Bancroft, Richard
BANCROFT, RICHARD: Archbishop of
Canterbury; b. at Farnworth, Lancashire, 1544; d. in
Lambeth Palace, London, Nov. 2, 1610. He was
educated at Cambridge (B.A., 1567; D.D., 1585),
was made rector, of Teversham, near Cambridge,
1576, and rose steadily till he became Bishop of
London in 1597 and Archbishop of Canterbury in
1604. He was a High-churchman, asserting that
the episcopal authority is based upon a divine right,
and most violently opposed to the Puritans, whom
he often attacked in his sermons. As president of
the Convocation, he presented for adoption the
Book of Canons now in force, and as Archbishop
he was “the chief overseer" of the authorized
version of the Bible, which he had opposed as a
Puritan proposition at the Hampton Court Conference
(1604). His literary remains are unimportant.