Henry Man | |
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Bishop of Sodor and Man | |
Diocese | Diocese of Sodor and Man |
In office | 1546–1555/6 |
Other post(s) | Prior of Witham (1534–35) Prior of Sheen (1535–39) Dean of Chester (1541–47) |
Orders | |
Consecration | 14 February 1546 |
Personal details | |
Died | 19 October 1556 |
Buried | St Andrew Undershaft, London |
Nationality | English |
Denomination | Catholic / Anglican |
Henry Man (died 19 October 1556) was an English clergyman who served as the Bishop of Sodor and Man in the 16th century.
Until the English Reformation he was a Carthusian monk who had been appointed the Prior of Witham, Somerset (1534–35)[2] and then the Prior of Sheen, Surrey (1535–39).[3] Following the dissolution of the monasteries, he was briefly a chaplain to King Henry VIII. He was appointed the Dean of Chester in 1541,[4][5] also holding the rectories of St Mary on the Hill, Chester and Fyningley, Nottinghamshire.[6]
He was nominated Bishop of Sodor and Man in January 1546 and consecrated at Old St Paul's Cathedral on 14 February 1546 by bishops Bonner, Chetham and Hodgkins.[7][8] He continued to hold the deanery of Chester in commendam for another year before resigning the post by 31 May 1547.[4][5] After the accession of Queen Mary I, he was deprived of the see and his predecessor Thomas Stanley was restored in 1555 or 1556.[9][10]
Henry died on 19 October 1556 and was buried at St Andrew Undershaft, London.[7][8][11] He had become a Doctor of Divinity (DD).