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"clergyman" Definitions
  1. a male priest, minister or religious leader, especially in the Christian Church

1000 Sentences With "clergyman"

How to use clergyman in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "clergyman" and check conjugation/comparative form for "clergyman". Mastering all the usages of "clergyman" from sentence examples published by news publications.

That, I won't discuss without the help of a clergyman.
His father was an Anglican clergyman; his mother an engineer.
He encouraged the faithful to maintain their trust in the clergyman.
At times, he seemed to fill the role of national clergyman.
Timothy Cole, the church's top-ranking clergyman, tested positive on Saturday.
His journey from farm boy to clergyman was an unlikely one.
I was refused admission to the pre-service meeting with the clergyman.
" RFK Jr. added that a clergyman had fittingly called her a "wounded healer.
Hassan Rouhani, a clergyman and the incumbent, is the predictable, if plodding, front-runner.
I have a Latin lexicon from the seventeenth century, once owned by a clergyman.
The clergyman says that, as a rule, the church has always supported the state.
Due to his father's calling as a clergyman, he had a somewhat peripatetic childhood.
His father is a clergyman at Mar Thoma Syrian Church, a Christian church, there.
Pell becomes the most senior Catholic clergyman worldwide to be convicted for child sex offences.
Her father was a clergyman turned politician who became mayor of New Plymouth in New Zealand.
Not surprisingly, these "greasy compliments," as one clergyman described them, didn't go over well with everyone.
White is accused of head-butting the clergyman and one of the women, the prosecutor said.
It was an extraordinary request for a Catholic clergyman to make, as churches often remain a refuge.
Nope — in this case it's an EAR; "a wager" is a BET, and "clergyman" is a REV.
As their doomed passion unfolds between Paris and St. Petersburg, threats abound, including from Brodie's clergyman father.
"He is not merely a random clergyman pulled in off the street for executions," the office wrote.
The clergyman, also unidentified, told the man to go to authorities and accompanied him to the police station.
As the sisters entered their late teens, they faced painfully limited prospects as daughters of a humble clergyman.
Pierbattista Pizzaballa, the apostolic administrator of the Latin Patriarchate, is the temporary chief clergyman to the local Catholic population.
Hostility towards church-building means that growing Christian congregations are meeting in warehouses and empty shops, says a clergyman.
Jackson, a longtime civil rights leader and clergyman, launched campaigns for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1983 and 1987.
A counselor to presidents, Mr. Graham at times filled the role of national clergyman, offering prayers after the Sept.
The curator, Karolina Ziębinska-Lewandowska, made a point of including Dulac's surrealist film, The Seashell and The Clergyman (1928).
On her second trip, she travelled with the clergyman Greville John Chester, who helped her make some of her acquisitions.
The design-selection committee was headed by Bishop Tikhon, a clergyman believed to be Mr Putin's dukhovnik, or spiritual adviser.
The clergyman fled Rwanda to neighboring Uganda in 20003 after authorities closed his churches, Nyirigira's son, Tony Ndasingwa told CNN.
According to Koval, the man wanted to turn himself into police after he opened up to a clergyman about the incident.
Google also rejected the request of a former U.K. clergyman who had been accused of sexual abuse under his professional capacity.
The World Heritage Site is also the seat of the Archbishop of Canterbury, the senior clergyman in the Church of England.
Scalise talked to the clergyman at a reception last week with the pastors affected that was attended by Vice President Pence.
A native of Newark, New Jersey, he had been trained as a cantor — the clergyman charged with leading Jewish congregations in song.
Charles Boynton, a clergyman who also served as the chaplain for the U.S. House of Representatives, was selected as the first president.
The Catholic clergyman who agreed to be an officiant wanted to marry them in a church, but that made Dr. Preminger uncomfortable.
His "Body and Soul" (1925) gave Paul Robeson his first screen roles, as a corrupt and exploitative clergyman and his virtuous twin.
However, O'Malley surmised that today, such a title or honor would not be accorded to a clergyman accused of the same misdeeds.
In 1981, the New York-born clergyman was made the bishop of the newly created diocese of Metuchen in central New Jersey.
These include a dull clergyman (Josh O'Connor) and an enigmatic interloper (Callum Turner), both of whom Emma tries to steer toward Harriet.
A memorial spoon by the silversmith Cornelius Vander Burch is delicately engraved in memory of Nicholas van Rensselaer, a prominent Dutch Reformed clergyman.
That remained true until the 323s, when a young and charismatic Muslim clergyman, Fethullah Gülen, began attracting disciples at a mosque in Izmir.
Following tradition, the Sangha council—in effect, Thai Buddhism's governing body—announced that the next-most-senior clergyman, Somdet Chuang, should succeed him.
The daughter of a clergyman, Ms. May was regarded as a modernizer in the Conservative Party before taking over at the Home Office.
He also won for the movie's cinematography, and Wendell Pierce, who stars as the troubled clergyman, won best actor in an American feature.
Dr. Marc Gabel, a former president of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario and a Clergy Support Memorial Church clergyman, officiated.
The first, rudimentary knitting machine, known as a "stocking frame," was invented in the late sixteenth century by a clergyman named William Lee.
The clergyman also gave suspicious––almost baiting––answers on a lie detector test that spanned questions about both Guerra's assault and Garza's murder.
Or, we can all just go by the "wisdom" that clergyman Richard Carpenter doled out in his 1657 sermon: "Astrology proved harmless, useful, pious."
In June, Cardinal Theodore McCarrick became the highest-ranking clergyman ever removed from the Catholic ministry in the US over child sex abuse allegations.
It's hardly news for a clergyman to condemn slander, which has been a sin since at least the biblical injunction against bearing false witness.
A clergyman took to the microphone, causing Pelosi to pause the tongue-lashing as she bowed her head and clasped her hands in prayer.
Reminder: The cardinal was convicted of abuse in December, making him the highest-ranking Catholic clergyman to be found guilty of sexually abusing minors.
After the clergyman said a few final words, the mourners stayed in place for a long moment, silent and not quite ready to leave.
Then he met William Metcalfe, an English clergyman who'd recently established America's first vegetarian church, preaching that meat was the cause of mankind's spiritual downfall.
The American clergyman who preached about the power of love at the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle has undergone surgery for prostate cancer.
The plots have a way of moving and the man being interred was widely hated and the clergyman extolling his virtues hasn't got a clue.
"I had presumed they would recognize that it was a bad mistake to shoot a robed clergyman at the church gates," the priest, the Rev.
Alfiero Toppetti, 76, dressed as a cardinal, leaned against the railing and stared at the tents as a counterfeit clergyman droned on at his side.
But during the early-1990s, as a young father, one of my children was baptized by a local clergyman, who had become a family friend.
Baker notes that the clergyman likely found this manuscript in Egypt, although it was probably originally produced in the Hijaz region in present-day Saudi Arabia.
The lay friar said a clergyman told him a time would come when Penchi "would be the only voice heard on the radio" in Puerto Rico.
Charlotte, bowing to the prejudices of the day, often presented herself as a kind of country mouse, nothing more than the daughter of a humble clergyman.
Bishop Alvin A. Childs of the Faith Temple Church of God in Christ (later renamed in his honor) was the clergyman who finally opened his doors.
"I have no intentions of taking that back," the gray-headed clergyman said, stressing that his forgiveness had been more for himself than for Mr. Roof.
It has been challenged, but rebuffed, in American courtrooms, where all states and the District of Columbia protect most communications between a clergyman and a churchgoer.
Williams is also credited as the first person to use the phrase "wall of separation," in a 1644 response to the theocratic Puritan clergyman John Cotton.
The biggest break in modern beekeeping came in the mid-93th century with the invention of a portable hive by Lorenzo Langstroth, a clergyman and apiarist.
In this clue, "Listener made a wager with a clergyman about some bones," you'd be forgiven for expecting an auditory pun, tipped off by "Listener," right?
It turned out that this clergyman I trusted had set up a camera inside a clock radio that taped me and other women as we undressed.
INTERNATIONAL A photo caption with an article on Wednesday about local elections in Britain misstated the borough represented by Steven Saxby, a clergyman running for Parliament.
The couple is essentially entrusting you — over a clergyman or a legal official — to administer the all-important part of their ceremony that makes their union official.
Appearing in maroon slacks at the High Court, the clergyman pleaded not guilty to two charges of subverting the government and two charges of inciting public violence.
NEW YORK – The American clergyman who preached about the power of love at the wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle has undergone surgery for prostate cancer.
Cardinal Pell, 78, began serving a six-year prison sentence a year ago, becoming the highest ranking Catholic clergyman worldwide to be jailed for child sex offences.
The seeds of the rebellion were planted a year ago in a conversation between a Cuban doctor and a clergyman in a remote village in northeastern Brazil.
Mr. Saxby is a clergyman in east London who signs his emails with the word "peace" and who says he is a committed supporter of Mr. Corbyn.
A garish, fairy-lit Buddha shrine shines like a carnival and, above the hubbub, a clergyman chants like an auctioneer as the faithful pour forward with cash offerings.
Created in 1946 by a British clergyman, Thomas has charmed generations of boys and girls — especially boys — by teaching gentle life lessons on the fictional island of Sodor.
On this day in 1638, John Harvard, a 31-year-old clergyman from Charlestown, Massachusetts, died, leaving his library and half of his estate to a local college.
Cardinal Barbarin, a conservative, was appointed to his post in the Lyon Diocese in 2002, and for years he cultivated the image of an energetic and outspoken clergyman.
Edward Wigglesworth ( – 1765) was a clergyman, teacher and theologian in Colonial America. His father was clergyman and author Michael Wigglesworth (1631–1705).
Portrait of a Clergyman — sometimes called Portrait of a 17th Century Clergyman or The Unknown Clergyman — is an oil on canvas portrait painting by Guilliam de Ville (ca. 1614–1672) dated 1639. The identity of the subject, an elderly clergyman, is unknown. It is owned by the Redwood Library and Athenaeum (Identifier: PA.125), Newport, Rhode Island, USA, where it hangs.
Before Carlson scaled the wall, he urged a clergyman to go first, and as he was climbing the wall after the clergyman, he was shot and killed by rebel gun fire.
Bela of Britonia (? - 675 - ?) was a medieval Galician clergyman.
After graduating from Oxford he became an anglican clergyman. While working as a clergyman at Cramlington, White played minor counties cricket for Northumberland between 1909-1913, making eight appearances in the Minor Counties Championship. His career as a clergyman later took him to Killingworth, Bugbrooke, and Chawton. He died at Taunton in January 1965.
György Tarlósi was the first known evangelical clergyman of Tés.
Rev. Benjamin Glennie, pioneer Anglican clergyman in Queensland, particularly on the Darling Downs The Reverend Benjamin Glennie (29 January 1812 – 30 April 1900) was a pioneer Anglican clergyman in the Darling Downs, Queensland, Australia.
John Burdett Wittenoom (24 October 1788 - 23 January 1855) was a colonial clergyman who was the second Anglican clergyman to perform religious services in the Swan River Colony, Australia, soon after its establishment in 1829.
James Brome (died 1719) was an English clergyman and travel writer.
Philip Wynter D.D. (1793–1871) was an English clergyman and academic.
Their children included Samuel Wordsworth Poole, a physician and episcopal clergyman.
Presbyterian clergyman Lyman Beecher proposed another goal: the Christianization of Africa.
His son Melancthon Williams Jacobus Jr. was a clergyman and educator.
Thomas Gumble, D.D. (died 1676) was an English clergyman and biographer.
Nathaniel Torporley (1564-1632) was an English clergyman, mathematician, and astrologer.
He was the grandfather of Norwegian clergyman Christoffer Hjort (1561-1616).
Stephen Nettles (fl. 1595 - 1647) was an English clergyman and controversialist.
Rudesindus I (in office 877-907) was a medieval Galician clergyman.
Keeley was born in Bristol, the son of a local clergyman.
The Reformed clergyman Godfridius Dellius also preached among the Kanienʼkehá꞉ka.
The current clergyman of the church is the Reverend Brett Murphy.
Edward Sparke (died 1692) was an English clergyman and devotional writer.
Henry Felton D.D. (1679–1740) was an English clergyman and academic.
Edward Hamley (1764 (baptised) - 1834) was an English clergyman and poet.
Lionel Gatford (died 1665) was a royalist Church of England clergyman.
Thomas Maude (1801-1865) was an English clergyman, writer and poet.
Thomas Ellis (1625 - April 1673) was a Welsh clergyman and antiquarian.
John Bromley (died 1717) was an English clergyman, Catholic convert, and translator.
John of Küküllő ( 13201393) was a Hungarian clergyman, royal official and historian.
The Reverend George Burton (1717–1791) was an English clergyman and chronologer.
George Dana Boardman the Younger (1828April 28, 1903) was an American clergyman.
Samuel Irenæus Prime (1812–1885) was an American clergyman, traveler, and writer.
Edward Bury (1616–1700), was an English, ejected Presbyterian minister and clergyman.
Wilbur Fisk Tillett (1854–1936) was an American Methodist clergyman and educator.
Charles Pourtales Golightly (1807–1885) was an Anglican clergyman and religious writer.
John Beadle (died 1667), was an English clergyman, known as a diarist.
William Andrew Smith (1802–1870) was an American college president and clergyman.
Sabaricus I (served as bishop 866-877) was a medieval Galician clergyman.
Arthur Willink (1850-1913) was a nineteenth-century British theologian and clergyman.
James Upton (1670–1749) was an English clergyman, schoolmaster, and literary editor.
Ayatollah Bahari is a famous clergyman whose shrine is located in Bahar.
Thomas Wilcox (c. 1549 – 1608) was a British Puritan clergyman and controversialist.
Henry Morton Dexter (1846-1910) was an American clergyman, historian, and editor.
John Mitford (1781–1859) was an English clergyman and man of letters.
John Parkhurst (1728–1797) was an English academic, clergyman and biblical lexicographer.
Henry Mason (1573? - August 1647) was an English clergyman and theological writer.
Anthony Scattergood (or Antony) (1611–1687) was an English clergyman and scholar.
In December, 1899, she married Rev. William J. Nichols, a Unitarian clergyman.
John Nalson (–1686) was an English clergyman, historian and early Tory pamphleteer.
Francis Kett (c. 1547–1589) was an Anglican clergyman burned for heresy.
Richard Parkes (born 1559) was an English clergyman, known as a controversialist.
Lemuel Abbott (ca. 1730 – April 1776) was an English clergyman and poet.
George Fenwicke, B.D. (1690–1760) was an English clergyman and religious writer.
Francis Thackeray (1793–1842) was a Church of England clergyman and author.
William Dansey (1792–1856), was a Church of England clergyman and author.
Simon Birckbek or Birkbeck (1584–1656) was an English clergyman and controversialist.
Charles Maurice Davies (1828–1910) was an Anglican clergyman, writer and spiritualist.
William Clagett (1646–1688) was an English clergyman, known as a controversialist.
Henry Kett (1761–1825) was a versatile English clergyman, academic and writer.
William Goode, the elder (1762–1816) was an English evangelical Anglican clergyman.
It followed the passage I'd denunciated the clergyman because of tax avoidance.
Contributors included Thomas Babington, the clergyman and theological writer Charles Smith Bird (1795–1862), the lay theological writer John Bowdler (1783–1815), the writer on prophecy William Cuninghame of Lainshaw (c. 1775-1849), the clergyman William Dealtry (1775–1847), the clergyman and biblical scholar George Smith Drew (1819–1880), John Shore, 1st Baron Teignmouth, Henry Thornton, Henry Tuke, John Venn (1759–1813), and Daniel Wilson.
Every Master of Selwyn College was a clergyman up until 1983. As a clergyman and Master of Selwyn, Appleton was something of a throwback to the old pattern of Cambridge academic life prior to the "Revolution of the Dons".
William Swan Plumer, American clergyman, author and religious educator. William Swan Plumer (July 26, 1802 – October 22, 1880) was an American clergyman, theologian and author who was recognized as an intellectual leader of the Presbyterian Church in the 1800s.
German Roman Catholic clergyman, Eugen Seiterich Eugen Viktor Paul Seiterich (9 January 1903 in Karlsruhe – 3 March 1958 in Freiburg im Breisgau) was a German Roman Catholic clergyman who served as archbishop of Freiburg from 1954 until his death.
Charles John Fynes Clinton (1799–1872) was an English clergyman and classical scholar.
Robert Andrews (1748–1804) was a Colonial/American clergyman, professor and Virginia politician.
Granville Wheler (August 1701 – 12 May 1770) was an English clergyman and scientist.
William Clubbe (or Clubb) (1745–1814) was an English clergyman and poetical writer.
Edward Garrard Marsh (1783–1862)genealogy was an English poet and Anglican clergyman.
Theophilus Evans (February 1693 – 11 September 1767) was a Welsh clergyman and historian.
