Cyril Jackson(
1746—
1819), dean of Christ Church, Oxford, was born in Yorkshire, and educated at Westminster and Oxford. In
1771 he was chosen to be sub-preceptor to the two eldest sons of George III., but in
1776 he was dismissed, probably through some household intrigues. He then took orders, and was appointed in
1779 to the preachership at Lincoln’s Inn and to a canonry at Christ Church, Oxford. In
1783 he was elected dean of Christ Church. His devotion to the college led him to decline the bishopric of Oxford in
1799 and the primacy of Ireland in
1800. He took a leading part in framing the statute which, in
1802, launched the system of public examinations at Oxford, but otherwise he was not prominent in university affairs. On his resignation in
1809 he settled at Felpham, in Sussex, where he remained till his death.
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