Henry Parry Liddon (born August 20, 1829, North Stoneham, Hampshire, England—died September 9, 1890, Weston-super-Mare, Gloucestershire) was an Anglican priest, theologian, close friend and biographer of the Oxford movement leader Edward Bouverie Pusey, and a major advocate of the movement’s principles, which included an elaborated liturgy, a recovery of 18th-century church discipline, and an emphasis on Classical learning.
Ordained in 1852, Liddon became vice principal at the new seminary at Cuddesdon, Oxfordshire, in 1854, and he was made vice principal at St. Edmund Hall, Oxford, in 1859. He used his post at Oxford to maintain and advance the movement, which had suffered a setback after the conversion in 1845 of its chief figure, John Henry Newman, to Roman Catholicism. In 1864 Liddon became chaplain to W.K. Hamilton, bishop of Salisbury and one of the few bishops then favourable to the Oxford movement’s renewal of Roman Catholic principles within the Anglican church. His stature as a spokesman was enhanced by his Bampton lectures of 1866, published the following year as The Divinity of Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
In 1870 Liddon became a canon of St. Paul’s, London, and Ireland Professor of Exegesis at Oxford. His sermons at St. Paul’s attracted vast congregations for the next 20 years. Like others in the movement, he consistently opposed preferment (the ecclesiastical system of promotions) and is known to have refused at least two bishoprics. His concern with Christian unity prompted him to participate in developing the Old Catholic movement after the Vatican Council of 1869–70, and he traveled in Russia and the Middle East, contacting Orthodox church leaders.
As an associate and admirer of Pusey at Oxford, he favoured Pusey’s attitudes, in contrast to those of younger thinkers in the movement; after Pusey’s death in 1882, Liddon began his authorized biography, published posthumously as Life of Edward Bouverie Pusey (1893–97).