Abp. Rowan Williams
2002-2012
Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams
Archbishop Rowan Williams meets Pope John Paul II in Rome ~ 4 Oct. 2003
Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams visiting Pope John Paul II in Rome. Photo credit: ACNS ~ 4 Oct. 2003
Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams visiting Pope John Paul II in Rome. Photo credit:
UK in Holy See/Flickr ~ 4 Oct. 2003
Pope Benedict XVI and Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams met in Rome ~ 23 Nov. 2006
Pope Benedict XVI and Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams met in Rome ~ 23 Nov. 2006
Pope Benedict XVI and Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams met in Rome ~ 23 Nov. 2006
Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams and Pope Benedict XVI met in Rome ~ 23 Nov. 2006
Archbishop Rowan Williams of Canterbury and Pope Benedict XVI signing common declaration ~ 23 Nov. 2006
Archbishop Rowan Williams and Pope Benedict XVI signing a Common Declaration ~ 23 Nov. 2006
Archbishop Rowan Williams and Pope Benedict XVI ~ 23 Nov. 2006
Pope Benedict XVI and the then-Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, hold a private meeting in the Pope's study at the Vatican. Photo credit: ACNS ~ May 2008
Monsignor Donald Bolen receives the St Augustine Award from Archbishop Rowan Williams ~ 2009
Visit of Archbishop of Canterbury, His Grace Rowan Williams to Pope Benedict XVI. Photo credit: L'Osservatore Romano ~ 21 Nov. 2009
Pope Benedict XVI and Archbishop Rowan Williams on the occasion of the papal visit to the UK ~ 17 Sept. 2010
Archbishop Rowan Williams and Pope Benedict XVI on the occasion of the papal visit to the UK ~ 17 Sept. 2010
Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams, Pope Benedict XVI, and Jane Williams ~ 17 Sept. 2010
Archbishop Rowan Williams and Pope Benedict XVI on the occasion of the papal visit to the UK ~ 17 Sept. 2010
Pope Benedict XVI and Archbishop Rowan Williams with ecumenical guests ~ 18 Sept. 2010
Archbishop Rowan Williams and Pope Benedict XVI attend Day of Reflection with ecumenical guests ~ 18 Sept. 2010
Archbishop Rowan Williams, left, with Pope Benedict XVI walking up stairs as they arrive for vespers at the Basilica of St. Gregory on the Caelian Hill in Rome ~ 10 Mar. 2012
Lord Rowan Williams, former Archbishop of Canterbury, speaking at the Centenary of the Malines Conversations in York Minster. Photo credit: York Minster ~ 6 Dec. 2021
Malines Conversations Group (Member, 2013-)
Archbishop of Canterbury, 2002-2012
Rowan Douglas Williams was born in Swansea, south Wales on 14 June 1950, into a Welsh-speaking family, and was educated at Dynevor School in Swansea and Christ’s College Cambridge where he studied theology. He studied for his doctorate – in the theology of Vladimir Lossky, a leading figure in Russian twentieth-century religious thought – at Wadham College Oxford, taking his DPhil in 1975. After two years as a lecturer at the College of the Resurrection, near Leeds, he was ordained deacon in Ely Cathedral before returning to Cambridge.
From 1977, he spent nine years in academic and parish work in Cambridge: first at Westcott House, being ordained priest in 1978, and from 1980 as curate at St George’s, Chesterton. In 1983 he was appointed as a lecturer in Divinity in the university, and the following year became dean and chaplain of Clare College. 1986 saw a return to Oxford now as Lady Margaret Professor of Divinity and Canon of Christ Church; he was awarded the degree of Doctor of Divinity in 1989, and became a fellow of the British Academy in 1990. He is also an accomplished poet and translator.
In 1981 Dr Williams married Jane Paul, a lecturer in theology, whom he met while living and working in Cambridge. They have a daughter and a son.
In 1991 Professor Williams accepted election and consecration as bishop of Monmouth, a diocese on the Welsh borders, and in 1999 on the retirement of Archbishop Alwyn Rice Jones he was elected Archbishop of Wales, one of the 38 primates of the Anglican Communion. Thus it was that, in July 2002, with eleven years’ experience as a diocesan bishop and three as a leading primate in the Communion, Archbishop Williams was confirmed on 2 December 2002 as the 104th bishop of the See of Canterbury: the first Welsh successor to St Augustine of Canterbury and the first since the mid-thirteenth century to be appointed from beyond the English Church.
At the end of 2012 he stepped down and moved to a new role as Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge. He has been given the title Lord Williams of Oystermouth.
Website: rowanwilliams.archbishopofcanterbury.org
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