William de Longchamp: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|12th |
{{Short description|12th century Chancellor and Justiciar of England, Bishop of Ely}} |
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{{Use British English|date=July 2017}} |
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{{Infobox Christian leader |
{{Infobox Christian leader |
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| name = William de Longchamp |
| name = William de Longchamp |
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| image = Ely-071.jpg |
| image = Ely-071.jpg |
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| image_size = 250 |
| image_size = 250 |
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| caption = Ely Cathedral |
| caption = Ely Cathedral |
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| alt=Two towers rise above a stone building on a wooded hill |
| alt = Two towers rise above a stone building on a wooded hill |
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| religion = Roman Catholic |
| religion = Roman Catholic |
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| title = [[Bishop of Ely]] |
| title = [[Bishop of Ely]] |
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| ended = January 1197 |
| ended = January 1197 |
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| appointed = 15 September 1189 |
| appointed = 15 September 1189 |
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| consecration =31 December 1189 |
| consecration = 31 December 1189 |
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| enthroned = 6 January 1190 |
| enthroned = 6 January 1190 |
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| predecessor = [[Geoffrey Ridel (bishop of Ely)|Geoffrey Ridel]] |
| predecessor = [[Geoffrey Ridel (bishop of Ely)|Geoffrey Ridel]] |
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| successor = [[Eustace (Bishop of Ely)|Eustace]] |
| successor = [[Eustace (Bishop of Ely)|Eustace]] |
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| death_date = January 1197 |
| death_date = January 1197 |
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| death_place = [[Poitiers]] |
| death_place = [[Poitiers]] |
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| buried = abbey of Le Pin |
| buried = abbey of Le Pin |
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| module = {{Infobox officeholder | embed = yes |
| module = {{Infobox officeholder | embed = yes |
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| office |
| office = Chief [[Justiciar]] of England |
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| term_start |
| term_start = December 1189 |
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| term_end |
| term_end = 1191 |
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| monarch |
| monarch = [[Richard I of England|Richard I]] |
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| predecessor |
| predecessor = [[Hugh de Puiset]] (co-chief Justiciar until June 1190) |
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| successor |
| successor = [[Walter de Coutances]] |
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| constituency |
| constituency = South of the [[Humber|Humber River]] (March–June 1190) |
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| office2 |
| office2 = [[Lord Chancellor|Chancellor]] of England |
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| term_start2 |
| term_start2 = 1189 |
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| term_end2 |
| term_end2 = 1197 |
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| monarch2 |
| monarch2 = [[Richard I of England|Richard I]] |
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| predecessor2 |
| predecessor2 = [[Geoffrey, Archbishop of York|Geoffrey]] |
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| successor2 |
| successor2 = [[Eustace (Bishop of Ely)|Eustace]] |
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| office3 |
| office3 = [[chancellor]] of the [[Duke of Aquitaine|Duchy of Aquitaine]] |
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| monarch3 |
| monarch3 = [[Richard I of England|Richard]], Duke of Aquitaine |
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}} |
}} |
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}} |
}} |
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'''William de Longchamp'''{{efn|Sometimes known as William Longchamp or William de Longchamps}} (died 1197) was a medieval [[Lord Chancellor]], [[Justiciar|Chief Justiciar]], and [[Bishop of Ely]] in England. Born to a humble family in [[Normandy]], he owed his advancement to royal favour. Although contemporary writers accused Longchamp's father of being the son of a peasant, he held land as a knight. Longchamp first served [[Henry II of England|Henry II]]'s illegitimate son [[Geoffrey (archbishop of York)|Geoffrey]], but quickly transferred to the service of [[Richard I of England|Richard I]], Henry's heir. When Richard became king in 1189, Longchamp paid £3,000 for the office of Chancellor |
'''William de Longchamp'''{{efn|Sometimes known as William Longchamp or William de Longchamps}} (died 1197) was a medieval [[Lord Chancellor]], [[Justiciar|Chief Justiciar]], and [[Bishop of Ely]] in England. Born to a humble family in [[Normandy]], he owed his advancement to royal favour. Although contemporary writers accused Longchamp's father of being the son of a peasant, he held land as a knight. Longchamp first served [[Henry II of England|Henry II]]'s illegitimate son [[Geoffrey (archbishop of York)|Geoffrey]], but quickly transferred to the service of [[Richard I of England|Richard I]], Henry's heir. When Richard became king in 1189, Longchamp paid £3,000 for the office of Chancellor and was soon named to the [[Diocese]], or bishopric, of Ely and appointed [[papal legate|legate]] by the pope. |
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Longchamp governed England while Richard was on the [[Third Crusade]], but his authority was challenged by Richard's brother, [[John of England|John]], who eventually succeeded in driving Longchamp from power and from England. Longchamp's relations with the other leading English nobles were also strained, which contributed to the demands for his exile. Soon after Longchamp's departure from England, Richard was captured on his journey back to England from the |
Longchamp governed England while Richard was on the [[Third Crusade]], but his authority was challenged by Richard's brother, [[John of England|John]], who eventually succeeded in driving Longchamp from power and from England. Longchamp's relations with the other leading English nobles were also strained, which contributed to the demands for his exile. Soon after Longchamp's departure from England, Richard was captured on his journey back to England from the Crusade and held for ransom by [[Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor]]. Longchamp travelled to Germany to help negotiate Richard's release. Although Longchamp regained the office of Chancellor after Richard's return to England, he lost much of his former power. He aroused a great deal of hostility among his contemporaries during his career, but he retained Richard's trust and was employed by the king until the bishop's death in 1197. Longchamp wrote a treatise on the law, which remained well-known throughout the [[Late Middle Ages]]. |
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==Background and early life== |
== Background and early life == |
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Longchamp's ancestors originated in the village of |
Longchamp's ancestors originated in the village of [[Longchamps, Eure]], [[Normandy]].<ref name=Balfour78>Balfour "Origins of the Longchamp Family" ''Medieval Prosopography'' p. 78</ref> Although it is known that he was born in Normandy,<ref name=Spear6>Spear "Norman Empire and the Secular Clergy" ''Journal of British Studies'' p. 6</ref> the exact location is unknown, with it perhaps being near the Norman village of Argenton<!--There is no village called Argenton in Normandy, but a town called Argentan-->. His father, Hugh de Longchamp, also held land in England, as did many other Norman nobles after the [[Norman Conquest]] in 1066. [[Hugh Nonant]] — one of Longchamp's opponents — declared that the elder Longchamp was the son of a peasant, which seems unlikely, as Hugh de Longchamp appears to have held a [[knight's fee|knight's tenancy]] in Normandy.<ref name=DNB>Turner "Longchamp, William de" ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''</ref> The family was originally of humble background but rose through service to King Henry II.<ref name=Feudal352>Barlow ''Feudal Kingdom of England'' pp. 352–353</ref> The elder Longchamp also held land in [[Herefordshire]] in England, including the manor of [[Wilton, Herefordshire|Wilton]] near [[Ross-on-Wye|Ross]] in [[Wales]].<ref name=Balfour82>Balfour "Origins of the Longchamp Family" ''Medieval Prosopography'' p. 82</ref> Hugh married a woman named Eve, a relative of the [[de Lacy|Lacy family]]. Historian David Balfour suggests that Eve was the daughter of [[Gilbert de Lacy]], the son of [[Roger de Lacy]], exiled by King [[William II of England|William II]] in 1095 for rebellion.<ref name=Balfour84>Balfour "Origins of the Longchamp Family" ''Medieval Prosopography'' p. 84</ref> |
