KING (Dr Henry), bishop of Chichester, eldest son of the former, was born in 1591, and educated at Oxford. He became an eminent preacher, and chaplain to king James I. and Charles I. In 1638, he was made dean of Rochester; and, in 1641, was advanced to the see of Chichester. Upon the breaking out of the civil wars, and the dissolution of episcopacy, he was treated with great severity by the friends to the parliament; but recovered his bishopric at the restoration. This worthy prelate, who had a most amiable character, died in 1699; and was interred at his cathedral of Chichester, where a monument was erected to his memory. He published, 1. The psalms of David turned into metre. 2. Poems, elegies, paradoxes, and sonnets. 3. Several sermons, and other works.