The Clergyman () is a 1914 Swedish silent drama film directed by Victor Sjöström.
His daughter Sarah Christiana married Church of England clergyman Thomas Finch Hobday Bridge.
Alimjan Yimit, (also written as Alimujiang Yimiti) is an Uyghur house church clergyman.
James Isaac Good (1850 – 1924) was an American Reformed church clergyman and historian.
Charles Croke (died 1657) was an English clergyman and Gresham Professor of Rhetoric.
Nikolaus von Dinkelsbühl was an Austrian Roman Catholic clergyman, pulpit orator and theologian.
William Sergrove (1746 – 1796) was a Clergyman and Master of Pembroke College, Oxford.
Colwell Brickenden (1663 - 1714) was a Clergyman and Master of Pembroke College, Oxford.
John Flavel (c.1627–1691) was an English Presbyterian clergyman, puritan, and author.
Matthew Panting (1682–1738) was a clergyman and Master of Pembroke College, Oxford.
Charles Mayo (1767–1858) was an English clergyman and professor of Anglo- Saxon.
Thomas Newton (c. 1542-1607) was an English clergyman, poet, author and translator.
George Dacre Blacker (1791–1871) was a Church of Ireland clergyman and antiquary.
Robert Acklom Ingram (1763–1809) was an English mathematician, clergyman and political economist.
Robert Freind (1667–1751) was an English clergyman and headmaster of Westminster School.
Mark Noble (1754–1827) was an English clergyman, biographer and antiquary. Robert Hancock.
The clergyman and scholar Sydney Thelwall was a son of Algernon Sydney Thelwall.
Daniel Alfred Poling (November 30, 1884 - February 7, 1968) was an American clergyman.
Archer Thompson Gurney (1820–1887) was a Church of England clergyman and hymnodist.
Charles-Joseph Voisin (1802–1872) was a Belgian Catholic clergyman and art historian.
Lewis Atterbury D.D., the elder (died 1693) was an English clergyman and writer.
Thomas Brett (1667–1743) was an English nonjuring clergyman known as an author.
Through much of his career he would have been considered an Ethiopian clergyman.
Henry Soames (1785 – 21 October 1860) was an English clergyman and ecclesiastical historian.
Thomas Hutchinson (bap. 1698, d. 1769) was an English clergyman and classical scholar.
Andreas Creusen by Lucas Faydherbe. Andreas Creusen (1591–1666) was a Dutch Catholic clergyman.
John Clayton (1709–1773) was an English clergyman, an early Methodist, and Jacobite supporter.
John Bryan, D.D. (died 1676), was an English clergyman, an ejected minister of 1662.
Brent Hawkes, (born June 2, 1950) is a Canadian clergyman and gay rights activist.
Nathaniel Clark Burt (April 23, 1825 – March 4, 1874) was an American Presbyterian clergyman.
John Blair FRS, FSA (died 24 June 1782), was a British clergyman, and chronologist.
James Hervey (26 February 1714 – 25 December 1758) was an English clergyman and writer.
Michael Hobart Seymour (1800–1874) was an Anglo-Irish Protestant clergyman and religious controversialist.
Oliver Pigg (also Pig, Pygg and Pygge) (fl. 1580) was an English Puritan clergyman.
He is remembered as a loyalist clergyman and father of freemasonry in New Brunswick.
John Russell D.D. (1787–1863) was an English clergyman and headmaster of Charterhouse School.
Thomas John Hussey (4 April 1792 – c. 1866) was an English clergyman and astronomer.
Arthur Tozer Russell (1806–1874) was an English clergyman known as a hymn- writer.
Odoarius (bishop 750–780) was a medieval Galician clergyman. His real existence was debated.
James Guinness Rogers (29 December 1822 - 20 August 1911), was a British Nonconformist clergyman.
Constantine Jessop (1601 or 1602 - 16 April 1658) was a 17th-century Anglican clergyman.
Ezra Ripley (1 May 1751 – 21 September 1841) was a clergyman of Concord, Massachusetts.
Daniel Guildford Wait (1789–1850) was an English clergyman, Hebrew scholar and religious writer.
Valeriu Ghileţchi (born July 8, 1960, Pînzăreni) is a Moldovan Baptist clergyman and politician.
Zhang Mingxuan is a Chinese clergyman and president of the Chinese House Church Alliance.
Chauncey Colton (August 30, 1800 –April 15, 1876) was an educator, author and clergyman.
James Gerard (c.1740 – 1789) was a Clergyman and Warden of Wadham College, Oxford.
Robert Dampier self-portrait Robert Dampier (1799–1874) was a British artist and clergyman.
John Jackson (1686–1763) was an English clergyman, known as a controversial theological writer.
John Abbot (1587/1588 – c. 1650) was an English Roman Catholic clergyman and poet.
Thomas Paske (died 1662) was an English clergyman and academic, deprived as a royalist.
William Lowth D.D. (1660–1732) was an English clergyman, known as a Biblical commentator.
George Croft (1747–1809) was an English clergyman, one of the early Bampton Lecturers.
Robert Isaac Wilberforce (19 December 18023 February 1857) was an English clergyman and writer.
He was the son of Richard Arnald (d. 1756) English clergyman and biblical scholar.
William Hawkins (1722–1801) was an English clergyman, known as a poet and dramatist.
George Simpson Duncan (1884-1965) was a 20th-century Scottish clergyman and Christian scholar.
Paul Mwazha is a Zimbabwean clergyman known as MutumwaShona for "Messenger" by his followers.
John Kelly LL.D. (1750 – 12 November 1809) was a Manx scholar, translator and clergyman.
Robert Fellowes, LL.D. (1771 – 6 February 1847) was an English clergyman, journalist and philanthropist.
Frederick Starr (January 23, 1826 - January 8, 1867) was an American clergyman and abolitionist.
Charles White Huntington (May 22, 1854 – May 23, 1942) was a notable Congregational clergyman.
William John Brock (c.1817–1863) was an English clergyman, religious writer, and poet.
John Ellis (1598/9 - December 1665) was a Welsh Anglican clergyman and religious writer.
Peder Christian Hersleb Kjerschow (29 June 1786 – 24 November 1866) was a Norwegian clergyman.
William Sowerby (1799–1875) was an English clergyman who served in Cumberland before moving to New South Wales, Australia. He was the first Anglican clergyman at Goulburn and took a keen interest in the education, health and social welfare of the local population.
She died at Chester Terrace, Regent's Park, on 5 July 1870. His siblings were the clergyman and local historian Frederick Charles Cass, clergyman Charles William Cass, and Martha Adelina Cass (died Little Grove, 1831). Cass was educated at Trinity College, University of Cambridge.
Jöns Svanberg (1771–1851) was a Swedish clergyman and natural scientist. Jöns Svanberg 1771-1851.
William Richards (1643–1705) was an English clergyman and author. John Smith after Godfrey Kneller.
Samuel William King (20 September 1821 – 8 July 1868) was an English clergyman and geologist.
In Spain, another clergyman member of this family was cardinal Gaspar Dávalos de la Cueva.
James Graves (1815 - 1886) was an Irish clergyman, antiquary and archaeologist of the Victorian era.
Godfrey Thring (25 March 1823 – 13 September 1903), was an Anglican clergyman and hymn writer.
John Hampden Gurney (15 August 1802 – 8 March 1862) was an Anglican clergyman and hymnist.
Thomas Nowell (1730? – 23 September 1801) was a Welsh-born clergyman, historian and religious controversialist.
Amory Dwight Mayo (31 January 1823 - 8 April 1907) was a Unitarian clergyman and educator.
Rev. Thomas Morong (April 15, 1827 – April 26, 1894) was an American botanist and clergyman.
Peder Hersleb (25 March 1689 - 4 April 1757) was a Norwegian-Danish clergyman and Bishop.
Henry Parry Henry Parry (c.1766 - 17 December 1854) was a Welsh clergyman and antiquarian.
Thomas Holyoake (1616? – 10 June 1675) was an English royalist soldier, physician, clergyman and lexicographer.
William Scoresby (5 October 178921 March 1857), was an English Arctic explorer, scientist and clergyman.
Cadwallader Owen (c. 1562 - 1617) was a Welsh Church of England clergyman, debater and writer.
John Waugh John Waugh (1656–1734) was an English clergyman, bishop of Carlisle from 1723.
Johannes Rudolph Lauritzen (February 21, 1845 – September 26, 1923) was a German-American Lutheran clergyman.
Andrew Burnaby (16 August 1732 – 9 March 1812) was an English clergyman and travel writer.
Thomas Parker (1595–1677) was an English nonconforming clergyman and a founder of Newbury, Massachusetts.
George Whitaker (9 October 1811 – 27 August 1882) was an English-Canadian clergyman and educator.
William Adams (January 25, 1807 – August 31, 1880) was a noted American clergyman and academic.
Roswell Dwight Hitchcock (August 15, 1817 - June 16, 1887) was a United States Congregationalist clergyman.
Johannes Czerski (1813–1893) was a German clergyman, one of the founders of German Catholicism.
John Smyth or Smith (1744 – 1809) was a clergyman and Master of Pembroke College, Oxford.
John Clarke (1732 - 1781) was the Provost of Oriel College, Oxford and an Anglican clergyman.
Stephen Weston (1747 – 8 January 1830) was an English antiquarian, clergyman and man of letters.
John Ellis (1606?–1681) was an English clergyman, known as the author of Vindiciæ Catholicæ.
John Russell) Henry Peckwell (1747–1787) was a Church of England clergyman of Methodist views.
Osborne Gordon (1813-1883) was an influential Oxford college tutor and Church of England Clergyman.
John Davison (1777–1834) was an English clergyman and academic, known as a theological writer.
Thomas Mears Eddy (September 7, 1823 – October 7, 1874) was an American clergyman and author.
Mervyn Archdall (1723 - 1791) was an Irish antiquary and clergyman of the Church of Ireland.
Lambert van der Burch (1542–1617) was a clergyman and historian from the Habsburg Netherlands.
John Seally (1741 or 1742-1795) was an English writer, in later life a clergyman.
He later became a clergyman, and was vicar of Wakes Colne from 1846 to 1865.
John Field (1545–1588), also called John Fielde, was a British Puritan clergyman and controversialist.
John Moultrie (1799–1874) was an English clergyman, known as a poet and hymn- writer.
George Harbin (c.1665-1744) was an English clergyman, a nonjuror and significant political writer.
The clergyman Ulrich von Höfingen is believed to have been an illegitimate son of Eberhard's.
George Hendric Houghton (February 1, 1820 - November 17, 1897) was an American Protestant Episcopal clergyman.
John Bacchus Dykes (10 March 1823 - 22 January 1876) was an English clergyman and hymnwriter.
William Bawdwen (1762–1816) was a Church of England clergyman, school teacher and English antiquary.
Joseph Finch Fenn (1820 in Travancore – 1884) was an English clergyman, honorary canon of Gloucester.
Reverend Nehemiah Adams (February 19, 1806 – October 6, 1878) was an American clergyman and writer.
George MacKinnon Wrong (June 25, 1860 - June 29, 1948) was a Canadian clergyman and historian.
Robert Burhill or Burghill (1572–1641) was an English clergyman, known as a prolific controversialist.
Portrait of John Timothy Stone John Timothy Stone (1868–1954) was an American Presbyterian clergyman.
John Brand (died 1808) was an English clergyman and writer on politics and political economy.
Aulay Macaulay (1758– 1819) was a Scottish writer and clergyman of the Church of England.
George Frederick Nott (1767–1841) was an English author and a Church of England clergyman.
Joseph Patrick Dougherty (January 11, 1905 - July 9, 1970) was an American Roman Catholic clergyman.
Rev. Albert Rivett (17 May 1855 – 18 November 1934) was an Australian clergyman and pacifist.
Richard Lucas (1648/1649 - 29 June 1715) was a Welsh clergyman and writer of devotional works.
William Scott (1813–1872) was an English clergyman, a leading High Church figure of his time.
William Erbery or ErburyAlso Earbury. (1604 - April 1654) was a Welsh clergyman and radical Independent theologian.
John Rowe (1626–1677) was an English clergyman, minister to an important Congregationalist church in London.
Edward Corbet ( – 5 January 1658) was an English clergyman, and a member of the Westminster Assembly.
Preston Bruce Austin (9 December 1827 - 7 July 1908) was a Welsh clergyman, barrister and cricketer.
Edward Daniel Clarke (5 June 17699 March 1822) was an English clergyman, naturalist, mineralogist, and traveller.
The Reverend Charles Tooth was an Anglican clergyman and founder of St Mark's English Church, Florence.
Thomas Rogers (died 1616) was an English Anglican clergyman, known as a theologian, controversialist and translator.
Peter Fontaine (1691–1757) was a clergyman at Westover Church, Westover Parish, Charles City County, Virginia.
Thomas Gaskin (1810–1887) was an English clergyman and academic, now known for contributions to mathematics.
Samuel Macauley Jackson (June 19, 1851 - August 2, 1912) was an American clergyman, editor and author.
Rev. Charles Franklin Thwing (November 9, 1853 - August 29, 1937) was an American clergyman and educator.
Ezekiel Rogers (1590 - January 23, 1660) was an English nonconformist clergyman, and Puritan settler of Massachusetts.
Alexander Hyde (1598–1667) was an English royalist clergyman, Bishop of Salisbury from 1665 to 1667.
Thomas Mangey (1688–1755) was an English clergyman and scholar, known for his edition of Philo.
Mackenzie Edward Charles Walcott (1821–1880) was an English clergyman, known as an ecclesiologist and antiquarian.
Robert Traill Spence Lowell (October 8, 1816 – September 12, 1891) was an Episcopal clergyman and educator.
John Stockwood (died 1610) was an English clergyman, preacher, translator of Protestant texts and school-master.
Nathan Christ Schaeffer (February 3, 1849 – March 15, 1919) was a United States clergyman and educator.
Michael Geddes LL.D. (1650?–1713) was a Scottish clergyman of the Church of England and historian.
Edward Lyon Berthon FRAS (20 February 1813 London27 October 1899) was an English inventor and clergyman.
Samuel Hart Samuel Hart (1845 – March 1917) was an American Episcopal clergyman, classicist, and liturgical scholar.
Robert Nares (9 June 1753, York - 23 March 1829) was an English clergyman, philologist and author.
Percival Stacy Waddy (8 January 1875 - 8 February 1937) was an Australian schoolmaster, clergyman and cricketer.
Francis Edward Clark Francis Edward Clark (12 September 1851 – 26 May 1927) was an American clergyman.
John Brinsley the Younger (1600–1665) was an English nonconforming clergyman, an ejected minister in 1662.
Walter Tenniel Evans (17 May 1926 – 10 June 2009) was a British actor and, latterly, clergyman.
John Tombes (c.1603? – 22 May 1676) was an English clergyman of Presbyterian and Baptist views.
William Prichard (c. 1563 - 1629) was a Welsh clergyman and academic at the University of Oxford.
Thomas Prichard (born c. 1591) was a Welsh clergyman and academic at the University of Oxford.
Leighton Coleman (May 3, 1837 - December 14, 1907) was an American clergyman of the Episcopal Church.
John Loder (c. 1726 – 1805) was a clergyman, landowner and founder of the Old Berkshire Hunt.
Thomas Wise D.D. (1670/71-1726) was an eighteenth-century clergyman of the Church of England.
200px Jonathan Cape FRS (1793–9 September 1868) was a mathematician and Church of England clergyman.
William Herbert Perry Faunce (January 15, 1859 – January 31, 1930) was an American clergyman and educator.
John Punnett Peters (December 16, 1852 – November 10, 1921) was an American Episcopal clergyman and Orientalist.
Owen Manning (1721–1801) was an English clergyman and antiquarian, known as a historian of Surrey.
David Jenner (died 10 September 1691) was an English clergyman and controversialist, who published numerous books.
Reverend Laurence George Bomford (6 August 1847 – 2 July 1926) was an English painter and clergyman.
John Lewis John Lewis (29 August 1675 – 16 January 1747) was an English clergyman and antiquary.
Jeremiah Whitaker (1599–1654) was an English Puritan clergyman, and important member of the Westminster Assembly.
David Ellis (31 August 1736 - 1795) was a Welsh Anglican clergyman, poet and transcriber of manuscripts.
Robert Wilmot (c. 1550 – by 1608) was a Church of England clergyman, known as a playwright.
Sydney Thelwall (born 18 December 1834 — 28 August 1922) was an English clergyman and Christian scholar.
Reynold Gideon Bouyer (24 December 1741 – 3 January 1826) was an English clergyman, archdeacon of Northumberland.
Arthur Philip Perceval (1799–1853) was an English High Church clergyman, royal chaplain and theological writer.
Hans Daniel Johan Wallengren (8 June 1823 – 25 October 1894) was a Swedish clergyman and entomologist.
