Richard Chartres
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The Right Reverend and Right Honourable Richard Chartres (born July 11, 1946) is the 132nd Bishop of London, being installed on September 26, 1996. He was previously Bishop of Stepney (1992 - 1995) and Gresham Professor of Divinity.
Chartres was educated at Hertford Grammar School and Trinity College, Cambridge before studying theology at Cuddesdon and Lincoln Theological colleges. He was ordained as a priest in 1974 and was married in 1982.
He is a Privy Counsellor.
He wrote History of Gresham College 1597 - 1997. This was based upon a three part lecture series given in May 1992, whilst Chartres was Professor of divinity there. During the first lecture of the original lecture series he referred to the College as a 'magical island like Atlantis' disappearing and re-emerging from the sea. This was a reference both to the Invisible College and Francis Bacon's New Atlantis. At the second lecture he was keen to disassociate himself from any occult references.
Other Gresham lectures by Chartres covered prayer (which he keenly distinguished from magic), Autumn 1991, the Shroud of Turin, November 1988, and the Holy Sepulchr in Jerusalem where he not only made certain revelations about the Gresham Jerusalem Project but also gave a personal account of a month he spent at an ancient monastery in Egypt where he would go on moonlight walks with a Christian leader who would trace great patterns in the sand as he sought to explain abstruse points of theology, December 1989.
Chartres is also a patron and fellow of the Burgon Society for the study of academical dress.