Philip Twysden

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ProvinceArmagh
DioceseRaphoe
In office1747–1752

Philip Twysden
Lord Bishop of Raphoe
ChurchChurch of Ireland
ProvinceArmagh
DioceseRaphoe
In office1747–1752
PredecessorWilliam Barnard
SuccessorRobert Downes
Orders
Consecration29 March 1747
by George Stone
Personal details
Born(1713-09-07)7 September 1713
Died2 November 1752(1752-11-02) (aged 39)
London
BuriedSt Michael's Church, East Peckham
NationalityEnglish
DenominationAnglican
ParentsSir William Twysden, 5th Baronet, and Jane Twisden
Spouse(1) Mary Purcell
(2) Frances Carter
Children2, including Frances, Countess of Jersey
Alma materUniversity College, Oxford

Philip Twysden (1713–1752), was an Anglican clergyman who served in the Church of Ireland as Lord Bishop of Raphoe from 1747 to 1752. The circumstances of his death later became the subject of scandalous rumour.

He was born in Kent,[1] south-east England, in 1713, the third son of Sir William Twysden, 5th Baronet of Roydon Hall, East Peckham, Kent, by his wife (and distant cousin) Jane Twisden.

He studied at University College, Oxford, from 1732.[1][2] He was awarded a Master of Arts degree, and the honorary degree of Doctor of Civil Law in 1745.[1]

He married twice: firstly to Mary Purcell (died 1743), and secondly to Frances Carter, daughter of The Rt Hon. Thomas Carter, Master of the Rolls in Ireland. After Bishop Twysden's death, she married her cousin, General James Johnston.

By his second wife, he had two children: Mary (died in infancy)[3] and a posthumous daughter called Frances (1753–1821).[4] Frances, later Countess of Jersey, was one of the many mistresses of King George IV when he was Prince of Wales. Through Frances, they are ancestors of Diana, Princess of Wales, and of her sons, Princes William, the Prince of Wales, and Harry, Duke of Sussex.

Ecclesiastical career

He was ordained a priest in the Church of England. He was instituted in 1738 as rector of Eard and in 1745, for a short time, served as the rector of Eastling in Kent.[5] He accompanied The 4th Earl of Chesterfield to Dublin as his chaplain, upon the Earl's appointment as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.[1]

Twysden was nominated to the Bishopric of Raphoe in Ulster on 3 March 1746[6][7] and was consecrated by the Lord Archbishop of Dublin, assisted by the bishops of Derry and Clonfert, at St Michan's Church, Dublin, on 29 March 1747.[8][1][9][10]

Death

Notes

References

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