English bishop (1868–1946)
In this article, the
surname is
Wynne Willson , not
Willson .
St John Basil Wynne Willson (surname Wynne-Willson;[ 3] 28 August 1868 – 15 October 1946) was an Anglican bishop in the first half of the 20th century. He was the Bishop of Bath and Wells from 1921 to 1937.[ 1] [ 4]
The maternal grandson of Michael Alexander , Bishop of Jerusalem,[ 2] Willson was educated at Cheltenham and St John's College, Cambridge .[ 5] He was an Assistant Master at The Leys School and Rugby before Headships at Haileybury College and Marlborough .[ 6] Ordained in 1904, he was appointed Dean of Bristol in 1916,[ 7] a post he held for five years.[ 8] The Bishop of Bristol (George Nickson ) and the Dean were strong supporters of Britain's involvement in the Great War and Willson, although 48, volunteered for the Army Chaplaincy. He was interviewed on 7 February 1917, and he asked to be posted to France or Salonika;[ 9] but bouts of colon pain and shortsightedness meant that he had to serve in England.[ 10] He left the army in 1918. He married Alice Lillian Wills in 1919, and died in 1946.[ 11] He was consecrated a bishop on All Saints' Day 1921 (1 November) by Randall Davidson , Archbishop of Canterbury , at St Paul's Cathedral .[ 12] He then served as Bishop of Bath and Wells until his retirement on 1 November 1937.[ 13]
Publications
A classical scholar, Willson's translations included Aeschylus ’ Prometheus Bound ; Julius Caesar ’s Gallic Wars , Books 4 and 5; Virgil 's Aeneid , Books 5 and 6; and Lucian of Samosata's Wonderland (Vera Historia ).[ 1]
References
External links
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