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GODFREY See also: bishop of See also: Gloucester, was See also: born at Ruthin, Denbighshire, and educated at See also: Westminster and Cambridge
.
He took orders in 1603, and in ,6o6 obtained the living of Stapleford Abbots, See also: Essex, which he held together with several other livings
.
He was See also: canon of Windsor from 1617 and dean of Rochester 162o–1621, and became bishop of Gloucester in 1625
.
From this See also: time his tendencies towards See also: Roman Catholicism constantly got him into trouble
.
He preached an unsatisfactory See also: sermon at See also: court in 1626, and in 1628 incurred charges of introducing popery at Windsor
.
In 1633 he secured the see of See also: Hereford by bribery, but Archbishop Laud persuaded the See also: king to refuse his consent
.
In r638 he was said to be converted to
See also: Rome, and two years later he was imprisoned for refusing to sign the new canons denouncing popery and affirming the divine right of See also: kings
.
He afterwards signed and was released on See also: bail, but next See also: year the bishops who had signed were all imprisoned in the Tower, by See also: order of parliament, on the See also: charge of treason
.
After eighteen See also: weeks' imprisonment See also: Goodman was allowed to return to his diocese
.
About 165o he settled in See also: London, where he died a confessed Roman Catholic
.
His best known See also: book is The Fall of See also: Man (London, 1616)
.
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