Charles Henry Hamilton Wright (9 March 1836, Dublin – 22 March 1909) was an Irish Anglican clergyman.
Paul Giustiniani (1476-1528) was a Roman Catholic clergyman who reformed the Camaldolese order of monks.
Israel Oludotun Ransome-Kuti (April 30, 1891 - April 6, 1955) was a Nigerian clergyman and educationist.
Richard Alvey (died 1584) was an English clergyman, known as the master of the Temple Church.
David Brown (Cherokee: A-wish) (c.1806 – September 14, 1829) was a Cherokee clergyman and translator.
Chester Smith Lyman (January 13, 1814 – January 29, 1890) was an American teacher, clergyman and astronomer.
John Burton, D.D. (1696–1771) was an English clergyman and academic, a theological and classical scholar.
Matthew Wren (3 December 1585 - 24 April 1667) was an influential English clergyman, bishop and scholar.
Theophilus Brabourne (1590–1662) was an English Puritan clergyman and theological writer on the Christian Sabbath.
Claude Hermann Walter Johns (20 February 1857 – 1920) was an Assyriologist and Church of England clergyman.
The Very Rev. Joseph Williams Blakesley (6 March 1808 – 18 April 1885) was an English clergyman.
William Walter Merry William Walter Merry (1835–1918) was an English classical scholar, clergyman, and educator.
I am surprised, on reflection, that this venerable clergyman should have been unvexed by Episcopal censures.
Mann was born on December 2, 1860 in Geneva, New York, the son of the Reverend Duncan Cameron Mann and Caroline Brother Schuyler. His brother was Bishop Cameron D. Mann. His grandfather was a Scottish clergyman and his mother's brother, his uncle, was also a clergyman.
The clergy occupy an essential place in Jane Austen's work, even more than the Royal Navy, because Jane Austen's father himself was a clergyman, as were her brother James, and briefly her brother Henry. The moral principles taught by her father are found in the moral precepts sprinkled throughout the novels. The position of clergyman at the time was a special one from several points of view. Firstly, being a clergyman was a profession like any other.
James Hebblethwaite (22 September 1857 – 13 September 1921) was an English- born Australian poet, teacher and clergyman.
Andrew Perne (1596–1654) was an English clergyman of Puritan opinions and member of the Westminster Assembly.
Charles Wheatly (1686–1742) was an English clergyman, known for writings on the Book of Common Prayer.
Alexander Neil Bethune (August 28, 1800 – February 3, 1879) was a Church of England clergyman and bishop.
Matthew Bryan otherwise Brian (died 10 March 1699) was an English clergyman, non-juror and Jacobite preacher.
Anthony Grant, D.C.L. (31 January 1806 - 25 November 1883 in Ramsgate) was an English clergyman and divine.
The Reverend Henry Giles Alington (25 July 1837 – 2 December 1928) was an English clergyman and cricketer.
Thomas Adam (25 February 1701 – 31 March 1784) was a Church of England clergyman and religious writer.
Henry Fairfax (1634–1702) was an English clergyman and academic, Dean of Norwich after the Glorious Revolution.
It was the birthplace of clergyman and diarist James Woodforde and, in 1763, his nephew Samuel Woodforde.
William Greenhill (1591–1671) was an English nonconformist clergyman, independent minister, and member of the Westminster Assembly.
Herman of Nassau, († 16 July before 1206),Cawley. was count of Nassau. He later became a clergyman.
In Victorian England, a clergyman is wrongly transported to Australia for a crime he did not commit.
Robert "Silyn" Roberts (28 March 1871 - 15 August 1930) was a Welsh clergyman, writer, teacher and pacifist.
John Thomlinson (1692–1761) was an English clergyman best known for his diary, covering 1715 to 1722.
George Adams (1698? – 1768?), English translator, in prose, of Sophocles, and probably a clergyman, polemic and apologist.
John Parkhurst (1564–1639) was an English clergyman and academic, Master of Balliol College, Oxford from 1617.
Walter Shirley (1725–1786) was an English clergyman, hymn-writer, and controversialist, of Calvinist and Methodist views.
Theodore Thornton Munger (March 5, 1830 - January 11, 1910) was an American Congregational clergyman, theologian and writer.
Ven. Edward Wix (1802-1866) was an English clergyman best known as an Anglican missionary in Canada.
John Hodgson (1779–1845) was an English clergyman and antiquary, known as the county historian of Northumberland.
Arthur Robertson Hoare (17 October 1871 – 18 March 1941) was an English first- class cricketer and clergyman.
Nicholas Bownde, Bownd or Bound (died 1613) was an English clergyman, known for his Christian Sabbatarian writings.
Edward Arthur Dayman, BD, (11 July 1807 – 30 October 1890) was an English clergyman and hymn writer.
Anders Hovden (April 6, 1860 – November 26, 1943) was a Norwegian Lutheran clergyman, hymnwriter poet and author.
Joseph Beaumont Joseph Beaumont (13 March 1616 – 23 November 1699) was an English clergyman, academic and poet.
Yohanna Barnaba Abdallah (died 1924) was a clergyman and historian of the Yao people of central Africa.
John Aucher D.D., (1619-1700) was an English clergyman and royalist supporter during the Commonwealth of Britain.
Joannes del Rio (–1624) was a clergyman from the Low Countries who became dean of Antwerp Cathedral.
François Arnaud (Comtat-Venaissin, 27 July 1721 – 2 December 1784) was a French clergyman, writer, and philologist.
Moses Mather (23 February 1719 in Lyme, Connecticut21 September 1806 in Darien, Connecticut), was a Connecticut clergyman.
William Marmion, Baron Marmion of Torrington, was an English clergyman and member of Simon de Montfort's Parliament.
Frederick Keppel (19 January 1728 - 27 December 1777) was a Church of England clergyman, Bishop of Exeter.
Rev. Field Henry Martyn Field (April 3, 1822 – January 26, 1907) was an American author and clergyman.
Arthur Buckminster Fuller (August 10, 1822 – December 11, 1862) was a Unitarian clergyman of the United States.
Henry Telford Hayman (20 November 1853 – 8 February 1941) was an English freemason, clergyman and amateur cricketer.
Richard Newte (1613–1678) was an Anglican clergyman and Rector of Tidcombe and Clare, Tiverton, Devon, England.
John Colson (1680–1760) was an English clergyman and mathematician, Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge University.
Rev. Canon Joseph Whately or Whateley (1730–1797) was an English clergyman and Gresham Professor of Rhetoric.
Charles William Russell (14 May 1812 – 26 February 1880) was an Irish Roman Catholic clergyman and scholar.
Henry Herman Meyer (21 November 1874 Champaign, Illinois - 1951) was an American Methodist Episcopal clergyman and editor.
Joshua Fawcett (9 May 1809, Bradford, Yorkshire - 21 December 1864) was an English clergyman and miscellaneous writer.
William Henry Channing (May 25, 1810 – December 23, 1884) was an American Unitarian clergyman, writer and philosopher.
Samuel Jennings Wilson (July 19, 1828 - August 17, 1883) was a clergyman and academic in Western Pennsylvania.
John Rouse Bloxam (1807–1891) was an English academic and clergyman, the historian of Magdalen College, Oxford.
Eugene Augustus Hoffman (March 21, 1829 New York City - June 17, 1902) was a United States clergyman.
Philip Richard Llewelyn Morgan (11 March 1927 – 12 January 2017) was an English sportsman, clergyman and educator.
Marco Ganci (born 16 May 1976) is an Italian clergyman and a diplomat of the Holy See.
Lyman Pierson Powell (September 21, 1866 - February 10, 1946) was an American Episcopal clergyman and college president.
Joseph Tuckerman (January 18, 1778 Boston – April 20, 1840 Havana) was a United States clergyman and philanthropist.
James Cornwallis, 4th Earl Cornwallis (25 February 1743 – 20 January 1824) was a British clergyman, and peer.
János Lászai (also Lazói or Lázói, , ; 1448 – 17 August 1523) was a Hungarian Humanist poet and clergyman.
John Penrose (15 December 1778 - 9 August 1859) was a Church of England clergyman and theological writer.
Stephen Greenleaf Bulfinch (June 18, 1809 - October 12, 1870) was a Unitarian clergyman, author and hymn writer.
James Aspinall (22 June 1795 – 15 February 1861) was a Church of England clergyman and miscellaneous writer.
Henry Van Dyke Johns (1803–1859) was an Episcopal clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate.
Thomas Mozley (1806 – June 17, 1893), was an English clergyman and writer associated with the Oxford Movement.
Berthold, Bertholde or Bertholdus of Toul (died 25 September 1018, Toul) was a German Roman Catholic clergyman.
Thomas Bennet (1673–1728) was an English clergyman, known for controversial and polemical writings, and as a Hebraist.
Charles Kittredge True (August 14, 1809June 20, 1878) was a United States Methodist Episcopal clergyman, educator, and author.
Howard Hyde Russell (1855–1946) was an American lawyer and clergyman, the founder of the Anti-Saloon League.
Samuel Clarke (10 October 1599 - 25 December 1683) was an English clergyman and significant Puritan biographer. Thomas Cross.
Engraving of Richard Bernard by Wenceslas Hollar Richard Bernard (1568–1641) was an English Puritan clergyman and writer.
Archdale Palmer Wickham (9 November 1855 – 13 October 1935) was an Anglican clergyman, first-class cricketer and entomologist.
John Ley (4 February 1583 – 16 May 1662) was an English clergyman and member of the Westminster Assembly.
Richard Byfield (1598?-1664) was an English clergyman, Sabbatarian controversialist, member of the Westminster Assembly, and ejected minister.
Henry Lawrence Blamires (17 April 1871 - 18 August 1965) was a New Zealand first-class cricketer and clergyman.
Ernest Oswald Blamires (11 June 1881 - 6 June 1963) was a New Zealand first- class cricketer and clergyman.
Robert Calder (1650?–1723) was a clergyman of the Scottish Episcopal Church, known as an author and controversialist.
Timothy Cutler (May 31, 1684 – August 17, 1765) was an American Episcopal clergyman and rector of Yale College.
William Creed (1614?-1663) was an English clergyman and academic, Regius Professor of Divinity at Oxford from 1660.
William Jane (1645–1707) was an English academic and clergyman, Regius Professor of Divinity at Oxford from 1680.
Ethelbert William Bullinger (15 December 1837 – 6 June 1913) was an Anglican clergyman, biblical scholar, and ultradispensationalist theologian.
Johann Adolf Schlegel Johann Adolf Schlegel (17 September 1721 - 16 September 1793) was a German poet and clergyman.
Leberecht Uhlich (1799–1872) was a German clergyman and one of the founders of the German Free Congregations.
Thomas Baily (ca. 1525, Yorkshire - 7 October 1591, Douai) was an English Catholic clergyman during the Elizabethan persecutions.
Claus Harms (May 25, 1778, in Fahrstedt - February 1, 1855, in Kiel) was a German clergyman and theologian.
Thomas Baylie (1582–1663) was an English clergyman, member of the Westminster Assembly, Fifth Monarchist and ejected minister.
Abel Evans (1675–1737) was an English clergyman, academic, and poet, a self- conscious follower of John Milton.
Edmund Boldero (1608–1679) was an English royalist clergyman and academic, Master of Jesus College, Cambridge from 1663.
James Hutchison Cockburn (29 October 1882 - 20 June 1973) was a Scottish scholar and Church of Scotland clergyman.
Richard de la More was a medieval clergyman who was Bishop-elect of Winchester from 1280 to 1282.
William Thorne (1568? - 1630) was an English clergyman and orientalist, Regius Professor of Hebrew at Oxford in 1598.
The suburb name comes from "The Bungalow", the residence of Archdeacon Joseph Campbell, a clergyman and agricultural entrepreneur.
The Rev. Robert Walsh, M.D., LL.D, (1772 – 30 June 1852) was an Irish clergyman, historian, writer and physician.
Drue Cressener (1642?-1718) was an English clergyman and theological writer, known as an interpreter of the Apocalypse.
Clement Moore Butler (1810–1890) was an Episcopal clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate (1850–1853).
Miles Justice Knowlton (February 8, 1825 – 1874) was an American Baptist clergyman, missionary to China, academic and author.
Samuel Winter DD (1603–1666) was an English clergyman and academic, who became Provost of Trinity College Dublin.
William Dickinson Hawley (1784 – January 23, 1845) was an Episcopal clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate.
Charles Maurice Graham (1834-1912) was a British clergyman who held high office in the Roman Catholic Church.
Thomas Pearce (1820–1885) was an English clergyman, known under the pseudonym "Idstone" as an author on dogs.
Zachariah Mudge (1694–1769) was an English clergyman, known for his sermons, and his deist or Platonist views.
Joseph Woodfall Ebsworth (1824–1908) was an English clergyman, known as an editor of ballads, poet and artist.
Valentin Thalhofer Valentin Thalhofer (January 20, 1825 – September 17, 1891) was a German Roman Catholic clergyman and theologian.
Andrew Macdonald (born Andrew Donald) (1757–1790), pen name Matthew Bramble, was a Scottish clergyman, poet and playwright.
Alexander Rzewuski (1893-1983) was a Catholic clergyman of Polish-Russian aristocratic background, with a Russian Orthodox background.
Alfred Inigo Suckling (1796–1856), surname originally Fox, was an English clergyman, an author and historian of Suffolk.
Nathaniel Wanley (1634 – 1680) was an English clergyman and writer, known for The Wonders of the Little World.
John Kempthorne (24 June 1775, Plymouth Dock, Devon – 9 November 1838, Gloucester) was an English clergyman and hymnwriter.
Richard Osbaldeston (1691–1764) was a Church of England clergyman and Bishop of London from 1762 to 1764.
Humphrey Henchman (1592 – 1675) was a Church of England clergyman and bishop of London from 1663 to 1675.
William Branwhite Clarke, FRS (2 June 179816 June 1878) was an English geologist and clergyman, active in Australia.
Samuel Jones (1628 - September 1697) was a Welsh nonconformist clergyman, who established an academy for educating dissenting ministers.
Gérard Dominique Azevedo Continho y Bernal (1712–1782) was a clergyman, antiquary and genealogist in the Austrian Netherlands.
Thomas Tuke (c.1580–1657) was an English clergyman and controversial writer, of royalist views in later life.
Canon Robert Stuart King (4 April 1862 – 4 March 1950) was an English international footballer and Anglican clergyman.
Samuel Charles Wilks (1789–1872) was an evangelical clergyman of the Church of England, known as a journalist.
Thomas Allin (1838–1909) was an Anglo-Irish clergyman, a writer on Universalism, also known for botanical research.
James Bentham (10 March 1709? – 17 November 1794) was an English clergyman, antiquarian and historian of Ely Cathedral.
Rev. John Pettingall D.D. (1707/8 - 30 June 1781) was a Welsh Church of England clergyman and antiquarian.
John Stoughton (1593?–1639) was an English clergyman, of influential millennial views.P.S. Seaver, 'Stoughton, John (bap. 1593, d.
William Snatt (1645 – 1721) was an English nonjuring clergyman, who came to prominence after a failed Jacobite plot.
Rev. Henry J. Ripley (January 28, 1798 – May 21, 1875) was an American Baptist clergyman and biblical scholar.
Miles Oscar Noll (March 30, 1862 – November 27, 1905) was an American clergyman, educator, and college football coach.
Roger Fenton (1565–1615) was an English clergyman, one of the translators of the Authorised King James Version.
Stephen Nye (1648–1719) was an English clergyman, known as a theological writer and for his Unitarian views.
Robert Warren Spike (November 13, 1923 - October 17, 1966) was an American clergyman, theologian, and civil rights leader.
Eric Sutherland Robertson (1857 – 24 May 1926) was a Scottish man of letters, academic in India, and clergyman.
Thomas Brice (1536–1571) was a Church of England clergyman, martyrologist and poet in the later 16th century.
The Rt. Rev. Alexander Gregg Alexander Gregg (1819–1893), an Episcopal clergyman, was the first bishop of Texas.
Timothie Bright, M.D. (1551?–1615) was an Early Modern English physician and clergyman, the inventor of modern shorthand.
Arthur Wollaston Hutton (September 5, 1848 Spridlington, Lincolnshire – March 25, 1912 Blackheath) was an English clergyman and author.
John Johnson, of Cranbrook (1662–1725) was an English clergyman, known as a theologian in the Laudian tradition.
Alexander MacWhorter Alexander MacWhorter, DD (also spelled McWhorter) (July 26, 1734 – July 20, 1807) was an American clergyman.
Jacob Merrill Manning (December 31, 1824 – November 29, 1882) was a prominent Congregational clergyman, active in Boston, Massachusetts.
Kimball had intended to become a clergyman, but health problems kept him from doing so. He married the daughter of a clergyman when he married Sarah Weston (1811-1891), daughter of Rev. Isaiah Weston of Dalton, Massachusetts, in 1840. The couple had six children: William, Sarah, Mary, Alonzo, Charles and Mather.