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Longchamp's sister, Richeut, married the [[castellan]] of [[Dover Castle]].<ref name=DNB/><ref name=Feudal373/> A second sister, Melisend, came to England with Longchamp, but otherwise is unknown.<ref name=DNB/> A sister is recorded as having married Stephen Devereux, but whether this is Melisend is unclear. Of Longchamp's brothers, [[Osbert de Longchamp|Osbert]] remained a layman, and owed much of his advancement to William;<ref name=Poole352/> Stephen served King Richard I on crusade; [[Henry de Longchamp|Henry]], another layman, became a sheriff along with Osbert; and Robert became a monk. Two of Longchamp's brothers became [[abbot]]s.<ref name=Balfour91>Balfour "Origins of the Longchamp Family" ''Medieval Prosopography'' p. 91</ref> |
Longchamp's sister, Richeut, married the [[castellan]] of [[Dover Castle]].<ref name=DNB/><ref name=Feudal373/> A second sister, Melisend, came to England with Longchamp, but otherwise is unknown.<ref name=DNB/> A sister is recorded as having married [[Stephen Devereux]], but whether this is Melisend is unclear. Of Longchamp's brothers, [[Osbert de Longchamp|Osbert]] remained a layman, and owed much of his advancement to William;<ref name=Poole352/> Stephen served King Richard I on crusade; [[Henry de Longchamp|Henry]], another layman, became a sheriff along with Osbert; and Robert became a monk. Two of Longchamp's brothers became [[abbot]]s.<ref name=Balfour91>Balfour "Origins of the Longchamp Family" ''Medieval Prosopography'' p. 91</ref> |
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Longchamp entered public life at the close of Henry II's reign, as an official for the King's illegitimate son [[Geoffrey, Archbishop of York|Geoffrey]].{{efn|There is a William of Longchamps who was a canon of [[Evreux Cathedral|Evreux]] in the 1180s, who may be the same person as the future Bishop of Ely. The William who was a canon occurs once in an Evreux charter that dates to sometime between 1181 and 1192 and again in an undated charter from the same period.<ref name=Spear165>Spear ''Personnel of the Norman Cathedrals'' p. 165</ref>}} He soon left Geoffrey's service,<ref name=Poole351fn/> and served in Henry II's [[Chancery (medieval office)|chancery]], or writing office, before he entered service with Henry's son Richard.<ref name=Richard121>Gillingham ''Richard I'' pp. 121–122</ref> Richard, who was Duke of Aquitaine at the time, named Longchamp chancellor of the [[Duke of Aquitaine|Duchy of Aquitaine]].<ref name=Poole351fn>Poole ''Domesday Book to Magna Carta'' p. 351 footnote 3</ref> Longchamp first distinguished himself at the court of King [[Philip II of France]] in Paris in 1189, when he acted as Richard's envoy in a dispute with [[William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke|William Marshal]], King Henry's envoy. By that time, Longchamp was already one of Richard's trusted advisors.<ref name=RichardI98>Gillingham ''Richard I'' p. 98</ref> |
Longchamp entered public life at the close of Henry II's reign, as an official for the King's illegitimate son [[Geoffrey, Archbishop of York|Geoffrey]].{{efn|There is a William of Longchamps who was a canon of [[Evreux Cathedral|Evreux]] in the 1180s, who may be the same person as the future Bishop of Ely. The William who was a canon occurs once in an Evreux charter that dates to sometime between 1181 and 1192 and again in an undated charter from the same period.<ref name=Spear165>Spear ''Personnel of the Norman Cathedrals'' p. 165</ref>}} He soon left Geoffrey's service,<ref name=Poole351fn/> and served in Henry II's [[Chancery (medieval office)|chancery]], or writing office, before he entered service with Henry's son Richard.<ref name=Richard121>Gillingham ''Richard I'' pp. 121–122</ref> Richard, who was Duke of Aquitaine at the time, named Longchamp chancellor of the [[Duke of Aquitaine|Duchy of Aquitaine]].<ref name=Poole351fn>Poole ''Domesday Book to Magna Carta'' p. 351 footnote 3</ref> Longchamp first distinguished himself at the court of King [[Philip II of France]] in Paris in 1189, when he acted as Richard's envoy in a dispute with [[William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke|William Marshal]], King Henry's envoy. By that time, Longchamp was already one of Richard's trusted advisors.<ref name=RichardI98>Gillingham ''Richard I'' p. 98</ref> |
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==Chancellor and Justiciar== |
== Chancellor and Justiciar == |
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[[File:Seal of William de Longchamp.svg|thumb|Seal of William de Longchamp, Bishop of Ely]] |
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⚫ | On Richard's accession to the throne of England in 1189 Longchamp became Chancellor of England.<ref name=Handbook84>Fryde, et al. ''Handbook of British Chronology'' p. 84</ref> Longchamp paid 3,000 [[pound sterling|pounds]] (£) for the office of Chancellor. This was followed by an increase in the price of having chancery documents sealed with the [[Great Seal of the Realm|Great Seal]], necessary for their authentication, perhaps to help Longchamp recoup the cost of office. At the council held at Pipewell on 15 September 1189, the King raised Longchamp to the bishopric of [[Diocese of Ely|Ely]].<ref name=DNB/> Richard named three other bishops at the same time: [[Godfrey de Lucy]] to [[Diocese of Winchester|Winchester]], [[Richard FitzNeal]] to [[Diocese of London|London]], and [[Hubert Walter]] to [[Diocese of Salisbury|Salisbury]].<ref name=RichardI109>Gillingham ''Richard I'' p. 109</ref> Longchamp was consecrated on 31 December 1189<ref name=Handbook244>Fryde, et al. ''Handbook of British Chronology'' p. 244</ref> and enthroned at Ely on 6 January 1190.<ref name=BHOEly>Greenway "Ely: Bishops" ''Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300''</ref> |
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⚫ | On Richard's accession to the throne of England in 1189 Longchamp became [[Lord Chancellor|Chancellor of England]].<ref name=Handbook84>Fryde, et al. ''Handbook of British Chronology'' p. 84</ref> Longchamp paid 3,000 [[pound sterling|pounds]] (£) for the office of Chancellor. This was followed by an increase in the price of having chancery documents sealed with the [[Great Seal of the Realm|Great Seal]], necessary for their authentication, perhaps to help Longchamp recoup the cost of the office. At the council held at [[Pipewell]] on 15 September 1189, the King raised Longchamp to the bishopric of [[Diocese of Ely|Ely]].<ref name=DNB/> Richard named three other bishops at the same time: [[Godfrey de Lucy]] to [[Diocese of Winchester|Winchester]], [[Richard FitzNeal]] to [[Diocese of London|London]], and [[Hubert Walter]] to [[Diocese of Salisbury|Salisbury]].<ref name=RichardI109>Gillingham ''Richard I'' p. 109</ref> Longchamp was consecrated on 31 December 1189<ref name=Handbook244>Fryde, et al. ''Handbook of British Chronology'' p. 244</ref> and enthroned at Ely on 6 January 1190.<ref name=BHOEly>Greenway "Ely: Bishops" ''Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300''</ref> |
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⚫ | Before leaving England in 1189, Richard put the [[Tower of London]] in Longchamp's hands and appointed him jointly with [[Hugh de Puiset]], the [[Bishop of Durham]], to the office of Chief Justiciar,<ref name=Richard121/> at that time not strictly a judicial office. Instead, the justiciar was the person entrusted with much of the king's authority when the king was outside the kingdom, able to act in the king's name.<ref name=Saul154>Saul "Justiciar" ''Companion to Medieval England'' p. 154</ref> Along with Puiset, the king named [[Hugh Bardulf]], [[William Brewer (justice)|William Briwerre]], [[Geoffrey fitz Peter]], and William Marshal as associates in the justiciarship, under Puiset and Longchamp.<ref name=West68>West ''Justiciarship in England'' p. 68</ref> As Justiciar, Longchamp sent judges throughout the country to visit the [[shire]]s on judicial visits, even though he had no previous knowledge of the judiciary.<ref name=Judiciary66>Turner ''English Judiciary'' pp. 65–66</ref> Longchamp and Puiset were unable to work together, and so in March 1190 Richard gave authority north of the [[Humber|River Humber]] to Hugh, and authority south of the river to Longchamp.<ref name=Richard121/> Historians' opinions are divided whether Richard explicitly made Longchamp superior to Puiset at this time, or if in theory the two were supposed to co-equal in their respective spheres.<ref name=DNB/><ref name=Richard121/><ref name=West68/> By June, Longchamp had eased Puiset out of power and the justiciar's office.<ref name=Richard121/> He also received a commission as a papal legate from Pope [[Pope Clement III|Clement III]] at this time.<ref name=BHOEly/> Supposedly Richard paid 1,500 |
