William Levett was educated at
Christ Church, Oxford, where he became a fellow, in 1663. After his graduation with a
doctorate of divinity, he entered the service of the first
Earl of Clarendon (1609-1674), historian and statesman who went into exile in France. Levett accompanied him there, returning to England in 1672 and becoming rector of
Husbands Bosworth in
Leicestershire. Four years later he became vicar of
Flore, Northamptonshire. In 1681 he was named
Principal of Magdalen Hall at Oxford, succeeding James Hyde. Hyde, who was the eleventh son of
Sir Laurence Hyde of Heale, near Salisbury, was a barrister and a physician as well as
Member of Parliament. Hyde himself had been nominated Principal by his relation, the Earl of Clarendon, who was Chancellor of the university, and he took office in 1662. On his death in 1681, the Principal's slot passed to Dr. Levett, another favourite of the Hydes. In 1685 Levett became Dean of Bristol. Levett was well known to many Oxford contemporaries, and remained friends with the Earl of Clarendon and his second son
Laurence Hyde, 1st Earl of Rochester for the rest of his life. Among his fellow churchmen, Levett seems to have been held in high regard. Levett held all four positions—his appointments to both parishes, as well as his Magdalen Hall principalship and his Deanship of Bristol—until his death. ==Death and legacy==