Bernard Gilpin

British clergyman
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Also known as: Apostle of the North
Quick Facts
Byname:
Apostle Of The North
Born:
1517, Kentmere, Westmorland, Eng.
Died:
March 4, 1583, Houghton-le-Spring, Durham (aged 66)
Also Known As:
Apostle of the North

Bernard Gilpin (born 1517, Kentmere, Westmorland, Eng.—died March 4, 1583, Houghton-le-Spring, Durham) was an English cleric, one of the most conscientious and broad-minded upholders of the Elizabethan church settlement, which recognized the English sovereign, rather than the pope, as head of the English church.

Gilpin was educated at Queen’s College, Oxford, and was ordained in 1542. He defended Roman Catholic doctrines against the Protestant bishop John Hooper and Peter Martyr and in 1552 preached a sermon, before the ailing adolescent king Edward VI of England, denouncing the expropriation of church property.

Gilpin became vicar of Norton, Durham, that same year and obtained permission to preach throughout the kingdom. Just before Mary’s accession he went to study on the European continent, returning in 1556 to be rector of Easington, Durham, and archdeacon of Durham. He frankly refused to accept either Calvinism or the anti-Reformation decrees of the Council of Trent. He was defended on a heresy charge by his great-uncle, the Catholic bishop Cuthbert Tunstall of Durham, a leading conservative during the English Reformation, who endorsed royal supremacy. Gilpin succeeded in avoiding a royal warrant for his apprehension in London and was spared further harassment after the death of Mary (Nov. 17, 1558), whose persecution of the Protestants he had abhorred.

He joined the majority of the lower clergy in subscribing to royal supremacy. He declined, however, several offers of promotion and concentrated on pastoral work throughout northern England—which was in great need of such work after the dissolution of the Cistercian abbeys there. That service earned him the title of Apostle of the North and the respect of the Puritans. Austere in private life, Gilpin in 1574 founded a grammar school at Houghton-le-Spring (where he was rector in 1558–83), helped finance the education of poor scholars, and visited prisons. He remained celibate and retained other characteristics of the Catholic tradition, though many of his pupils became Puritans.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.