Robert Hallam

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Robert Hallam
Roman Catholic
high altar, to an English design. The text of hexameter verses, rhymed at end and middle, in the ledger lines is as follows: Subiacet hic stratus, Robert Hallum vocitatus; Quondam prelatus, Sarum sub honore creatus; Hic decretorum, doctor pacisque creator; Nobilis Anglorum, regis fuit ambasciator; Festum Cuthberti, Septembris mense vigebat; In quo Roberti, mortem Constantia flebat; Anno milleno, tricent octuageno; Sex cum ter deno, cum Christo vivat amoeno.[1]

Robert Hallam (a.k.a. Alum or Halam; died 4 September 1417) was an English churchman, Bishop of Salisbury and English representative at the Council of Constance. He was Chancellor of the University of Oxford from 1403 to 1405.[2]

Hallam was originally from

Chancellor he, the Proctors, and all others in the University were pardoned by King Henry IV.[4] On leaving the chancellorship, he was nominated in May 1406 by Pope Innocent VII as Archbishop of York, but the appointment was vetoed by King Henry IV in the same year.[5] However, in 1407 he was consecrated[6] by Pope Gregory XII at Siena as Bishop of Salisbury.[citation needed] As bishop, Hallam supported various churches and shrines in his diocese with grants of episcopal indulgences.[7]

At the Council of Pisa in 1409, Hallam was one of the English representatives. On 6 June 1411, Antipope John XXIII (Baldassare Cardinal Cossa) purported to make Hallam a pseudocardinal, but this title was not recognised.

At the Council of Constance, in November 1414, Hallam was the chief English envoy. There he took a prominent position, as an advocate of Church reform and of the superiority of the council to the pope. He played a leading part in the discussions leading to the deposition of Antipope John XXIII on 29 May 1415, but was less concerned with the trials of Jan Hus and Jerome of Prague. Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor, through whose influence the council had been assembled, was absent during the whole of 1416 on a diplomatic mission in France and England; but when he returned to Constance in January 1417, as the open ally of the English king, Hallam as Henry V's trusted representative obtained increased importance, and contrived to emphasise English prestige by delivering the address of welcome to Sigismund. Afterwards, under Henry's direction, he supported the emperor in trying to secure a reform of the Church, before the council proceeded to the election of a new pope. This matter was still undecided when Hallam died suddenly on 4 September 1417.[6] His executors were Masters Richard Hallum, John Fyton, John Hikke, with William Clynt, Thomas Hallum, Thomas Faukys, clerk, & Humfrey Rodeley[8]

After Hallam's death the cardinals were able to secure the immediate election of a new pope,

Constance Cathedral, where his tomb near the high altar is marked by a brass
of English workmanship.

Citations

  1. ^ Ellacombe 1881, p. 52.
  2. ^ Hibbert 1988, pp. 521–522, Appendix 5: Chancellors of the University.
  3. ^ Wallace 2008, p. 143.
  4. ^ Wood 1790, pp. 36–37.
  5. ^ Fryde et al. 1986, p. 282.
  6. ^ a b Fryde et al. 1986, p. 271.
  7. ^ Swanson 1995, pp. 222–224.
  8. ^ "Plea Rolls of the Court of Common Pleas: National Archives CP 40/629; dated 1418; third entry". O'Quinn Law Library. University of Houston. His executors were suing various people for debt in Wiltshire & Oxfordshire

References

Further reading

Academic offices
Preceded by
Chancellor of the University of Oxford

1403–1405
Succeeded by
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by Archbishop of York
election quashed

1406–1407
Succeeded by
Preceded by Bishop of Salisbury
1407–1417
Succeeded by