Lewis Jones (c. 1560 – 2 November 1646), was a Welsh priest, who joined the Church of Ireland in 1606, and became Bishop of Killaloe in 1633.


Lewis Jones
ChurchChurch of Ireland
DioceseKillaloe
In office1633–1646
PredecessorJohn Rider
SuccessorEdward Parry
Orders
Consecration12 April 1633
by James Ussher
Personal details
Bornc. 1560
Dol-y-moch, Merionethshire
Died2 November 1646(1646-11-02) (aged 86)
Dublin, Ireland
Alma materBrasenose College, Oxford

Biography

edit

Jones was educated at Brasenose College at Oxford (Fellowship at All Souls, 1569) and married Mabel Ussher, sister of James Ussher (later Primate of All Ireland) in Ireland c. 1602. Irish historian James Ware claimed he was called "the vivacious Bishop of Killaloe" for having married a young wife at the age of threescore (60).[1] He held several church posts in Ireland, finally becoming Bishop of Killaloe in 1633. His Puritan leanings were deplored by Archbishop Laud, but he remained in office until his death in 1646 at the reputed age of 104. He was buried in St. Werburgh's Church, Dublin.

He was Dean of Ardagh (1606–1625) and Dean of Cashel (1609–1633), when he renovated Cashel Cathedral and instituted a choir there.[2]

Two of his sons were themselves bishops – Henry Jones (1605–1682) and Ambrose Jones (d. 1678). Three other sons, Michael Jones (d. 1649), Oliver Jones (d. 1664), and Theophilus Jones (d. 1685), were soldiers and politicians.[3]

Disputes

edit

A good deal of confusion exists about Jones' career and age. Several writers[4][5] believe Jones graduated from Brasenose College in 1580, which would correspond to a date given for his age in a letter of Archbishop Laud and make him about 86 at his death. On the other hand, the story of Jones as "the vivacious Bishop" given by James Ware and his editor Walter Harris – in a work supposedly printed by Jones' granddaughters – would argue for the earlier date of graduation. Genealogist Robert Leech, in a 19th-century work on the Jones family, posited that there were several Lewis Joneses active at the time, and the Dean of Ardagh was a different Lewis Jones, the son of Thomas Jones, Archbishop of Dublin.[6]

References

edit
  1. ^ James Ware, The Whole Works of James Ware concerning Ireland, Volume 1, Dublin: E. Jones, 1739, p. 596
  2. ^ The Ecclesiologist, August 1867, "The Cathedrals of Ireland" (part V), John Jebb, p. 191
  3. ^ Welsh Biography Online, "Michael Jones"
  4. ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, "Lewis Jones"
  5. ^ Alumni Oxonienses, Volume II, Joseph Foster, Oxford: Parker & Co., 1891
  6. ^ The Jones Family in Ireland, Robert Leech, Yonkers, New York: M. H. Clark, 1886, p. 36

Sources

edit
  • McCafferty, John (2004). "Jones, Lewis". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15059. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)