Page:Fasti ecclesiae Anglicanae Vol.1 body of work.djvu/49

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7
ARCHBISHOPS.

church of St. Mary which he had chiefly built at vast expense[1].

1052Stigand, bishop of Winton, invaded the archbishopric[2]. Some MSS. of the Saxon Chronicle however state that the King conferred it on him: "Rex autem dedit Stigando capellano suo archiepiscopatum Kantiæ;" be that as it may, he could not obtain the pall from Stephen IX, and therefore prudently retained the bishopric of Winchester. By bribery he obtained a pall from Benedict X in 1058; but that Pope being dethroned by Nicholas II, Stigand was not recognised as archbishop. He retained however both sees until the council of Winchester, held in the octave of Easter 1070, when he was degraded and condemned to perpetual imprisonment[3].

1070
4 Will. I.
Lanfranc, abbot of St. Stephen's at Caen, was appointed 15th Aug. 1070[4], and consecrated archbishop on Sunday 29th Aug.[5]. He died 24th May 1089[6].

See vacant four years[7].

1093
7 Will. II.
Anselme, abbot of Bec in Normandy, was appointed in Lent[8], and consecrated archbishop 5th Dec. 1093[9]. He died 21st April 1109[10], ætat. 76, and was buried on the following day. Holy Thursday, at Canterbury[11].

See vacant five years[12].

1114
4 Hen. I.
Radulfus de Turbine[13], bishop of Rochester, was elected

  1. Will. Malms. Gest. Reg.
  2. Ibid.
  3. Will. Malms. Gest. Reg.
  4. Sim. Dunelm.
  5. Malms. Gest. Pont, and Hoved. Annal.
  6. Sim. Dunelm. and Hoved. Annal. Florence says (ix Cal. Jul.) 23rd June, and Serlo, a contemporary, l0th May.
  7. MS. Cott. Domit. xiii. f. 23 says that, on the death of Lanfranc in 1089, Ralph Passeflambe succeeded to Canterbury.
  8. Eadm. Hist. Nov. and Sim. Dimelm.
  9. Hoved. Annal. and Eadm. Hist. Nov.
  10. Sim. Dunelm. Hoved. Annal. and Eadmer.
  11. Sim. Dunelm. and Hoved.
  12. An. 1113. Rex Henricus dedit archiepiscopatum Richardo episcopo London, et ilium per baculum et annulum investivit. Matt. Westm.
  13. Homo summæ jocunditatis et non modice literis instructus (Gervas. Act. Pont.). He was commonly called the Jester {Nugax). Knighton, col. 2380. See MS. Laud. D. 49, a letter from him to the Pope on the supremacy of the see of Canterbury over that of York.