He was born at Barnoldby-le-Beck, near Great Grimsby, Lincolnshire, in 1787. His father died at Waltham while he was a child. He was educated privately under a clergyman, the incumbent of the neighbouring parish of Irby. His friends desired him to become a clergyman in the established church.
Thomas Tanner (1630–1682) was an English clergyman and writer, the author of The Entrance of Mazzarini (Oxford, 1657–58). He was educated at St Paul's School, London, and at Pembroke Hall, Cambridge. He became a barrister and later a clergyman, being vicar of Colyton, Devon, and afterwards of Winchfield, Hampshire.
Anglican clergyman Devereux Jarratt (1733–1801) was a particularly active supporter, founding Methodist societies in Virginia and North Carolina.
Lawrence from the kindred Becsegergely (; died after 1268) was a Hungarian clergyman of noble origin in the 13th century.
Martin Fotherby, Bishop of Salisbury Martin Fotherby (c. 1560–1620) was an English clergyman, who became Bishop of Salisbury.
Charles Chauncy (baptised November 5, 1592 - February 19, 1672) was an Anglo- American clergyman, educator, and secondarily, a physician.
William Henry Cynric Lloyd (13 January 1802 - 3 January 1881) was an Anglican clergyman, Archdeacon of Durban from 1869.
Henry Windsor Villiers-Stuart (13 September 1827 – 12 October 1895), was a British soldier, clergyman, politician, Egyptologist, and author.
William George Howard, 8th Earl of Carlisle (23 February 1808 – 29 March 1889) was an English clergyman and peer.
John Thomas Pelham (21 June 1811 – 1 May 1894), styled The Honourable from birth, was a British Anglican clergyman.
Joshua Huntington (31 January 1786 in Norwich, Connecticut – 11 September 1819 in Groton, Massachusetts) was a United States clergyman.
The Rev. John Samuel Bewley Monsell (2 March 1811 - 9 April 1875) was an Irish Anglican clergyman and poet.
Eelco Alta (Makkum, Súdwest-Fryslân, 23 June 1723 - Bozum, 17 August 1798) was a Frisian clergyman, theologian, and veterinarian.
Philip Morant (6 October 1700 in Jersey – 25 November 1770 in Battersea) was an English clergyman, author and historian.
Henry Sweetser Burrage (7 January 1837, Fitchburg, Massachusetts - 9 March 1926) was a United States clergyman, editor and author.
The Reverend John Hannah FRSE (16 July 1818 – 1 June 1888) was a Church of England clergyman and schoolmaster.
Michael Schlatter (14 July 1716 St. Gallen, Switzerland – 31 October 1790 near Philadelphia) was an American German Reformed clergyman.
Louis Frolla (1904-1978) was a clergyman and writer in Monégasque, the national language of the Principality of Monaco.
James Bickham (1719-1785) was a Fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and clergyman, scholar and fifteenth Archdeacon of Leicester.
Frontispiece of Hall's 1652 work The Font Guarded Thomas Hall (1610–1665) was an English clergyman and ejected minister.
John White Chadwick (19 October 1840 – 11 December 1904) was an American writer and clergyman of the Unitarian Church.
Samuel Henley D.D. (1740–1815) was an English clergyman, school teacher and college principal, antiquarian, and man of letters.
William Disney, D.D. (1731–1807) was an English clergyman and academic, and one of the critics of Edward Gibbon.
Daniel Cawdry (Cawdrey) (1588–1664) was an English clergyman, member of the Westminster Assembly, and ejected minister of 1662.
Richard Rogers. Richard Rogers (1550?–1618) was an English clergyman, a nonconformist under both Elizabeth I and James I.
The W. O. von Horn Museum was opened on 12 June 2004 in memory of the clergyman and writer.
Johann Schüßler Kirchenmeister. Anno MDCXXIX” (“Johann Burchart Trarbach clergyman at Cleinich. Johann Schüßler church father. In the year 1629”).
Edgar Harkness Gray Edgar Harkness Gray (1813–1894) was a Baptist clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate.
Samuel Clarke or Clark (1626–1701) was an English Nonconformist clergyman known as an assiduous annotator of the Bible.
Stephen P. Hill Stephen P. Hill (1806–1884) was a Baptist clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate.
Staff report (October 6, 2008). Tattoo gay men, clergyman writes. BBC News He later apologized.Staff report (7 October 2008).
Unattributed 1619 portrait of Arthur Hildersham Arthur Hildersham (1563–1632) was an English clergyman, a Puritan and nonconforming preacher.
Pietro Correr (c. 1235/40 – c. 1302) was an Italian Roman Catholic clergyman of the Correr family of Venice.
Richard Harris (fl. 1558 – 1595) was an academic at the University of Oxford and clergyman in the sixteenth century.
John Gmeiner (5 December 1847, Bärnau, Bavaria - 17 February 1915, Richfield, Minnesota) was a United States Roman Catholic clergyman.
Clifton's father was the clergyman Robert Cox Clifton. His daughter Catharine Edith was married to the surgeon Henry Souttar.
Henry Jackson van Dyke Jr. (November 10, 1852 – April 10, 1933) was an American author, educator, diplomat, and clergyman.
Hiram Harrison Lowry (May 29, 1843 - January 13, 1924) was an educator, Methodist clergyman and college president in China.
William Lyford (1598–1653) was an English nonconformist clergyman, elected to the Westminster Assembly though not sitting in it.
In 1886 Nixon married Ada Fox, the daughter of a Church of England clergyman from Tumut, New South Wales.
John Grote (5 May 1813, Beckenham - 21 August 1866, Trumpington, Cambridgeshire) was an English moral philosopher and Anglican clergyman.
William Binnington Boyce (9 November 1804 – 8 March 1889) was an English-born philologist and clergyman, active in Australia.
Richard Polwhele (6 January 1760 - 12 March 1838) was a Cornish clergyman, poet and historian of Cornwall and Devon.
In 2011, he played the reactionary father-in-law of the eponymous clergyman of Rev. in its Christmas episode.
Edward Revell Eardley-Wilmot (11 February 1814, Leek Wootton, Warwickshire – 30 May 1899) was a Church of England clergyman.
William Greenway was educated at Rugby School and Trinity Hall, Cambridge. He subsequently became ordained as an Anglican clergyman.
He subsequently became ordained as an Anglican clergyman, and from 1835 until his death was Vicar of East Grinstead.
Richard Duke (1658–1711) was an English clergyman and poet, associated with the Tory writers of the Restoration era.
The Reverend Alexander Home, 9th Earl of Home (died on 8 October 1786) was a Scottish nobleman and clergyman.
Simon de Langham (1310 – 22 July 1376) was an English clergyman who was Archbishop of Canterbury and a cardinal.
John Milner (1628–1702) was an English clergyman, known as a nonjuring minister, scholar and opponent of John Locke.
George Duryea Hulst George Duryea Hulst (9 March 1846 – 5 November 1900) was an American clergyman, botanist and entomologist.
Thomas Grinfield (27 April 1788, Bath, Somerset - 8 April 1870, Clifton, Bristol) was an English clergyman and hymn-writer.
José Miguel Gómez Rodríguez (born April 24, 1961 in Bogotá) is a Roman Catholic clergyman and bishop of Facatativá.
John Johnson Sayrs (1774 – January 6, 1809) was an American Episcopal clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate.
Thomas Ashton (died 29 August 1578, Cambridge) was an English clergyman and schoolmaster, the first headmaster of Shrewsbury School.
Signet of the Thingeyrar monastery, Iceland, 15th century Karl Jónsson (1135–1213) was an Icelandic writer, poet and clergyman.
The clergyman proves to be an inconvenient convert, however; he spends his time getting drunk and trying to kiss Virginia, and Paul's intellectual arguments have little influence on him. Physical intimidation is more effective, since the clergyman is both a "coward" and a "weakling." When the drunken clergyman falls off a cliff, Paul meditates on the utilitarian aspects of his death. Paul eventually converts Virginia; she gives up her religious faith, and replaces it with a sexual desire for Paul -- which the intellectual Paul finds very uncomfortable.
After completing his studies at Turbingen and Islington in 1870, Hechler became an Anglican clergyman. An Anglophile as well as a Germanophile, Hechler enlisted in the German army during the Franco-Prussian war of 1870-1871. He served as a clergyman and medical aide. He was wounded and was twice decorated with distinction.
The Biography of U Thittila, p.45,46 Soon after his oath, about 11 a.m, a kindly Christian clergyman, one of his acquaintances, came to him and asked him what he needed. When the clergyman knew his difficulties, he took him to the nearby restaurant and offered lunch, then gave shelter in his home.
Hans Strøm was born at Borgund in Møre og Romsdal, Norway. His father was a clergyman and many other relatives of both his father and mother were ministers. He attended the Bergen Cathedral School. He was educated as a Lutheran clergyman and in 1745 took a theological degree at the University of Copenhagen.
The church was consecrated on 21 May 1612 and the first clergyman Joachim Schöfelder, the evangelical pastor of Dolní Podluží, became the first clergyman. In 1616, the priest moved from Dolní Podluží to Jiřetín. Hopes and prayers for ore deposits did not meet expectations. The path to life security led to guilds.
Richard Cox (c. 1500 – 22 July 1581) was an English clergyman, who was Dean of Westminster and Bishop of Ely.
Plaque on the original library building in Saint Helier Philip Falle (1656–1742) was a clergyman and historian of Jersey.
Thomas Broughton (1704–1774), was an English clergyman, biographer, and miscellaneous writer, whose works include the libretto to Handel's Hercules.
Brampton Gurdon (c. 1672 in Letton, Norfolk - 20 November 1741) was an English clergyman and academic, Boyle lecturer in 1721.
Baker was also related to clergyman Neville Arthur Blachley Borton.Other family connections include John Browne, a renowned English landscape engraver.
George Edmands Merrill (December 19, 1846 – June 11, 1908) was an American Baptist clergyman and educator, born at Charlestown, Mass.
John Newte (1656–1716) was a high Anglican clergyman best remembered as the defender of the lawfulness of church music.
Henry Savage Henry Savage (1604? – 1672) was an English clergyman, academic and controversialist, Master of Balliol College, Oxford from 1651.
Arthur Wade Wade-Evans (born Arthur Wade Evans) (31 August 1875 - 4 January 1964) was a Welsh clergyman and historian.
Becila (? - 589 -?) was a Medieval Hispanic church clergyman Galician and an Arian bishop of Lugo in the late sixth century.
Charles Elliott Perry (1871-1937) was a New Zealand Anglican clergyman. He was born in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia in 1871.
Samuel Johnson (10 October 1822 Salem, Massachusetts – 19 February 1882 North Andover, Massachusetts) was a United States clergyman and author.
Richard Temple West (1827 – 10 February 1893) was a prominent High Church English clergyman and academic in the 19th century.
Gottfried Wilhelm Fink (8 March 1783 - 27 August 1846) was a German composer, music theorist, poet, and a Protestant clergyman.
Witts was a clergyman, diarist, and magistrate. He was rector of Upper Slaughter in Gloucestershire.Parishes: Upper Slaughter. British History Online.
François Buisseret (1549–1615) was a clergyman from the Habsburg Netherlands who became bishop of Namur and archbishop of Cambrai.
Matthew Beovich (1 April 1896 - 24 October 1981) was an Australian Roman Catholic clergyman, and the fifth Archbishop of Adelaide.
Waldemar Stanisław Sommertag (born 6 February 1968) is a Polish clergyman, Roman Catholic Archbishop and diplomat of the Holy See.
A grandson, Samuel Seabury (1801–1872) was an American Protestant Episcopal clergyman, as was that Seabury's son, William Jones Seabury.
The Rev. William Tasman Drake (2 December 1884 – 15 April 1946) was an Anglican clergyman and cricketer in New Zealand.
Rev. Horace Percy Finnis MA (17 April 1883 – 1960) was an Anglican clergyman and organist in Victoria and South Australia.
Bernhard Schwentner. Bernhard Schwentner (28 September 1891 in Schwerin – 30 October 1944 near Brandenburg-Görden) was a German Catholic clergyman.
Joseph Johnstone Muir (July 30, 1847 – November 21, 1927) was a Baptist clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate.
Thomas Kilgore Jr. was a prominent clergyman, community leader, and human rights activist. He helped organize the March on Washington.
Henry Jacob (1563–1624) was an English clergyman of Calvinist views, who founded a separatist congregation associated with the Brownists.
William Gregor (25 December 1761 - 11 June 1817) was the British clergyman and mineralogist who discovered the elemental metal titanium.
Jonathan Holt Titcomb (29 July 1819 – 2 April 1887) was an English clergyman, and the first Anglican bishop of Rangoon.
Samuel Rickards (1796–1865) was a Church of England clergyman, opponent of the Oxford Movement, and writer of devotional literature.
Edward Holyoke (June 26, 1689 - June 1, 1769) was an early American clergyman, and the 9th President of Harvard College.
Nathaniel Colver (born in Orwell, Vermont, 10 May 1794; died in Chicago, 25 December 1870) was an American Baptist clergyman.
Michael Simpson Culbertson (January 18, 1819 - August 25, 1862) was an American Presbyterian clergyman, missionary to China, academic and author.
Reverend Dugald Macfadyen MA, FRHistS, (25 December 1867 – 23 July 1936), was a British Clergyman, Liberal Party candidate and writer.
Henry Tattam (28 December 1788 – 8 January 1868, Stanford Rivers, Essex) was a Church of England clergyman and Coptic scholar.
Henry Horrocks Slater (1851–26 November 1934) was an English clergyman and a naturalist who studied ornithology, entomology, and botany.
John Humfrey (1621–1719) was an English clergyman, an ejected minister from 1662 and controversialist active in the Presbyterian cause.
Dr John Hovyngham (died 1417), also written Honyngham or Ovyngham, was an English clergyman, notary, diplomat and Archdeacon of Durham.
Bartholomäus van der Lake (died 1468) was a German clergyman and author of a chronicle of the city of Soest.
John Reinhard Goodman (died July 8, 1865) was an Episcopal clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate (1836–1837).
Peter MorwenAlso Morvyn, Morwent, Morwinge, or Morwyng. (1530?–1573?) was an English clergyman and Marian exile, known as a translator.
Hartley Williams (1844 – 18 January 1927) was an Anglican clergyman in South Australia who ran a private school in Mount Gambier.
Michael John Victor Shaver (1918-2001), known as Jack Shaver, was a theologian and clergyman of the United Church of Canada.
Charles Booth, D.C.L. (died 1535) was a sixteenth-century clergyman who served as the Bishop of Hereford from 1516 to 1535.
Arthur William Barton DD (1 June 1881 – 22 September 1962) was a Church of Ireland clergyman, from 1939 Archbishop of Dublin.
Benjamin Woodbridge (1622–1684) was an English clergyman and controversialist, Harvard College's first-ever graduate, and participant in the Savoy Conference.
William Strong (died 1654) was an English clergyman and then pastor of an independent congregation, and member of the Westminster Assembly.
Memorial to Charles Henry Hylton Stewart in Chester Cathedral Charles Henry Hylton Stewart (1849 - 1922) was an English clergyman and organist.
John "Jack" Shearer (30 December 1926 - 12 January 2001) was a Church of Ireland clergyman and the Dean of Belfast cathedral.
John Strype, engraving by William Richardson. John Strype (1 November 1643 – 11 December 1737) was an English clergyman, historian and biographer.
Daniel Cohalan (1858–1952) was an Irish Roman Catholic clergyman who served as the Bishop of Cork from 1916 to 1952.
Their sons include Thomas Bulfinch (1796–1867), author of Bulfinch's Mythology, and Stephen Greenleaf Bulfinch (1809–1870), Unitarian clergyman and author.
Ephraim Peabody (22 March 1807 Wilton, New Hampshire - 28 November 1856 Boston, Massachusetts) was a Unitarian clergyman from the United States.
John MacDonald (1818–1889) was a Scottish clergyman who served as the Roman Catholic Bishop of Aberdeen from 1878 to 1889.
Nathaniel Bouton (New Hampshire clergyman and author) Nathaniel Bouton (June 20, 1799 – June 6, 1878) was an American minister and historian.
Louis de Berlaymont (1542–1596) was an aristocratic clergyman in the Habsburg Netherlands who served as the second archbishop of Cambrai.
Simon Walton (or Simon de Wanton; died 2 January 1266) was a British clergyman who served as the Bishop of Norwich.
Portrait c. 1880 William Weekes Fowler (January 1849 – 3 June 1923 ) was an English clergyman and entomologist mainly interested in beetles.
Warren B. Burton (November 23, 1800June 6, 1866) was an American clergyman and writer who wrote on phrenology, transcendentalism, and education.
