He was the son of Sir Richard Cotton of Warblington, Hampshire, and his wife Jane Onley.
He gained Royal Assent on 24 October, was confirmed on 11 November, and consecrated at Lambeth the next day, and had the temporalities restored to him on 23 December 1598.
[4] In his time as bishop, a long-running struggle by the city of Salisbury for its charter was resolved, in 1612.
[5] He died in 1615 and was buried "in his own church"[6] beside his wife, as he had requested in his Will.
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