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  2. William of Wykeham - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_of_Wykeham

    William of Wykeham (born William Longe) was the son of John Longe, a freeman from Wickham in Hampshire. He was educated at a school in Winchester, and probably enjoyed early patronage from two local men, Sir Ralph Sutton, constable of Winchester Castle, and Sir John Scures, lord of the manor of Wickham, and then from Thomas Foxley, Constable of Windsor Castle.

  3. William Kingsmill (priest) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Kingsmill_(priest)

    William Kingsmill alias William Basyng (?–1549) was Prior of St. Swithun's Priory, Winchester until the Dissolution of the Monastery in 1539; it was a Benedictine monastic house and its shrine to the saint popularly associated with determining the entire period of pre-harvest weather was a place of pilgrimage.

  4. William Walker (diver) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Walker_(diver)

    There is also a bust of Walker in the Cathedral gardens. [8] A public house in Winchester is also named after him. [9] A plaque commemorates him on 118 Portland Road, South Norwood, where he lived. [10] A service of remembrance for Walker, was held at the Cathedral in October 2018. An exhibition about Walker ran until 31 October. [11]

  5. William Edington - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Edington

    William Edington (died 6 or 7 October 1366) was an English bishop and administrator. He served as Bishop of Winchester from 1346 until his death, Keeper of the wardrobe from 1341 to 1344, treasurer from 1344 to 1356, and finally as chancellor from 1356 until he retired from royal administration in 1363.

  6. Winchester Cathedral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winchester_Cathedral

    "Winchester Cathedral" was a UK top ten hit and a US number one song for The New Vaudeville Band in 1966. The cathedral was also the subject of the Crosby, Stills & Nash song "Cathedral" from their 1977 album CSN. Liverpool-based band Clinic released an album titled Winchester Cathedral in 2004. [88] Rose cultivar 'Winchester Cathedral', Austin ...

  7. Walkelin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walkelin

    Walkelin [a] (d. 1098) was the first Norman Bishop of Winchester.He began the construction of Winchester Cathedral in 1079 and had the Old Minster demolished. He reformed the cathedral's administration, although his plan to replace the monks with priests was blocked by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Lanfranc.

  8. Thomas Thetcher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Thetcher

    Grenadier Thetcher's gravestone has been quoted and misquoted extensively in the centuries since his death. Bill W., author of Alcoholics Anonymous (1939), the book which inspired the modern spiritual alcoholism recovery movement of the same name, quotes/paraphrases the first and last parts of the gravestone on the first page, writing:

  9. Thomas Rennell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Rennell

    In consequence of growing infirmities, heightened probably by the premature death of his only son, he resigned the mastership of the Temple in 1827, when he wrote a touching letter of farewell to the Inns of the Inner and Middle Temple. He died at the deanery, Winchester, on 31 March 1840, in his eighty-seventh year.