Cynesige of Lichfield
Cynesige | |
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Bishop of Lichfield | |
Appointed | between 946 and 949 |
Term ended | between 963 and 964 |
Predecessor | Ælfwine |
Successor | Wynsige |
Orders | |
Consecration | between 946 and 949 |
Personal details | |
Died | between 963 and 964 |
Cynesige[a] (died c. 963) was a medieval Bishop of Lichfield.
Cynesige was consecrated between 946 and 949 and died between 963 and 964.[1] He was a relative of Dunstan and left the king's court soon after the coronation of King Eadwig of England in January 956, along with Dunstan who was Abbot of Glastonbury at the time. The Life of Dunstan states that the reason the bishop and abbot were dismissed from court was that they denounced the new king and his new bride Ælfgifu.[2]
Notes
- ^ Or Kynsy or Kinsey or Kinsius
Citations
References
- Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I. (1996). Handbook of British Chronology (Third revised ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-56350-X.
- Stafford, Pauline (1989). Unification and Conquest: A Political and Social History of England in the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries. London: Edward Arnold. ISBN 0-7131-6532-4.
Further reading
- Winterbottom, Michael; Lapidge, Michael, eds. (2011). The Early Lives of St Dunstan (in Latin and English). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-960504-0.
External links
- Cynesige 2 at Prosopography of Anglo-Saxon England
Christian titles | ||
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Preceded by | Bishop of Lichfield c. 963–c. 963 | Succeeded by Wynsige |
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Bishops of Lichfield (including precursor offices)
- Diuma
- Ceollach
- Trumhere
- Jaruman
- Chad, Bishop of the Mercians & the Lindisfaras
- Winfrith
- Seaxwulf
- Headda
- Aldwine
- Witta
- Hemele
- Cuthfrith
- Berhthun
- Hygeberht (Archbishop of Lichfield)
- Ealdwulf
- Herewine
- Æthelwold
- Hunberght
- Cynefrith
- Tunberht
- Wulfsige
- Burgheard
- Eadberht
- Wulfred
- Wilferth
- Ælfwine
- Wulfgar
- Cynesige
- Wynsige
- Elphege
- Godwin
- Leofgar
- Brihtmær
- Wulfsige
- Leofwin
- Peter (became Bishop of Chester)
- Peter, Bishop of Chester
- Robert de Limesey, Bishop of Chester
- Robert de Limesey (previously Bishop of Chester)
- Robert Peche
- Roger de Clinton
- Walter Durdent
- Richard Peche
- Gerard la Pucelle
- Hugh Nonant
- Geoffrey de Muschamp
- William de Cornhill
- Alexander de Stavenby
- Alexander de Stavenby
- Hugh de Pateshull
- Roger Weseham
- Roger de Meyland
- Walter Langton
- Roger Northburgh
- Robert de Stretton
- Walter Skirlaw
- Richard le Scrope
- John Burghill
- John Catterick
- James Cary
- William Heyworth
- William Booth
- Nicholas Close
- Reginald Boulers
- John Hales
- William Smyth
- John Arundel
- Geoffrey Blythe
- Rowland Lee
- Rowland Lee
- Richard Sampson
- Ralph Baines
- Thomas Bentham
- William Overton
- George Abbot
- Richard Neile
- John Overall
- Thomas Morton
- Robert Wright
- Accepted Frewen
- Episcopacy abolished (Commonwealth)
- Accepted Frewen
- John Hacket
- Thomas Wood
- William Lloyd
- John Hough
- Edward Chandler
- Richard Smalbroke
- Frederick Cornwallis
- John Egerton
- Brownlow North
- Richard Hurd
- James Cornwallis
- Henry Ryder
- Samuel Butler
- Samuel Butler
- James Bowstead
- John Lonsdale
- George Selwyn
- William Maclagan
- Augustus Legge
- John Kempthorne
- Edward Woods
- Stretton Reeve
- Kenneth Skelton
- Keith Sutton
- Jonathan Gledhill
- Clive Gregory (acting)
- Michael Ipgrave
10th-century Bishop of Lichfield
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