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Walter Giffard

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Archbishop of York from 1266 to 1279
For other people named Walter Giffard, seeWalter Giffard (disambiguation).

Walter Giffard
Archbishop of York
Appointed15 October 1266
Installed1 November 1266
Term endedlate April 1279
PredecessorGodfrey Ludham
SuccessorWilliam de Wickwane
Other postsBishop of Bath and Wells
Orders
Consecration4 January 1265
by Peter d'Acquablanca
Personal details
Bornc. 1225
DiedApril 1279
BuriedYork Minster
ParentsHugh Giffard
Sibyl de Cormeilles
Lord Chancellor
In office
1265–1266
MonarchHenry III of England
Preceded byRalph Sandwich
Succeeded byGodfrey Giffard

Walter Giffard (c. 1225 – April 1279) wasLord Chancellor of England andArchbishop of York.

Family

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A picture of Henry III taken fromCassell's History of England published c. 1902. Henry entrusted his son Edward to the care of Walter's parents.

Giffard was a son of Hugh Giffard ofBoyton inWiltshire,[1] a royal justice, by Sibyl, a daughter and co-heiress of Walter de Cormeilles. He was born about 1225, and may have been the oldest son.[2] Hugh and Sybil were entrusted with the care of the young PrinceEdward in 1239.[3] In 1256 Giffard and his mother received the king's licence to live inBoyton Castle.[2] Giffard's brother was BishopGodfrey Giffard, who wasBishop of Worcester[1] and also Lord Chancellor of England; his sister Mabel was theAbbess ofShaftesbury Abbey. Walter was also a kinsman ofWilliam of Bitton I, who was Walter's predecessor at Bath.[4] The family was also related toWalter de Gray, who was Archbishop of York from 1215 to 1255.[2]

Career

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Giffard studied atCambridge University and took his Master of Arts atOxford University. While at universityAdam Marsh wrote to another scholar praising Giffard's scholarly skills.[2] Giffard took holy orders and became acanon andarchdeacon of Wells and a papal chaplain.[5] On 22 May 1264 he was electedBishop of Bath and Wells[6] and received thetemporalities on 1 September 1264. As theArchbishop of Canterbury,Boniface of Savoy was in France, Giffard travelled to Paris to be consecrated at Notre-Dame on 4 January 1265.[4][7] The service was performed byPeter d'Acquablanca, theBishop of Hereford, Giffard having first sworn that he would not take part against KingHenry III. However, the barons were angered that he had ventured abroad against their will and ravaged nearly all his manors. Archbishop Boniface ordered him toexcommunicateSimon de Montfort theEarl of Leicester and his party on Giffard's return to England.[2] Following theBattle of Evesham, on 10 August 1265 King Henry made Giffard Chancellor and awarded him a stipend of five hundred marks a year.[8] In August of the following year he was appointed one of the arbitrators for drawing up theDictum of Kenilworth which provided the disinherited lords a means of recovering their estates.

On 15 October 1266 Giffard was appointed by PopeClement IV to the Archbishopric of York. As part of this elevation he resigned the chancellorship[8] and was enthroned on 1 November 1266, receiving his temporalities onBoxing Day.[7] Soon after his enthronement he became involved in a dispute with Archbishop Boniface of Canterbury about the right to carry his cross erect in the southern province, and ended up making an appeal to Rome.[2]

Although Giffard had family wealth and much money associated with his office, he could not keep clear of debt. In the years after his appointment he paid 1600marks to Italian money-lenders, 550 marks to certain merchants of Paris, and in 1270 sent 200 marks to his agents at Rome to expedite his affairs, hoping, "...for the present to keep out of the whirlpool of usury." Despite his own financial problems he seems to have been kind to his relatives, paying for his nephew's education[2] and giving his brother Godfrey the Archdeaconry of York.[9] His register contains many gifts to the poor, and he helped support schoolmasters at Beverley.[10] He also supported the scholarly careers of two of his successors at York,John le Romeyn andWilliam Greenfield.[2]

On 13 October 1269 Giffard officiated at the translation ofEdward the Confessor's relics.[2] When leaving England, Prince Edward (who was then heir to the throne) appointed him by will in 1270 as one of the tutors of his sons. He also assisted Edward in bringingJohn de Warenne theEarl of Surrey to justice for the murder ofAlan la Zouche atWestminster. Upon the death of Henry III on 20 November 1272 theGreat Seal was delivered to the Archbishop as first Lord of the Council in order for him,Roger Mortimer andRobert Burnell to be appointed to govern the Kingdom until the return of the new king, nowEdward I, to the country in August 1274.[11] Giffard again acted in this capacity during the king's absence in 1275.[6]

Death

[edit]

Giffard died at York on or about 22 April 1279,[7] and he was buried inYork Minster, probably in the choir.[1] Archbishop Thoresby later removed his body to a tomb which he had erected in the presbytery.[2] Contemporary reports state that Giffard was a handsome, happy and genial man who was fond of luxury; as a result of this in later life he grew fat which affected both his health and his temper. He was noted at the time as being a man of high character who was able and industrious.

Citations

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  1. ^abcGreenwayFasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300: Volume 6: York: Archbishops
  2. ^abcdefghijDobson "Giffard, Walter"Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  3. ^PrestwichEdward I pp. 5–6
  4. ^abGreenwayFasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300: Volume 7: Bath and Wells: Bishops
  5. ^GreenwayFasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300: Volume 7: Bath and Wells: Unidentified Prebendaries
  6. ^abChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911)."Giffard, Walter" .Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 4.
  7. ^abcFryde, et al.Handbook of British Chronology p. 282
  8. ^abFryde, et al.Handbook of British Chronology p. 85
  9. ^GreenwayFasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300: Volume 6: York: Archdeacons: York
  10. ^MoormanChurch Life pp. 205–207
  11. ^ChrimesIntroduction to the Administrative History p. 130

References

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External links

[edit]
Political offices
Preceded by
Ralph Sandwich
(Keeper of the Great Seal)
Lord Chancellor
1265–1266
Succeeded by
Catholic Church titles
Preceded byBishop of Bath and Wells
1264–1266
Succeeded by
Preceded byArchbishop of York
1266–1279
Succeeded by
Henry III
(1216–1272)
Edward I
(1272–1307)
Edward II
(1307–1327)
Edward III
(1327–1377)
Richard II
(1377–1399)
Henry III
(1216–1272)
Edward I
(1272–1307)
Edward II
(1307–1327)
Edward III
(1327–1377)
Richard II
(1377–1399)
Pre-Reformation bishops
Pre-Reformation
archbishops
Post-Reformation
archbishops
previous titles
Wells
Bath
Bath & Glastonbury
  • Savaric FitzGeldewin(previously Bishop of Bath)
  • Jocelin of Wells(became Bishop of Bath)
  • Glastonbury claim abandoned
Bath
Medieval
Early modern
Late modern
Authority control databasesEdit this at Wikidata

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