Benjamin Carier (1566–1614) was an English clergyman, a fellow of Chelsea College who was a well-publicised convert to Catholicism.
Thomas Larkham or Larcome (1602–1669) was an English Puritan clergyman, an early but not permanent settler at Dover, New Hampshire.
Richard Parkinson DD (1797–1858) was an English clergyman, known as a canon of Manchester Cathedral, college principal, theologian and antiquarian.
The execution led to fears of a Welsh rebellion. One clergyman was concerned that the Welsh and Irish would join together.
John Overton (1763–1838) was an English clergyman, known for his defence of evangelicals at the start of the 19th century.
Samuel Bold (1649–1737) was an English clergyman and controversialist, a supporter of the arguments of John Locke for religious toleration.
Samuel Harris (1682–1733) was an English clergyman and academic, the first professor of modern history at the University of Cambridge.
Ercel Franklin Webb (July 24, 1920 - December 21, 1999), was a clergyman, educator, colonel, civic leader and proponent of civil rights.
James "Holy" Johnson (c. 1836-1917) was a prominent clergyman and one of the first African members of Nigeria's Legislative Council.
The couple had two children.The Butchers p. 55 The same year, Mahon was arrested for burgling the home of a clergyman.
Johannes Adam Simon Oertel (3 November 1823 in Fürth, Bavaria – 9 December 1909) was a German-American Episcopal clergyman and artist.
James Gareth Endicott (right) with Y. T. Wu James Gareth Endicott (1898-1993) was a Canadian clergyman, Christian missionary, and socialist.
Obadiah Wills (born 1625) was a clergyman, theologian and paedobaptist best remembered for his critiques of John Bunyan's position on baptism.
Jacques Cassagne or Jacques de Cassaigne (1 January 1636, Nîmes – 19 May 1679, Paris) was a French clergyman, poet, and moralist.
Jeremiah Seed (1700–1747) was an English clergyman and academic. Jeremiah Seed, 1750 engraving by Simon François Ravenet, after Francis Hayman.
Thomas James (c. 1573 – August 1629) was an English librarian and Anglican clergyman, the first librarian of the Bodleian Library, Oxford.
William Reading (1674–1744) was an English clergyman and librarian of Sion College, known for his edition of early church historians.
Vlastimil Kročil (born 10 May 1961 in Brno) is a Czech Roman Catholic clergyman. He is the current Bishop of Budweis.
Henry Maurice (c. 1647 - 30 October 1691) was a Welsh clergyman who became Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity at Oxford University.
John Pryce (1828 - 15 August 1903) was a Welsh clergyman and writer on church history, who became Dean of Bangor Cathedral.
The famous astrologer Johannes Lichtenberger worked as a clergyman in Brambach, as Niederbrombach was then called, until his death about 1503.
Lancelot Ridley (died 1576), was an English clergyman, known as a theological writer, and rector of St James' Church, Stretham, Cambridgeshire.
Hugh MacDonald, C.Ss.R., (1841–1898) was a Roman Catholic clergyman who served as the Bishop of Aberdeen from 1890 to 1898.
John Williams (1762 – 3 April 1802) was a Welsh Anglican clergyman with Methodist sympathies. He also published a book of sermons.
Juan Sinforiano Bogarín (August 21, 1863 - February 25, 1949) was an eminent Paraguayan clergyman, the first Roman Catholic archbishop of Paraguay.
Noah Worcester (November 25, 1758 – October 31, 1837) was a Unitarian clergyman and a seminal figure in history of American pacifism.
John Colville (c. 1540–1605), Scottish clergyman, judge, politician and author, was the son of Robert Colville of Cleish, in Kinross.
Francis Potter (1594–1678) was an English painter, clergyman, Biblical commentator, and experimentalist, and an early Fellow of the Royal Society.
On 1 January 1830 she married William Prosser, a surgeon and later a clergyman. Prosser is buried in Bilston, Staffordshire, England.
Nicholas Battely (1648-1704) was an English clergyman and antiquary, editor of William Somner’s Cantuaria Sacra and brother of John Battely.
Edward Gantt (D.1837) was an Episcopal clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate of the United States (1801–1804).
John Glendy (1755 – 1832) was a Scots-Irish Presbyterian clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate of the United States.
John Bull (1803February 1863) was an American clergyman and physician who represented Missouri in the U.S. Congress between 1833 and 1835.
The Arlesdale Railway in The Railway Series by Rev. W. Awdry is based on the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway. In Small Railway Engines (1967), Awdry relates part of a holiday he spent visiting the Ravenglass and Eskdale Railway with the Rev. E. R. Boston; the two appear in the book as the Thin Clergyman and the Fat Clergyman, respectively.
Charles Kegan Paul (8 March 1828 – 19 July 1902) was an English clergyman, publisher and author. He began his adult life as a clergyman of the Church of England, and served the Church for more than 20 years. His religious orientation moved from the orthodoxy of the Church of England to first Agnosticism, then Positivism, and finally Roman Catholicism.
Willard J. Houghton (1825-1896) was a Protestant clergyman who founded Houghton College in Houghton, New York. Houghton was born on July 19, 1825 to a family of English ancestry. Houghton married on January 10, 1847 to Harriet Wilson (born 1827) and they had two sons. Houghton was a farmer until middle- age when he became a clergyman.
Richard Swann Swann-Mason (4 March 1871 – 21 February 1942) was an English first-class cricketer and clergyman. Swann-Mason was born in March 1871 at Haslingfield, Cambridgeshire. He was educated at The Perse School, before graduating as a non-collegiate graduate from the University of Cambridge. After graduating, he became a clergyman in the Anglican Church.
300 After the flogging the headmistress discovers she is greatly excited and makes love to the clergyman. The next day Miss Hazletine and Miss Hatherton are punished, first with a riding whip and then with a hair brush as the clergyman watches the proceedings though a spy- hole.Henry Spencer Ashbee (1969) Index of Forbidden Books. Sphere; pp.
The story is about Eliza Wharton, the daughter of a clergyman. At the beginning of the novel she has just been released from an unwanted marriage by the death of her betrothed, the Rev. Haly, also a clergyman, whom Eliza nursed during his final days in her own home. After this experience, she decides she wants friendship and independence.
Philip Francis (19 July 1708 – 5 March 1773) was an Anglo-Irish clergyman and writer, now remembered as a translator of Horace.
James Davenport (1716–1757) was an American clergyman and itinerant preacher noted for his often controversial actions during the First Great Awakening.
The Eneados is a translation into Middle Scots of Virgil's Latin Aeneid, completed by the poet and clergyman Gavin Douglas in 1513.
Joshua Bates (March 20, 1776 – January 14, 1854) was an American educator and clergyman. He was the third president of Middlebury College.
Charles Henry Ritchie (1887–1958) was an Anglican clergyman who served in both the Church of England and the Scottish Episcopal Church.
Frederick Henry Williams (1826 - 22 August 1885) was a 19th-century Anglican clergyman, considered at the time to be a controversial figure.
The Rt. Rev. and Hon. Richard Ponsonby (1772-1853) was an Irish clergyman who held high office in the Church of Ireland.
Richard Storrs, by Sherman & McHugh (Abraham Bogardus studio). Richard Salter Storrs (August 21, 1821 – June 7, 1900) was an American Congregational clergyman.
Niels Dorph (1681 - 1758) was a Danish/Norwegian clergyman. He served as Bishop of the Diocese of Oslo from 1738 to 1758.
Donald Macintosh (1743–1808) was a Scottish clergyman, a nonjuror of the Scottish Episcopal Church, known as a scholar of Scottish Gaelic.
Irah Chase (born at Stratton, Vermont, October 5, 1793; died at Newtonville, Massachusetts, November 1, 1864) was a United States Baptist clergyman.
Derek Grier (born May 28, 1965) is a nationally recognized clergyman and the founding pastor of Grace Church located in Dumfries, Virginia.
Remorseful for what he had done, Boleslaus promised to have his son educated as a clergyman and devoted his life to religion.
Thomas Long (1621–1707) was an English clergyman and writer on Church politics. He spent almost all of his life in Exeter.
David Lloyd (1597 – 7 September 1663) was a Welsh clergyman, and was the author of a ballad The Legend of Captain Jones.
William Freind (c.1715–1766) was an 18th-century Church of England clergyman who was Dean of Canterbury from 1760 to 1766.
Harry Mengden Scarth (11 May 1814 – 5 April 1890) was a British clergyman, antiquary and an expert on the Romans in Britain.
Bishop Colin Cameron Grant (1832–1889) was a Scottish clergyman who briefly served as the Roman Catholic Bishop of Aberdeen in 1889.
Ahmad Vaezi (; born 1963) is an Iranian philosopher, scholar and clergyman. He is now the chief of Islamic propagation office of Qom.
Samuel Grascome (1641–1708) was a clergyman of the Church of England, after the nonjuring schism a member of the breakaway church.
Giles Wigginton (fl. 1564 - 1597) was an English clergyman who became a fringe religious activist towards the end of the sixteenth century.
Wentworth Webster (16 June 1828 – 2 April 1907) was an Anglican clergyman, scholar, and collector of folk tales of the Basque Country.
Henry Homer, the elder (1719 – 24 July 1791) was an English clergyman, known as a writer on topics related to economic development.
Richard Mudge (born 1718 in Bideford; died April 1763 in Bedworth) was an English clergyman and composer of the late baroque period.
Thomas Albert Smith Adams (February 5, 1839 - December 21, 1888), also known as "TAS", was a southern American Methodist clergyman and poet.
Edward Woolsey Bacon (May 5, 1843 – June 7, 1887) was an American Congregational clergyman, as well as a sailor and a soldier.
Prosper Balthazar Lyimo (born 20 August 1964 in Kyou-Kilema, Tanzania) is a Tanzanian clergyman and Roman Catholic auxiliary bishop in Arusha.
Francis Vyvyan Jago Arundell, portrait c.1815 Francis Vyvyan Jago Arundell (1780–1846) was an English antiquary, Anglican clergyman and oriental traveller.
Rufus Phineas Stebbins (8 March 1810 in South Wilbraham, Massachusetts - 13 August 1885 in Cambridge, Massachusetts) was a Massachusetts and Pennsylvania clergyman.
Samuel Collins (1576–1651) was an English clergyman and academic, Regius Professor of Divinity at Cambridge and Provost of King's College, Cambridge.
Francis Davies (14 March 1605 - 14 March 1675) was a Welsh clergyman who was Bishop of Llandaff from 1667 until his death.
John Flavel Clark (December 10, 1784 – October 7, 1853) was a Presbyterian clergyman who served as Chaplain of the United States Senate.
Ward-Jackson was born in 1869, the son of a Church of England clergyman. He received his formal education at Eton College.
Charles Colcock Jones Sr. (December 20, 1804 - March 16, 1863) was a Presbyterian clergyman, educator, missionary, and planter of Liberty County, Georgia.
Edward Hughes (1772 - 11 February 1850) was a Welsh clergyman and prize- winning Welsh language poet, whose bardic name was ' ("The wren").
Henry Highton (1816–1874) was an English schoolmaster and clergyman, Principal of Cheltenham College, known also as a scientific and theological writer.
Charles Brodrick (3 May 1761 – 6 May 1822) was a reforming Irish clergyman and Archbishop of Cashel in the Church of Ireland.
John Fullarton (c.1645 – 1727), of Greenhall, Argyll, was a Scottish clergyman and nonjurant Episcopal Bishop of Edinburgh between 1720 and 1727.
Thomas Postlethwaite (; 1731 - 4 May 1798) was an English clergyman and Cambridge fellow, Master of Trinity College, Cambridge from 1789 to 1798.
John Bond LL.D. (1612–1676) was an English jurist, Puritan clergyman, member of the Westminster Assembly, and Master of Trinity Hall, Cambridge.
Richard Day (21 December 1552 – before 1607) was an English printer, Church of England clergyman, and the son of printer John Day.
The parish burial register records the burial of two John Cokers, in 1631 and 1635, uncertain as to which is the clergyman.
However, in the event the Warden appointed to succeed Farrer, Dennis Nineham, was another clergyman. Farrer is buried in Holywell Cemetery, Oxford.
Henry Harbaugh (October 28, 1817, near Waynesboro, Pennsylvania - December 28, 1867 Mercersburg, Pennsylvania) was an American clergyman of the German Reformed Church.
Epiphany's associate clergyman, the Rev. John Huston, son of Bishop Simeon Arthur Huston was called as the first vicar of St. David's.
David Wenham (born 1945) is a British theologian and Anglican clergyman, who is the author of several books on the New Testament.
Albert Henry Wratislaw Albert Henry Wratislaw (5 November 1822 – 3 November 1892) was an English clergyman and Slavonic scholar of Czech descent.
William Hooke or Hook (1600–1677) was an English Puritan clergyman, in New England for nearly two decades, mostly at New Haven.
Act 1672, c. 13 This is neither assignable by the clergyman during his life nor can it be seized by his creditors.
George Garrett George William Littler Garrett (4 July 1852 – 26 February 1902) was a British clergyman and inventor who pioneered submarine design.
Mario Antonio Cargnello (born 20 March 1952) is an Argentinian clergyman. He has been the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Salta since 1999.
Thomas Corser (1793–1876) was a British literary scholar and Church of England clergyman. He was the editor of Collectanea Anglo-Poetica.
Alexander Duncan (c.1655-1733) was a non-jurant Scottish Episcopal clergyman, college bishop (from 1724), and Bishop of Glasgow from 1731.
John Scott (1639–1695) was an English clergyman, known as a devotional writer, and a defender of Anglican orthodoxy in his preaching.
Stephen Addington D.D. (9 June 1729, in Northampton, England – 6 February 1796, in Minories) was a scholarly English dissenting clergyman and teacher.
Juan Alberto Puiggari (born 21 November 1949) is an Argentinian clergyman. He has been the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Paraná since 2010.
Joel Parker (born Bethel, Vermont, 27 August 1799; died New York City, 2 May 1873) was a United States Presbyterian clergyman and educator.
James Fawcett (1752–1831) was an English clergyman. He was Hulsean Professor of Divinity at the University of Cambridge from 1795 to 1815.
The area was acquired by the comune of Cagliari in the 19th century and excavated under the direction of a clergyman, Giovanni Spano.
Thomas Austin was born in 1887 to a British clergyman, Rev. T. Austin. He was educated at Plymouth College and Jesus College, Cambridge.
Logo prior to 2018 The station was named for Stanley Kiehl Gambell, a prominent local clergyman who was active in children's television programming.
Paolo Lunardo OSB (25 May 1930 – 11 October 2017), was an Italian catholic clergyman, who became Abbot of San Paolo fuori le Mura.
Peter Trosdal Way (August 15, 1937 – October 6, 2018) was an American clergyman and politician who served in the Virginia House of Delegates.
Luciano Bergamin CRL (born May 4, 1944 in Loria, Veneto) is an Italian clergyman and Roman Catholic Bishop of Nova Iguaçu in Brazil.
William Pearce (1744–1820) was an English clergyman and academic, Master of Jesus College, Cambridge from 1789 and Dean of Ely from 1797.
Henry Randall Waite (Copenhagen, New York, 16 December 1845 - East Orange, New Jersey, 8 May 1909) was a United States editor and clergyman.
John Alexander RamsbothamNPG details (25 February 1906 – 16 December 1989) was an eminent Anglican clergyman during the middle third of the 20th century.
Stewart Cleveland Cureton (March 24, 1930 – December 30, 2008), also known as S. C. Cureton, was an American clergyman and civil rights activist.
Charles Gordon Ames Charles Gordon Ames (3 October 1828, Dorchester, Massachusetts - 15 April 1912) was a United States Unitarian clergyman, editor and lecturer.
Vincenzo Gioberti (; 5 April 180126 October 1852) was an Italian clergyman, philosopher, publicist and politician. He was a prominent spokesman for liberal Catholicism.
Thomas Horton D.D. (died 1673) was an English clergyman, Professor of Divinity at Gresham College in London, and President of Queens' College, Cambridge.
Gravestone for Jakob Knudsen in Rødding Jakob Christian Lindberg Knudsen (14 September 1858 - 21 January 1917) was a Danish author, educator and clergyman.
William Smith (1819–1892) was a Catholic clergyman from Scotland. He served as the Archbishop of the Archdiocese of St. Andrews and Edinburgh.
Richard Hollinworth (also Hollingworth) (1607–1656) was an English clergyman of presbyterian views, an influential figure in North-West England in the 1640s.
Thomas Charles (14 October 1755 – 5 October 1814) was a Welsh Calvinistic Methodist clergyman of considerable importance in the history of modern Wales.
George Washington Burnap (November 30, 1802 in Merrimack, New Hampshire - September 8, 1859 in Philadelphia) was a Unitarian clergyman of the United States.
Kingaby was born in Holloway, London, on 7 January 1920, the son of clergyman. Before the war he worked for an insurance company.