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⚫ | Before leaving England in 1189, Richard put the [[Tower of London]] in Longchamp's hands and appointed him jointly with [[Hugh de Puiset]], the [[Bishop of Durham]], to the office of Chief Justiciar,<ref name=Richard121/> at that time not strictly a judicial office. Instead, the justiciar was the person entrusted with much of the king's authority when the king was outside the kingdom, able to act in the king's name.<ref name=Saul154>Saul "Justiciar" ''Companion to Medieval England'' p. 154</ref> Along with Puiset, the king named [[Hugh Bardulf]], [[William Brewer (justice)|William Briwerre]], [[Geoffrey fitz Peter]], and William Marshal as associates in the justiciarship, under Puiset and Longchamp.<ref name=West68>West ''Justiciarship in England'' p. 68</ref> As Justiciar, Longchamp sent judges throughout the country to visit the [[shire]]s on judicial visits, even though he had no previous knowledge of the judiciary.<ref name=Judiciary66>Turner ''English Judiciary'' pp. 65–66</ref> Longchamp and Puiset were unable to work together, and so in March 1190 Richard gave authority north of the [[Humber|River Humber]] to Hugh, and authority south of the river to Longchamp.<ref name=Richard121/> Historians' opinions are divided whether Richard explicitly made Longchamp superior to Puiset at this time, or if in theory the two were supposed to co-equal in their respective spheres.<ref name=DNB/><ref name=Richard121/><ref name=West68/> By June, Longchamp had eased Puiset out of power and the justiciar's office.<ref name=Richard121/> He also received a commission as a papal legate from Pope [[Pope Clement III|Clement III]] at this time.<ref name=BHOEly/> Supposedly Richard paid 1,500 [[Mark (money)|mark]]s (£1,000) to the papacy to secure the legateship for Longchamp.<ref name=RichardI130>Gillingham ''Richard I'' p. 130</ref> |
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⚫ | Longchamp granted the citizens of London the right to elect their own sheriffs, and to collect and remit their monetary levy of £300 directly to the [[Exchequer]], the treasury of England.<ref name=Poole70>Poole ''Domesday Book to Magna Carta'' p. 70</ref> On Longchamp's visits to his diocese he was accompanied by a large train of retainers and animals, which became notorious throughout the country as a sign of his extravagance.<ref name=Poole223>Poole ''Domesday Book to Magna Carta'' p. 223</ref> Under his legatine authority, the bishop held [[legatine council]]s of the church at Gloucester and Westminster in 1190. He also acted to restore authority in York, which had suffered a breakdown in order after the [[12th century English pogroms|massacre of Jews]] in March 1190. Also in 1190, he sent an army against [[Rhys ap Gruffydd]], a Welsh prince who was attempting to throw off the control of the [[marcher lords]] that surrounded Wales.<ref name=DNB/> |
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⚫ | Longchamp granted the citizens of London the right to elect their own sheriffs, and to collect and remit their monetary levy of £300 directly to the [[Exchequer]], the treasury of England.<ref name=Poole70>Poole ''Domesday Book to Magna Carta'' p. 70</ref> On Longchamp's visits to his diocese he was accompanied by a large train of retainers and animals, which became notorious throughout the country as a sign of his extravagance.<ref name=Poole223>Poole ''Domesday Book to Magna Carta'' p. 223</ref> Under his legatine authority, the bishop held [[legatine council]]s of the church at [[Gloucester]] and [[Westminster]] in 1190. He also acted to restore authority in [[York]], which had suffered a breakdown in order after the [[12th century English pogroms|massacre of Jews]] in March 1190. Also in 1190, he sent an army against [[Rhys ap Gruffydd]], a [[Welsh people|Welsh prince]] who was attempting to throw off the control of the [[marcher lords]] that surrounded [[Wales]].<ref name=DNB/> |
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⚫ | Longchamp's relations with the English people were made more difficult because he was a native of Normandy, and often insensitive to English customs.<ref name=Feudal352/> The medieval writer [[William of Newburgh]] claimed that Longchamp was "an obscure foreigner of unproven ability and loyalty".<ref name=QRichardI121>Quoted in Gillingham ''Richard I'' p. 121</ref> For example, it appears likely that Longchamp did not speak English, making his relations with his flock more difficult.<ref name=Bartlett488>Bartlett ''England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings'' p. 488</ref> The leading nobles complained that Longchamp marginalised the other officials Richard had appointed to serve with him |
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⚫ | Longchamp's relations with the English people were made more difficult because he was a native of Normandy, and often insensitive to English customs.<ref name=Feudal352/> The medieval writer [[William of Newburgh]] claimed that Longchamp was "an obscure foreigner of unproven ability and loyalty".<ref name=QRichardI121>Quoted in Gillingham ''Richard I'' p. 121</ref> For example, it appears likely that Longchamp did not speak English, making his relations with his flock more difficult.<ref name=Bartlett488>Bartlett ''England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings'' p. 488</ref> The leading nobles complained that Longchamp marginalised the other officials Richard had appointed to serve with him and that he brought in foreigners to fill offices. Although the first charge is mostly untrue, the second appears to have been valid, as Longchamp did install non-natives in judicial offices and as [[sheriff]]s. He also attempted to seize control of several English castles by granting their custody to relatives and dependents.<ref name=Heiser19>Heiser "Castles, Constables, and Politics" ''Albion'' pp. 19–20</ref> |
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Throughout 1190, Longchamp's relations with Richard's younger brother John were difficult.<ref name=Richard227/> This led to Longchamp besieging [[Lincoln Castle]] because the castellan would not surrender the castle and allow himself to be replaced by Longchamp's nominee.<ref name=Huscroft144/> The castellan, [[Gerard de Camville]], had sworn allegiance to John and stated he would no longer recognise the chancellor's authority.<ref name=DNB/> In response, John took the two castles of [[Tickhill Castle|Tickhill]] and [[Northampton Castle|Northampton]].<ref name=Huscroft144>Huscroft ''Ruling England'' p. 144</ref> News of the dispute reached Richard, who sent [[Walter de Coutances]], the [[Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Rouen|Archbishop of Rouen]], to England in late spring 1191, with orders to negotiate a peace between John and Longchamp.<ref name=Feudal373>Barlow ''Feudal Kingdom of England'' pp. 373–376</ref> Eventually, Walter brokered a compromise between the two as a result of which Gerard was confirmed as castellan and John relinquished the castles.<ref name=DNB/> Longchamp also agreed to work to ensure John's succession to the throne in the event of Richard's death.<ref name=Richard227/> |
Throughout 1190, Longchamp's relations with Richard's younger brother John were difficult.<ref name=Richard227/> This led to Longchamp besieging [[Lincoln Castle]] because the castellan would not surrender the castle and allow himself to be replaced by Longchamp's nominee.<ref name=Huscroft144/> The castellan, [[Gerard de Camville]], had sworn allegiance to John and stated he would no longer recognise the chancellor's authority.<ref name=DNB/> In response, John took the two castles of [[Tickhill Castle|Tickhill]] and [[Northampton Castle|Northampton]].<ref name=Huscroft144>Huscroft ''Ruling England'' p. 144</ref> News of the dispute reached Richard, who sent [[Walter de Coutances]], the [[Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Rouen|Archbishop of Rouen]], to England in late spring 1191, with orders to negotiate a peace between John and Longchamp.<ref name=Feudal373>Barlow ''Feudal Kingdom of England'' pp. 373–376</ref> Eventually, Walter brokered a compromise between the two as a result of which Gerard was confirmed as castellan and John relinquished the castles.<ref name=DNB/> Longchamp also agreed to work to ensure John's succession to the throne in the event of Richard's death.<ref name=Richard227/> |
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Longchamp's legatine commission from the papacy expired in spring 1191, on the death of Clement III,<ref name=BHOEly/> thus removing one of Longchamp's power bases.<ref name=Richard227/> The legation was, however, renewed a few months later by Clement's successor, [[Pope Celestine III|Celestine III]].<ref name=DNB/> A further complication for Longchamp arose in September 1191, when Henry II's illegitimate son Geoffrey, Archbishop of York, was arrested by Longchamp's subordinates,<ref name=Richard227/> led by the castellan of Dover Castle, Longchamp's brother-in-law.<ref name=Feudal373/> Their orders had been to arrest the Archbishop of York as he landed at [[Dover]] on the archbishop's return to England, but Geoffrey had been warned of their plans, and fled to [[sanctuary]] in [[Dover Priory|St. Martin's Priory]]. Longchamp's men laid siege to the priory, and after four days forcibly removed Geoffrey. The violence of the attack reminded the public of [[Thomas Becket]]'s martyrdom, and public opinion turned against Longchamp.<ref name=Richard227>Gillingham ''Richard I'' pp. 227–229</ref> Longchamp claimed that Geoffrey had not sworn [[fealty]] to Richard, but this was likely just an excuse to eliminate a rival.<ref name=Lyon233>Lyon ''Constitutional and Legal History'' pp. 233–236</ref> |
