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Edward Trollope

Edward Trollope
Suffragan Bishop of Nottingham
Edward Trollope.jpg
Installed 1877
Term ended 1893
Predecessor Henry Mackenzie
Successor Not replaced
Personal details
Born 1817
Died 1893
Denomination Church of England

Edward Trollope (1817–1893) was an antiquary and an Anglican Bishop of Nottingham in the Victorian era.

Trollope was born at Uffington, near Stamford in Lincolnshire, on 15 April 1817, the sixth son of Sir John Trollope, of Casewick Hall, Uffington, and his wife, Anne, the daughter of Henry Thorold of Cuxwold, Lincolnshire. He was thus second cousin to the writer Anthony Trollope, as well as a cousin to future Bishop of Winchester, Anthony Wilson Thorold. Educated at Eton College and at Christ Church, Oxford, he returned to Lincolnshire to become vicar of Rauceby in 1841. In 1843, his maternal relative, Sir John Thorold, appointed him to the rectory of Leasingham, Lincolnshire, and he held this living for fifty years. In 1867, he was collated to the archdeaconry of Stow. The high point of his career in the church came in 1877, when he was made Bishop of Nottingham. It was to a large extent the result of Edward Trollope’s hard work, as a fund raiser, that the new see of Southwell, was established in 1884. Despite Trollope’s efforts at the restoration of the Great Hall, next to Southwell Minster, as a Bishop’s Palace, the Ecclesiastical Commissioners thought it unfit for purpose and the first Bishop of Southwell lived for a time at Thurgarton Priory.


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