The 'Province of
Wales' in the
Anglican Communion was created in 1920, as the
Church in Wales, independent from the
Church of England (of which the four Welsh
dioceses had previously been part). Unlike the
Archbishops of
Canterbury and
York -- who are appointed by the
Queen upon the advice of the
Prime Minister -- the Archbishop of Wales is one of the six diocesan
bishops of
Wales, elected to hold this office in addition to his own diocese.
The establishment of a separate province and archbishopric was an indirect consequence of the
Disestablishment of the Church of England in Wales (voted by Parliament in 1914 but implemented in 1920). Precedents for this development were sought by some in the early Celtic Church with a debatable pre-eminence of
St. Davids. A Roman Catholic archbishopric of Cardiff had been created
in 1916. The circulating character of the post was justified by Welsh geography and by the ecclesiastical precedent of the province of Numidia (of which
St. Augustine of Hippo had been a bishop).
Successive archbishops have not only represented different geographical areas but also different tendencies within Anglicanism. In the mid- twentieth century lingustic issues were prominent in the successive incumbencies of
Edwin Morris (who spoke no
Welsh) and of
Glyn Simon (who sympathised with advocates of the use of the Welsh language). Morris in some ways represented the broad churchmanship characteristic of the first occupant of the newly created post, Alfred Edwards, whereas Simon in many respects inherited the Anglo-Catholic outlook of the second archbishop, Green. Towards the end of his period in office Gwilym Williams was one of three leading Welsh figures in a deputation to guarantee the status of the language which had been challenged by
Margaret Thatcher. He was also decisive in the decision to ordain women priests. The present Archbishop of Canterbury,
Dr. Rowan Williams, held the post as Bishop of Monmouth.
The current Archbishop of Wales is
The Most Rev Dr Barry Morgan, who signs 'Barry Cambrensis'.
Archbishops of Wales, 1920-present
★
Alfred George Edwards (
Bishop of St Asaph) 1920-1934
★
Charles Alfred Howell Green (
Bishop of Bangor) 1934-1944
★
David Lewis Prosser (
Bishop of St David's) 1944-1949
★
John Morgan (
Bishop of Llandaff) 1949-1957
★
Edwin Morris (
Bishop of Monmouth) 1957-1967
★
William Glyn Hughes Simon (
Bishop of Llandaff) 1968-1971
★
Gwilym Owen Williams (
Bishop of Bangor) 1971-1982
★
Derrick Greenslade Childs (
Bishop of Monmouth) 1983-1986
★
George Noakes (
Bishop of St David's) 1987-1991
★
Alwyn Rice Jones (
Bishop of St Asaph) 1991-1999
★
Rowan Williams (
Bishop of Monmouth) 1999-2002 (became
Archbishop of Canterbury in the
Church of England in 2002)
★
Barry Morgan (
Bishop of Llandaff) 2002-