Henricus Calenus or Henri van Caelen (1583–1653) was a clergyman in the Spanish Netherlands, closely involved in the early history of Jansenism.
Daniel Rogers (1573–1652) was an English nonconforming clergyman and religious writer. He is now best known for his conduct book Matrimoniall Honour.
Morgan Porteus (August 10, 1917 – December 15, 2019) was an Episcopal clergyman in Connecticut who served as the eleventh bishop of that state.
Among Cotton's descendants are U.S. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., Attorney General Elliot Richardson, actor John Lithgow, and clergyman Phillips Brooks.
Harold Wyatt Monaghan (7 October 1886 - 15 October 1958) was a New Zealand first-class cricketer and a clergyman in the Anglican Church.
Elias DeWitt Huntley Elias Dewitt Huntley (19 April 1840 - 12 February 1909) was a Methodist clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate.
Lucius Edwin Smith (29 January 1822, in Williamstown, Massachusetts – 10 February 1900 Groton, Massachusetts) was a United States lawyer, editor, clergyman and educator.
Charles-Claude Genest (17 October 1639 – 19 November 1719) was a French clergyman, poet and playwright. He was born and died in Paris.
Henry William-Powlett, 3rd Baron Bayning (8 June 1797 – 5 August 1866), styled The Honourable until 1823, was a British peer and clergyman.
Arthur Yeldard (c.1530–1599) was an English clergyman and academic, chosen as the first Fellow and second President of Trinity College, Oxford.
Rev. William Betham (1749–1839) was an English clergyman and antiquarian, best known for his work on the history of the English Baronetage.
Clergyman Will Air Sounds Of Religion The Babylon Beacon. September 19, 1968Konig, Susan. "Q&A;: Bill Ayres; In Forefront of Fighting World Hunger".
A timid and dim-witted clergyman is duped into helping a playboy avoid his creditors, inherit his uncle's fortune and get the girl.
Nathan Henry Chamberlain (25 December 1830, Bourne, Massachusetts - 1 April 1901) was a United States clergyman, first a Unitarian, and later an Episcopalian.
Hilkiah Bedford (1663–1724) was an English clergyman, a nonjuror and writer, imprisoned as the author of a book really by George Harbin.
Revd Canon Thomas Wentworth Pym DSO (1885 - 1945) was a prominent Church of England clergyman, theologian, and a Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford.
William Tooke (1744–1820) was a British clergyman and historian of Russia. William Tooke, 1820 engraving by Joseph Collyer after Martin Archer Shee.
Ken Nelson (born May 22, 1936) is a retired clergyman, politician, and veteran from Minnesota. He served in the Minnesota House of Representatives.
The Reverend William Darwin Fox (23 April 1805 – 8 April 1880) was an English clergyman, naturalist, and a second cousin of Charles Darwin.
He was the author of various published works.M.R. Bell, 'Allen, Thomas (1608-1673), clergyman and ejected minister', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004).
Algernon Sydney Thelwall (1795 in Cowes, Isle of Wight – 1863, in London) was an evangelical Church of England clergyman and teacher of elocution.
One of his eight brothers was the diplomat Major Robert Stuart, and Robert Stuart King, the footballer and clergyman, was his great-nephew.
Rev. Sir John Ayloffe, 5th Baronet ( – 10 December 1730) was an English clergyman, Rector of Stanford Rivers in Essex from 1707 until 1730.
Charles James Hoare (14 July 1781 in London – 15 January 1865 in Godstone) was an evangelical Church of England clergyman, archdeacon of Surrey.
William Dealtry (1775–1847) was an English clergyman of evangelical views, who became archdeacon of Surrey and a Fellow of the Royal Society.
Alvah Sabin (October 23, 1793 – January 22, 1885) was an American politician and clergyman. He served as a United States Representative from Vermont.
Ole Hersted Schjøtt (1805-1848) was a Norwegian clergyman and politician.Opptegnelser fra det gamle Porsgrunn, by Inga Friis. Hosted by Porsgrunn public library.
Francis Newton (died 1572) was an English clergyman who served as Dean of the Winchester Cathedral from 1565 until his death in 1572.
Evan Lewis (16 November 1818 – 24 November 1901) was a Welsh clergyman who was Dean of Bangor Cathedral from 1884 until his death.
91 Samuel had also trained as a clergyman. Each marriage was soon ended with the death of the husband.Soskice, p.84 (Gibson), p.
After Emma Cunningham's acquittal, she was permitted to return to the townhouse on 31 Bond Street, pending a hearing and decision of the Surrogate's Court to determine if in fact her marriage to Dr. Harvey Burdell was valid, and if that entitled her to his house and other property. At the time, marriage was conducted by a clergyman, and witnessed, but was not registered with any office of the state to make it legal and valid. The marriage certificate in question was signed by a clergyman, both parties and two witnesses. The clergyman recalled the event.
The first member of the Forbes family to live in the United States was Rev. John Forbes (1740 – 1783). He was a clergyman who arrived to the colonies in 1763. The Reverend's first post on the North American continent was in British East Florida, where he became the first Anglican clergyman licensed to officiate during the English period of 1763 – 1783.
Santa Luzia village grew into today's Luziânia, Goiás. By early 1747, the first clergyman, Luís da Gama Mendonça, had arrived at Santa Luiz, at Bueno’s request. It’s supposed that, in homage to the clergyman, the region was named “Gama”. The lands that today constitute the Administrative Region of Gama, in which the satellite city of Gama is located, belonged to local farmers.
He was received by President Sukarno at Merdeka Palace immediately after being ordained archbishop of Semarang in 1964. The President often called him "Romo Agung" (Great Clergyman), but he preferred to be called "Romo" (Clergyman). As an archbishop, he attended the third and fourth sessions of Second Vatican Council. When he attended the third Council session, Indonesia was in grave danger.
She is best known today for her Impressionist film, La Souriante Madame Beudet (The Smiling Madam Beudet, 1922/23), and her Surrealist experiment, La Coquille et le Clergyman (The Seashell and the Clergyman, 1928). Her career as filmmaker suffered after the introduction of sound film and she spent the last decade of her life working on newsreels for Pathé and Gaumont.
Bishop Alfred Garpee Reeves (died 8 May 2009) was a Liberian politician and clergyman. Reeves was a bishop in the Church of God in ChristLeaders Must Be Farsighted -Clergyman The Analyst, 21 June 2006 and a member of the National Reformation Party (NRP). He was also co-chair of Lifewater Liberia, a branch of a Canada-based non-government organization.Alfred Reeves Lifewater.
William Dakins (died 1607) was an English academic and clergyman, Gresham Professor of Divinity and one of the translators of the King James Bible.
Henry Langley (1611–1679) was an English clergyman and academic, intruded Master of Pembroke College, Oxford, and later an ejected minister and nonconformist tutor.
He died at Eastbourne, Sussex on 12 August 1915. His brother James Aitken was a clergyman and sportsman who also played first-class cricket.
The son of a clergyman, Wells was born in Ashford, Kent in 1936. He was educated at Eastbourne College and St Edmund Hall, Oxford.
Anton Niklas Sundberg (27 May 1818, Uddevalla - 2 February 1900) was a Lutheran clergyman, and the Church of Sweden archbishop of Uppsala 1870-1900.
Franklin Clark Fry (August 30, 1900 – June 6, 1968) was a leading American Lutheran clergyman, known for his work on behalf of interdenominational unity.
Robert Laughlin Pierson (1926–1997) was an Episcopal clergyman and Freedom Rider and a named appellant in Pierson v. Ray, 386 U.S. 547 (1967).
David Powel (1549/52 – 1598) was a Welsh Church of England clergyman and historian who published the first printed history of Wales in 1584.
William Cooper (fl. 1653) was an English clergyman of Puritan views, chaplain to Elizabeth of Bohemia, participant in the Savoy Conference, and ejected minister.
Ephraim M. Wright was a Connecticut and Massachusetts teacher, clergyman and politician who served as 12th Massachusetts Secretary of the Commonwealth from 1853–1856.
22, 1927. "Local Clergyman Writes Book." A large illustration by Martin is under that heading. It contains eleven short stories covering the church year.
Nathaniel Ingelo (c.1621–1683) was an English clergyman, writer and musician, best known for the allegorical romance Bentivolio and Urania (1660 and 1664).
Hugh Goodacre (died 1 May 1553) was an English Protestant clergyman, who was briefly Church of Ireland Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of Ireland.
Mytilinidion is a genus of fungi in the family Mytilinidiaceae. The genus was described by Swiss clergyman and botanist Jean Étienne Duby in 1861.
Gottlob Frederick Krotel (born in Ilsfeld, Duchy of Württemberg, 4 February 1826; died 17 May 1907) was a Lutheran clergyman of the United States.
Stuart Alexander Donaldson (born 4 December 1854 in Sydney, Australia, died 29 October 1915) was a schoolmaster, clergyman and Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge.
Antoine Philibert Albert Bailly (1 March 1605 - 3 April 1691) was a Savoyard clergyman who was bishop of Aosta from 1659 until his death.
Joseph Galea-Curmi (born 1 January 1964, in Balzan, Malta) is a Maltese clergyman and Catholic auxiliary bishop in the Metropolitan Archdiocese of Malta.
Cover of an 1828 American publication Palestine is an 1803 romantic long poem by noted clergyman Reginald Heber, successfully entered for the Newdigate Prize.
He was married with children, one of whom is also a Moravian Church clergyman. Bishop Neil is buried at Bethabara Moravian Church (aerial view).
Andrew John Young (29 April 1885 – 25 November 1971) was a Scottish poet and clergyman although recognition of his poetry was slow to develop.
Richard Biscoe (died 1748) was an English clergyman. Initially a Dissenting minister, he later was an Anglican, Boyle Lecturer, and President of Sion College.
Rev. Henry Foster (c.1743-1814) was an evangelical clergyman who played a significant part in the religious revival of the late eighteenth century.
John Wadden Bethune (5 January 1791 - 22 August 1872) was a Canadian Anglican clergyman and acting principal of McGill University from 1835 to 1846.
The Reverend Robert Sherard, 4th Earl of Harborough (21 October 1719 – 21 April 1799) was a British clergyman who inherited the earldom of Harborough.
Jean-Baptiste Labat (sometimes called, simply, Père Labat) (1663 - 6 January 1738) was a French clergyman, botanist, writer, explorer, ethnographer, soldier, engineer, and landowner.
Sedgwick in a 19th-century watercolour Obadiah Sedgwick (1600?–1658) was an English clergyman of presbyterian views, and a member of the Westminster Assembly.
Owen Patrick Bernard Corrigan (March 5, 1849 - April 8, 1929) was an American Roman Catholic clergyman who served as Auxiliary Bishop of Baltimore, Maryland.
Edmund Salusbury Ffoulkes (1819 - 19 April 1894) was a British clergyman who converted from Anglicanism to Catholicism and back again in the 19th century.
Samuel Webber (1759 – July 17, 1810) was an American clergyman, mathematician, academic, and president of Harvard University from 1806 until his death in 1810.
Joseph Willard (29 December 1738 – 25 September 1804) was an American Congregational clergyman and academic. He was president of Harvard from 1781 until 1804.
James Calfhill (also Calfield) (1530?–1570) was an Anglican clergyman, academic and controversialist, who died as Archdeacon of Colchester and Bishop-designate of Worcester.
Robert Harris (1581–1658) was an English clergyman, known as a Puritan preacher, member of the Westminster Assembly, and President of Trinity College, Oxford.
Roy Thomas Davies (31 January 1934 – 7 August 2013) was a Welsh Anglican clergyman, who served as Bishop of Llandaff from 1985 to 1999.
James Thomas O'Brien (1792–1874), was an Irish clergyman. He was Church of Ireland Bishop of Ossory, Ferns and Leighlin from 1842 to 1874.
John Larking, c. 1860-1880. Father or brother? Lambert Blackwell Larking (2 February 1797 – 2 August 1868) was an English clergyman, writer and antiquarian.
The Rev. C. L. Tuke Charles Lawrence Tuke (3 August 1858 – 30 December 1929) was an English-born cricketer and clergyman in New Zealand.
The Reverend Clement Eustace Macro Wilson (15 May 1875 – 8 February 1944) was an English amateur first-class cricketer and Church of England clergyman.
During World War Two he served in the Home Guard as a sergeant, but as a clergyman, he was not allowed to bear arms.
Whittington Landon (c. 1758 – 29 December 1838) was an academic at the University of Oxford and an Anglican clergyman who became Dean of Exeter.
John William Cunningham (1780–1861) was an evangelical clergyman of the Church of England. He was known to be a writer and an editor.
His brother, Robert Gregg Bury, was an Irish clergyman, classicist, philologist, and a translator of the works of Plato and Sextus Empiricus into English.
John Tillinghast (1604–1655) was an English clergyman and Fifth-monarchy man. He is known for his confrontation with Oliver Cromwell, and millenarian writings.
His brother Francis was an experimentalist, numerologist and clergyman. During Hannibal's presidency, Francis was at work in his rooms in Trinity with William Harvey.
Ottobuono di Razzi (died 3 January 1315) was an Italian clergyman and feudal lord, who was Patriarch of Aquileia from 1302 until his death.
John Eyre (January 1754 – March 28/29, 1803) was an English evangelical clergyman. He helped in establishing some of the major national evangelical institutions.
Rev. Rufus T. Babcock (September 18, 1798 - May 4, 1875) was an American clergyman and the second president of Colby College in Waterville, Maine.
The Very Rev. George Henry Connor (1822–1 May 1883, the Deanery, Windsor) was a Church of England clergyman who became Dean of Windsor.
Michael Rabbet (or Rabbett) (c. 1562 – 5 February 1630) was an English clergyman and translator of the Authorised King James Version of the Bible.
A legend exists that the famous Scottish patriot William Wallace, lived in Dunipace with his uncle, who was a clergyman at the parish church.
Michael Duignan B.Phil. LDT DD (born 15 July 1970) is an Irish Roman Catholic clergyman who has been the Bishop of Clonfert since 2019.
Leonard Foster Ward (24 March 1866 - 1 September 1945) was an English clergyman and cricketer who played first-class cricket for Derbyshire in 1899.
Perceval Wiburn or Wyburn (Percival) (1533?-1606?) was an English clergyman, a Marian exile, suspected nonconformist and Puritan, and polemical opponent of Robert Parsons.
Canon James Goodman (1828–1896), a Church of Ireland clergyman, collected over 2,000 tunes and songs, mainly from the south-west of the country.
Edward Dunlap Smith (1807 – March 28, 1883) was a Presbyterian clergyman and served as Chaplain of the United States House of Representatives (1834–1835).
George Zabriskie Gray (July 14, 1837 – August 4, 1889) was a notable clergyman, educator and theologian of the Episcopal Church in the United States.
The Very Rev. Hon. Henry Edward John Howard (14 December 1795 – 8 October 1868) was an English Anglican clergyman who was Dean of Lichfield.
John Strachan (died 1810) was an Anglican clergyman who served in the Scottish Episcopal Church as the Bishop of Brechin from 1788 to 1810.
Frederick Winslow Hatch (August 1, 1789 - January 14, 1860) was an Episcopal clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate of the United States.
Samuel Bolton (1606 – 15 October 1654) was an English clergyman and scholar, a member of the Westminster Assembly and Master of Christ's College, Cambridge.
Sir Thomas Combe Miller, 6th Baronet (1781 – 29 June 1864), was an English clergyman and landowner. He was educated at St John's College, Cambridge.
The Reverend John Hutchins (1698–1773) was Church of England clergyman, and English topographer, who is best known as a county historian of Dorset.
Robert McIntyre (November 20, 1851 - August 30, 1914) was a Scottish-born American clergyman. He served as a Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
Robert William Eyton (21 December 1815 – 8 September 1881) was an English Church of England clergyman who was author of The Antiquities of Shropshire.
Paul Meng Zhuyou (; born January 8, 1963) is a Chinese Catholic clergyman and Metropolitan Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Taiyuan from 2013.
Evangelischer Kirchentag, Berlin 1961 Kurt Scharf (October 21, 1902 – March 28, 1990) was a German clergyman and bishop of the Evangelical Church in Berlin-Brandenburg.
The Right Reverend Philip Herbert Eliot (20 September 1862 – 1 April 1946) was an Anglican clergyman who was Bishop of Buckingham from 1921 to 1944.
Edmund (Edmwnd) Prys (1542/3 - 1623) was a Welsh clergyman and poet, best known for Welsh metrical translations of the Psalms in his Salmau Cân.
Robert Everett Pattison (August 19, 1800 - November 21, 1874) was an American clergyman, and served as both the third and sixth president of Colby College.
The Rev. John Thomas Becher (born 1770 died 1848), was an English clergyman, social reformer and Vicar-General of Southwell Minster from 1818 to 1840.
