Alfred Lilley
Alfred Leslie Lilley (14 August 1860 – 31 January 1948) was an Anglican priest[1] and author.[2]
Lilley was born in Clare, County Armagh,[3] and educated at the Royal School, Armagh, and Trinity College Dublin. After a curacy in Glendermott he served at Holy Trinity, Sloane Street and St Mary on Paddington Green.[4] He was a Canon Residentiary of Hereford Cathedral from 1911 to 1936; its Chancellor from 1922 to 1936; and Archdeacon of Ludlow from 1913 to 1928.[5]
Character
E. H. Visiak describes Lilley in his 1968 memoir Life's Morning Hour as having "the aspect of a monk with a genial and sagacious mind", with "a capacity for suffering bores gladly".[6] (Lilley provided the introduction for Visiak's 1911 poetry collection Flints and Flashes.)
Notes
- ^ The National Archives
- ^ Amongst others he wrote Sir Joshua Fitch: his Life and Work, 1906; Adventus Regni, 1907; Modernism, 1908; The Soul of St Paul, 1909; The Religion of Life, 1910; Nature and Super-nature, 1911; Prayer in Christian Theology, 1924; Worship; Its Necessity, Nature, and Expression, 1926; Sacraments, their Meaning for Christian Worship, 1928; and Religion and Revelation, 1932 > British Library web site accessed 09:13 GMT Thursday 4 May 2017
- ^ "Papers of Canon Alfred Leslie Lilley". Jisc Archives Hub. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
- ^ Crockford's Clerical Directory 1929-30 p792/2 London: Oxford University Press, 1929
- ^ 'LILLEY, Canon Alfred Leslie', Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014 accessed 4 May 2017
- ^ Visiak, E. H. (1968). Life's Morning Hour. London: John Baker. p. 196.
Church of England titles | ||
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Preceded by Algernon Oldham | Archdeacon of Ludlow 1913–1928 | Succeeded by |
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(Shropshire)
- William
- Peter le Kauf
- Odo
- Gilbert Foliot
- Hugh Foliot
- Nicholas de Aquila
- Simon de Edenbridge
- Peter d'Aigueblanche
- John Foliot
- James d'Aigueblanche
- Hervey de Boreham
- Richard de Swinfield
- James d'Aigueblanche (2nd term)
- Adam de Fileby
- John de Bestan
- John de Swinfield
- Roger de Canterbury
- Philip Talbot
(Shropshire)
- John de Rosse
- William le Mercer de Rosse
- Richard de Sydenhale
- Henry de Shipton
- William de Borstall
- Richard Nowell
- John Hoare
- John Welles
- John Hereford
- John Loveney
- John Merbury
- William Leche
- Thomas Yone
- Robert Jeffry
- Thomas Morton
- John Martyn
- William Webbe
- Arthur Stafford
- John Wardroper
- William Gobard
- Henry Martyn
- Humphrey Ogle
- Richard Sparcheford
(Shropshire)
- Richard Smythe
- Robert Grensill
- Robert Greenwiche
- Morgan Godwin
- Thomas Cooke
- Stephen Philips
- Francis Wheeler
- Adam Ottley
- Robert Comyn
- Richard Crosse
- Samuel Croxall
- Robert Breton
- Egerton Leigh
- John Harley
- Robert Clive
- Joseph Plymley (Corbett)
- William Vickers
- William Waring (became Archdeacon of Ludlow)
- William Waring (previously Archdeacon of Shropshire)
- George Maddison
- Henry Bather
- Algernon Oldham
- Alfred Lilley
- Edwin Bartleet
- Henry Dixon
- Herbert Whately
- Hugh Bevan
- John Lewis
- Andrew Woodhouse
- Mark Wood (Bishop of Ludlow)
- Ian Griggs
- Richard Lewis
- John Saxbee (Bishop of Ludlow)
- Michael Hooper (Bishop of Ludlow)
- Alistair Magowan (Bishop of Ludlow)
- Fiona Gibson
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