He edited the collected works of James I; it has been said that his introductions "push the art of panegyric close to deification".[14] He had worked with James on An Apologie for the Oath of Allegiance in 1607, at Royston and Newmarket, reading to James the four volumes of the works of Cardinal Bellarmine.[15][16]
He was Dean of Lichfield from July 1603 until he became Dean of Worcester on 20 December 1604. Montague was elected Bishop of Bath and Wells on 29 March 1608,[17] his election was confirmed on 15 April[18] and he was enthroned and installed at Wells Cathedral on 14 May 1608;[19] he was translated to become Bishop of Winchester on 3 July 1616.[20] As Bishop of Bath and Wells, Montague spent considerable sums in restoring both the Bishop’s Palace at Wells and Bath Abbey; this last, roofless since the Reformation, was re-roofed out of his own pocket. He actively supported the Baths themselves, aware that the ‘towne liveth wholly by them’. In 1613, perhaps at his behest, the Queen, Anne of Denmark, visited the town to take the waters: the Queen’s Bath was named after her. The cue for the visit may have been the completion of the restoration work to Bath Abbey, the last instalment of which had been paid for two years previously. In the same year (probably) and at Wells (probably), Montague staged a "Panegiricall entertainement" for the queen, whose cast included the character of Joseph of Arimathea, who presented a bough from the Holy Thorn of Glastonbury to the queen, the first explicit link between Joseph and the Thorn. [21]At Bath and Wells, he contributed to the legend of the Holy Thorn of Glastonbury, in an entertainment for Anne of Denmark, when the character of Joseph of Arimathea presented boughs to the Queen.[22] He is buried in an alabaster tomb in Bath Abbey.[23]
^Nicholas Tyacke, Lancelot Andrewes and the Myth of Anglicanism, p. 29 in Peter Lake, Michael C. Questier (editors), Conformity and Orthodoxy in the English Church, c. 1560 – 1660 (2000).
^Ralph Anthony Houlbrooke, James VI and I: Ideas, Authority, and Government (2006), p. 173.
^Christopher Hill, Intellectual Origins of the English Revoluation (1965), p. 217.
^Graham Parry, The Golden Age Restor'd: The Culture of the Stuart Court 1603–1642 (1981), p. 26.
^Alan Stewart, The Cradle King: A Life of James VI &I (2003), p. 227.
^Doris Jones-Baker, Hertfordshire in History: Papers Presented to Lionel Munby (2004), p. 99.