He was born in
Chadderton,
Lancashire, England, and proceeded
MA at
Queens' College, Cambridge in 1588. In the 1590s Covell took part in the controversy about how far the newly reformed
Church of England should abandon the
liturgy and hierarchy of the past, to which debate he contributed several broadly anti-
puritan works. In his later career he allied himself with
Archbishop John Whitgift and afterwards with his successor,
Richard Bancroft, who, like Covell, was Lancashire-born. William Covell died in 1613 at
Mersham, Kent, where he was
rector. ==Works==