Moleyns had the living of
Kempsey, Worcestershire from 1433. He was
Dean of Salisbury from 1441 to 1446. He became
bishop of Chichester on 24 September 1445, and was consecrated bishop on 6 February 1446. He was
Lord Privy Seal in 1444, at the same time that he was
Protonotary of the Holy See. In 1447 he had permission to fortify the manor house at
Bexhill. Moleyns was a correspondent of the
humanist Aeneas Silvius Piccolomini,
Pope Pius II, who complimented him in a letter of 29 May 1444: "And I congratulate you and England, since you care for the art of rhetoric". In 1926 George Warner attributed
The Libelle of Englyshe Polycye (1435–38) to Moleyns but this theory was partly based on Warner's mistaken identification of Adam Moleyns as a member of the family's Lancashire branch. The theory of Moleyns' authorship of the poem is now rejected by most historians and scholars. An active partisan of the unpopular
William de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk, Moleyns was lynched in
Portsmouth by discontented unpaid soldiers on 9 January 1450. ==Notes==