Longchamp's legatine commission from the papacy expired in spring 1191, on the death of Clement III,<ref name=BHOEly/> thus removing one of Longchamp's power bases.<ref name=Richard227/> The legation was, however, renewed a few months later by Clement's successor, [[Pope Celestine III|Celestine III]].<ref name=DNB/> A further complication for Longchamp arose in September 1191, when Henry II's illegitimate son Geoffrey, [[Archbishop of York]], was arrested by Longchamp's subordinates,<ref name=Richard227/> led by the [[castellan]] of [[Dover Castle]], Longchamp's brother-in-law.<ref name=Feudal373/> Their orders had been to arrest the Archbishop of York as he landed at [[Dover]] on the archbishop's return to England, but Geoffrey had been warned of their plans, and fled to [[sanctuary]] in [[Dover Priory|St. Martin's Priory]]. Longchamp's men laid siege to the priory, and after four days forcibly removed Geoffrey. The violence of the attack reminded the public of [[Thomas Becket]]'s martyrdom, and public opinion turned against Longchamp.<ref name=Richard227>Gillingham ''Richard I'' pp. 227–229</ref> Longchamp claimed that Geoffrey had not sworn [[fealty]] to Richard, but this was likely just an excuse to eliminate a rival.<ref name=Lyon233>Lyon ''Constitutional and Legal History'' pp. 233–236</ref> |
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An intense propaganda campaign led by partisans of John ensued.<ref name=Richard227/> One of the leaders of the campaign against Longchamp was Hugh Nonant, the [[Bishop of Coventry]], and he along with other magnates, including Geoffrey, who had been released, convened a trial on 5 October 1191 at Loddon Bridge near London. Longchamp did not attend, but he was deposed and excommunicated, and after trying to hold the Tower of London,<ref name=Feudal373/> he was forced to surrender due to lack of support from the citizens of London. The council then declared his offices forfeit |
An intense propaganda campaign led by partisans of John ensued.<ref name=Richard227/> One of the leaders of the campaign against Longchamp was [[Hugh Nonant]], the [[Bishop of Coventry]], and he along with other magnates, including Geoffrey, who had been released, convened a trial on 5 October 1191 at [[Loddon Bridge disaster|Loddon Bridge]] near London. Longchamp did not attend, but he was deposed and excommunicated, and after trying to hold the [[Tower of London]],<ref name=Feudal373/> he was forced to surrender due to lack of support from the citizens of London. The council then declared his offices forfeit and ordered the surrender of the castles in his custody.<ref name=DNB/> The main charge against Longchamp appears to have been his autocratic behaviour.<ref name=Feudal373/> |
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Longchamp went to Dover in late 1191 to seek transport to the continent. During his escape, he was unable to answer the local people when they spoke to him in English.<ref name="Bartlett488"/> He attempted to leave England in various disguises, including a monk's habit and women's clothes. Hugh Nonant wrote that Longchamp attempted on one occasion to hide dressed as a prostitute, which led to him being assaulted by a fisherman who mistook him for a whore. Longchamp eventually succeeded in leaving England, on 29 October.<ref name=DNB/> |
Longchamp went to Dover in late 1191 to seek transport to the continent. During his escape, he was unable to answer the local people when they spoke to him in English.<ref name="Bartlett488"/> He attempted to leave England in various disguises, including a monk's habit and women's clothes. Hugh Nonant wrote that Longchamp attempted on one occasion to hide dressed as a prostitute, which led to him being assaulted by a fisherman who mistook him for a whore. Longchamp eventually succeeded in leaving England, on 29 October 1991.<ref name=DNB/> |
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==Exile and return== |
== Exile and return == |
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Longchamp went to the court of Henry VI, the Holy Roman Emperor, who was holding King Richard captive at [[Trifels Castle|Trifels]]. The bishop arranged for Richard to be held at the imperial court and negotiated a payment plan for the ransom, 100,000 |
Longchamp went to the court of [[Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor|Henry VI]], the [[Holy Roman Emperor]], who was holding King Richard captive at [[Trifels Castle|Trifels]]. The bishop arranged for Richard to be held at the imperial court and negotiated a payment plan for the ransom, 100,000 marks, under the terms of which the emperor agreed to release Richard once 70,000 marks had been paid and hostages for the payment of the rest had been received.<ref name=Richard239>Gillingham ''Richard I'' p. 239</ref> When the Emperor in January 1194 called a meeting of the imperial magnates to debate King Philip II of France's offer to pay the Emperor to keep Richard captive, Longchamp attended along with Walter of Coutances and [[Eleanor of Aquitaine]], Richard's mother. After further diplomatic wrangling, Richard was freed on 4 February 1194.<ref name=Richard247>Gillingham ''Richard I'' pp. 247–248</ref> |
||
Richard rewarded Longchamp with the custody of [[Eye, Suffolk |
Richard rewarded Longchamp with the custody of [[Eye, Suffolk]] and an appointment as [[High Sheriff of Essex|Sheriff of Essex]] and [[High Sheriff of Hertfordshire|Sheriff of Hertfordshire]] when the pair returned to England,<ref name=DNB/> but Longchamp soon became embroiled in a renewal of his disagreement with Archbishop [[Geoffrey (archbishop of York)|Geoffrey of York]].<ref name=Richard272>Gillingham ''Richard I'' p. 272</ref> Richard left England in May 1194, and Longchamp accompanied him to the continent, never to return to England;<ref name=Poole368>Poole ''Domesday Book to Magna Carta'' pp. 368–369</ref> Longchamp returned to the Emperor's court in 1195.<ref name=DNB/> Richard continued to use Longchamp in diplomacy<ref name=Richard290>Gillingham ''Richard I'' p. 290</ref> — although it was Geoffrey who arranged a truce with King Philip in 1194<ref name=Richard290/> — as well as retaining the bishop as chancellor, but the main power in England was now Hubert Walter.<ref name=Feudal385>Barlow ''Feudal Kingdom of England'' pp. 385–386</ref> Longchamp spent the rest of his life outside his diocese, usually accompanying the king.<ref name=Sharpe134>Sharpe "Richard Barre's ''Compendium''" ''Journal of Medieval Latin'' p. 134</ref> |
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==Death and legacy== |
== Death and legacy == |
||
Longchamp died in January 1197,<ref name=Handbook244/> at [[Poitiers]],<ref name=Feudal385/> while on a diplomatic mission to Rome for Richard,<ref name=Richard302>Gillingham ''Richard I'', p. 302, footnote 5</ref> and was buried at the abbey of Le Pin.<ref name=DNB/> Much of the information on his career comes from people hostile to him,<ref name=Poole358/> for example, [[Gerald of Wales]] called Longchamp that "monster with many heads".<ref name=QFeudal353>Quoted in Barlow ''Feudal Kingdom of England'' p. 353</ref> The historian [[Austin Lane Poole]] says that Gerald described Longchamp as more like an ape than a man.<ref name=Poole352/> Longchamp was reportedly a cultured and well-educated man.<ref name=Richard121/> He was supported by others among his contemporaries, including Pope Clement III, who, when he appointed Longchamp legate, wrote that he did so at the urging of the English bishops.<ref name=Poole358>Poole ''Domesday Book to Magna Carta'' p. 358</ref> When he was one of four men named bishop in 1189, medieval chronicler [[Richard of Devizes]] wrote that the four new bishops were "men of no little virtue and fame".<ref name=QRichardI109>Quoted in Gillingham ''Richard I'' p. 109</ref> Historian [[John Gillingham]] wrote that Longchamp's "record of his life in politics and administration was a good one, spoiled only by his failure in 1191".<ref name=Richard121/> |
Longchamp died in January 1197,<ref name=Handbook244/> at [[Poitiers]],<ref name=Feudal385/> while on a diplomatic mission to [[Rome]] for Richard,<ref name=Richard302>Gillingham ''Richard I'', p. 302, footnote 5</ref> and was buried at the abbey of Le Pin.<ref name=DNB/> Much of the information on his career comes from people hostile to him,<ref name=Poole358/> for example, [[Gerald of Wales]] called Longchamp that "monster with many heads".<ref name=QFeudal353>Quoted in Barlow ''Feudal Kingdom of England'' p. 353</ref> The historian [[Austin Lane Poole]] says that Gerald described Longchamp as more like an ape than a man.<ref name=Poole352/> Longchamp was reportedly a cultured and well-educated man.<ref name=Richard121/> He was supported by others among his contemporaries, including Pope Clement III, who, when he appointed Longchamp legate, wrote that he did so at the urging of the English bishops.<ref name=Poole358>Poole ''Domesday Book to Magna Carta'' p. 358</ref> When he was one of four men named bishop in 1189, medieval chronicler [[Richard of Devizes]] wrote that the four new bishops were "men of no little virtue and fame".<ref name=QRichardI109>Quoted in Gillingham ''Richard I'' p. 109</ref> Historian [[John Gillingham]] wrote that Longchamp's "record of his life in politics and administration was a good one, spoiled only by his failure in 1191".<ref name=Richard121/> |
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Two writers have seen, in the assembly that met to try Longchamp in 1191, a precursor to the gathering at [[Runnymede]] in 1215 that drew up [[Magna Carta]], as it was one of the earliest examples of the nobles of the realm coming together to force the government to rule with their advice.<ref name=Lords100>Powell and Wallis ''The House of Lords'' p. 100</ref> Longchamp also promoted the careers of his brothers; Henry and Osbert became sheriffs in the 1190s,<ref name=DNB/> Osbert the Sheriff of Yorkshire.<ref name=Poole352>Poole ''Domesday Book to Magna Carta'' pp. 352–353</ref> His brother Robert, a cleric, also benefitted, becoming [[prior]] of the Ely [[cathedral chapter]] and later abbot of [[St Mary's Abbey, York]].<ref name=Heads46>Knowles, et al. ''Heads of Religious Houses'' p. 46</ref> |
