Charles Baring

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Charles Baring
Bishop of Durham
Charles Baring portrait.jpg
DioceseDiocese of Durham
In office1861–1879
PredecessorHenry Montagu Villiers
SuccessorJoseph Lightfoot
Other post(s)Bishop of Gloucester and Bristol (1856–1861)
Orders
Ordination1830 (deacon); 1831 (priest)
Consecrationc. 1856
Personal details
Born(1807-01-11)11 January 1807
Died14 September 1879(1879-09-14) (aged 72)
Wimbledon, Surrey, United Kingdom
NationalityBritish
DenominationAnglican
ParentsThomas & Mary
Spouse1. Mary (m. 1830)
2. Caroline (m. 1846)
Childreninc. Thomas & Francis
OccupationPreacher
Alma materChrist Church, Oxford

Charles Thomas Baring (11 January 1807 – 14 September 1879) was an English bishop, noted as an Evangelical.

Brass plaque memorial to Charles Baring in Holy Innocents Church, High Beach, Essex, the place where he is interred

Early life, family and education[]

Baring was born into the Baring banking family on 11 January 1807, the fourth son of Sir Thomas Baring, 2nd Baronet, and Mary née Sealy. Having been educated privately as a child, he read classics and mathematics at Christ Church, Oxford, before ordination, and was President of the Oxford Union. He first married Mary Sealy (who died in 1840) in 1830; they had at least one child – Tory politician Thomas Charles Baring was their son. He later remarried in 1846, his cousin Caroline Kemp, with whom he had further children – their son Francis became a priest.[citation needed] Caroline survived Charles.

Career[]

Ordained a deacon on 6 June 1830 and a priest on 29 May 1831 by Richard Bagot, Bishop of Oxford, Baring began his ecclesiastical career at St Ebbe's, Oxford and Kings Worthy before taking the benefice of All Souls', Marylebone, in 1847. He moved to Limpsfield in 1855, but was soon elected Bishop of Gloucester and Bristol. He became a bishop at a period when Lord Palmerston, influenced by Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 7th Earl of Shaftesbury, was promoting Evangelicals.[1]

He translated to the see of Durham in 1861, where as Bishop of Durham he came into conflict with High Church clergy, for example suspending Francis Grey, rector of Morpeth, as Rural Dean, for wearing a stole of which he disapproved.[2] He resigned due to ill health on 2 February 1879 and died in Wimbledon on 14 September, and was interred at Holy Innocents Church at High Beach, Essex.

Styles and titles[]

References[]

  1. ^ David William Bebbington, Evangelicalism in Modern Britain: A History from the 1730s to the 1980s (1989), p. 107.
  2. ^ Scotland, Nigel. Evangelicals, Anglicans and Ritualism in Victorian England (p. 7) Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine (Accessed 1 February 2014)

Sources[]

External links[]

Church of England titles
Preceded by
James Henry Monk
Bishop of Gloucester and Bristol
1856–1861
Succeeded by
William Thomson
Preceded by
Henry Montagu Villiers
Bishop of Durham
1861–1879
Succeeded by
Joseph Lightfoot
Retrieved from ""