Archdeacon of the East Riding (1625–1660) Master of Peterhouse (1635–1643, 1660) Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge University (1639–1640) Dean of Peterborough (November 1640–1660) Master of Peterhouse (1660)
Orders
Consecration
2 December 1660 by Accepted Frewen
Personal details
Born
(1594-11-30)30 November 1594
Norwich, Norfolk, England
Died
15 January 1672(1672-01-15) (aged 77) Westminster, Middlesex, England
Buried
29 April 1672, Auckland Castle chapel
Nationality
English
Denomination
Anglican
Parents
Giles Cosin
Spouse
Frances (m. 1626–1642)
Children
3 sons & 2 daughters
Profession
theologian, writer
Education
Norwich Grammar School
Alma mater
Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge
John Cosin (30 November 1594 – 15 January 1672) was an English bishop.
JohnCosin (30 November 1594 – 15 January 1672) was an English bishop. He was born at Norwich, and was educated at Norwich School and at Caius College...
greats such as T. S. Eliot. JohnCosin (30 November 1594 – 15 January 1672) was an English priest, bishop and theologian. Cosin was elected Master of Peterhouse...
Cosin is a surname, which may refer to: JohnCosin (1594–1672), English churchman Richard Cosin (died 1596), English jurist Edmund Cosin (or Cosyn; mid...
1947. The translation "Come Holy Ghost, our souls inspire" was by Bishop JohnCosin in 1625, and has since been sung at all subsequent British coronations...
our souls inspire", a paraphrase of Veni Creator Spiritus by Bishop JohnCosin, published in the 1662 Book of Common Prayer and used also for coronations...
Gilbert Gerard, Attorney General. His second wife was Mary Cosin, daughter of JohnCosin the Bishop of Durham. Sir Gilbert acquired an estate at Gateshead...
remodelled by Bishop JohnCosin in 1661–65. The woodwork, which includes the pulpit, stalls, and screen, was commissioned by Cosin and combines Gothic...
the eucharist, but attacked Roman transubstantiation), William Laud and JohnCosin – all in the seventeenth century – as well as in the nineteenth century...
Divine Right of Kings). On the one hand, the seventeenth century divine, JohnCosin, held that episcopal authority is jure divino, but that it stemmed from...
million (The New York Times, 2008). Although the book, once the property of JohnCosin the Bishop of Durham, was returned to the library, it had been mutilated...
the eucharist, but attacked Roman transubstantiation), William Laud and JohnCosin - all in the seventeenth century - as well as in the nineteenth century...
Richard Cosin (died 1596) was an English jurist. He became prominent as an ecclesiastical lawyer in the service of Archbishop John Whitgift, active against...
influential early theologians such as Richard Hooker, Lancelot Andrewes and JohnCosin. With the expansion of the British Empire and the growth of Anglicanism...
survivors were shipped as slave labour to the American Colonies. Bishop JohnCosin (in office 1660–1672), previously a canon of the cathedral, set about...
her life to JohnCosin, future Bishop of Durham, insisting that she had married King Charles. She allegedly gave proof of thus to Cosin, which he kept...
JohnCosin, Thomas Cranmer, Richard Hooker, John Jewel, Matthew Parker, and Jeremy Taylor; and later figures such as Joseph Butler, William Law, John...
and jealousies of the late times". In October 1662 he was appointed by JohnCosin, Bishop of Durham, as a Deputy Lord Lieutenant and Receiver for County...
martyr, born at or near Norwich. John Sherren Brewer (1809–1879) clergyman, historian, journalist and scholar. JohnCosin (1594–1672) an English churchman...
discography. On Christian liturgy, Cuming's work included The Durham Book on JohnCosin's 17th-century proposed liturgy and A History of Anglican Liturgy. His...
minister (22 April 1669), when asked about his health "Lord!": 39 — JohnCosin, English churchman (15 January 1672), raising his hand "Well, my friend...