Archdeacon of St Albans
The Archdeacon of St Albans is an ecclesiastical post in the Church of England Diocese of St Albans in the Province of Canterbury.
History
Before the Dissolution of the Monasteries and Henrican reforms of the 16th century, there were Archdeacons of St Albans from within the Abbey. Registers list archdeacons starting in 1420, but this old "abbey archdeaconry" is supposed to have been created in the reign of Henry III.The "diocesan archdeaconry" was newly constituted from St Albans Abbey's parishes in Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire in 1550; it remained a part of the Diocese of London until 1845, when it and was transferred to the diocese of Rochester, at which point its boundaries were made to coincide with those of Hertfordshire. Thirty years later, the archdeaconries of Essex, of Colchester, and of St Albans were taken from the Rochester diocese to create the Diocese of St Albans in 1878. Shortly after the two Essex archdeaconries were erected into the Diocese of Chelmsford in 1914, the St Albans diocese received the ancient county archdeaconry of Bedford from the Diocese of Ely; there has once again been a third archdeaconry since the split on 1 January 1997 of the Hertford archdeaconry from the Archdeaconry of St Albans.
List of archdeacons
Medieval
- 1415–bef. 1420: John Blebury
- 1420–bef. 1425: John Hatfield
- 1425–bef. 1435: William Alnwick/Alnewyke
- 1435–bef. 1437: John Peyton
- 1437–bef. 1441: John Hatfield
- 1441–bef. 1446: Stephen London
- 1446–bef. 1450: William Albon
- 1450–bef. 1476: William of Wallingford
- 1476–bef. 1478: Nicholas Boston
- 1478–bef. 1490: John Rothebury
- 1490–bef. 1494: John Thornton
- 1494–bef. 1495: Thomas Newland/Newlonde
- 1495–bef. 1505: Richard Runham
- 1505–bef. 1506: John Stonewell/Stonywell
- 1506: John Killingworth
- 1506–bef. 1509: John Albon
- 1509–bef. 1512: John Mainard/Maynard
- 1512–bef. 1514: Richard Runham
- 1514–bef. 1517: Thomas Marshall
- 1517–bef. 1531: Thomas Kyngesbury
- 1531: Egidius Ferrers
- 1531–bef. 1539: Thomas Kyngesbury
- 1539–1550: William East/Este
Early modern
- 1550–bef. 1557 : William Este
- 26 February 1557–bef. 1560 : James Dugdale
- 17 July 1560–bef. 1581 : David Kempe
- 3 January 1581–bef. July 1581 : Giles Lawrence
- 5 July 1581–aft. 1602: William Hutchinson
- bef. 1626–bef. 1631 : Thomas Raymond
- 14 November 1631 – 25 June 1644 : Thomas Westfield
- 19 December 1660–bef. 1664 : Mark Frank
- 30 June 1664 – 24 April 1671 : Christopher Shute
- 28 April 1671 – 19 July 1683 : William Bell
- 9 August 1683–bef. 1688 : Edward Carter
- 4 June 1688–bef. 1713 : John Cole
- 21 April 1713–September 1715 : Lionel Gatford
- 6 October 1715 – 13 September 1738 : Philip Stubbs
- 14 October 1738 – 1741 : Fifield Allen
- 14 June 1741 – 29 August 1754 : John Cole
- 13 September 1754 – 12 August 1781 : James Ibbetson
- 5 September 1781 – 1788 : Samuel Horsley
- 8 January 1789 – 1813 : Joseph Pott
- 4 January 1814–bef. 1816 : Robert Hodgson
- 23 January 1816 – 9 June 1839 : John Watson
- 17 June 1839 – 1840 : William Hale
- 16 October 1840 – 28 August 1845 : Charles Burney
- 13 January 1846 – 25 November 1883 : Anthony Grant
Late modern
- 1884–1909 : Walter Lawrance
- 1909–1933 : Kenneth Gibbs
- 1933–31 December 1935 : Arthur Parnell
- 1936–1942 : Aylmer Skelton
- 1942–1951 : Thomas Wood
- 1951–1962 : Charles Cockbill
- 1962–1973 : Basil Snell
- 1973–1974 : Peter Mumford
- 1974–1981 : David Farmbrough
- 1982–1987 : Edward Norfolk
- 1987–1998 : Philip Davies
- 1999–2002 : Richard Cheetham
- 2003–2007 : Helen Cunliffe
- 2008–2020 : Jonathan Smith
- 14 March 2020 – 2 February 2023 : Jane Mainwaring
- 20 May 2023 – present: Charles Hudson