John Christopherson


John Christopherson
Bishop of Chichester
ChurchRoman Catholic
Appointed7 May 1557
Term ended1558
PredecessorGeorge Day
SuccessorWilliam Barlow
Orders
Consecration21 November 1557
by Edmund Bonner
Personal details
DiedDecember 1558

John Christopherson (died December 1558) was Chaplain and confessor to Queen Mary I of England, Master of Trinity College, Cambridge (1553–1558), Dean of Norwich (1554–1557) and Bishop of Chichester (1557–1558)—all during the reign of Queen Mary (1553–1558).

Born at Ulverstone, Lancashire, John Christopherson was educated at the University of Cambridge, graduating B.A. in 1540-41 and M.A. in 1543. He became Fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge in 1541, Fellow of St John's in 1542 and Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge in 1546. During the reign of Edward VI he went abroad to Louvain.[1] In 1555, he was one of the accusers of William Wolsey and Richard Pygot,[2] and he was involved in the trial of the Protestant martyr Richard Woodman in Southwark. He was a member of a commission under direction from Stephen Gardiner to reintroduce Catholicism to the University of Cambridge.

He died in 1558. He had been put under house arrest following his definition of Protestantism as "a new invention of new men and heresies" on 27 November 1558, preached in response to a sermon at Paul's Cross. He died a month later, in late December 1558, either the 22nd or the 28th, and was buried at Christchurch, Newgate Street, where he had held a lease to the Prior's lodging and two gardens.[3] He is particularly known for writing a tragedy on Jephthah (based on Euripides' Iphigenia at Aulis), which is noteworthy for being the only Tudor play written in Greek. (The Scotsman George Buchanan wrote one in Latin on the same theme.)

  1. ^ "Christopherson, John (CHRR540J)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  2. ^ "The Diocese of Ely - About Us - the Good & the Great - William Wolsey of Upwell & Robert Pygot of Wisbech". Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 23 March 2011.
  3. ^ History of Greyfriars: the site and buildings; British History Online. Accessed 26 November 2022.