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William de Blois (bishop of Lincoln)

11th and 12th-century Bishop of Lincoln


11th and 12th-century Bishop of Lincoln

FieldValue
typebishop
nameWilliam de Blois
titleBishop of Lincoln
electedabout 6 July 1203
consecration24 August 1203
consecrated_byWilliam of Sainte-Mère-Eglise, Bishop of London
ended10 May 1206
predecessorHugh of Avalon
successorHugh of Wells
other_postPrecentor of Lincoln
death_date10 May 1206
Note

the medieval Bishop of Lincoln

William de Blois (or William of Blois; died 1206) was a medieval Bishop of Lincoln. He first served in the household of Hugh du Puiset, the Bishop of Durham, then later served the household of Hugh of Avalon, Bishop of Lincoln. After Hugh's death and a two-year vacancy in the see, or bishopric, Blois was elected to succeed Hugh in 1203. Little is known about his episcopate, although 86 of his documents survive from that time period. He died in 1206 and was buried in his cathedral.

Early life

Possibly related to Hugh de Puiset the bishop of Durham, who he went on to serve later in life, His relationship with Puiset reinforces the likelihood of his origins being in Blois, as Puiset was a nephew of King Stephen of England and Stephen's brother Henry of Blois, the Bishop of Winchester, both of whom came from Blois. He was titled magister, implying that he attended a university and was well-educated. He taught at the school of Paris for a while, where at one point a townswoman tried to seduce him, resulting in the medieval writer Gerald of Wales later recounting the humorous story of how Blois resisted the lady's advances.

Blois was frequently a witness to Puiset's charters, and was named as rector of a parish church in the city of Durham, appointed by Puiset. probably from about 1189. He was a frequent witness to Hugh's charters in the late 1180s. Although he was now serving Hugh, Blois did not entirely quit the service of Puiset, and was present at Puiset's deathbed in 1195. Besides Hugh and Puiset, he also served Pope Innocent III.

Bishop of Lincoln

Hugh of Avalon died on 16 November 1200, but no new bishop was elected for over two years. King John first tried to impose his own appointee, but was unable to force his choice on the cathedral chapter, who were responsible for electing a new bishop. John then left the see vacant, and some contemporaries accused the king of doing so to secure the revenues of the see for himself because of the regalian right English kings had to receive all the income from a vacant bishopric. Eventually the cathedral chapter was allowed to perform an election, at Canterbury. The consecration was performed by William of Sainte-Mère-Eglise, the Bishop of London, because Hubert Walter, the Archbishop of Canterbury was ill and unable to perform the service which would normally have been his right.

Most of what is known about Blois' episcopate comes from his acta, or records; 86 of them survive. There is an early 14th-century reference to Blois' matricula, which can mean register, but given the distance in time from when it was recorded to Blois' episcopate, it is unclear what exactly was meant by this. Nor has any such document survived. Blois' acta show him to have been an active and diligent administrator, especially concerned with the establishment of vicarages and with parish care. He also spent time mediating disputes, including one in 1204 over a church at Eynesbury that was disputed between Saer de Quincy, the canons of Newnham Priory and monks of St Neot's Priory. Most of his clerks and household members appear to have been non-relatives, with only another William de Blois, appointed Archdeacon of Buckingham by the bishop before becoming Bishop of Worcester in 1218, being a relative.

Blois died on 10 May 1206,

Citations

References

References

  1. Blois probably came from [[Blois]] in France.Greenway "Bishops" ''Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300'': Volume 3: Lincoln
  2. Nothing else is known of Blois' origins.Smith "Blois, William de" ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''
  3. Scammell ''Hugh du Puiset'' p. 70
  4. He may be the Master William of Blois who is a witness to some Scottish charters.Scammell ''Hugh du Puiset'' p. 235
  5. and was buried in [[Lincoln Cathedral]]. In the early fourteenth century, he was still remembered well by the cathedral chapter and was described as learned and kindly by the 14th century writer [[John Schalby]], who wrote a work on the lives of the bishops of Lincoln. Besides his kinsman William de Blois, another known relative was a nephew, William de Marum. Marum succeeded his uncle as rector in Durham. He was once identified with another [[William of Blois (poet)|William of Blois]], who was a poet and the brother of [[Peter of Blois]], but there is no evidence supports that identification.Sharpe ''Handlist of the Latin Writers'' p. 754
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