John Dowden
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The Right Reverend John Dowden | |
---|---|
Bishop of Edinburgh | |
Church | Scottish Episcopal Church |
Diocese | Edinburgh |
Elected | 1886 |
In office | 1886–1910 |
Predecessor | Henry Cotterill |
Successor | Somerset Walpole |
Orders | |
Ordination | 1865 by Hamilton Verschoyle |
Consecration | 21 September 1886 by Hugh Jermyn |
Personal details | |
Born | |
Died | 30 January 1910 Edinburgh, Scotland | (aged 69)
Buried | Dean Cemetery |
Nationality | Irish |
Denomination | Anglican |
Spouse |
Louisa Jones (m. 1864) |
Children | 7 |
Alma mater | Trinity College Dublin |
John Dowden /d͡ʒɒn ˈdaʊdən/ (29 June 1840 – 30 January 1910) was an Irish-born bishop and ecclesiastical historian. He served in the Scottish Episcopal Church as the Bishop of Edinburgh.
Life
He was born in
In 1886, he was consecrated as the Episcopalian bishop of Edinburgh and served in St Mary's Episcopal Cathedral in Edinburgh's West End and served this role until death.[1] In the late 19th century he lived at 10 Gillsland Road in the Merchiston district of Edinburgh,[2] but in his later years he lived at 13 Learmonth Terrace, a substantial Victorian terraced house, west of the cathedral.[3]
He died in Edinburgh on 30 January 1910 and is buried in the Victorian north extension of Dean Cemetery in western Edinburgh. He is buried with his wife Louisa and son John Wheeler Dowden LLD, FRCSEd (1866–1936), who was president of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh.[4]
His memorial in St Marys Cathedral was designed by Sir Robert Lorimer in 1911.[5]
Scholarly work
As a scholar, he was author of many works of thorough scholarship, including The Medieval Church in Scotland: its constitution, organisation and law (1910) and The Bishops of Scotland: being notes on the lives of all the bishops, under each of the sees, prior to the Reformation (1912). Both were published posthumously by James Maclehose and Sons, Glasgow. The former, although extremely dated, is still regarded as one of the main starting points in medieval Scottish ecclesiastical history, and the latter remains to this day one of the most comprehensive guides to medieval Scottish episcopal prosopography. An earlier work, The Workmanship of the Prayer Book: In Its Literary and Liturgical Aspects, (London: Methuen, 1899) remains an indispensable analysis of the background to and ethos of the Book of Common Prayer.
Dowden gave the
References
Further reading
- Dowden, Alice (1910) "Biographical sketch" in: Dowden, John: The Medieval Church in Scotland
- Strong, Rowan. "Dowden, John (1840–1910)". doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/32883. (Subscription or UK public library membershiprequired.)
- Watt, D. E. R., "Scotland: Religion and Piety", in Steve Rigby (ed.), A Companion to Britain in the Later Middle Ages, (Oxford, 2003), pp. 396–410 (info on p. 396)