Walter Champfleur: Difference between revisions
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As well as his duties as Abbot, he acted as political adviser and financial agent to [[Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond]]. He collected the Earl's rents, stored money for him, and kept him informed of political developments in Dublin. In particular, while the [[Parliament of Ireland]] was in session, Champfleur on at least two occasions advised Ormond to have [[private bills]] drafted to secure his own interests. |
As well as his duties as Abbot, he acted as political adviser and financial agent to [[Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond]]. He collected the Earl's rents, stored money for him, and kept him informed of political developments in Dublin. In particular, while the [[Parliament of Ireland]] was in session, Champfleur on at least two occasions advised Ormond to have [[private bills]] drafted to secure his own interests. |
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He is usually said to have died in 1497, but there is evidence that he was still alive in February of 1498; he may have died later that year or in the following year. His death was a severe blow to Ormond, whose relations with the new Abbot, John Orum, were very bad. Champfleur was mourned as an "aged |
He is usually said to have died in 1497, but there is evidence that he was still alive in February of 1498; he may have died later that year or in the following year. His death was a severe blow to Ormond, whose relations with the new Abbot, John Orum, were very bad. Champfleur was mourned as an "aged, learned and prudent man", who had attempted to reform abuses within his Order. |
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==Sources== |
==Sources== |
Revision as of 12:55, 12 May 2022
Walter Champfleur (died 1498 or 1499) was an Irish cleric and judge of the fifteenth century.
He was Abbot of the Cistercian foundation of St Mary's Abbey, Dublin, for at least 30 years, being first recorded as Abbot in 1467. He was briefly Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of Ireland from late 1482 to early 1483. LIke almost all of the Anglo-Irish ruling class, he made the mistake of supporting the claims of the pretender Lambert Simnel to the English Crown, which were crushed by the incumbent King, Henry VII, at the Battle of Stoke Field in 1487. Henry was magnanimous in victory and Champfleur shared in the general pardon issued by the victorious King in 1488.
As well as his duties as Abbot, he acted as political adviser and financial agent to Thomas Butler, 7th Earl of Ormond. He collected the Earl's rents, stored money for him, and kept him informed of political developments in Dublin. In particular, while the Parliament of Ireland was in session, Champfleur on at least two occasions advised Ormond to have private bills drafted to secure his own interests.
He is usually said to have died in 1497, but there is evidence that he was still alive in February of 1498; he may have died later that year or in the following year. His death was a severe blow to Ormond, whose relations with the new Abbot, John Orum, were very bad. Champfleur was mourned as an "aged, learned and prudent man", who had attempted to reform abuses within his Order.
Sources
- Ball F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921 London John Murray 1926
- McCormack, Anthony M. "Champfleur, Walter" Cambridge Dictionary of Irish Biography