English Puritan cleric and academic
Arthur Saul (died 1586) was an English Puritan cleric and academic, a Marian exile and canon of Gloucester Cathedral .[ 1]
Life
Of Gloucestershire origin, Saul was admitted a demy of Magdalen College, Oxford , in 1545. He graduated B.A. in 1546, and M.A. 1549. He was fellow of Magdalen probably from 1546 to 1553.[ 2]
In October 1553 Saul was expelled from Magdalen at Bishop Stephen Gardiner 's visitation. Under Mary I of England he was an exile, and in 1554 was at Strasbourg with Alexander Nowell and others. Under Elizabeth I Saul was installed canon of Salisbury in 1559, of Bristol in 1559, and of Gloucester in 1565 (3 June); and was successively rector of Porlock , Somerset (1562), Ubly , Somerset (1565), Deynton , Gloucestershire (1566), and Berkeley, Gloucestershire (1575). He subscribed the canons of 1562 as a member of Convocation, but displayed a strong Puritan leaning. In 1565 he was appointed by Thomas Bentham , bishop of Lichfield and Coventry , to visit his diocese, and by Edmund Grindal in 1576 to visit the diocese of Gloucester .[ 2]
Saul died in 1586. The Jacobean chess-writer Arthur Saul was not his son, as has sometimes been claimed.[ 1]
Notes
Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain : Lee, Sidney , ed. (1897). "Saul, Arthur ". Dictionary of National Biography . Vol. 50. London: Smith, Elder & Co.