Gerard, Preceptor of Rouen
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Gerard, Preceptor of Rouen (d. 21 May 1108) was an English clergyman who eventually became Archbishop of York and Lord Chancellor of England.
He was a nephew of Walkelin, Bishop of Winchester, of Simon, Abbot of Ely, and connected with the royal family. Originally a precentor in Rouen cathedral, he served as Lord Chancellor from 1085 to 1092, and he became clerk in the chapel of William Rufus, who employed him in 1095 on a diplomatic mission to the pope. His success was rewarded with the Bishopric of Hereford, and he was consecrated by St. Anselm on 8 June 1096, having been ordained deacon and priest on the previous day. On the accession of Henry I, in 1100, he was made Archbishop of York and began a long contest with St. Anselm, in which he claimed equal primacy with Canterbury and refused to make his profession of canonical obedience before him. When he journeyed to Rome for the pallium, he was entrusted with the mission of representing the king against Anselm in the controversy about investitures. The pope's decision was against the king, but Gerard professed to have received private assurances that the decrees would not be enforced. This was denied by the monks who represented St. Anselm; and the pope, when appealed to, repudiated the statement and excommunicated Gerard till he confessed his error and made satisfaction.
Eventually he professed obedience to St. Anselm, but continued to assert the independence of York. When Anselm refused to consecrate three bishops, two of whom had received investiture from the king, Gerard attempted to do so, but two refused to accept consecration at his hands. The pope reprimanded him for his opposition to the primate, and finally the two prelates were reconciled. Gerard carried out many reforms in York, though by his action against St. Anselm he incurred great unpopularity, and the writers of the time charge him with immorality, avarice, and the practice of magic. He died suddenly on the way to London to attend a council, and his death without sacraments was regarded as a Divine judgment. The canons refused to bury him within the cathedral, and the people pelted the hearse with stones. Some Latin verses by him are preserved in the British Museum.
Religious Posts | ||
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Preceded by Thomas I of York |
Archbishop of York 1100–1108 |
Succeeded by Thomas II of York |
Political offices | ||
Preceded by Maurice |
Lord Chancellor 1085–1092 |
Succeeded by Robert Blouet |
Saxon to Norman
Paulinus1 · Chad1 · Wilfrid1 · Bosa1 · John of Beverley1 · Wilfrid II1 · Egbert2 · Ethelbert · Eanbald I · Eanbald II · Wulfsige · Wigmund · Wulfhere · Ethelbald · Hrotheweard · Wulfstan · Oskytel · Edwald · Oswald · Ealdwulf · Wulfstan II · Aelfric Puttoc · Cynesige
Norman to Reformation
Aldred · Thomas of Bayeux · Gerard · Thomas of York · Thurstan · William FitzHerbert · Henry Murdac · William FitzHerbert · Roger de Pont L'Evêque · Geoffrey Plantagenet · Walter de Gray · Sewal de Bovil · Godfrey Ludham · Walter Giffard · William de Wickwane · John le Romeyn · Henry of Newark · Thomas of Corbridge · William Greenfield · William Melton · William Zouche · John of Thoresby · Alexander Neville · Thomas Arundel · Robert Waldby · Richard le Scrope · Henry Bowet · John Kempe · William Booth · George Neville · Lawrence Booth · Thomas Rotherham · Thomas Savage · Christopher Bainbridge · Thomas Wolsey
Reformation to present
Edward Lee · Robert Holgate · Nicholas Heath · Thomas Young · Edmund Grindal · Edwin Sandys · John Piers · Matthew Hutton · Tobias Matthew · George Montaigne · Samuel Harsnett · Richard Neile · John Williams · Accepted Frewen · Richard Sterne · John Dolben · Thomas Lamplugh · John Sharp · William Dawes · Lancelot Blackburne · Thomas Herring · Matthew Hutton · John Gilbert · Robert Hay Drummond · William Markham · Edward Venables-Vernon-Harcourt · Thomas Musgrave · Charles Thomas Longley · William Thomson · William Connor Magee · William Dalrymple Maclagan · Cosmo Lang · William Temple · Cyril Forster Garbett · Arthur Michael Ramsey · Frederick Donald Coggan · Stuart Yarworth Blanch · John Stapylton Habgood · David Hope · John Sentamu
1Bishops of York 2First Archbishop of York
- This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.