Two writers have seen, in the assembly that met to try Longchamp in 1191, a precursor to the gathering at [[Runnymede]] in 1215 that drew up [[Magna Carta]], as it was one of the earliest examples of the nobles of the realm coming together to force the government to rule with their advice.<ref name=Lords100>Powell and Wallis ''The House of Lords'' p. 100</ref> Longchamp also promoted the careers of his brothers; Henry and Osbert became sheriffs in the 1190s,<ref name=DNB/> Osbert the Sheriff of Yorkshire.<ref name=Poole352>Poole ''Domesday Book to Magna Carta'' pp. 352–353</ref> His brother Robert, a cleric, also benefitted, becoming [[Prior (ecclesiastical)|prior]] of the Ely [[cathedral chapter]] and later abbot of [[St Mary's Abbey, York]].<ref name=Heads46>Knowles, et al. ''Heads of Religious Houses'' p. 46</ref> |
||
The medieval poet Nigel Wireker (also known as [[Nigel de Longchamps]]) dedicated to the bishop a satirical poem, ''Speculum Stultorum'' ("Mirror of Fools"), on the habits of students.<ref name=Poole241>Poole ''Domesday Book to Magna Carta'' p. 241</ref> [[Richard Barre]], a medieval writer and judge, dedicated his work ''Compendium de veteris et novo testamento'' to Longchamp.<ref name=Judiciary96>Turner ''English Judiciary'' p. 96</ref> Longchamp was one of Barre's patrons, and secured the post of [[Archdeacon of Ely]] for him as well as judicial posts.<ref name=Judiciary104>Turner ''English Judiciary'' p. 104</ref> |
The medieval poet Nigel Wireker (also known as [[Nigel de Longchamps]]) dedicated to the bishop a satirical poem, ''Speculum Stultorum'' ("Mirror of Fools"), on the habits of students.<ref name=Poole241>Poole ''Domesday Book to Magna Carta'' p. 241</ref> [[Richard Barre]], a medieval writer and judge, dedicated his work ''Compendium de veteris et novo testamento'' to Longchamp.<ref name=Judiciary96>Turner ''English Judiciary'' p. 96</ref> Longchamp was one of Barre's patrons, and secured the post of [[Archdeacon of Ely]] for him as well as judicial posts.<ref name=Judiciary104>Turner ''English Judiciary'' p. 104</ref> |
||
One of Longchamp's probable innovations as chancellor was the replacement of the first person singular previously used in documents drafted in the king's name with the [[majestic plural]] or "royal we".<ref name=DNB/> He wrote a work on law entitled ''Practica legum et decretorum'',<ref name=DNB/> a manual on the usage of both civil and [[canon law]] in the [[House of Plantagenet|Angevin]] possessions on the continent,<ref name=Roman12>Turner "Roman Law" ''Journal of British Studies'' p. 12</ref> composed sometime between 1181 and 1189. It was well known in the Middle Ages |
One of Longchamp's probable innovations as chancellor was the replacement of the first person singular previously used in documents drafted in the king's name with the [[majestic plural]] or "royal we".<ref name=DNB/> He wrote a work on law entitled ''Practica legum et decretorum'',<ref name=DNB/> a manual on the usage of both civil and [[canon law]] in the [[House of Plantagenet|Angevin]] possessions on the continent,<ref name=Roman12>Turner "Roman Law" ''Journal of British Studies'' p. 12</ref> composed sometime between 1181 and 1189. It was well known in the Middle Ages and served as a practical guide for those involved in litigation.<ref name=Judiciary230>Turner ''English Judiciary'' p. 230</ref> |
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==Notes== |
== Notes == |
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{{notelist}} |
{{notelist}} |
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==Citations== |
== Citations == |
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{{Reflist|40em}} |
{{Reflist|40em}} |
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==References== |
== References == |
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{{refbegin|60em}} |
{{refbegin|60em}} |
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* {{cite journal |author=Balfour, David |title=The Origins of the Longchamp Family |journal=Medieval Prosopography |volume=18 |year=1997 |pages=73–92 |s2cid=186941099 |
* {{cite journal |author=Balfour, David |title=The Origins of the Longchamp Family |journal=Medieval Prosopography |volume=18 |year=1997 |pages=73–92 |s2cid=186941099}} |
||
* {{cite book |author=Barlow, Frank |title=The Feudal Kingdom of England 1042–1216|author-link=Frank Barlow (historian)|edition=Fourth |publisher=Longman |location=New York |year=1988 |isbn=0-582-49504-0 |
* {{cite book |author=Barlow, Frank |title=The Feudal Kingdom of England 1042–1216 |author-link=Frank Barlow (historian) |edition=Fourth |publisher=Longman |location=New York |year=1988 |isbn=0-582-49504-0}} |
||
* {{cite book |author=Bartlett, Robert C. |title=England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings: 1075–1225 |author-link=Robert Bartlett (historian)|publisher=Clarendon Press |location=Oxford, UK |year=2000 |isbn=0-19-822741-8 |
* {{cite book |author=Bartlett, Robert C. |title=England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings: 1075–1225 |author-link=Robert Bartlett (historian) |publisher=Clarendon Press |location=Oxford, UK |year=2000 |isbn=0-19-822741-8}} |
||
* {{cite book |author1=Fryde, E. B. |author2=Greenway, D. E. |author3=Porter, S. |author4=Roy, I. |title=Handbook of British Chronology|edition=Third revised |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge, UK |year=1996 |isbn=0-521-56350-X |
* {{cite book |author1=Fryde, E. B. |author2=Greenway, D. E. |author3=Porter, S. |author4=Roy, I. |title=Handbook of British Chronology |edition=Third revised |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge, UK |year=1996 |isbn=0-521-56350-X}} |
||
* {{cite book |author=Gillingham, John |title=Richard I |author-link=John Gillingham |publisher=Yale University Press |location=New Haven, CT |year=1999 |isbn=0-300-07912-5 |
* {{cite book |author=Gillingham, John |title=Richard I |author-link=John Gillingham |publisher=Yale University Press |location=New Haven, CT |year=1999 |isbn=0-300-07912-5}} |
||
* {{cite book |author=Greenway, Diana E. |section=Ely: Bishops |title=Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300|volume=2: Monastic Cathedrals (Northern and Southern Provinces)|section-url=http://british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=33863 |publisher=Institute of Historical Research |year=1971 |access-date=25 October 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120214055546/http://british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=33863 |archive-date=14 February 2012 |url-status=dead}} |
* {{cite book |author=Greenway, Diana E. |section=Ely: Bishops |title=Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300 |volume=2: Monastic Cathedrals (Northern and Southern Provinces) |section-url=http://british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=33863 |publisher=Institute of Historical Research |year=1971 |access-date=25 October 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120214055546/http://british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=33863 |archive-date=14 February 2012 |url-status=dead}} |
||
* {{cite journal |author=Heiser, Richard R. |title=Castles, Constables and Politics in Late Twelfth-Century English Governance |journal=[[Albion (journal)|Albion]] |volume=32 |issue=1 |pages=19–36 |date=Spring 2000 |doi=10.2307/4053985 |jstor=4053985 |s2cid=197767892 |
* {{cite journal |author=Heiser, Richard R. |title=Castles, Constables and Politics in Late Twelfth-Century English Governance |journal=[[Albion (journal)|Albion]] |volume=32 |issue=1 |pages=19–36 |date=Spring 2000 |doi=10.2307/4053985 |jstor=4053985 |s2cid=197767892}} |
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* {{cite book |author=Huscroft, Huscroft |title=Ruling England 1042–1217 |publisher=Pearson/Longman |location=London |year=2005 |isbn=0-582-84882-2 |
* {{cite book |author=Huscroft, Huscroft |title=Ruling England 1042–1217 |publisher=Pearson/Longman |location=London |year=2005 |isbn=0-582-84882-2}} |
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* {{cite book |author1=Knowles, David |author2=London, Vera C. M. |author3=Brooke, Christopher |title=The Heads of Religious Houses, England and Wales, 940–1216 |author3-link=Christopher N. L. Brooke |author-link1=David Knowles (scholar) |edition=Second |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge, UK |year=2001 |isbn=0-521-80452-3 |
* {{cite book |author1=Knowles, David |author2=London, Vera C. M. |author3=Brooke, Christopher |title=The Heads of Religious Houses, England and Wales, 940–1216 |author3-link=Christopher N. L. Brooke |author-link1=David Knowles (scholar) |edition=Second |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge, UK |year=2001 |isbn=0-521-80452-3}} |
||
* {{cite book |author=Lyon, Bryce Dale |title=A Constitutional and Legal History of Medieval England |edition=Second |publisher=Norton |location=New York |year=1980 |isbn=0-393-95132-4 |
* {{cite book |author=Lyon, Bryce Dale |title=A Constitutional and Legal History of Medieval England |edition=Second |publisher=Norton |location=New York |year=1980 |isbn=0-393-95132-4}} |
