He was born at
Mayland, Essex, where his father, also named John Gauden, was vicar of the parish, and educated at
Bury St Edmunds school and at
St John's College, Cambridge, where he graduated B.A. 1623, M.A. 1626. By his matriculation at Michaelmas 1619, the
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography gives him a birth year 1599/1600; whereas
A Cambridge Alumni Database gives 1605. He married Elizabeth, daughter of
William Russell of
Chippenham, Cambridgeshire,
Treasurer of the Navy and his second wife Elizabeth Gerard, and widow of Edward Lewkenor of Denham in
Suffolk, and was tutor at Oxford to two of his wife's brothers. They had five children, four sons and a daughter. He seems to have remained at
Oxford until 1630, when he became
vicar of Chippenham. His sympathies were at first with the parliamentary party. He was
chaplain to
Robert Rich, 2nd Earl of Warwick, and preached before the
House of Commons in 1640. In 1641 he was appointed to the rural
deanery of
Bocking. Apparently, his views changed as the revolutionary tendency of the Presbyterian party became more pronounced, for in 1649 he addressed to
Lord Fairfax A Religious and Loyal Protestation... against the proceedings of the parliament. Under the
Commonwealth he faced both ways, keeping his ecclesiastical preferment, but publishing from time to time pamphlets on behalf of the
Church of England. While in Bocking he met
William Juniper, the "Gosfield Seer" whom he first dismissed as a harmless fool. However, he was later impressed by prophecies made by Juniper, first that the King would be overthrown, and then that the monarchy would be restored. At the Restoration he was made
Bishop of Exeter; he was
elected to the See on 3 November 1660,
confirmed 17 November, and consecrated a bishop on 2 December 1660. He immediately began to complain to
Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon, of the poverty of the See, and based claims for a better benefice on a certain secret service, which he explained in January 1661 to be the sole invention of the
Eikon Basilike, The Pourtraicture of his sacred Majestie in his Solitudes and Sufferings, put forth within a few hours after the execution of
Charles I as written by the king himself. To which Clarendon replied that he had been before acquainted with the secret and had often wished he had remained ignorant of it. Gauden was advanced in 1662, not as he had wished to the
See of Winchester, but to Worcester. He was duly elected to the
See of Worcester on 23 May and that election was confirmed on 10 June 1662. He died on 20 September the same year: his enemies said that he had died of chagrin at not getting the see of Winchester. His widow died in 1671:
Samuel Pepys, a close friend of John's brother Sir Denis Gauden, the Navy
Victualler, praised her charm and conversational skills. ==Authorship question==