Henry Dove D.D. was an English priest in the 17th century. [1]
The nephew of Bishop John Pearson, Dove was educated at Westminster School [2] and Trinity College, Cambridge. [3] He was incorporated at Oxford in 1669. [4] He became the incumbent at St Bride's Church in the City of London in 1673; and Archdeacon of Richmond in 1678. [5] He was Chaplain to Charles II, James II and William and Mary.
Dove died on 11 March 1694.
Henry Latham was a priest and academic in the second half of the 19th century and first decade of the 20th.
William Beale was an English royalist churchman, Master in turn of Jesus College, Cambridge and St John's College, Cambridge. He was subjected to intense attacks by John Pym from 1640, for an unpublished sermon he had given in 1635 supporting royal prerogative. According to Glenn Burgess, Pym's attention to Beale was because he exhibited a rare combination of Arminian or Laudian theological views with explicit political views tending to absolutism.
Richard Bowchier was the Archdeacon of Lewes from 1693 until 1723. He was also known as an antiquarian.
Anthony Martin was an Anglo-Irish Anglican priest who served as Provost of Trinity College Dublin from 1645 to 1650. during the first half of the 17th-century.
Venn Eyre was Archdeacon of Carlisle from 2 March 1756 until his death on 18 May 1777.
Samuel Freeman was dean of Peterborough from 1691 until his death.
(John) Peter Allix, D.D. was an Anglican dean in the early 18th century.
John Bell was a 16th-century English priest and academic.
John Neile D.D. was an eminent Anglican priest in the second half of the 17th century.
John Howorth, D.D. was a 17th-century priest and academic.
James Pulling was a British academic.
William Grigg, D.D. was Master of Clare College from 1713 until his death.
John Hills, D.D. was a priest and academic in the late 16th and early 17th centuries.
William Elliston, D.D. was an academic in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
Thomas Browne, D.D. was Master of Pembroke College, Cambridge from 1694 until his death.
Thomas Henchman, D.D. (1642–1674) was an Anglican priest and the Archdeacon of Wilts from 1 August 1663 until his death.
John Jeffery, D.D. was an Anglican priest and author.
John Robinson was an English priest and academic in the second half of the 16th century.
Francis Walsall was a priest in England during the 17th century.
Cuthbert Bellott was an Anglican priest in the late 16th and early 17th centuries.