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David Lloyd (Dean of St Asaph) : ウィキペディア英語版 | David Lloyd (Dean of St Asaph)
David Lloyd (1597 – 7 September 1663) was a Welsh clergyman, and was the author of a ballad ''The Legend of Captain Jones''. ==Life== He was born at Berthlwyd in the parish of Llanidloes, Montgomeryshire, in 1597, son of David Lloyd. His uncle was Oliver Lloyd, Dean of Hereford Cathedral from 1617. David graduated from Hart Hall, Oxford, on 22 June 1615, was elected fellow of All Souls College, Oxford on 9 May 1618, and became Bachelor of Civil Law in 1622, and Doctor of Civil Law in 1628. He obtained the post of chaplain to William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby. He was made a canon of Chester Cathedral in 1639 and was instituted on 2 December 1641 to the rectory of Trefdraeth in Anglesey, upon resigning which he was instituted in July 1642 to Llangynhafal, and on 21 December became vicar of Llanfair Dyffryn Clwyd. In 1642 he was also appointed warden of Ruthin, Denbighshire. Deprived, and for a time imprisoned by the Long Parliament, he was reinstated in his benefices upon the Restoration, and in 1660 became Dean of St Asaph. He died on 7 September 1663 at Ruthin, where he was buried without any inscription or monument; however a humorous rhyming epitaph, said to have been written by himself, is printed in Anthony Wood's work ''Athenæ Oxonienses'' (iii. 653). The epitaph bespeaks a jovial ecclesiastic who spent considerably more than his revenues on the pleasures of the table.
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