John Trilleck
14th-century Bishop of Hereford
John Trilleck | |
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Bishop of Hereford | |
Elected | 22 February 1344 |
Term ended | 20 November 1360 |
Predecessor | Thomas Charleton |
Successor | Lewis de Charleton |
Orders | |
Consecration | 29 August 1344 |
Personal details | |
Died | 20 November 1360 |
Denomination | Catholic |
John Trilleck or Trillick (died 20 November 1360) was a medieval Bishop of Hereford.
Trilleck was the nephew of Adam Orleton, successively Bishop of Hereford, Worcester and Winchester and the elder brother of Thomas Trilleck, later Bishop of Rochester.[1]
Trilleck was elected to the episcopate as Bishop of Hereford on 22 February 1344 and consecrated on 29 August 1344.[2] He founded Trellick's Inn at Oxford as undergraduate quarters.
Trilleck died on 20 November 1360.[2]
Citations
- ^ "Canterbury and York Series Vol. VIII". Retrieved 27 January 2012.
- ^ a b Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 250
References
- Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I. (1996). Handbook of British Chronology (Third revised ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-56350-X.
External links
- Media related to John Trilleck at Wikimedia Commons
- Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society Includes some biographical notes on Trilleck/Trillick
Catholic Church titles | ||
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Preceded by Thomas Charleton | Bishop of Hereford 1344–1360 | Succeeded by Lewis de Charleton |
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Bishops of Hereford
- Æthelstan
- Leofgar
- Ealdred
- Walter of Lorraine
- Robert de Losinga
- Gerard
- Roger
- Reynelm
- Geoffrey de Clive
- Richard de Capella
- Robert de Bethune
- Gilbert Foliot
- Robert of Melun
- Robert Foliot
- William de Vere
- Giles de Braose
- Hugh de Mapenor
- Hugh Foliot
- Ralph de Maidstone
- Michael
- Peter of Aigueblanche
- John de Breton
- Thomas de Cantilupe
- Richard Swinefield
- Adam Orleton
- Thomas Charleton
- John Trilleck
- Lewis de Charleton
- William Courtenay
- John Gilbert
- Thomas Trevenant
- Robert Mascall
- Edmund Lacey
- Thomas Polton
- Thomas Spofford
- Richard Beauchamp
- Reginald Boulers
- John Stanberry
- Thomas Mylling
- Edmund Audley
- Adriano Castellesi
- Richard Mayew
- Charles Booth
- Edward Foxe
- Edmund Bonner
- John Skypp
- John Harley
- Robert Parfew
- Thomas Reynolds
- John Scory
- Herbert Westfaling
- Robert Bennet
- Francis Godwin
- William Juxon
- Godfrey Goodman
- Augustine Lindsell
- Matthew Wren
- Theophilus Feild
- George Coke
- Episcopacy abolished (Commonwealth)
- Nicholas Monck
- Herbert Croft
- Gilbert Ironside
- Humphrey Humphreys
- Philip Bisse
- Benjamin Hoadly
- Henry Egerton
- Lord James Beauclerk
- John Harley
- John Butler
- Folliott Cornewall
- John Luxmoore
- George Huntingford
- Edward Grey
- Thomas Musgrave
- Renn Hampden
- James Atlay
- John Percival
- Hensley Henson
- Linton Smith
- Charles Lisle Carr
- Richard Parsons
- Tom Longworth
- Mark Hodson
- John Eastaugh
- John Oliver
- Anthony Priddis
- Alistair Magowan (acting)
- Richard Frith
- Alistair Magowan (acting)
- Richard Jackson
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