- Hugh Curwen
Hugh Curwen (d.
November 1 ,1568 ), was an English ecclesiastic and statesman. He was a native ofWestmorland and educated at Cambridge, afterwards taking orders in the church.In May 1533 he expressed approval of Henry VIII's marriage with
Anne Boleyn in a sermon preached before the king. In 1541 he became dean of Hereford, and in 1555 Queen Mary nominated him to the archbishopric of Dublin, and in the same year he was appointedLord Chancellor of Ireland . He acted as one of the lords justices during the absence from Ireland of the lord deputy, the earl of Sussex, in 1557.On the accession of Elizabeth, Curwen at once accommodated himself to the new conditions by declaring himself a
Protestant , and was continued in the office of lord chancellor. He was accused by the archbishop of Armagh of serious moral delinquency, and his recall was demanded both by the primate and thebishop of Meath . In 1567 Curwen resigned the see of Dublin and the office of lord chancellor, and was appointedbishop of Oxford .References
*
John Strype , "Life and Acts of Archbishop Parker" (3 vols, Oxford, 1824), and "Memorials" ofThomas Cranmer (2 vols, Oxford, 1840)
*John D'Alton , "Memoirs of the Archbishops of Dublin" (Dublin, 1838).*1911
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