -0.4872 Country France Region Nouvelle-Aquitaine Department Deux-Sèvres Arrondissement Bressuire Canton Bressuire Government • Mayor .mw-parser-output .nobold{font-weight:normal} (2014–20) Jean Michel Bernier Area 1 180.59 km 2 (69.73 sq mi) Population (2014) 2 19,300 • Density 110/km 2 (280/sq mi) Time zone UTC+01:00 (CET) • Summer (DST) UTC+02:00 (CEST) INSEE/Postal code 79049 /79300 Elevation 98–236 m (322–774 ft) (avg. 173 m or 568 ft) 1 French Land Register data, which exclude...
Vorschmack Ukrainian Jewish-style vorschmack served on rye bread Course Hors d'oeuvre Region or state Eastern Europe Associated national cuisine Ashkenazi Jewish, Finnish, German, Ukrainian, Polish, Russian Main ingredients Ground meat and/or fish Cookbook: Vorschmack Media: Vorschmack Vorschmack or forshmak (Yiddish: פֿאָרשמאַק , from archaic German Vorschmack , "foretaste" [1] or "appetizer" [2] ) is an originally East European dish made of salty minced fish or meat. Different variants of this dish are especially common in Ashkenazi Jewish and Finnish cuisine. Some varieties are also known in Russian and Polish cuisine. Contents 1 In Jewish cuisine 2 In Russian cuisine 3 In Polish cuisine 4 In Finnish cuisine 5 See also 6 References In Jewish cuisine According to Gil Marks, the German name points to the possible Germanic origin of this dish. [1] William Pokhlyobkin descr...
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