He died in 1598 in Ruabon, where he was buried. One of his sons was Gabriel Powell, also a clergyman, and a strident anti-Catholic.
Donald Lapointe (born 25 September 1936 in Disraeli, Quebec) is a Canadian clergyman of the Roman Catholic Church and emeritus auxiliary bishop in Saint- Jérôme.
Cortlandt Van Rensselaer (26 May 1808, in Albany, New York – 25 July 1860, in Burlington, New Jersey) was a Presbyterian clergyman from the United States.
The Most Reverend Daniel Cohalan (1884–1965) was an Irish Roman Catholic clergyman who served as Bishop of Waterford and Lismore from 1943 to 1965.
Hans Rosing (9 August 1625 - 13 April 1699) was a Norwegian clergyman. He served as Bishop of the Diocese of Oslo from 1664 until 1699.
George Aaron Barton (12 November 1859 – 28 June 1942) was a Canadian author, Episcopal clergyman, and professor of Semitic languages and the history of religion.
An engraving of Hurdis by Romney, frontispiece from The Village Curate and other poems (1809) James Hurdis (1763–1801) was an English clergyman and poet.
George Okill Stuart, another brother of the first Baronet, was a clergyman. His son, George Okill Stuart, Jr., was a lawyer, judge and political figure.
He was survived by his wife Susanna, and was buried in Balmoral Cemetery, Belfast.Rev John Edgar (1798 - 1866) - Clergyman and philanthropist Dictionary of Ulster Biography.
Edward Martin, D.D. (died 1662) was an English clergyman, ejected President of Queens' College, Cambridge, and at the end of his life Dean of Ely.
Johan Baazius the younger (July 17, 1626 - May 12, 1681) was a Swedish clergyman who served as Archbishop of Uppsala in the Church of Sweden.
Jonathan Boucher, c1790 Rev. Jonathan Boucher (pronounced Boo-Shay), FRSE, FSA (12 March 1738 – 27 April 1804) was an English clergyman, teacher, preacher and philologist.
Kjeld or Ketil (, ; 1100–1150) was a 12th-century Danish clergyman. He is venerated as a saint in Denmark, by both Catholics and Danish Lutherans.
Dunbar Isidore Heath (3 March 1816, in London – 27 May 1888) was an English clergyman prosecuted for heresy in 1861; he was a Cambridge Apostle.
A clergyman in the Presbyterian Church (USA), M. Craig Barnes (born August 28, 1956) is an author, professor, and currently president of Princeton Theological Seminary.
David Alfred Doudney (1811–1894) was an English printer, journalist and author, who became an evangelical clergyman. He is known as a founder of schools.
Thomas Manton. Thomas Manton (1620–1677) was an English Puritan clergyman. He was a clerk to the Westminster Assembly and a chaplain to Oliver Cromwell.
Byrne Thomas Sebastian Byrne (July 28, 1841 - September 4, 1923) was an American Roman Catholic clergyman who served as the fifth Bishop of Nashville, Tennessee.
ODNB entry by Charles Kent, rev. Graham Law. Retrieved 18 November 2013. Pay-walled. One son, Archibald, became a first-class cricketer, scholar and clergyman.
Theodore Richard "Dick" Milford (10 June 1895 – 19 January 1987) was an English clergyman, educator and philanthropist, who was involved in the founding of Oxfam.
The stables are a physical reminder of the indispensability of the horse for a nineteenth century country clergyman performing parochial rounds and servicing outlying churches.
Henry Hugh Higgins (1814–1893) was an English botanist, bryologist, geologist, curator and clergyman. He is cited as an authority in scientific classification, as Higgins.
Lazarus Seaman (died 1675), was an English clergyman, supporter in the Westminster Assembly of the Presbyterian party, intruded Master of Peterhouse, Cambridge, and nonconformist minister.
Rev. William Houghton The Reverend William Houghton (1828–1895) was an English naturalist and clergyman, noted for being the author of British Fresh-Water Fishes.
Antonín Liška (17 September 1924, Bohumilice - 15 October 2003, Budweis) was a Czech Roman Catholic clergyman. From 1991 to 2002 he was bishop of Budweis.
John Pocklington (died 1642) was an English Laudian clergyman and polemicist. By order of the Long Parliament, two of his works were burned in public.
Caspar (or Kaspar) Neumann (14 September 1648 - 27 January 1715) was a German professor and clergyman from Breslau with a special interest in mortality rates.
Erasmus Lewes (1663 or 1664 - 1745) was a Welsh Anglican clergyman, copies of some of whose sermons are held by the National Library of Wales.
Paulino do Livramento Évora (22 June 1931 – 16 June 2019) was a Cape Verdean clergyman and the first Cape Verdean-born bishop of Cape Verde.
"Roman Catholic" at Catholic Encyclopedia online. ; Shaveling (archaic) :Usually disparaging: a tonsured clergyman, priest. ; Taig (Northern Ireland Protestants):a Catholic; from tadhg, Irish for "Timothy".
Bonifazio Graziani Bonifazio Graziani (1604/05 in Marino near Rome – 15 June 1664, Rome) was an Italian organist, composer and clergyman in the Baroque period.
David Moir, D.D. (died 1847) was an Anglican clergyman who served in the Scottish Episcopal Church as the Bishop of Brechin from 1840 to 1847.
John Ochterlony, MA (1667–1742) was an Anglican clergyman who served in the Scottish Episcopal Church as the Bishop of Brechin from 1731 to 1742.
James Rait, MA (1689–1777) was an Anglican clergyman who served in the Scottish Episcopal Church as the Bishop of Brechin from 1742 to 1777.
Ralph Taylor (1647 – 26 December 1722) was an English clergyman, nonjuror and sometime chaplain to the court of James II at Saint-Germain-en-Laye.
Wrangham married Amelia, daughter of Walter Fawkes. They had two sons and two daughters. Of the sons, Digby Strangeways Wrangham was a clergyman and writer.
Thomas Campbell (1733 – 1795) was an Irish Protestant clergyman, best known as a travel writer and for his accounts of the circle of Samuel Johnson.
John Buckner, LL.D. (1734-1824) was an Anglican clergyman who served in the Church of England as the Bishop of Chichester from 1797 to 1824.
Henry Cantrell (baptised 17 September 1684 at St Oswald's, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, probably died 1773) was a high-church Church of England clergyman and religious controversialist.
Wilcock, David, The Rev Wilbert Awdry - Thomas the Tank Engine's Creator - Dies at 85 , obituary in Steam Railway dated June 1997 online at pegnsean.net (accessed 13 April 2008) In 2017, 'the Fat Clergyman' was rendered in CGI for Thomas and Friends' twentieth series. He and 'the Thin Clergyman' appeared in the adaptation of Tit for Tat. They also appeared together in Series 21's Confused Coaches.
In the following example, the lexical entry is associated with a lemma clergyman and two inflected forms clergyman and clergymen. The language coding is set for the whole lexical resource. The language value is set for the whole lexicon as shown in the following UML instance diagram. Image:LMFMorphoClergymanInflected.svg The elements Lexical Resource, Global Information, Lexicon, Lexical Entry, Lemma, and Word Form define the structure of the lexicon.
Richard Thomas Lowe (1802–1874) was an English scientist, a botanist, ichthyologist, malacologist, and a clergyman. In 1825 he graduated from Christ's College, Cambridge, and in the same year he took holy orders. In 1832 he became a clergyman in the Madeira Islands, where he was also a part-time naturalist, extensively studying the local flora and fauna. He wrote a book on the Madeiran flora.
Joseph Philip Knight (Bradford-on-Avon, 6 July 1812–Great Yarmouth, 1 June 1887) was a British clergyman, singer and one of Britain's most popular song composers. He published over 200 songs, first under the name Philip Mortimer then under his own name. Knight was the son of an Anglican clergyman, Rev. Francis Knight, and went to America in 1829 to sing and teach music.
Scribner was born on February 25, 1936 in Washington, D.C., the son of a Maryland clergyman appointed the year before he was born.Pamela Sommers, Choral Arts, Still in Perfect Harmony at 25, Washington Post, June 2, 1990, p. C03 (noting that he was the son of a Maryland clergyman)Reception Held For New Pastor, Gaithersburg Epworth League Honors Minister, Washington Post, Jul. 7, 1935, p.
A beautiful girl named Afsaneh who is living in Downtown has economic problems, and her family offers her to marry to their landlord whose wife had died. One night, she went to see a clergyman (Akbar Abdi). She was tired, and the clergyman let her sleep there for a night. Next morning, clergyman's students see the girl's shoes and think that they have slept together.
Maxwell Henry Close (1822 - 12 September 1903) was an Irish Church of Ireland clergyman and geologist who also contributed to the preservation of the Irish language.
The Reverend Thomas Seaton (baptised 2 October 1684, Stamford, Lincolnshire, died 18 August 1741 at Ravenstone, Buckinghamshire), was a Church of England clergyman and religious writer.
Now known as the Avocet Line, the nearest station to Woodbury is at Exton. The clergyman and botanist W. Keble Martin lived in Woodbury in retirement.
Luke Milbourne or Milbourn (1649–1720) was an English clergyman, known as a High Church supporter of Henry Sacheverell, and also as a critic and poet.
George James Cowley-Brown, M.A. (1832–1924) was an Anglican clergyman and author who served in both the Church of England and the Scottish Episcopal Church.
The Rev. John Owen Farquhar Murray (6 May 1858 – 29 November 1944) was an Anglican clergyman, and Master of Selwyn College, Cambridge from 1909 to 1928.
Isaac Van Arsdale Brown (November 4, 1784 – April 19, 1861) was an American educator and Presbyterian clergyman who founded the Lawrenceville School near Princeton, New Jersey.
William Selwyn, (19 February 1806 – 24 April 1875) was a Church of England clergyman, canon of Ely Cathedral, Lady Margaret's Professor of Divinity, and amateur astronomer.
Lynn Harold Hough (1877–1971) was an American Methodist clergyman, theologian, and academic administrator. He served as the president of Northwestern University from 1919 to 1920.
Edmund Keith Blundell (1886–1961) Who Was Who: a cumulated index 1897–1980, A & C Black, 1981, p.65 was an Anglican clergyman in South Africa.
Ludwig Sigismund Jacoby (21 October 1813, Altstrelitz, Mecklenburg - 21 June 1874, St. Louis, Missouri) was a Methodist clergyman who worked in Germany and the United States.
Simon Lowth (1636–1720) was an English nonjuring clergyman, nominated by James II as Dean of Rochester, and later a controversialist on the position of bishops.
His father is identified in the Dictionary of National Biography as probably Simon Lowth (d. 1679), a royalist clergyman with whom he has sometimes been confused.
Rrok Gjonlleshaj (born February 10, 1961 in Velež, SFR Yugoslavia, today Velezha, Kosovo) is a Kosovo-Albanian clergyman and the current Roman Catholic archbishop of Bar.
William Alfred Orange (9 August 1889 - 28 June 1966) was a New Zealand Anglican clergyman. He was a leader of the Evangelical movement in New Zealand.
William Thomas (1734 - 3 September 1799) was a Welsh clergyman and academic, who was a Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford and later chancellor of Llandaff Cathedral.
Beamont married Ann Gaskell (died 1859), daughter of John Gaskell of Warrington. He outlived his only son William John Beamont, who was a clergyman and author.
Pike as engraved for the New Evangelical Magazine Samuel Pike (1717?–1773) was a British clergyman and a member of a religious movement known as Sandemanians.
Joshua Hall McIlvaine (1815–1897) was an American clergyman known for his work in philology and orientalism. He was born in Lewes, Delaware, 4 March 1815.
Gotthilf Heinrich Ernst Muhlenberg, portrait by Charles Willson Peale, 1810 Gotthilf Heinrich Ernst Muhlenberg (17 November 1753 – 23 May 1815) was an American clergyman and botanist.
John Weiss John Weiss (June 28,1818 – March 9, 1879) was an American author and clergyman, an advocate of women's rights, as well as a noted abolitionist.
Norman Gregory Matthews (12 February 1904 - 6 August 1964) was a British Anglican clergyman and broadcaster. Born in Swansea, he spent his working life in Cardiff.
Bishop Thomas Walsh (3 October 1777 –18 February 1849) was a Roman Catholic clergyman and Vicar Apostolic who served the Midlands area of the United Kingdom.
Canon Rev. George Champagné ( – 26 October 1828) was an Anglican clergyman who was Canon of Windsor from 1802–28.Fasti Wyndesorienses, May 1950. S. L. Ollard.
Rev. Dr. John Clinch (January 9, 1749 – November 22, 1819) was a clergyman- physician credited with being the first man to practice vaccination in North America.
John Menzies Strain (1810–1883) was a Roman Catholic clergyman who served as the first Archbishop of the Metropolitan see of St. Andrews and Edinburgh, Scotland.
Joseph Hill (October 1625 - 5 November 1707) was an English academic and nonconformist clergyman, mostly in the Netherlands after 1662. He is known as a lexicographer.
William Lucy from an 1827 engraving William Lucy (1594–1677) was an English clergyman. He was Bishop of St David's after the English Restoration of 1660.
William Chappell (Chappel, Chapple) (10 December 1582 – 14 May 1649) was an English scholar and clergyman. He became Church of Ireland bishop of Cork and Ross.
The Rev. ZeBarney Thorne Phillips ZeBarney Thorne Phillips (May 1, 1875 - May 1942) was an Episcopal clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate (1927–1942).
In Parliament, in accordance with Whig party policy, he voted for the impeachment of Henry Sacheverell, a clergyman who had criticised the party, in March 1710.
Osborne William Tancock (25 June 1839 – 26 March 1930) was an English clergyman, headmaster, and author. At Oxford he was President of the Oxford Union Society.
John Smith "Jock" Garden (13 August 188231 December 1968), clergyman, Australian trade unionist and politician, was one of the founders of the Communist Party of Australia.
1, p. 91, 204. A few months before the beginning of the Revolution, when Papaflessas arrived in Spetses, Panou followed the revolutionary dictates of the clergyman.
Henry Wilkinson (1616–1690) was an English clergyman and academic, Principal of Magdalen Hall, Oxford and White's Professor of Moral Philosophy, and later an ejected minister.
John Disney John Disney (1746–1816) was an English Unitarian minister and biographical writer, initially an Anglican clergyman active against subscription to the Thirty Nine Articles.
William Henry Steel Demarest, a clergyman and ecclesiastical history scholar, and Philip Milledoler Brett, a prominent New York City attorney (both also alumni of Rutgers College).
William Jones (18 November 1755 - 12 October 1821) was a Welsh evangelical clergyman, who was a friend and correspondent of the prominent Welsh cleric Thomas Charles.
Miles Joseph Berkeley (1 April 1803 – 30 July 1889) was an English cryptogamist and clergyman, and one of the founders of the science of plant pathology.
He was born in Barnwell, Northamptonshire, the son of Noel or Neville Boteler; Ivan Roots considers that the clergyman Edward Boteler (died 1670) was his brother.
Joseph Nafaa (born March 14, 1969 in Andket, near Tripoli, Lebanon) is a clergyman of the Maronite Church and Curial Bishop of the Patriarchate of Antioch.
F.X.Kordač František Kordač (11 January 1852, Seletice - 26 April 1934, Zbraslav) was a Czech Roman Catholic clergyman. He was Archbishop of Prague from 1919 to 1931.
Philadelphia Public Ledger, 1880-05-13, p. 8. His only child, Clarence A. Adams, was a Baptist clergyman in Pennsylvania until his death in the 1920s.
William Howley (12 February 1766 – 11 February 1848) was a clergyman in the Church of England. He served as Archbishop of Canterbury from 1828 to 1848.
He married, in 1819, Charlotte Anne, daughter of Colonel John Nelley of the Bengal Artillery, and had a son, the clergyman Mackenzie Walcott, and two daughters.
William Delaune D.D. (14 April 1659 – 23 May 1728) was an English clergyman and academic, President of St John's College, Oxford, and chaplain to Queen Anne.
The Reverend James Michael John Fletcher MA (Cantab.) (29 September 1852 – 23 February 1940), was an English clergyman of the Church of England, author and historian.
Vincent Alsop (c. 16308 May 1703) was an English Nonconformist clergyman. His Mischief of Separation and Melius Inquirenduni became landmarks in the history of religious nonconformity.
Francis John Marsh (born 3 July 1947) is a British Anglican clergyman. He was Archdeacon of Blackburn in the Church of England from 1996 until 2001.
Clergyman and historian Jeremy Belknap (1744 – 1798), who was the founder of the Massachusetts Historical Society, mentions Abraham Belknap early in his History of New Hampshire.
Thomas Vowler Short (16 September 1790 - 13 April 1872) was an English academic and clergyman, successively Bishop of Sodor and Man and Bishop of St Asaph.
