William Lort Mansel | |
Bishop of Bristol | |
Diocese: | Diocese of Bristol |
Term: | 1808–1820 |
Predecessor: | John Luxmoore |
Successor: | John Kaye |
Birth Date: | 2 April 1753 |
Birth Place: | Pembroke, Wales |
Death Place: | Trinity College, Cambridge, England |
Buried: | Chapel, Trinity College, Cambridge |
Religion: | Anglican |
Alma Mater: | Trinity College, Cambridge |
William Lort Mansel (2 April 1753 – 27 June 1820) was an English churchman and Cambridge fellow. He was Master of Trinity College, Cambridge from 1798 to his death in 1820, and also Bishop of Bristol from 1808 to 1820.
He was born in Pembroke, the son of William Wogan Mansel and his wife Anne (née Lort), sister of Michael Lort, Regius Professor of Greek at Cambridge. He was educated at the King's School, Gloucester under Edward Sparkes, and at Trinity College, Cambridge (matriculated 1770, scholarship 1771, graduated B.A. 1774, M.A. 1777, D.D. 1798).
Elected a fellow of Trinity in 1775, Mansel was ordained deacon in 1780 and priest in 1783. He became Vicar of Bottisham 1783–1790, Vicar of Chesterton in 1788 and Rector of Fowlmere in 1789.
Mansel was known as a wit, writer of epigrams, and satirist of academic rivalries. His popularity led to his election as Public Orator of Cambridge, 1788–1798. Appointed Master of Trinity in 1798, Mansel served as University Vice-Chancellor 1799–1800. Appointed Bishop of Bristol in 1808 on the recommendation of his former pupil Spencer Perceval, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, he combined the bishopric with his mastership until his death in 1820.
Lord Byron, who was a student at Trinity from 1805 to 1808, described Mansel ("Magnus", for his corpulence) presiding in college:
Mansel died in the Master's Lodge at Trinity College, Cambridge, and is interred in the College Chapel.[1]
Mansel married in 1779 Isabella Haggerston(e), daughter of John Haggerston, a Cambridge attorney.[2] [3] They had 13 children:[4]
On Mansel's death, his executors were Edward Daniel Clarke and James Devereux Hustler; his estate was left in will to his five unmarried daughters.[6]