||
* {{cite book |author=Poole, Austin Lane |author-link=Austin Lane Poole |title=From Domesday Book to Magna Carta, 1087–1216 |publisher=Clarendon Press |location=Oxford, UK |year=1955 |edition=Second |isbn=0-19-821707-2 |
* {{cite book |author=Poole, Austin Lane |author-link=Austin Lane Poole |title=From Domesday Book to Magna Carta, 1087–1216 |publisher=Clarendon Press |location=Oxford, UK |year=1955 |edition=Second |isbn=0-19-821707-2}} |
||
* {{cite book |author1= Powell, J. Enoch |author2=Wallis, Keith |title=The House of Lords in the Middle Ages: A History of the English House of Lords to 1540 |author-link1= |
* {{cite book |author1= Powell, J. Enoch |author2=Wallis, Keith |title=The House of Lords in the Middle Ages: A History of the English House of Lords to 1540 |author-link1=Enoch Powell |year=1968 |publisher=Weidenfeld and Nicolson |location=London |oclc=463626}} |
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* {{cite book |author= |
* {{cite book |author=Saul, Nigel |title=A Companion to Medieval England 1066–1485 |author-link=Nigel Saul |year=2000 |publisher=Tempus |location=Stroud, UK |isbn=0-7524-2969-8}} |
||
* {{cite journal |author=Sharpe, Richard |title=Richard Barre's ''Compedium Veteris et Noui Testamenti'' |author-link= |
* {{cite journal |author=Sharpe, Richard |title=Richard Barre's ''Compedium Veteris et Noui Testamenti'' |author-link=Richard Sharpe (historian) |journal=Journal of Medieval Latin |volume=14 |year=2004 |pages=128–146 |doi=10.1484/J.JML.2.304218 |s2cid=162410647}} |
||
* {{cite journal |author=Spear, David S. |date=Spring 1982 |title=The Norman Empire and the Secular Clergy, 1066–1204 |journal=[[Journal of British Studies]] |volume= XXI |issue=2 |pages=1–10 |doi=10.1086/385787 |jstor=175531 |s2cid=153511298 |
* {{cite journal |author=Spear, David S. |date=Spring 1982 |title=The Norman Empire and the Secular Clergy, 1066–1204 |journal=[[Journal of British Studies]] |volume= XXI |issue=2 |pages=1–10 |doi=10.1086/385787 |jstor=175531 |s2cid=153511298}} |
||
* {{cite book |author=Spear, David S. |title=The Personnel of the Norman Cathedrals during the Ducal Period, 911–1204 |publisher=Institute of Historical Research |location=London |series= |
* {{cite book |author=Spear, David S. |title=The Personnel of the Norman Cathedrals during the Ducal Period, 911–1204 |publisher=Institute of Historical Research |location=London |series=Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae |date=2006 |isbn=1-871348-95-1}} |
||
* {{cite book |author= |
* {{cite book |author=Turner, Ralph V. |title=The English Judiciary in the age of Glanvill and Bracton, c. 1176–1239 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge, UK |year=2008 |edition=Reprint |isbn=978-0-521-07242-7}} |
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* {{cite encyclopedia |author=Turner, Ralph V. |encyclopedia=Oxford Dictionary of National Biography |title=Longchamp, William de (d. 1197) |url= http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/16980 |access-date=13 March 2008 |edition=May 2007 revised |year=2007 |publisher= |
* {{cite encyclopedia |author=Turner, Ralph V. |encyclopedia=Oxford Dictionary of National Biography |title=Longchamp, William de (d. 1197) |url= http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/16980 |access-date=13 March 2008 |edition=May 2007 revised |year=2007 |publisher=Oxford University Press |doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/16980}} {{ODNBsub}} |
||
* {{cite journal |author=Turner, Ralph V. |title=Roman Law in England Before the Time of Bracton |journal=[[Journal of British Studies]] |volume=15 |issue=1 |date=Autumn 1975 |pages=1–25 |doi=10.1086/385676 |jstor=175236 |s2cid=159948800 |
* {{cite journal |author=Turner, Ralph V. |title=Roman Law in England Before the Time of Bracton |journal=[[Journal of British Studies]] |volume=15 |issue=1 |date=Autumn 1975 |pages=1–25 |doi=10.1086/385676 |jstor=175236 |s2cid=159948800}} |
||
* {{cite book |author=West, Francis |title=The Justiciarship in England 1066–1232 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1966 |location=Cambridge, UK |oclc= |
* {{cite book |author=West, Francis |title=The Justiciarship in England 1066–1232 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1966 |location=Cambridge, UK |oclc=953249}} |
||
{{refend}} |
{{refend}} |
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==Further reading== |
== Further reading == |
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{{refbegin}} |
{{refbegin}} |
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* {{Cite thesis |author= |
* {{Cite thesis |author=Balfour, David Bruce |title=William Longchamp: Upward mobility and character assassination in twelfth century England |date=1 January 1996 |url=http://digitalcommons.uconn.edu/dissertations/AAI9625566}} |
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{{refend}} |
{{refend}} |
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{{s-aft| after=[[Eustace (Bishop of Ely)|Eustace]]<br>(Keeper of the Great Seal)}} |
{{s-aft| after=[[Eustace (Bishop of Ely)|Eustace]]<br>(Keeper of the Great Seal)}} |
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{{s-bef | before=[[William de Mandeville, 3rd Earl of Essex]]<br>[[Hugh de Puiset]] }} |
{{s-bef | before=[[William de Mandeville, 3rd Earl of Essex]]<br>[[Hugh de Puiset]] }} |
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{{s-ttl | title=[[Justiciar|Chief Justiciar]]| years= |
{{s-ttl | title=[[Justiciar|Chief Justiciar]]| years=1189–1191 |alongside=<br>[[Hugh de Puiset]] until 1190}} |
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{{s-aft| after=[[Walter de Coutances]] }} |
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{{s-bef |
{{s-bef | before = [[Geoffrey Ridel (bishop of Ely)|Geoffrey Ridel]] }} |
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{{s-ttl| title = [[Bishop of Ely]] | years |
{{s-ttl| title = [[Bishop of Ely]] | years=1189–1197}} |
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{{s-aft | after = [[Eustace (Bishop of Ely)|Eustace]]}} |
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{{House of Blois and Anjou Lord Chancellors}} |
{{House of Blois and Anjou Lord Chancellors}} |
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{{Bishops of Ely|state=collapsed}} |
{{Bishops of Ely|state=collapsed}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
{{Authority control}} |
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[[Category:High |
[[Category:High sheriffs of Essex]] |
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[[Category:High |
[[Category:High sheriffs of Hertfordshire]] |
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[[Category:Lord chancellors of England]] |
[[Category:Lord chancellors of England]] |
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[[Category:Year of birth unknown]] |
[[Category:Year of birth unknown]] |
Latest revision as of 08:04, 29 August 2024
William de Longchamp | |
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Bishop of Ely | |
Appointed | 15 September 1189 |
Installed | 6 January 1190 |
Term ended | January 1197 |
Predecessor | Geoffrey Ridel |
Successor | Eustace |
Orders | |
Consecration | 31 December 1189 |
Personal details | |
Died | January 1197 Poitiers |
Buried | abbey of Le Pin |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Chief Justiciar of England | |
In office December 1189 – 1191 | |
Monarch | Richard I |
Preceded by | Hugh de Puiset (co-chief Justiciar until June 1190) |
Succeeded by | Walter de Coutances |
Constituency | South of the Humber River (March–June 1190) |
Chancellor of England | |
In office 1189–1197 | |
Monarch | Richard I |
Preceded by | Geoffrey |
Succeeded by | Eustace |
chancellor of the Duchy of Aquitaine | |
Monarchs | Richard, Duke of Aquitaine |
William de Longchamp[a] (died 1197) was a medieval Lord Chancellor, Chief Justiciar, and Bishop of Ely in England. Born to a humble family in Normandy, he owed his advancement to royal favour. Although contemporary writers accused Longchamp's father of being the son of a peasant, he held land as a knight. Longchamp first served Henry II's illegitimate son Geoffrey, but quickly transferred to the service of Richard I, Henry's heir. When Richard became king in 1189, Longchamp paid £3,000 for the office of Chancellor and was soon named to the Diocese, or bishopric, of Ely and appointed legate by the pope.
Longchamp governed England while Richard was on the Third Crusade, but his authority was challenged by Richard's brother, John, who eventually succeeded in driving Longchamp from power and from England. Longchamp's relations with the other leading English nobles were also strained, which contributed to the demands for his exile. Soon after Longchamp's departure from England, Richard was captured on his journey back to England from the Crusade and held for ransom by Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor. Longchamp travelled to Germany to help negotiate Richard's release. Although Longchamp regained the office of Chancellor after Richard's return to England, he lost much of his former power. He aroused a great deal of hostility among his contemporaries during his career, but he retained Richard's trust and was employed by the king until the bishop's death in 1197. Longchamp wrote a treatise on the law, which remained well-known throughout the Late Middle Ages.
