Guy Etton

Anglican priest

The Venerable Guy Etton was an Anglican priest in the late 16th and early 17th centuries.[1]

He was educated at the University of Oxford.[2] He held livings at St. James the Elder, Horton, Gloucestershire and St. Leonard, Shoreditch. He was Archdeacon of Gloucester from 1559 to 1571.[3] He died in 1577.

Notes

  1. ^ 'The English Reformation and the Laity: Gloucestershire, 1540–1580' Litzenberger, C p89: Cambridge; CUP; 1997 ISBN 0-521-47545-7
  2. ^ "Eade–Eyton". British History Online. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  3. ^ Horn, Joyce M. (1996), Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541–1857, vol. 8, pp. 47–49
Portals:
  • Biography
  • icon Christianity
  • flag England
  • History
  • flag England
  • v
  • t
  • e
High Medieval
  • Thurstinus
  • Robert
  • Gervase
  • Richard (I)
  • Matthew
  • William of Northall
  • Robert de Inglesham
  • Richard (II)
  • John de Gray
  • William de Verdun
  • Maurice de Arundel
  • William Lupus
  • Thomas
  • Hugh de Cantilupe
  • Robert de Fangfoss
  • John of Capévreux
Late Medieval
  • Walter de Burdon
  • William de Birstone
  • Nicholas de Hungate
  • Hugh de Statherne
  • Joceus de Kinebauton
  • John de Uske
  • Roger de Breynton
  • Richard de Ledbury
  • Thomas de Stratford
  • Roger Peres
  • William de Thirsford
  • Nicholas Geyell
  • Richard Winchcombe
  • Nicholas Herbury
  • Philip Polton
  • John Kingscote
  • John Segden
  • Robert Morton
  • John Dunmoe
  • John de Gigliis
Early modern
  • Geoffrey Blythe
  • Thomas Ruthall
  • Peter Carmelian
  • John Bell
  • Nicholas Wotton
  • John Williams
  • Guy Etton
  • George Savage
  • Robert Hill
  • Samuel Burton
  • Hugh Robinson
  • John Middleton
  • Edward Pope
  • John Gregory
  • Thomas Hyde
  • Robert Parsons
  • Nathaniel Lye
  • William Geekie
  • Richard Hurd
  • James Webster
Late modern
  • v
  • t
  • e
Unitary authorities
Boroughs or districts
Major settlements
(cities in italics)
Rivers
Topics


This article about a Church of England archdeacon in the Province of Canterbury is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e