In 1632 Aglionby accepted the vicarage of Cassington, Oxfordshire. On the death of his uncle, Dr. John King, in 1638, he was promoted to a stall in Westminster Abbey.[4] In the following year he was made a prebendary of Chichester, and in 1642 compounded for the Deanery there. For some time he was a master of Westminster School, and was tutor to the young George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham.[1]
He was deprived of his stall at Westminster; at Canterbury he was never installed, given the wartime conditions, and it is probable that he never visited his cathedral. He died of disease in Oxford, in November, 1643, and was buried in Christ Church Cathedral there.[1][5]
^Noel Malcolm, The Correspondence by Thomas Hobbes (1994).
^Joyce M. Horn (1971). "Prebendaries: Sidlesham". Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541-1857: volume 2: Chichester diocese. Institute of Historical Research. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
^Thomas Hearne, Letters Written by Eminent Persons in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, vol. II (1813), p. 629.