Bishop of Whalley

The Bishop of Whalley was an episcopal title used by a Church of England suffragan bishop; the See was created by Order in Council on 28 June 1909 (under the Suffragans Nomination Act 1888)[1] and took its name after the large village Whalley in Lancashire.[2][3]

The suffragan bishop was originally under the jurisdiction of the Diocese of Manchester, but with the creation of the Diocese of Blackburn in 1926, the suffragan bishop and the Whalley area became part of the new diocese. Since 1936, the title has been in abeyance.[2]

List of bishops

Bishops of Whalley
From Until Incumbent Notes
19091936Atherton Rawstorne [4]Diocese of Manchester until 1926/7; Diocese of Blackburn thereafter.
1936presentin abeyance
Source(s):[2]
gollark: And the thing (a mobile bee deployment platform) needs that DMP thing to track its orientation.
gollark: The code is all running on an RPi, but the "DMP" features in the MPU6050 are poorly documented and the reverse engineered drivers are in C++.
gollark: Unfortunately, I'm working on a robotics thing for which I have to use C++ due to bad drivers for an accelerometer/gyroscope chip.
gollark: Which is gibson.
gollark: <@734160436194181170> too.

References

  1. "No. 28266". The London Gazette. 2 July 1909. p. 5049.
  2. Crockford's Clerical Directory (100th ed.). London: Church House Publishing. 2007. p. 949. ISBN 978-0-7151-1030-0.
  3. The parish of Whalley, A History of the County of Lancaster: Volume 6 (1911), pp. 349-360. Retrieved on 9 October 2008.
  4. Atherton Gwillym Rawstorne. thePeerage.com. Retrieved on 9 October 2008.


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