- Donald Coggan
-
The Rt Revd and Rt Hon
The Lord Coggan
PCArchbishop of Canterbury Enthroned 1974 Reign ended 1980 Predecessor Michael Ramsey Successor Robert Runcie Personal details Born 9 October 1909
Highgate, London, EnglandDied 17 May 2000 (aged 90)
Winchester, HampshireBuried Canterbury Cathedral Frederick Donald Coggan, Baron Coggan, PC (9 October 1909 – 17 May 2000) was the 101st Archbishop of Canterbury from 1974 to 1980, during which time he visited Rome and met the Pontiff, in company with Bishop Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, future Cardinal of England and Wales.
Contents
Background
Coggan was born in Highgate, London, England and educated at Merchant Taylors' School, Charterhouse Square, City of London and St. John's College, Cambridge. He studied oriental languages from 1928 to 1931 and took a first in both parts of the tripos, achieving a rare and distinguished double first. He then had a positions as a lecturer in Semitic languages at the University of Manchester (1931–1934), professor of New Testament at Wycliffe College in Toronto (1937–1944) and principal of the London College of Divinity (1944–1956).
Life and work
Coggan served as curate of St Mary's Church, Islington from 1934 to 1937. He was ordained a priest in 1935, appointed Bishop of Bradford in 1956 and translated to Archbishop of York in 1961. After his retirement as Archbishop of Canterbury he was granted a life peerage and made Baron Coggan, of Canterbury and Sissinghurst in the County of Kent.
Coggan's tenure as archbishop was noted for his strong support for the ordination of women (which did not happen in the Church of England until 1994), having proposed it at the Lambeth Conference of the world's Anglican bishops in 1970. His comparatively brief tenure was marked by his boldness, orderliness and punctuality. Aside from his duties of his primacy, he was a prolific writer – his works including Call To The Nation (1975). He was also a speaker and preacher, often accompanied by his wife, Jean Braithwaite.
Among his other roles was being Honorary President of the United Bible Societies from 1957 to 1976. His knowledge of the scriptures meant he made an enormous contribution to the furthering of the organisation. He also founded the Lord Coggan Memorial Fund which helped to supply Russian children with copies of the Bible.
Known for his warm welcome, he is commonly credited with remarking that "The art of hospitality is to make guests feel at home when you wish they were."[1]
Coggan died in Winchester, Hampshire.[2] He was cremated and his ashes buried at Canterbury Cathedral.
References
- ^ Quoted in A Gentleman Publisher's Commonplace Book, John Murray, October 1996
- ^ Deaths England and Wales 1984–2006
External links
Church of England titles Preceded by
Alfred BluntBishop of Bradford
1956–1961Succeeded by
Clement ParkerPreceded by
Michael RamseyArchbishop of York
(Primate of England)
1961–1974Succeeded by
Stuart BlanchArchbishop of Canterbury
1974–1980Succeeded by
Robert RuncieBishops and Archbishops of York Pre-Reformation Bishops Paulinus · Chad · Wilfrid · Bosa · John of Beverley · Wilfrid II
Pre-Reformation Archbishops Egbert · Æthelbert · Eanbald I · Eanbald II · Wulfsige · Wigmund · Wulfhere · Æthelbald · Hrotheweard · Wulfstan I · Oscytel · Edwald · Oswald · Ealdwulf · Wulfstan II · Ælfric Puttoc · Æthelric · Cynesige · Ealdred · Thomas of Bayeux · Gerard · Thomas II · Thurstan · William FitzHerbert · Henry Murdac · William FitzHerbert · Roger de Pont L'Évêque · Geoffrey Plantagenet · Simon Langton · Walter de Gray · Sewal de Bovil · Godfrey Ludham · William Langton · Bonaventure · Walter Giffard · William de Wickwane · John le Romeyn · Henry of Newark · Thomas of Corbridge · William Greenfield · William Melton · William Zouche · John of Thoresby · Alexander Neville · Thomas Arundel · Robert Waldby · Richard le Scrope · Thomas Langley · Robert Hallam · Henry Bowet · Philip Morgan · Richard Fleming · John Kemp · William Booth · George Neville · Lawrence Booth · Thomas Rotherham · Thomas Savage · Christopher Bainbridge · Thomas Wolsey
Post-Reformation Archbishops Edward Lee · Robert Holgate · Nicholas Heath · Thomas Young · Edmund Grindal · Edwin Sandys · John Piers · Matthew Hutton · Tobias Matthew · George Montaigne · Samuel Harsnett · Richard Neile · John Williams · Accepted Frewen · Richard Sterne · John Dolben · Thomas Lamplugh · John Sharp · Sir William Dawes Bt · Lancelot Blackburne · Thomas Herring · Matthew Hutton · John Gilbert · Robert Hay Drummond · William Markham · Edward Venables-Vernon-Harcourt · Thomas Musgrave · Charles Longley · William Thomson · William Magee · William Maclagan · Cosmo Lang · William Temple · Cyril Garbett · Michael Ramsey · Donald Coggan · Stuart Blanch · John Habgood · David Hope · John Sentamu
Categories:- 1909 births
- 2000 deaths
- 20th-century Anglican archbishops
- Academics of the University of Manchester
- Alumni of St John's College, Cambridge
- Archbishops of Canterbury
- Archbishops of York
- Bishops of Bradford
- Crossbench life peers
- Evangelical Anglicans
- Holders of a Lambeth degree
- Members of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom
- Old Merchant Taylors
- Ordained peers
- Recipients of the Royal Victorian Chain
- University of Toronto faculty
- People from Highgate
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