Fb2 George Isaac Huntingford: Warden of Winchester College, 1789-1832, Bishop of Gloucester, 1802, Bishop of Hereford, 1815, ePub
by Hilda Mary Stowell
Category: | Schools and Teaching |
Subcategory: | Teaching and Education |
Author: | Hilda Mary Stowell |
ISBN: | 0950153303 |
ISBN13: | 978-0950153308 |
Language: | English |
Publisher: | Hilda M. Stowell, The Mound, West End (1970) |
Pages: | 73 |
Fb2 eBook: | 1243 kb |
ePub eBook: | 1574 kb |
Digital formats: | azw lit mbr lrf |
George Isaac Huntingford (1748–1832) was successively of Bishop of Gloucester and Bishop of Hereford.
George Isaac Huntingford (1748–1832) was successively of Bishop of Gloucester and Bishop of Hereford. Huntingford was educated at Winchester College and New College, Oxford, where he became a Fellow in 1770, graduating . He was then curate of Compton, south of Winchester, before becoming a master of his old school, of which he was warden from 1780 until his death.
Bibliography: p. 63-65. 0924, B. Library of Congress.
George Isaac Huntingford (1748-1832), bishop successively of Gloucester and Hereford; fellow of New College, Oxford, 1770; . List of Old Wykehamists - Former pupils of Winchester College are known as Old Wykehamists, in memory of the school s founder, William of Wykeham, and as such are able to include OW in any list of post nominal letters.
George Isaac Huntingford (1748–1832) was successively of Bishop of Gloucester and . In 1789 he was elected Warden of Winchester College. The Bishop of Hereford is the ordinary of the Church of England Diocese of Hereford in the Province of Canterbury. Through his friendship with Henry Addington, who he had taught at Winchester, Huntingford became Bishop of Gloucester, 1802–1815, and of Hereford, 1815–32, but continued to live in the comfortable Warden's lodgings at the school.
George Isaac Huntingford (1748–1832) was bishop successively of Gloucester and Hereford. He was educated at Winchester College and New College, Oxford, where he became a Fellow in 1770, graduating . Bell, . "Warden Huntingford and the Old Conservatism", Winchester College: Sixth Centenary Essays (ed. Custance), Oxford 1982. Church of England titles.
George Isaac Huntingford was successively of Bishop of Gloucester and .
George Isaac Huntingford was successively of Bishop of Gloucester and Bishop of Hereford. Life - Huntingford was educated at Winchester College and New College, Oxford, where he became a Fellow in 1770, graduating . He was then curate of Compton, south of Winchester, before becoming a master of his old school, of which he was warden from 1780 until his death
HUNTINGFORD, GEORGE ISAAC (1748–1832), bishop successively of Gloucester and Hereford, son of James Huntingford, who died 30 Sept.
HUNTINGFORD, GEORGE ISAAC (1748–1832), bishop successively of Gloucester and Hereford, son of James Huntingford, who died 30 Sept. 1772, aged 48, and was buried in Winchester Cathedral, was born at Winchester 9 Sept. In 1762 he was admitted scholar of Winchester College, and elected to New College, Oxford, in 1768, becoming scholar 18 July, and matriculating 19 July.
Huntingford was educated at Winchester College and New College, Oxford, where he became a Fellow in 1770, graduating Master of Arts, 1776 and Doctor of Divinity in 1793. From 1789 until 1825 he was vicar of the Church of Street John the Evangelist, Milborne Portuguese.
George Isaac Huntingford (1748-1832) was bishop successively of Gloucester .
George Isaac Huntingford (1748-1832) was bishop successively of Gloucester and Hereford He was fellow of New College, Oxford, 1770 graduating . He was then warden of Winchester College, 1789-1832; bishop of Gloucester, 1802-1815, and of Hereford, 1815-32.