William Senhouse
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
William Senhouse (died 1505), also called William Sever, was an English priest, successively Bishop of Carlisle, 1495–1502, and Bishop of Durham, 1502–1505. He was educated at the University of Oxford and became a Benedictine monk at St Mary's Abbey, York, being elected abbot in 1485.
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Preceded by Richard Bell |
Bishop of Carlisle 1495–1502 |
Succeeded by Richard Leyburn |
Preceded by Richard Fox |
Bishop of Durham 1502–1505 |
Succeeded by Christopher Bainbridge |
Bishops: Saxon to Norman
Aldhun · Eadmund · Eadred · Ethelric · Ethelwin
Prince-Bishops: Norman to Reformation
William Walcher · William of St. Carilef · Ranulf Flambard · Geoffrey Rufus · William of St. Barbara · Hugh Pudsey · Philip of Poitou · Richard Marsh · Richard le Poor · Nicholas Farnham · Walter of Kirkham · Robert Stitchill · Robert of Holy Island · Antony Beck · Richard Kellaw · Lewis de Beaumont · Richard de Bury · Thomas Hatfield · John Fordham · Walter Skirlaw · Thomas Langley · Robert Neville · Laurence Booth · William Dudley · John Sherwood · Richard Foxe · William Senhouse · Christopher Bainbridge · Thomas Ruthall · Thomas Wolsey · Cuthbert Tunstall
Prince-Bishops: Reformation to Victorian
James Pilkington · Richard Barnes · Matthew Hutton · Tobias Matthew · William James · Richard Neile · George Monteigne · John Howson · Thomas Morton · John Cosin · Nathaniel Crew · William Talbot · Edward Chandler · Joseph Butler · Richard Trevor · John Egerton · Thomas Thurlow · Shute Barrington · William Van Mildert
Bishops: Victorian to present
Edward Maltby · Charles Thomas Longley · Henry Villiers · Charles Baring · Joseph Barber Lightfoot · Brooke Westcott · Handley Moule · Herbert Hensley Henson · Alwyn Williams · Arthur Michael Ramsey · Maurice Harland · Ian Ramsey · John Habgood · David Edward Jenkins · Michael Turnbull · Tom Wright