Bishop of Grahamstown
Appearance
Bishop of Grahamstown | |
---|---|
Bishopric | |
anglican | |
Incumbent: Ebenezer St Mark Ntlali | |
Location | |
Ecclesiastical province | Southern Africa |
Information | |
Diocese | Grahamstown |
Cathedral | St. Michael and St. George Cathedral |
The Bishop of Grahamstown is the Ordinary of the Diocese of Grahamstown in the Anglican Church of Southern Africa. The Bishop's residence is Bishopsbourne, Grahamstown
List of Bishops of Grahamstown
Diocesan bishops
- John Armstrong,[1] D.D. 1853-1856
- Henry Cotterill,[1] M.A., D.D. 1856-1871 (Later bishop of Edinburgh)
- Nathaniel James Merriman,[1] D.D. 1871-1882
- Allan Becher Webb,[1] D.D. 1883-1898 (Later dean of Salisbury, England)
- Charles Edward Cornish,[1] D.D. 1899-1915
- Francis Robinson Phelps,[2] D.D. 1915-1931 (Later Archbishop of Cape Town)
- Archibald Howard Cullen,[2] M.A. 1931-1959
- Robert Selby Taylor,[2] M.A., D.D. 1959-1964 (Later archbishop of Cape Town)
- Gordon Leslie Tindall,[2] B.A. 1964-1969
- Bill Bendyshe Burnett,[2] M.A. L.Th. 1969-1974 (Later archbishop of Cape Town)
- Kenneth Cyril Oram,[2] B.A., A.K.C. 1974-1987 (Later assistant bishop of Lichfield)
- David Patrick Hamilton Russell,[2] M.A., Ph.D. 1987-2004
- Thabo Cecil Makgoba,[2] B.Sc. B.A. (Hons) MEd Ph.D. 2004-2007 (LaterArchbishop of Cape Town)
- Ebenezer St Mark Ntlali,[2] Dip.Th. B.A. (Hons) B.Th. 2007 - present
Bishops suffragan
The following were bishops suffragan in the diocese:
- Eric Pike,[2] P.T.C., Dip.Th. 1989-1993 (Later bishop of Port Elizabeth)
- Anthony Mdletshe,[2] L.Th., M.Div. 1993-1997 (Later bishop of Zululand)
- Bethlehem Nopece,[2] Dip.Th. B.Th. M.Th. 1998-2002 (Later bishop of Port Elizabeth)
- Thabo Cecil Makgoba,[2] B.Sc. B.A. (Hons) MEd.(Psychology) Ph.D. 2002-2004 (afterwards bishop of Grahamstown)
References
- ^ a b c d e Gould, Charles (1924). Grahamstown Cathedral: A Guide and Short History. Grahamstown Diocesan Registry. p. xviii.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Gould, Charles; Eve, Jeanette (2011). Grahamstown Cathedral: A Guide and Short History. Grahamstown Diocesan Registry. pp. A:24 – via Cory Library, Rhodes University.