The Archdeacon of Gloucester is a senior ecclesiastical officer in the Diocese of Gloucester, England whose responsibilities include the care of clergy and church buildings within the area of the Archdeaconry of Gloucester.
History
The first recorded archdeacons of the Diocese of Worcester occur from c. 1086 – the same sort of time that archdeacons occur across the church in England. Two archdeacons are recorded simultaneously from that time, but no clear territorial title occurs until 1143, when Gervase is called Archdeacon of Gloucester.[1]
The archdeaconry was within Worcester diocese for almost 500 years, until it was formed into the newly created Diocese of Gloucester on 13 September 1541, as part of the Henrician reformation. The new diocese was briefly dissolved and returned to Worcester
again on 20 May 1552[2] until Worcester and Gloucester were re-divided again at by Queen Mary in 1554.[3][4][5] From 5 October 1836, when the diocese was merged with Bristol[6] and 9 July 1897, when Bristol became an independent diocese again,[7] the archdeaconry was in the Diocese of Gloucester and Bristol. Parts of Gloucester archdeaconry were used to create the Cirencester archdeaconry (since renamed Cheltenham) on 8 December 1882.[8]
The archdeaconry consists of the deaneries of Forest, Gloucester City, Severn Vale, Stroud, & Wotton.
List of archdeacons
High Medieval
Junior archdeacon of the diocese:
bef. 1112–bef. 1114: Hugh (probably became senior archdeacon)
bef. 1114–aft. 1115: Richard (possibly same man as Richard I)