Apostolic Delegate to British Eastern and Western Africa (1947-1953) Apostolic Delegate to Africa for the Missions (1946-1947) Titular Bishop of Aeliae (1938-1946) Auxiliary Bishop of Westminster (1938-1946)
He entered Balliol College, Oxford, in 1920 and received a degree in modern history in 1923. He then went to Beda College in Rome, with the intention of seeking ordination and with a plan to enter the Carthusian order. He was ordained in 1929, and spent 10 months as a novice at St Hugh's Charterhouse, Parkminster, West Sussex, before concluding that he did not have a monastic vocation.[citation needed]
This brought his consecration to the titular Archbishopric of Apamea. His service in Africa was successful, and he helped carry out the Vatican's policy of preparing for the appointment of native African bishops, acting as principal consecrator of Laurean Rugambwa after his appointment as Apostolic Vicar of Lower Kagera: Rugambwa later became the first African cardinal since the days of the early church.[citation needed]
Upon Mathew's return to England in 1953, he was appointed bishop-in-ordinary to the British Armed Forces. (He had refused an appointment to the nunciature in Bern, hoping to receive an English diocese). Mathew retired in 1963 and spent the rest of his life writing history. He died in London on 12 December 1975, aged 73.[citation needed]
Publications
The Celtic Peoples and Renaissance Europe (1933)
The Reformation and the Contemplative Life (1934)
Catholicism in England, 1535-1935. Portrait of a Minority: Its Culture and Tradition (1936)
Steam Packet (1936)
The Jacobean Age (1938)
British Seamen (1943)
The Naval Heritage (1944)
Acton: The Formative Years (1946)
Ethiopia: The Study of a Polity, 1540-1935 (1947)
The Social Structure in Caroline England (1948)
Sir Tobie Mathew (1950)
The Mango on the Mango Tree (1950)
The Age of Charles I (1951)
In Vallombrosa (1952)
The Prince of Wales's Feathers (1953)
Scotland under Charles I (1955)
James I (1967)
Lord Acton and His Times (1968)
The Courtiers of Henry VIII (1970)
Lady Jane Grey (1972)
References
Kerr, Fergus: 'Mathew, David James (1902–1975)', rev., Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 , accessed 14 March 2008