- Richard Davies
Richard Davies (c.
1505 -7 November 1581 ) was a Welshbishop andscholar . He was born in northWales , and was educated atNew Inn Hall, Oxford , becoming vicar ofBurnham, Buckinghamshire , in 1550.Being a reformer he took refuge at
Geneva during the reign of Mary, returning to England and to parochial work after the accession of Elizabeth in 1558. His connection with Wales was renewed almost at once; for, after serving on a commission which visited the Welsh dioceses, he was, in January 1560, consecratedbishop of St Asaph , whence he was translated, early in 1561, to the bishopric ofSt David's . As a bishop, Davies was an earnest reformer, very industrious, active and liberal, but not very scrupulous with regard to the property of the church.He was a member of the
Council of Wales , was very friendly withMatthew Parker ,archbishop of Canterbury , and was regarded both by Parker and byWilliam Cecil , Lord Burghley, as a trustworthy adviser on Welsh concerns. Another of the bishops friends wasWalter Devereux, 1st Earl of Essex . AssistingWilliam Salesbury , Davies took part in translating theNew Testament into Welsh, and also did some work on the Welsh translation of theBook of Common Prayer . He helped to revise theBishops' Bible of 1568, being himself responsible for the book ofDeuteronomy , and the second book of Samuel. He died in November 1581, and was buried inAbergwili church.References
*1911
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