William of Ely: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|12th-century English clergyman and Treasurer of England}} |
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{{Infobox Officeholder |
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| office = Lord High Treasurer |
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| term_start =1196 |
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| term_end =Aug 1215 |
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| relations =Richard FitzNeal |
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| religion = Roman Catholic |
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| type = Bishop |
| type = Bishop |
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| previous_post = Canon of St. Paul's<br>Prebend of Leighton Buzzard |
| previous_post = [[Canon of St. Paul's]]<br/>Prebend of Leighton Buzzard |
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'''William of Ely''' was an English churchman and the fifth [[Lord High Treasurer]] of [[England]]. He was a relative of [[Richard FitzNeal]] and supposed descendant of [[Nigel, Bishop of Ely]], both previous Lord High Treasurers. He was appointed a Canon of St. Paul's just before being |
'''William of Ely''' was an English churchman and the fifth [[Lord High Treasurer]] of [[England]]. He was a relative of [[Richard FitzNeal]] and supposed descendant of [[Nigel, Bishop of Ely]], both previous Lord High Treasurers. He was appointed a [[Canon of St. Paul's]] just before being made Lord High Treasurer in 1196. He added the position of [[Archdeaconry of Cleveland|Archdeacon of Cleveland]] in 1201 and Prebendary of [[Leighton Buzzard]] in 1207.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Reign of King John |last=Painter|first=Sydney |year=1979 |publisher=Ayer Publishing |pages=66–67 }}</ref> |
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A story about William of Ely tells of his attempted escape from England during a time when he had fallen from favour with the King; he was disguised as a commoner but was stopped when he proved unable to respond to a simple question posed to him in English (illustrating the dominance of the French language among nobles and clergymen at the time).<ref>{{cite book |title=Aventure des langues en Occident : leur origine, leur histoire, leur géographie |last=Walter|first=Henriette |
A story about William of Ely tells of his attempted escape from England during a time when he had fallen from favour with the King; he was disguised as a commoner but was stopped when he proved unable to respond to a simple question posed to him in English (illustrating the [[Anglo-Norman language|dominance of the French language]] among nobles and clergymen at the time).<ref>{{cite book |title=Aventure des langues en Occident : leur origine, leur histoire, leur géographie |last=Walter|first=Henriette |year=1994 |publisher=[[Éditions Robert Laffont|Laffont]] |location=Paris |pages=379 }}</ref> |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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* [[List of |
* [[List of lord high treasurers of England and Great Britain]] |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
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{{succession box | title=[[Lord High Treasurer]] | years= |
{{succession box | title=[[Lord High Treasurer]] | years=1196–1215 | before=[[Richard FitzNeal]] | after=[[Eustace of Fauconberg]]}} |
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{{Archdeacons of Cleveland}} |
{{Archdeacons of Cleveland}} |
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{{Pre-Plantagenet England Lord High Treasurers}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:William Of Ely}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:William Of Ely}} |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Year of birth unknown]] |
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[[Category:12th-century English Roman Catholic priests]] |
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[[Category:13th-century deaths]] |
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[[Category:13th-century English Roman Catholic priests]] |
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[[Category:Archdeacons of Cleveland]] |
[[Category:Archdeacons of Cleveland]] |
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[[Category:Lord high treasurers of England]] |
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Latest revision as of 23:47, 28 August 2024
William | |
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Archdeacon of Cleveland | |
Church | Catholic |
In office | 1201 |
Previous post(s) | Canon of St. Paul's Prebend of Leighton Buzzard |
Treasurer | |
In office 1196 – August 1215 | |
Monarchs | Richard I John |
Preceded by | Richard FitzNeal |
Succeeded by | Eustace of Fauconberg, Bishop of London |
William of Ely was an English churchman and the fifth Lord High Treasurer of England. He was a relative of Richard FitzNeal and supposed descendant of Nigel, Bishop of Ely, both previous Lord High Treasurers. He was appointed a Canon of St. Paul's just before being made Lord High Treasurer in 1196. He added the position of Archdeacon of Cleveland in 1201 and Prebendary of Leighton Buzzard in 1207.[1]
A story about William of Ely tells of his attempted escape from England during a time when he had fallen from favour with the King; he was disguised as a commoner but was stopped when he proved unable to respond to a simple question posed to him in English (illustrating the dominance of the French language among nobles and clergymen at the time).[2]
See also
[edit]References
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