John Lloyd (Rector of Caerwys)

John Lloyd (baptised 26 March 1733 – 22 May 1793) was a Welsh cleric and antiquarian.

John Lloyd

Life

Lloyd was christened in Llanarmon-yn-Iâl, Denbighshire. As a boy, he was nicknamed "the flower of Llanarmon". He was educated at Jesus College, Oxford, matriculating in July 1753. He obtained his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1757, having already been ordained in 1756. In 1761, he became curate at Caerwys, remaining there even after being appointed to the parish of Nannerch in 1774. In 1778, Lloyd became rector of Caerwys (the living at Nannerch being given to someone else) and he then remained in Caerwys until his death on 22 May 1793.[1]

He married Martha in 1769; one of their children was the antiquarian Angharad Llwyd and another, Llweyn, was himself rector of Nannerch from 1810 to 1841. In addition to his church duties, Lloyd had an interest in scholarship. He helped to prepare the Myvyrian Archaiology and was acknowledged by Thomas Pennant in the preface to his Tours of Wales as "my worthy and constant attendant in all my excursions."[1]

gollark: Amazing, you just solved the economy.
gollark: Those are directly practical skills. Research, while often valuable, doesn't pay well because the applications are a while down the line.
gollark: ... no? It might be hard to directly apply.
gollark: Academia isn't very well-paying, apparently.
gollark: The ideal gas PV=nRT one or whatever?

References

  1. Jenkins, Robert Thomas. "LLOYD, JOHN (17331793)". Welsh Biography Online. National Library of Wales. Retrieved 1 May 2008.



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