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Belfast Live
Belfast Live
National
Lauren Harte

Northern Ireland clergyman to be the next Dean of Canterbury

A Co Fermanagh-born clergyman, who oversaw the reburial of King Richard III, has been named as the next Dean of Canterbury.

Originally from Irvinestown, the Very Revd David Monteith moved from Northern Ireland to England three decades ago and has been Dean of Leicester since 2013.

Dean Monteith, who is 54, was raised in the Church of Ireland during The Troubles. He was educated at Portora Royal School in Enniskillen.

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He trained for ordination at St John’s College, Nottingham, and was ordained deacon in 1993 and priest the following year. He held curacies at Kings Heath, Birmingham, and St Martin-in-the-Fields, London, until 2002, when he became Priest-in-Charge of Holy Trinity and St Peter, South Wimbledon, for seven years. He served as Area Dean of Merton during that time.

In 2009, he was Team Rector of Merton Priory when he was appointed Canon Chancellor of Leicester Cathedral before succeeding to the Deanery.

It was during his time as Dean, in 2015, that the remains of King Richard III, which had been discovered beneath a Leicester car park, were solemnly reinterred in the city’s cathedral. A new tomb was created, and a reordering of the cathedral interior took place.

Dean Monteith, who is in a civil partnership with David Hamilton, a counselling therapist in palliative and bereavement care, said he was “overjoyed and humbled” by his appointment to Canterbury.

“Canterbury Cathedral has played a vital part in our Christian story in England. . . I already can see there is much to steward and much to imagine anew as our context reshapes,” he added.

“David and I have had a place in Whitstable for over 20 years and so we already know Kent well. We are both looking forward to getting to know further the varied communities of the county as well as getting to the seaside more often.”

The Archbishop of Canterbury, the Most Reverend Justin Welby, described Dean Monteith as “an exceptional Dean of Leicester — and his deep faith and spirituality, creativity, and profound sense of service will be a gift to Canterbury Cathedral and all the communities it serves”.

Dean Monteith’s installation as Dean of Canterbury will take place in December.

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