Eliza Marsden Hassall (2 November 1834 – 26 December 1917) was the daughter of an Anglican clergyman, a lay leader of the Anglican church, and a philanthropist.
Evers in 2015 Alfonso Delgado Evers (born 21 June 1942) is an Argentinian clergyman. He has been the Archbishop of San Juan de Cuyo since 2000.
Nathaniel Hewit (Aug. 28, 1788-Feb. 3,1867) was an American clergyman. Hewit, the son of Nathaniel and Sarah (Avery) Hewit, was born in New London, Conn.
Ezra Butler (September 24, 1763July 12, 1838) was an American clergyman, politician, lawyer, judge, the 11th Governor of Vermont, and a United States Representative from Vermont.
Reverend Robin Roe (11 October 1928 – 15 July 2010) was an Irish clergyman known for his work as an army chaplain, and a rugby union player.
Carte de visite depicting John Cumming, 1860s Rev Dr John Cumming DD FRSE (10 November 1807 – 5 July 1881) was a Scottish clergyman and religious author.
Robert Norrie, MA (c.1647–1727) was an Anglican clergyman who served in the Scottish Episcopal Church as the Bishop of Brechin from 1724 to 1727.
Stephen Joseph McWhirter (b September 1964) is a Church of Ireland clergyman, the Incumbent at Kilmoremoy: he is also the Archdeacon-designate of Killala and Achonry.
The inn is said to be haunted by the ghost of a young woman who had an affair with a local clergyman which outraged the locals.
After Whitefield preached at St. Philip's, Charleston, the Commissary, Alexander Garden suspended him as a "vagabond clergyman." "A Brief History of St. Philip's Church", Charleston, SC.
Ralph Button (died 1680) was an English academic and clergyman, Gresham Professor of Geometry, canon of Christ Church, Oxford under the Commonwealth, and later a nonconformist schoolmaster.
Rev Henry Parr Hamilton FRS FRSE (3 April 1794 – 7 February 1880) was a Scots- born clergyman and mathematician, who was Dean of Salisbury for 30 years.
In Oscar Wilde's 1895 play The Importance of Being Earnest, Dr. Chasuble is a clergyman who, in the 2002 film adaptation, is seen wearing his namesake vestment.
William Day (1529 – 20 September 1596) was an English clergyman, Provost of Eton College for many years, and at the end of his life Bishop of Winchester.
Uzal Ogden (1744 - November 4, 1822) was an American clergyman, at first a member of the Episcopal Church and later as a minister of the Presbyterian Church.
Richard Sampson (died 25 September 1554) was an English clergyman and composer of sacred music, who was Anglican bishop of Chichester and subsequently of Coventry and Lichfield.
Reverend Doctor William Henry Furness (1886) by Cecilia Beaux. William Henry Furness (April 20, 1802 – January 30, 1896) was an American clergyman, theologian, Transcendentalist, abolitionist, and reformer.
Arthur Cushman McGiffert Arthur Cushman McGiffert (March 4, 18611933), American theologian, was born in Sauquoit, New York, the son of a Presbyterian clergyman of Scots-Irish descent.
Robert Hill, 17th-century engraving. Robert Hill (died 1623) was an English clergyman, a conforming Puritan according to Anthony Milton.Anthony Milton, Catholic and Reformed (2002), p. 13.
Theodore William Gull Acland ARIC (7 November 1890 – 13 October 1960) was an English educationist who in later life became a clergyman of the Church of England.
Combe Miller (1745–1814) was a Church of England clergyman. He was the third son of Sir John Miller, 4th Baronet Miller of Froyle and Susan Combe.
The Sumario Compendioso was the first mathematics book published in the New World. The book was published in Mexico City in 1556 by a clergyman Juan Diez.
George Henry Kingsley (14 February 1826 – 5 February 1892) was a medical doctor, traveller and writer. He was a brother of the clergyman and writer Charles Kingsley.
William Lipscomb was baptised on 9 July 1754 in Winchester and died at Brompton, London, on 25 May 1842. He was an English clergyman, translator and poet.
Michael Nnachi Okoro (born 1 November 1940) is a Nigerian clergyman who has been the Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Abakaliki since 19 February 1983.
Edward Wilson Douglas (26 August 1901 – 12 June 1967) was a Scottish Roman Catholic clergyman who served as the first Bishop of Motherwell from 1948 to 1954.
William Humble (later William John Humble-Crofts; 9 December 1846 - 1 July 1924) was an English clergyman and cricketer who played for Derbyshire between 1873 and 1877.
Andrew Lumsden, M.A. (1654–1733) was a Scottish clergyman who served as the Bishop of Edinburgh (1727–1733) and Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church (1727–1731).
John Cotterell DCL (died 1572) was an English clergyman and academic at the University of Oxford, who was one of the founding fellows of Jesus College, Oxford.
Msonthi was a Roman Catholic son of an Anglican clergyman, Reverend Canon Msonthi.Tengatenga, James. "Church, state, and society in Malawi: an analysis of Anglican ecclesiology". Kachere Series.
Gideon Hollister Pond and his wife Agnes, c. 1854 Gideon Hollister Pond (June 30, 1810 - January 20, 1878) was an American Presbyterian missionary, clergyman, and territorial legislator.
Paul Philippe Hardouin de Beaumont de Péréfixe (1606 - 1 January 1671, Paris) was a French historian and clergyman. He was bishop of Rodez, then archbishop of Paris.
Clarence Augustus Barbour (April 21, 1867 – January 16, 1937) was an American Baptist clergyman and educator most notable for having served as the president of Brown University.
Rev. Richard Warner (1763–1857) was an English clergyman and writer of a considerable number of topographical books based on his walks and his interest in antiquarianism.
Thomas Sparke (1548–1616) was an English clergyman, who represented the Puritan point of view both at the 1584 Lambeth Conference and the 1604 Hampton Court Conference.
David Walter Thomas (26 October 1829 - 1905) was a Welsh clergyman who was instrumental in the founding of a Welsh church in the Welsh settlement in Argentina.
Morris Williams (1809-1874) was a bard known as Nicander. He was ordained as an Anglican clergyman in 1836. He produced his own Metrical Psalms in 1850.
Rev. David Swing. David Swing (August 23, 1830October 3, 1894) was a United States teacher and clergyman who was the most popular Chicago preacher of his time.
In the third phase "the animus becomes the word, often appearing as a professor or clergyman...the bearer of the word - Lloyd George, the great political orator".
Thomas Dunham Whitaker (1759–1821) was an English clergyman and topographer. Thomas Dunham Whitaker, 1816 engraving by William Holl the elder after a portrait by James Northcote.
El Burg and Haifa in an 1801 Copper engraving by Willyams The Rev. Cooper Willyams (June 1762 – 17 July 1816) was a clergyman and a British artist.
Charlie is outraged. He renounces his daughter and his association with Sun and the Revolution. As he leaves, the couple turn towards the clergyman to be married.
Liston Corlando Pope (6 September 1909 — 15 April 1974) was an American clergyman, author, theological educator, and dean of Yale University Divinity School from 1949 to 1962.
William Thomas Collings (4 September 1823 – 7 March 1882) was a clergyman of the Church of England who served as Seigneur of Sark from 1853 to 1882.
Ralph Hutchinson (or Huchenson) (1553?-1606) was an English clergyman and academic, President of St John's College, Oxford and a translator of the Authorised King James Version.
The Rt Rev James Leslie Randall (4 August 1828 – 17 January 1922) was an English Anglican clergyman and the inaugural Bishop of Reading from 1889 until 1908.
No other supporting evidence had arisen since Reaney's conjecture.Young, p. 6, footnote 5. Crawford Young suggested in 2008 that Rodericus is the musician and clergyman Johannes Rogerii.
George R. Bliss was born in Sherburne, New York on June 20, 1816. He graduated from Hamilton College and Hamilton Theological Seminary and became a Baptist clergyman.
Walter Dulany Adison Walter Dulany Addison (January 1, 1769 – January 31, 1848) was an Episcopal clergyman who served as Chaplain of the United States Senate (1810–1811).
John Young (25 June 1585 - 20 July 1654) was a Scottish clergyman who served as Dean of the Winchester Cathedral from 1616 until his ejection in 1645.
Richard Bassett (7 November 1777 - 31 August 1852) was a Welsh cleric, thought to be the last Anglican clergyman in Wales to be associated with the Methodists.
Very Rev James Montgomery Campbell DD (1859-1937) was a Scottish clergyman who served as Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in 1928.
Daniel Bremer Juell (1 January 1808 – 26 May 1855) was a Norwegian clergyman and politician.Opptegnelser fra det gamle Porsgrunn, by Inga Friis. Hosted by Porsgrunn public library.
Reverend James Henry Savory (1855-1903) was an English clergyman, a Double Blue at Oxford University, a first-class cricketer, and an FA Cup finalist in football.
John Papworth (12 December 1921 – 4 July 2020) was an English clergyman, writer and activist against big public and private organizations and for small communities and enterprises.
He officiates at Ophelia's funeral, and does not give her full Christian burial rights, since the church suspects her death was suicide. Called a "Priest" in the First Folio edition of "Hamlet," his speech prefix in the Second Quarto is "Doct" for Doctor of Divinity, a Protestant clergyman. Thus, the two original "good" printings of the play are in disagreement whether the clergyman is Protestant or Catholic.Hamlet 5.1.
Cartwright was taught at Queen Elizabeth Grammar School, Wakefield, University College, Oxford, and for an MA degree at Magdalen College, Oxford, (awarded 1766) where he was received a demyship and was elected a Fellow of the College. He became a clergyman of the Church of England. Cartwright began his career as a clergyman, becoming, in 1779, rector of Goadby Marwood, Leicestershire. In 1783, he was elected a prebendary at Lincoln Cathedral.
In 1823, in the case of the R v. Redford, which was tried before William Draper Best, 1st Baron Wynford, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas on circuit, when a Church of England clergyman was about to give in evidence a confession of guilt made to him by the prisoner, the judge checked him and indignantly expressed his opinion that it was improper for a clergyman to reveal a confession.
Fano Frank Shimasaki (3 November 1913 – 13 September 1984) was an American Samoan chief, civil servant, clergyman and politician. He served as a Senator between 1969 and 1972.
Klængur Þorsteinsson (1102February 28, 1176) was an Icelandic Catholic clergyman, who became the fifth bishop of Iceland from 1152 to 1176. He served in the diocese of Skálholt.
William Burton (died 1616) was an English clergyman, known for his writings, an insider's view of the Puritan ascendancy at Norwich, and as an eyewitness to heresy executions.
Ernest Chitty (6 December 1883-8 June 1948) was a New Zealand Anglican clergyman, tutor and organist. He was born in Dunedin, New Zealand on 6 December 1883.
George Austen (1731–1805) was a clergyman in the Church of England and the father of Jane Austen. He was the rector of Deane and Steventon in Hampshire.
In 1852 Lauts accepted Van der Hoff as a clergyman for five years for the Volksraad of the Afrikaans Hollanders, north of the Vaal River in South Africa.
Martin Fynch or Finch (1628?–1698) was an English ejected minister.S. Wright, 'Fynch [Finch], Martin (1628/9–1698), clergyman and ejected minister', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004).
Archibald Spencer (January 1, 1698 – January 13, 1760) was a businessman, scientist, doctor, clergyman, and lecturer. He is noted for introducing the phenomenon of electricity to Benjamin Franklin.
Wales rugby union football international, later clergyman, John Strand-Jones (1877-1958) was born in Caio, and Victoria Cross recipient James Hills-Johnes (1833-1919) is buried here.
John Hudson (1773 - 31 October 1843) was an English mathematician and clergyman. He was notable for being a senior wrangler as well as the tutor of George Peacock.
Silas H. Hodges (January 12, 1804 – April 21, 1875) was a Vermont attorney, clergyman and politician who served as State Auditor and Commissioner of the U.S. Patent Office.
From 1844 to 1846, Warner officiated as a Congregational clergyman in Chesterfield, Massachusetts. In 1852 and 1853, Warner was a tutor at the Williston Seminary in Easthampton, Massachusetts.
Timothy Joseph Harrington (December 19, 1918 - March 23, 1997) was an American clergyman of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Bishop of Worcester from 1983 to 1994.
George Henry Sacheverell Johnson FRS (1808 – 5 November 1881) was a British clergyman and academic who was Dean of Wells and a professor at the University of Oxford.
They settled in Gorham, Maine 1751. He was called to preach there by the town proprietors the previous year. Rev. Lombard was the first settled clergyman in Gorham.
Thomas Keble, the younger brother of John Keble and also a notable Church of England clergyman, had charge of the parish of Windrush in the early 19th century.
Michael Kelly, Count of the Holy Roman Empire (13 February 1850 – 8 March 1940) was an Irish-born Roman Catholic clergyman who became the fourth Archbishop of Sydney.
Richard Capel (1586–1656) was an English nonconforming clergyman of Calvinist views, a member of the Westminster Assembly, and for a period of his life a practicing physician.
West front of the Nidaros Cathedral, Trondheim, Norway. Drawing by Maschius, 1661. Jacob Mortenssøn Maschius (c.1630 - 12 August 1678) was a Norwegian clergyman, poet and copperplate engraver.
Thomas Ephraim Peck (January 29, 1822 – October 2, 1893) was an American clergyman, theologian and author, and a recognized intellectual leader of Presbyterian Church during the 19th century.
Portrait of William Bedford attributed to Thomas Bock. William Bedford (1781 – 2 December 1852) was an English clergyman who became a chaplain in Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania).
Joseph J. Bullock (December 23, 1812 - November 9, 1892) was a Presbyterian clergyman who served as Chaplain of the Senate of the United States from 1879 until 1883.
John Morgan (also known as John Morgan Matchin or John Morgan of Matchin) (7 February 1688 - 28 February 1733 or 1734) was a Welsh clergyman, scholar and poet.
He did not hold parliamentary or ministerial office, but was said to be only the second active clergyman in the Legislative Assembly since the Rev. J D Lang.
Cristóbal de Pedraza (1485-c.1555) was a Spanish clergyman who became Bishop of Comayagua in Honduras in 1541."Bishop Cristóbal de Pedraza" Catholic- Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney.
Thomas Wagstaffe the Elder (13 February 1645 – 17 October 1712) was a clergyman of the Church of England, after the nonjuring schism a bishop of the breakaway church.
Henry Bright (1724 – 31 January 1803) was an English clergyman, scholar and schoolmaster, who served as headmaster of Abingdon School (1758–1774) and New College School (1774–1794).
Robert Quirk Short (1759 – 31 January 1827) was a Church of England clergyman who emigrated to Canada in 1796. He was born at Withycombe Hall in Somerset, England.
Jacob Henderson was an Irish clergyman and philologist who emigrated to the colonial Provinces of Pennsylvania, then Maryland, where he became a prominent land owner and church leader.
Scawen Kenrick (3 June 1694 – 2 May 1753) was an English clergyman who served as Chaplain to the Speaker of the House of Commons and Archdeacon of Westminster.
Borden Parker Bowne (1847–1910) was an American Christian philosopher, clergyman, and theologian in the Methodist tradition. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature nine times.
John Willis, (ca. 1575 - 28 November 1625) was a British clergyman, stenographer and mnemonician. He developed a simple style of shorthand based on the work by Timothy Bright.
Theodore Pitcairn (November 5, 1893 – December 17, 1973) the son of PPG Industries founder John Pitcairn, was a clergyman, theologian, philanthropist, and connoisseur of the arts and antiquities.
Robert Gregg Bury (22 March 1869 – 11 February 1951) was an Irish clergyman, classicist, philologist, and a translator of the works of Plato and Sextus Empiricus into English.
Deanna Merryman was born in 1972. Her father was a clergyman from Virginia. Merryman attended high school with Leeann Tweeden. She spent her early years living in Texas.
Charles Inglis (1734 - 24 February 1816) was an Irish clergyman who was consecrated the first Anglican bishop in North America, although technically of the Diocese of Nova Scotia.
John Mastin (1747–1829) was an English Topographer and Anglican clergyman. He is best known as the author of the earliest published history of the parish of Naseby.
It has the most vital single surviving congregation in the town, albeit as with the Anglican, United Church and continuing Presbyterian congregations, long since without a resident clergyman.
The Reverend Arthur Richard Shilleto (18 June 1848 – 19 January 1894) was a British clergyman and schoolmaster. He was the son of the classicist Richard Shilleto (1809–1876).
Rev James Menteath, in later life James Stuart Menteath of Closeburn (c.1718–1802) was a Scottish clergyman of the Church of England, and friend of Adam Smith.
Louis-Marie Billé (18 February 1938 - 12 March 2002) was a French clergyman, archbishop of Lyon from 6 September 1998 and a cardinal until his death in office.
He has been incorrectly identified both as a son and a brother of Robert Bolton (1572–1631); Robert Bolton's son Samuel was a clergyman who died in 1668.

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