We do know that Edmund Bonner , born in Worcestershire in about 1500, died in the Marshalsea Prison, today in 1569 and was buried secretly in St. George’s, Southwark. Rather like the head of Cardinal Morton, however, we cannot be certain that he remains there. As Bishop of London under Mary I, he (along with Cardinal Pole and Bishop Gardiner) had been significantly responsible for applying her policy of de heretico comburendo. London, the south-east and East Anglia had seen most of the persecution .

Not surprisingly, he was unpopular with her successor, being deprived and imprisoned later. Our old friend Strype, in his Ecclesiastica Memoria, actually suggests that Bonner’s father was actually Rev. George Savage of Cheshire. Illegitimacy, if known, could have made Edmund ineligble for ordination. Having lived occasionally in CopfordEssex, it is rumoured that he was reburied here, particularly as a suitable , named, coffin was found there in 1809. He seems to have added his name to the lexicon of a county further north, with a new name for a ladybird.

 


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2 responses to “Another posthumously mobile Bishop?”

  1. […] was defrocked and executed in Oxford by Mary I and is given dramatic last words by Foxe, but also Bonner, his successor who regularly tortured suspected heretics there. The episode concluded at Hampton […]

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  2. […] Richard III moved Henry VI’s remains from Chertsey to St George’s chapel at Windsor. This was NOT, as some traditionalists would have it, a move meant to stop Henry’s growing […]

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