Background and early life
[edit]Longchamp's ancestors originated in the village of Longchamps, Eure, Normandy.[1] Although it is known that he was born in Normandy,[2] the exact location is unknown, with it perhaps being near the Norman village of Argenton. His father, Hugh de Longchamp, also held land in England, as did many other Norman nobles after the Norman Conquest in 1066. Hugh Nonant — one of Longchamp's opponents — declared that the elder Longchamp was the son of a peasant, which seems unlikely, as Hugh de Longchamp appears to have held a knight's tenancy in Normandy.[3] The family was originally of humble background but rose through service to King Henry II.[4] The elder Longchamp also held land in Herefordshire in England, including the manor of Wilton near Ross in Wales.[5] Hugh married a woman named Eve, a relative of the Lacy family. Historian David Balfour suggests that Eve was the daughter of Gilbert de Lacy, the son of Roger de Lacy, exiled by King William II in 1095 for rebellion.[6]
Longchamp's sister, Richeut, married the castellan of Dover Castle.[3][7] A second sister, Melisend, came to England with Longchamp, but otherwise is unknown.[3] A sister is recorded as having married Stephen Devereux, but whether this is Melisend is unclear. Of Longchamp's brothers, Osbert remained a layman, and owed much of his advancement to William;[8] Stephen served King Richard I on crusade; Henry, another layman, became a sheriff along with Osbert; and Robert became a monk. Two of Longchamp's brothers became abbots.[9]
Longchamp entered public life at the close of Henry II's reign, as an official for the King's illegitimate son Geoffrey.[b] He soon left Geoffrey's service,[11] and served in Henry II's chancery, or writing office, before he entered service with Henry's son Richard.[12] Richard, who was Duke of Aquitaine at the time, named Longchamp chancellor of the Duchy of Aquitaine.[11] Longchamp first distinguished himself at the court of King Philip II of France in Paris in 1189, when he acted as Richard's envoy in a dispute with William Marshal, King Henry's envoy. By that time, Longchamp was already one of Richard's trusted advisors.[13]
Chancellor and Justiciar
[edit]On Richard's accession to the throne of England in 1189 Longchamp became Chancellor of England.[14] Longchamp paid 3,000 pounds (£) for the office of Chancellor. This was followed by an increase in the price of having chancery documents sealed with the Great Seal, necessary for their authentication, perhaps to help Longchamp recoup the cost of the office. At the council held at Pipewell on 15 September 1189, the King raised Longchamp to the bishopric of Ely.[3] Richard named three other bishops at the same time: Godfrey de Lucy to Winchester, Richard FitzNeal to London, and Hubert Walter to Salisbury.[15] Longchamp was consecrated on 31 December 1189[16] and enthroned at Ely on 6 January 1190.[17]
Before leaving England in 1189, Richard put the Tower of London in Longchamp's hands and appointed him jointly with Hugh de Puiset, the Bishop of Durham, to the office of Chief Justiciar,[12] at that time not strictly a judicial office. Instead, the justiciar was the person entrusted with much of the king's authority when the king was outside the kingdom, able to act in the king's name.[18] Along with Puiset, the king named Hugh Bardulf, William Briwerre, Geoffrey fitz Peter, and William Marshal as associates in the justiciarship, under Puiset and Longchamp.[19] As Justiciar, Longchamp sent judges throughout the country to visit the shires on judicial visits, even though he had no previous knowledge of the judiciary.[20] Longchamp and Puiset were unable to work together, and so in March 1190 Richard gave authority north of the River Humber to Hugh, and authority south of the river to Longchamp.[12] Historians' opinions are divided whether Richard explicitly made Longchamp superior to Puiset at this time, or if in theory the two were supposed to co-equal in their respective spheres.[3][12][19] By June, Longchamp had eased Puiset out of power and the justiciar's office.[12] He also received a commission as a papal legate from Pope Clement III at this time.[17] Supposedly Richard paid 1,500 marks (£1,000) to the papacy to secure the legateship for Longchamp.[21]
Longchamp granted the citizens of London the right to elect their own sheriffs, and to collect and remit their monetary levy of £300 directly to the Exchequer, the treasury of England.[22] On Longchamp's visits to his diocese he was accompanied by a large train of retainers and animals, which became notorious throughout the country as a sign of his extravagance.[23] Under his legatine authority, the bishop held legatine councils of the church at Gloucester and Westminster in 1190. He also acted to restore authority in York, which had suffered a breakdown in order after the massacre of Jews in March 1190. Also in 1190, he sent an army against Rhys ap Gruffydd, a Welsh prince who was attempting to throw off the control of the marcher lords that surrounded Wales.[3]
Disputes with John
[edit]Longchamp's relations with the English people were made more difficult because he was a native of Normandy, and often insensitive to English customs.[4] The medieval writer William of Newburgh claimed that Longchamp was "an obscure foreigner of unproven ability and loyalty".[24] For example, it appears likely that Longchamp did not speak English, making his relations with his flock more difficult.[25] The leading nobles complained that Longchamp marginalised the other officials Richard had appointed to serve with him and that he brought in foreigners to fill offices. Although the first charge is mostly untrue, the second appears to have been valid, as Longchamp did install non-natives in judicial offices and as sheriffs. He also attempted to seize control of several English castles by granting their custody to relatives and dependents.[26]
Throughout 1190, Longchamp's relations with Richard's younger brother John were difficult.[27] This led to Longchamp besieging Lincoln Castle because the castellan would not surrender the castle and allow himself to be replaced by Longchamp's nominee.[28] The castellan, Gerard de Camville, had sworn allegiance to John and stated he would no longer recognise the chancellor's authority.[3] In response, John took the two castles of Tickhill and Northampton.[28] News of the dispute reached Richard, who sent Walter de Coutances, the Archbishop of Rouen, to England in late spring 1191, with orders to negotiate a peace between John and Longchamp.[7] Eventually, Walter brokered a compromise between the two as a result of which Gerard was confirmed as castellan and John relinquished the castles.[3] Longchamp also agreed to work to ensure John's succession to the throne in the event of Richard's death.[27]
Longchamp's legatine commission from the papacy expired in spring 1191, on the death of Clement III,[17] thus removing one of Longchamp's power bases.[27] The legation was, however, renewed a few months later by Clement's successor, Celestine III.[3] A further complication for Longchamp arose in September 1191, when Henry II's illegitimate son Geoffrey, Archbishop of York, was arrested by Longchamp's subordinates,[27] led by the castellan of Dover Castle, Longchamp's brother-in-law.[7] Their orders had been to arrest the Archbishop of York as he landed at Dover on the archbishop's return to England, but Geoffrey had been warned of their plans, and fled to sanctuary in St. Martin's Priory. Longchamp's men laid siege to the priory, and after four days forcibly removed Geoffrey. The violence of the attack reminded the public of Thomas Becket's martyrdom, and public opinion turned against Longchamp.[27] Longchamp claimed that Geoffrey had not sworn fealty to Richard, but this was likely just an excuse to eliminate a rival.[29]
An intense propaganda campaign led by partisans of John ensued.[27] One of the leaders of the campaign against Longchamp was Hugh Nonant, the Bishop of Coventry, and he along with other magnates, including Geoffrey, who had been released, convened a trial on 5 October 1191 at Loddon Bridge near London. Longchamp did not attend, but he was deposed and excommunicated, and after trying to hold the Tower of London,[7] he was forced to surrender due to lack of support from the citizens of London. The council then declared his offices forfeit and ordered the surrender of the castles in his custody.[3] The main charge against Longchamp appears to have been his autocratic behaviour.[7]
Longchamp went to Dover in late 1191 to seek transport to the continent. During his escape, he was unable to answer the local people when they spoke to him in English.[25] He attempted to leave England in various disguises, including a monk's habit and women's clothes. Hugh Nonant wrote that Longchamp attempted on one occasion to hide dressed as a prostitute, which led to him being assaulted by a fisherman who mistook him for a whore. Longchamp eventually succeeded in leaving England, on 29 October 1991.[3]
Exile and return
[edit]Longchamp went to the court of Henry VI, the Holy Roman Emperor, who was holding King Richard captive at Trifels. The bishop arranged for Richard to be held at the imperial court and negotiated a payment plan for the ransom, 100,000 marks, under the terms of which the emperor agreed to release Richard once 70,000 marks had been paid and hostages for the payment of the rest had been received.[30] When the Emperor in January 1194 called a meeting of the imperial magnates to debate King Philip II of France's offer to pay the Emperor to keep Richard captive, Longchamp attended along with Walter of Coutances and Eleanor of Aquitaine, Richard's mother. After further diplomatic wrangling, Richard was freed on 4 February 1194.[31]
