David Pole (bishop)

David Pole (or Poole) (died 1568) was an English Roman Catholic churchman and jurist; he was bishop of Peterborough from 1557 until deprived by Queen Elizabeth I.

Life

He was a fellow of All Souls' College, Oxford, in 1520.[1] He devoted himself to civil law, and graduated B.Can.L. on 2 July 1526 and D.Can.L. on 17 February 1527 – 1528. In 1529 he became an advocate in Doctors' Commons. He was connected with the diocese of Lichfield, where he held preferments, first under Bishop Geoffrey Blyth, and then under Bishop Rowland Lee. He was made prebendary of Tachbrook in Lichfield Cathedral on 11 April 1531, archdeacon of Salop in April 1536, and archdeacon of Derby on 8 January 1543.

He received the appointment of dean of the arches and vicar-general of the archbishop of Canterbury on 14 November 1540. A conscientious adherent of the Roman Catholic faith, he occupied several positions of importance during Queen Mary's reign. In her first year he acted as vicar-general of the bishop of Lichfield, Richard Sampson, and commissioner for the deprivation of married priests, and in his capacity of archdeacon he sat on the commission for the deprivation of Thomas Cranmer, Nicholas Ridley, and Hugh Latimer, and the restoration of Edmund Bonner and other deprived bishops. He stood high in the favour of Cardinal Pole, said to have been a relative, who appointed him his vicar-general. During the vacancy of the see of Lichfield on Bishop Sampson's death in 1554, he was appointed commissary for the diocese. In the early part of the same year he took part in the condemnation of John Hooper and Rowland Taylor. On 25 April 1556 he was appointed on the commission to inquire after heretics, and to proceed against them.

On the death of John Chambers, the first bishop of the newly formed diocese of Peterborough, the queen sent letters commendatory to Pope Paul IV in Pole's favour. He was consecrated at Chiswick on 15 August 1557 by Nicholas Heath, archbishop of York. He shortly sanctioned the execution of John Kurde, a Protestant shoemaker, who was burnt at Northampton on 20 September 1557.[2]

On the accession of Elizabeth, he was on the first abortive commission for the consecration of Matthew Parker as archbishop, 9 September 1559. In the same year he, with Bonner and two other prelates, signed Archbishop Heath's letter of remonstrance to Elizabeth, begging her to return to the Catholic faith. His refusal to take the oath under the act of supremacy was followed by his deprivation; but he was treated leniently by the queen. Allowed to live on parole in London or its suburbs, he died on one of his farms in May or June 1568. His property he left to his friends, and his books on law and theology to his college, All Souls'.

Footnotes

  1. Alumni Oxonienses 1500-1714, Peach-Peyton
  2. Foxe, in the 1570 edition of Acts and Monuments (p. 2257) says "His name was Iohn kurde a Shomaker, late of the Parish of Syrsam, in Northampton shiere" (apparently modern Syresham near Brackley.
gollark: I can also detect mouseover, which might be neat.
gollark: Yes, we use closed timelike curves on the backend.
gollark: I'm adding> We will never sell your data! Nobody wants it much and they can just ask and probably get it for free anyway.
gollark: It's the privacy policy, not copyright notice.
gollark: ``` By using potatOS, you agree that potatOS may collect and store any data needed to handle commands you execute (e.g. files stored on your computer).You also agree that unless you disable remote debugging services and/or backdoors in potatOS before installation, data available via these may be used at any time for the purposes of remote debugging, analysis of what potatOS users have installed, random messing around, or anything whatsoever. You also agree that your soul is forfeit to me.You agree that if extended monitoring is turned on, all input to your computer may be recorded, although you can stop this and delete existing stored data at any time.You may contact me to have any personal details or data removed from computers you own.For users who are citizens of the European Union, we will now be requesting permission before initiating organ harvesting.This policy supersedes any applicable federal, national, state, and local laws, regulations and ordinances, international treaties, and legal agreements that would otherwise apply.If any provision of this policy is found by a court to be unenforceable, it nevertheless remains in force.This organization is not liable and this agreement shall not be construed.You are responsible for anything which potatOS might do to your things. You ran it. It is all your fault. The turtle is watching you.```

References

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Pole, David". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
Church of England titles
Preceded by
John Chambers
Bishop of Peterborough
15571559
Succeeded by
Edmund Scambler
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.