Richard Neile

{{Short description|Archbishop of York from 1631 to 1640}}

{{similar names|Richard Neal (disambiguation){{!}}Richard Neal}}

{{Use British English|date=April 2011}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}

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Richard Neile (or Neale; 1562 – 31 October 1640) was an English churchman, bishop successively of six English dioceses, more than any other man, including the Archdiocese of York from 1631 until his death.

Early life

Neile was born in Westminster, and baptised on 11 March 1562 at St Margaret's, Westminster.

He was son of a tallow-chandler, though his grandfather had been a courtier and official under Henry VIII, until he was deprived for non-compliance with the Six Articles. He was educated at Westminster School, under Edward Grant and William Camden. He was sent by Mildred, Lady Burghley (wife of William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley), on the recommendation of Gabriel Goodman to St John's College, Cambridge as a pensioner,{{cite DNB|wstitle=Neile, Richard|last=Hutton|first=W. H.|volume=40}} matriculating at Easter 1580, graduating B.A. 1584, M.A. 1587, B.D. 1595, D.D. 1600.{{acad|id=NL580R|name=Neale, Richard}}

Ordained deacon and priest at Peterborough in 1589, he continued to enjoy the patronage of the Burghley family, residing in their household, and became chaplain to Lord Burghley, and later to his son Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury.

He preached before Queen Elizabeth, and became vicar of Cheshunt, Hertfordshire (1590) and rector of Toddington, Bedfordshire (1598). He was appointed Master of the Savoy in 1602, and in July 1603 Clerk of the Closet,{{cite book|last=McCullough|first=Peter|year=1998|title=Sermons at Court: Politics and Religion in Elizabethan and Jacobean Preaching|volume=1|page=110|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=9780521590464|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uo2SR7BCNxEC&pg=PA110|access-date=4 September 2019}} a position he would hold until 1632. On 5 November 1605 he was installed Dean of Westminster, resigning the deanery in 1610.

Bishop

He held successively the bishoprics of Rochester (1608), Lichfield and Coventry (1610), Lincoln (1614), Durham (1617), and Winchester (1628), and the archbishopric of York (1631).

While at Rochester he appointed William Laud as his chaplain and gave him several valuable preferments. His political activity while bishop of Durham was rewarded with a privy councillorship in 1627. Neile sat regularly in the courts of Star Chamber and High Commission. His correspondence with Laud and with Sir Dudley Carleton and Sir Francis Windebank (Charles I's secretaries of state) are valuable sources for the history of the time. He was involved in the last burning at the stake for heresy in England, that of the Arian Edward Wightman in 1612.{{cn|date=May 2024}}

Oliver Cromwell made only one speech during his first stint as a Member of Parliament for Huntingdon in the Parliament of 1628–1629, a poorly received attack against Neile, possibly over disagreement with his form of Arminianism.{{sfn|Morrill|1990|pp=25–26}}

Family

Neile was the father of Sir Paul Neile, astronomer and politician, and grandfather of William Neile, mathematician.{{cite DNB|wstitle=Neile, William}} His brother, another William Neile (1560–1624), was a book-collector who left 880 books to his children at his death.Westminster Archives, Commissary Court of the Dean and Chapter of Westminster wills, Camden 27.

References

{{Portal|Christianity}}

{{Reflist}}

{{Refbegin}}

  • {{cite book|authorlink=John Morrill (historian)|last=Morrill |first=John |year=1990 |chapter=The Making of Oliver Cromwell |editor-last=Morrill |editor-first=John |title=Oliver Cromwell and the English Revolution |publisher=Longman |location=London |isbn=0-582-01675-4}}

{{Refend}}

=Attribution=

  • {{DNB|wstitle=Neile, Richard}}
  • {{EB1911|wstitle=Neile, Richard|volume=19|page=350}}

{{S-start}}

{{S-rel|en}}

{{S-bef

| before = Lancelot Andrewes

}}

{{S-ttl

| title = Dean of Westminster

| years = 1605–1610

}}

{{S-aft

| after = George Montaigne

}}

{{S-bef

| before = William Barlow

}}

{{S-ttl

| title = Bishop of Rochester

| years = 1608–1610

}}

{{S-aft

| after = John Buckeridge

}}

{{S-bef

| before = George Abbot

}}

{{S-ttl

| title = Bishop of Lichfield

| years = 1610–1614

}}

{{S-aft

| after = John Overal

}}

{{S-bef

| before = William Barlow

}}

{{S-ttl

| title = Bishop of Lincoln

| years = 1614–1617

}}

{{S-aft

| rows = 2

| after = George Montaigne

}}

{{S-bef

| before = William James

}}

{{S-ttl

| title = Bishop of Durham

| years = 1617–1628

}}

{{S-bef

| before = Lancelot Andrewes

}}

{{S-ttl

| title = Bishop of Winchester

| years = 1628–1631

}}

{{S-aft

| after = Walter Curle

}}

{{S-bef

| before = Samuel Harsnett

}}

{{S-ttl

| title = Archbishop of York

| years = 1631–1640

}}

{{S-aft

| after = John Williams

}}

{{S-off}}

{{S-bef

| before = The Earl of Somerset

}}

{{S-ttl

| title = Lord Lieutenant of Durham

| years = 1617–1627

}}

{{S-vac|next=John Howson}}

{{S-end}}

{{Deans of Westminster}}

{{Bishops of Rochester}}

{{Bishops of Coventry and Lichfield}}

{{Bishops of Lincoln}}

{{Bishops of Durham}}

{{Bishops of Winchester}}

{{Archbishops of York}}

{{Masters of the Savoy}}

{{Clerks of the Closet}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Neile, Richard}}

Category:1562 births

Category:1640 deaths

Category:17th-century Anglican archbishops

Category:17th-century Church of England bishops

Category:Alumni of St John's College, Cambridge

Category:Archbishops of York

Category:Arminian theologians

Category:Arminian ministers

Category:Bishops of Durham

Category:Bishops of Lichfield

Category:Bishops of Lincoln

Category:Bishops of Rochester

Category:Bishops of Winchester

Category:Burials at York Minster

Category:Clerks of the Closet

Category:Deans of Westminster

Category:Doctors of Divinity

Category:Lord-lieutenants of Durham

Category:Masters of the Savoy

Category:People educated at Westminster School, London

Category:1560s births