Guillaume d'Estouteville
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Guillaume d'Estouteville (1403 - 1483) was a French ecclesiastic, was bishop of Angers, then of Digne, archbishop of Rouen, prior of Saint Martin des Champs, abbot of Mont St Michel, of St Ouen at Rouen, and of Montebourg. He was made a Cardinal in the consistory of December 18, 1439 by Pope Eugene IV, and later became Cardinal Bishop of Porto-Santa Rufina, then Dean of the College of Cardinals and Cardinal Bishop of Ostia-Velletri; he was a cardinal elector during the conclaves that elected Pope Nicholas V, Pope Paul II, and Pope Sixtus IV, but was absent from Rome during the sede vacante prior to the election of Pope Calixtus III.
He was sent to France as legate by Pope Nicholas V to make peace between Charles VII and England (1451), and undertook at the instigation of the inquisitor general Jean Brehal an ex officio revision of the trial of Joan of Arc; he afterwards reformed the statutes of the university of Paris. He then went to preside over the assembly of clergy which met at Bourges to discuss the observation of the Pragmatic Sanction, finally returning to Rome, where he passed almost all the rest of his life.
He was a great builder: Rouen, Mont St Michel, Pontoise and Gaillon owing many noble buildings to his initiative.
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.