Background
Llewellyn Henry Gwynne was born in Britain on 11 June 1863, in Swansea, South Wales.
Llewellyn Henry Gwynne was born in Britain on 11 June 1863, in Swansea, South Wales.
He was the first Anglican Bishop of Egypt and Sudan (1920 - 1946). Ordained in 1886, he was vicar of Emmanuel Church, Nottingham from 1892 - 1899. He also played football for Derby County.
He began his overseas career in 1899 as a Christian missionary in east Africa.
In 1905 Gwynne was appointed archdeacon for the Sudan. And in 1908 he was consecrated Bishop of Khartoum.
Recalled to Europe in World War I bishop Llewellyn joined the army as chaplain. In July 1915 he was appointed deputy chaplain-general of the army in France, with the relative rank of major-general.
Bishop Llewellyn Gwynne returned to the Sudan in 1919.
In 1920, he became the bishop of the new Anglican diocese of Egypt and the Sudan. He became a resident in Cairo, Egypt and would come to the Sudan on visits. In 1929 he dedicated the first church building at Atbarah Railway Station.
In 1930 Bishop Gwynne laid the foundation shone for the Church of Saint John the Baptist in Maadi, Cairo and in 1937 laid the foundation stone of a lepers" church in Lui.
Bishop Gwynne returned to Britain during World World War II and formally retired in 1946. He died on 9 December 1957 at the age of ninety-four.
His pectoral cross is on display at the Museum of Army Chaplaincy.