Richard rewarded Longchamp with the custody of Eye, Suffolk and an appointment as Sheriff of Essex and Sheriff of Hertfordshire when the pair returned to England,[3] but Longchamp soon became embroiled in a renewal of his disagreement with Archbishop Geoffrey of York.[32] Richard left England in May 1194, and Longchamp accompanied him to the continent, never to return to England;[33] Longchamp returned to the Emperor's court in 1195.[3] Richard continued to use Longchamp in diplomacy[34] — although it was Geoffrey who arranged a truce with King Philip in 1194[34] — as well as retaining the bishop as chancellor, but the main power in England was now Hubert Walter.[35] Longchamp spent the rest of his life outside his diocese, usually accompanying the king.[36]
Death and legacy
[edit]Longchamp died in January 1197,[16] at Poitiers,[35] while on a diplomatic mission to Rome for Richard,[37] and was buried at the abbey of Le Pin.[3] Much of the information on his career comes from people hostile to him,[38] for example, Gerald of Wales called Longchamp that "monster with many heads".[39] The historian Austin Lane Poole says that Gerald described Longchamp as more like an ape than a man.[8] Longchamp was reportedly a cultured and well-educated man.[12] He was supported by others among his contemporaries, including Pope Clement III, who, when he appointed Longchamp legate, wrote that he did so at the urging of the English bishops.[38] When he was one of four men named bishop in 1189, medieval chronicler Richard of Devizes wrote that the four new bishops were "men of no little virtue and fame".[40] Historian John Gillingham wrote that Longchamp's "record of his life in politics and administration was a good one, spoiled only by his failure in 1191".[12]
Two writers have seen, in the assembly that met to try Longchamp in 1191, a precursor to the gathering at Runnymede in 1215 that drew up Magna Carta, as it was one of the earliest examples of the nobles of the realm coming together to force the government to rule with their advice.[41] Longchamp also promoted the careers of his brothers; Henry and Osbert became sheriffs in the 1190s,[3] Osbert the Sheriff of Yorkshire.[8] His brother Robert, a cleric, also benefitted, becoming prior of the Ely cathedral chapter and later abbot of St Mary's Abbey, York.[42]
The medieval poet Nigel Wireker (also known as Nigel de Longchamps) dedicated to the bishop a satirical poem, Speculum Stultorum ("Mirror of Fools"), on the habits of students.[43] Richard Barre, a medieval writer and judge, dedicated his work Compendium de veteris et novo testamento to Longchamp.[44] Longchamp was one of Barre's patrons, and secured the post of Archdeacon of Ely for him as well as judicial posts.[45]
One of Longchamp's probable innovations as chancellor was the replacement of the first person singular previously used in documents drafted in the king's name with the majestic plural or "royal we".[3] He wrote a work on law entitled Practica legum et decretorum,[3] a manual on the usage of both civil and canon law in the Angevin possessions on the continent,[46] composed sometime between 1181 and 1189. It was well known in the Middle Ages and served as a practical guide for those involved in litigation.[47]
Notes
[edit]- ^ Sometimes known as William Longchamp or William de Longchamps
- ^ There is a William of Longchamps who was a canon of Evreux in the 1180s, who may be the same person as the future Bishop of Ely. The William who was a canon occurs once in an Evreux charter that dates to sometime between 1181 and 1192 and again in an undated charter from the same period.[10]
Citations
[edit]- ^ Balfour "Origins of the Longchamp Family" Medieval Prosopography p. 78
- ^ Spear "Norman Empire and the Secular Clergy" Journal of British Studies p. 6
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Turner "Longchamp, William de" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
- ^ a b Barlow Feudal Kingdom of England pp. 352–353
- ^ Balfour "Origins of the Longchamp Family" Medieval Prosopography p. 82
- ^ Balfour "Origins of the Longchamp Family" Medieval Prosopography p. 84
- ^ a b c d e Barlow Feudal Kingdom of England pp. 373–376
- ^ a b c Poole Domesday Book to Magna Carta pp. 352–353
- ^ Balfour "Origins of the Longchamp Family" Medieval Prosopography p. 91
- ^ Spear Personnel of the Norman Cathedrals p. 165
- ^ a b Poole Domesday Book to Magna Carta p. 351 footnote 3
- ^ a b c d e f g Gillingham Richard I pp. 121–122
- ^ Gillingham Richard I p. 98
- ^ Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 84
- ^ Gillingham Richard I p. 109
- ^ a b Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 244
- ^ a b c Greenway "Ely: Bishops" Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300
- ^ Saul "Justiciar" Companion to Medieval England p. 154
- ^ a b West Justiciarship in England p. 68
- ^ Turner English Judiciary pp. 65–66
- ^ Gillingham Richard I p. 130
- ^ Poole Domesday Book to Magna Carta p. 70
- ^ Poole Domesday Book to Magna Carta p. 223
- ^ Quoted in Gillingham Richard I p. 121
- ^ a b Bartlett England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings p. 488
- ^ Heiser "Castles, Constables, and Politics" Albion pp. 19–20
- ^ a b c d e f Gillingham Richard I pp. 227–229
- ^ a b Huscroft Ruling England p. 144
- ^ Lyon Constitutional and Legal History pp. 233–236
- ^ Gillingham Richard I p. 239
- ^ Gillingham Richard I pp. 247–248
- ^ Gillingham Richard I p. 272
- ^ Poole Domesday Book to Magna Carta pp. 368–369
- ^ a b Gillingham Richard I p. 290
- ^ a b Barlow Feudal Kingdom of England pp. 385–386
- ^ Sharpe "Richard Barre's Compendium" Journal of Medieval Latin p. 134
- ^ Gillingham Richard I, p. 302, footnote 5
- ^ a b Poole Domesday Book to Magna Carta p. 358
- ^ Quoted in Barlow Feudal Kingdom of England p. 353
- ^ Quoted in Gillingham Richard I p. 109
- ^ Powell and Wallis The House of Lords p. 100
- ^ Knowles, et al. Heads of Religious Houses p. 46
- ^ Poole Domesday Book to Magna Carta p. 241
- ^ Turner English Judiciary p. 96
- ^ Turner English Judiciary p. 104
- ^ Turner "Roman Law" Journal of British Studies p. 12
- ^ Turner English Judiciary p. 230
References
[edit]- Balfour, David (1997). "The Origins of the Longchamp Family". Medieval Prosopography. 18: 73–92. S2CID 186941099.
- Barlow, Frank (1988). The Feudal Kingdom of England 1042–1216 (Fourth ed.). New York: Longman. ISBN 0-582-49504-0.
- Bartlett, Robert C. (2000). England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings: 1075–1225. Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-822741-8.
- Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I. (1996). Handbook of British Chronology (Third revised ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-56350-X.
- Gillingham, John (1999). Richard I. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-07912-5.
- Greenway, Diana E. (1971). "Ely: Bishops". Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300. Vol. 2: Monastic Cathedrals (Northern and Southern Provinces). Institute of Historical Research. Archived from the original on 14 February 2012. Retrieved 25 October 2007.
- Heiser, Richard R. (Spring 2000). "Castles, Constables and Politics in Late Twelfth-Century English Governance". Albion. 32 (1): 19–36. doi:10.2307/4053985. JSTOR 4053985. S2CID 197767892.
- Huscroft, Huscroft (2005). Ruling England 1042–1217. London: Pearson/Longman. ISBN 0-582-84882-2.
- Knowles, David; London, Vera C. M.; Brooke, Christopher (2001). The Heads of Religious Houses, England and Wales, 940–1216 (Second ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-80452-3.
- Lyon, Bryce Dale (1980). A Constitutional and Legal History of Medieval England (Second ed.). New York: Norton. ISBN 0-393-95132-4.
- Poole, Austin Lane (1955). From Domesday Book to Magna Carta, 1087–1216 (Second ed.). Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-821707-2.
- Powell, J. Enoch; Wallis, Keith (1968). The House of Lords in the Middle Ages: A History of the English House of Lords to 1540. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. OCLC 463626.
- Saul, Nigel (2000). A Companion to Medieval England 1066–1485. Stroud, UK: Tempus. ISBN 0-7524-2969-8.
- Sharpe, Richard (2004). "Richard Barre's Compedium Veteris et Noui Testamenti". Journal of Medieval Latin. 14: 128–146. doi:10.1484/J.JML.2.304218. S2CID 162410647.
- Spear, David S. (Spring 1982). "The Norman Empire and the Secular Clergy, 1066–1204". Journal of British Studies. XXI (2): 1–10. doi:10.1086/385787. JSTOR 175531. S2CID 153511298.
- Spear, David S. (2006). The Personnel of the Norman Cathedrals during the Ducal Period, 911–1204. Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae. London: Institute of Historical Research. ISBN 1-871348-95-1.
- Turner, Ralph V. (2008). The English Judiciary in the age of Glanvill and Bracton, c. 1176–1239 (Reprint ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-07242-7.
- Turner, Ralph V. (2007). "Longchamp, William de (d. 1197)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (May 2007 revised ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/16980. Retrieved 13 March 2008. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
- Turner, Ralph V. (Autumn 1975). "Roman Law in England Before the Time of Bracton". Journal of British Studies. 15 (1): 1–25. doi:10.1086/385676. JSTOR 175236. S2CID 159948800.
- West, Francis (1966). The Justiciarship in England 1066–1232. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. OCLC 953249.
Further reading
[edit]- Balfour, David Bruce (1 January 1996). William Longchamp: Upward mobility and character assassination in twelfth century England (Thesis).