Ffoulkes was the son of John Powell Foulkes and Caroline Mary Jocelyn. His father was heir to the
Eriviat Hall estate which the ffoulkes family had owned since at least the 16th century. He was christened on 21 January 1819 at
Henllan,
Denbighshire. Ffoulkes was educated at
Shrewsbury School and
Jesus College, Oxford. He obtained a second-class degree in
literae humaniores in 1841. He was ordained as a priest in the
Church of England and also served for a time as the college's junior bursar. He joined the
Roman Catholic Church in 1855. However, after fifteen years in the Catholic Church, he applied to his bishop,
Samuel Wilberforce, to be reinstated as a clergyman in the Church of England, and his request was granted. Jesus College appointed him as rector of
Wigginton, Oxfordshire, in 1876. When the position of vicar of the
University Church of St Mary the Virgin in Oxford became vacant in 1878, no fellow of
Oriel College wished to accept the appointment and the position was then offered to Ffoulkes, who had previously assisted at services. He remained vicar of St Mary's until his death. He was succeeded by
Cosmo Gordon Lang, later Archbishop of Canterbury. The church had almost ceased to function but Lang rebuilt the congregation. Ffoulkes wrote several theological works, including ''Christendom's Divisions
, The Church's Creed or the Crown's Creed
, and The Primitive Consecration of the Eucharistic Oblation
. His final work was A History of the Church of S. Mary the Virgin, Oxford''. He also lectured in Divinity to the non-collegiate students at Oxford. In 1860 Ffoulkes married Annie, youngest daughter of
Thomas Andrew Lumisden Strange, Chief Justice of Madras. His younger son was the historian
Charles ffoulkes. ==References==