John de Stratford
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Mayfield, Sussex, England | ||||||||||||
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John de Stratford (c. 1275 – 1348) was Archbishop of Canterbury, Bishop of Winchester, Treasurer and Chancellor of England.
Early life
Stratford was born into the landed
Career
Stratford served as
Under Edward III, John de Stratford (Bishop of Winchester) became a member of the royal council from its inception in February 1327. Stratford is often regarded as the main clerical ally of the party of Earl Henry of Lancaster inside the council. Together with Thomas Wake, Stratford helped organize the London petition of grievances (27 September 1328) against the government of Mortimer & Isabella.
His high political importance dates from the autumn of 1330, the time when Roger Mortimer lost his power. Edward III appointed Stratford as his new chancellor on 28 November, 1330.[11] For the next ten years Stratford was actively engaged in public business, being the king's most prominent adviser and being politically, says Stubbs, the "head of the Lancastrian or constitutional party."[8]
In 1329 and 1332 he was involved in the case of Christina Carpenter who was an achoress in a cell in Shere in Kent. She escaped from her cell and asked to be readmitted so she could die as a recluse.[12]
On 3 November 1333 Stratford was appointed Archbishop of Canterbury[13] and he resigned the chancellorship in the following year (28 September, 1334).[11] However, Stratford held the office of chancellor again for two years (from 6 June, 1335 to 24 March, 1337), when he was succeeded by his younger brother Robert de Stratford (then archdeacon of Canterbury), who had already acted frequently as locum tenens during his brother's absences. The elder Stratford was appointed for a third time as chancellor on 28 April, 1340, serving for about two months before resigning because of ill health. He was succeeded again by his younger brother Robert (now Bishop of Chichester) on 20 June, 1340.[11][14]
In November 1340 Edward III, humiliated, impecunious and angry, returned suddenly to England from Flanders and vented his wrath upon the archbishop's brother, the chancellor, Robert de Stratford, as well as briefly imprisoning Henry de Stratford.[2] Fearing arrest the archbishop fled to Canterbury, and entered upon a violent war of words with the king, and by his firm conduct led to the establishment of the principle that peers were only to be tried in full parliament before their own order (en pleyn parlement et devant les piers). But good relations were soon restored between the two, and the archbishop acted as president of the council during Edward's absence from England in 1345 and 1346, although he never regained his former position of influence.[8][15]
Later life and death
Though Stratford's political career was by now largely over, between 1342 and his death he continued to exert influence as an elder statesman, even being dubbed dux regis by Dene. In June 1348 he fell ill at Maidstone. He died on 23 August at his manor of
Legacy
Stratford's Canterbury register has not survived, but a large number of his acta can be gleaned from other sources. He was a notable legislator, drawing up detailed ordinances for the conduct of the court of Canterbury in 1342, while three sets of provincial constitutions, issued between 1341 and 1343, are attributed to him. The first set was clearly a draft, the second is particularly concerned with ecclesiastical administration and discipline, while the third was designed to preserve church liberties and deals with areas of friction between laymen and ecclesiastics. He was a notable benefactor to the hospital of St Thomas the Martyr at Canterbury, known as Eastbridge Hospital, but his efforts were principally directed towards his native Stratford, where he founded a chantry college with the same dedication. The initial foundation (1331) was for a warden, sub-warden, and three priests, but in 1336 an augmentation allowed for a further eight priests, though whether the full complement was ever achieved is uncertain. He secured the appropriation of the parish church to the foundation and a papal bull of confirmation was issued in 1345.
Opinion is divided as to Stratford's character, intentions, and stature. He has been compared unfavourably with his predecessors John Pecham (d. 1292) and Robert Winchelsey (d. 1313), but it was partly due to his moderation and legal training that the change of monarch was accomplished so smoothly in 1326–7. He certainly had a concern for what have been called ‘Lancastrian’ principles, in particular the importance of parliament. During the regime of Isabella and Mortimer he hazarded his career, perhaps his life, to maintain them. Without question he was a staunch defender of the liberties of the English church. The fourth of the statutes of 1340, conceded by Edward III under constraint of circumstances, he circulated triumphantly as a ‘charter of liberties’. His clerical petitions of May 1341 were incorporated in modified form into statutes of that date, which were summarily revoked by the king a few months later as contrary to English law and his own prerogative. That he was ambitious is self-evident, but it would be indefensible to argue that he had no underlying convictions. Although he had laboured long in the cause of peace, by 1337 he was forced to accept the inevitability of war with France, though not at the price of oppression at home. Even then he was not prepared to organize opposition to Edward III, doubtless because he had no desire to renew the civil strife of the previous reign. He may have been guilty of pride (superbia), as the frustrated king alleged, but he was not a foolish man. His reasoned defence in 1340–41 taught Edward a lesson he had the good sense never to forget.[5]
See also
- Thomas de Baumburgh – English clerk of the chancery and keeper of the great seal (fl. 1332)
Citations
- ^ Blomefield and Parkin An essay towards a topographical history of the county of Norfolk pp. 390
- ^ a b David Charles Douglas, Alec Reginald Myers "English historical documents. 4. [Late medieval]. 1327 – 1485" p. 69
- ^ Roy Martin Haines "The Register of John de Stratford, Bishop of Winchester, 1323–1333: Volume 1" pp. 298–299
- ^ Roy Martin Haines "The Register of John de Stratford, Bishop of Winchester, 1323–1333: Volume 1" Introduction pp. xvii–xviii
- ^ a b Roy Martin Haines, ‘Stratford, John (c.1275–1348)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Oct 2006 accessed 28 May 2014
- ^ Bedford, WK Riland. "The Blazon of Episcopacy" 1858
- a) Gules, a fess humette between three trestles, argent
- b) Gules, a fess humette or between two trestles, argent
- c) Or, a fess gules, between three torteaux
- d) Argent, a fess gules, between three bezants
- e) Per fess gules and sable, three plates
- ^ Fryde. et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 277
- ^ a b c public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Stratford, John de". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 997. One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the
- ISBN 0888440766.
- ^ Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 105
- ^ a b c Edward Foss (1851) The Judges of England, v.3, p.321-23.
- ISBN 978-0-7546-6601-1.
- ^ a b Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 233
- ^ Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 86
- ^ Powell and Wallis House of Lords in the Middle Ages pp. 335–43
References
- Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I. (1996). Handbook of British Chronology (Third revised ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-56350-X.
- OCLC 463626.
Further reading
- Haines, Roy Martin (1986). Archbishop John Stratford, Political Revolutionary and Champion of the Liberties of the English Church, ca.1275/80-1348. Toronto: ISBN 0888440766.
- Haines, Roy Martin, Bishop John Stratford's Injunctions to his Cathedral Chapter and to other Benedictine Houses in Winchester', Revue bénédictine, t. 117 (2007), 154–80
- Haines, R.M., ed. (2010). The Register of John de Stratford, Bishop of Winchester, 1323–1333: Vol. I. ISBN 9780902978171.)
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link - Haines, R.M., ed. (2011). The Register of John de Stratford, Bishop of Winchester, 1323-1333: Vol. II. ISBN 9780902978188.)
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External links
- Media related to John de Stratford at Wikimedia Commons
- "Archbishop John Stratford". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney.