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Topic: Henry Chichele


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  Henry Chichele
He was the son of Thomas Chichele, a yeoman, and Agnes, daughter of William Pyncheon.
On two occasions, in 1421 and 1422, Martin V severely reprimanded Chichele for his weakness in not procuring the abolition of the obnoxious statutes.
Chichele was a munificent benefactor to his birthplace, his university, and his cathedral church.
www.catholicity.com /encyclopedia/c/chichele,henry.html   (655 words)

  
 Henry Chichele - Catholic Encyclopedia - Catholic Online
His loyalty to the pope's policy of opposing the statutes of Provisors and Præmunire has been doubted ; the opponents of the Catholic Church have looked upon him as the upholder of the independence of the national Church against the claims of Rome.
He gave two hundred marks for the relief of poor students at Oxford ; this sum was preserved in a chest known as "Chichele's Chest".
Recognized as A.J. Cronin’s best novel, The Keys of the Kingdom is the gripping tale of Francis Chisholm, a courageous Scottish...
www.catholic.org /encyclopedia/view.php?id=2872   (898 words)

  
 Henry Chichele
Chichele told the pope, in 1443, in asking leave to retire from the archbishopric, that he was in his eightieth year.
Chichele and the other envoys were received on their return as saviours of the world; though the result was summed up by a contemporary as trischism instead of schism, and the Church as giving three husbands instead of two.
Chichele now became the subject of a leading case, the court of kings bench deciding, after arguments reheard in three successive terms, that he could not hold his previous benefices with the bishopric, and that, spite of the maxim Papa potest omnia, a papal bull could not supersede the law of the land (Year-book ii.
homepage.ntlworld.com /scjackson/HenryChichele.htm   (1444 words)

  
 The Duchy of Lancaster - Northamptonshire
Chichele College, in Higham Ferrers, was founded by Henry Chichele, Archbishop of Canterbury, in 1422 as a college for secular canons.
Henry Chichele, who was born in the village, also founded St. John's College and All Souls' College in Oxford.
The village of Higham Ferrers was held by the Earl of Derby until Robert Ferrers rebelled against Henry III in the Barons' Revolt of 1265.
www.duchyoflancaster.org.uk /output/page30.asp   (165 words)

  
 Florilegium urbanum - Death - The wills and testaments of three London grocers
Their younger brother Henry, born ca.1362, settled on a career in the Church and was fortunate to come to the notice of William de Wykeham, Bishop and Chancellor, who had founded a school at Winchester; from Winchester, Henry, progressed to Oxford where he studied civil law.
As an earlier instance of Henry's influence, William's elder son, also William, had been made chancellor of Salisbury cathedral shortly after Henry resigned the post in 1409, despite the fact that William junior was a minor; he later became archdeacon of Canterbury in 1420 (dying in 1424).
Chichele's parish lay in the Vintry ward; Queenhithe was the adjacent ward to the west.
www.trytel.com /~tristan/towns/florilegium/lifecycle/lcdth12.html   (9110 words)

  
 Suchmaschine
In 1418, while Henry V was alive, he successfully protested against Beaufort's being made a cardinal and legate a kteere to supersede the legatine jurisdiction of Canterbury.
Chichele, by appointing a jubilee to be held at Canterbury in 1420, after the manner of the Jubilee ordained by the Popes, threatened to divert the profits from pilgrims from Rome to Canterbury.
Chichele also incurred the papal wrath by opposing the system of papal provision which diverted patronage from English to Italian hands, but the immediate occasion was to prevent the introduction of the bulls making Beaufort a cardinal.
www.dmoz.ch /lexikon.cgi?sprache=en&q=Henry_Chichele   (2074 words)

  
 Henry Deane Information
On 13 April 1494, he was appointed Bishop of Bangor (confirmed by the Pope in July 1495), where he engaged in rebuilding the fortunes of the diocese after the rebellion led by Owain Glyndŵr.
On 7 December 1499, Henry VII appointed him to the much more significant bishopric of Salisbury, confirmed by the Pope on 8 January 1500.
As Archbishop, his main contribution was the negotiation of the Treaty of Perpetual Peace (signed January 1502) between England and Scotland, which also arranged the marriage of Margaret Tudor, daughter of Henry VII and James IV of Scotland.
www.bookrags.com /wiki/Henry_Deane   (349 words)

  
 Chichele College - 24 Hour Museum - official guide to UK museums, galleries, exhibitions and heritage
Chichele College is an evocative mediaeval building situated in the centre of Higham Ferrers.
The College was founded in the 15th century by Henry Chichele, Archbishop of Canterbury from 1414 to 1443.
Henry VIII dissolved the College and the buildings were in ruins by the 18th century.
www.24hourmuseum.org.uk /museum_gfx_en/AM34609.html   (228 words)

  
 New England Historic Genealogical Society
William Henry Chichele Pynchon was Carrie Susan Moyses, daughter of Joseph L. Moyses, banker, and Elizabeth A. Woodworth; her husband, born 16 April 1867 in Plainfield, Conn., was the son of William Lyon Pynchon, a Union College graduate of 1850, and Annie Payne Cogswell.
William Cogswell was the son of Nathaniel and Bridget (Cleveland) Cogswell, grandson of Edward and Hannah (Brown) Cogswell, and of Joseph and Deborah (Butterfield) Cleveland, and great-grandson of William, Jr.
Fitch was a son of James Fitch and Abigail Whitfield, daughter (by Dorothy Sheafe) of Guilford, Conn. founder Rev. Henry Whitfield, whose descent from a sister of the poet Geoffrey Chaucer is fully documented in John Brooks Threlfall, The Ancestry of Reverend Henry Whitfield and His Wife Dorothy Sheafe (1989).
www.newenglandancestors.org /education/articles/research/special_guests/gary_boyd_roberts/48_659_448.asp   (1377 words)

  
 Untitled Document
Henry IV (1399-1413) spent his entire reign attempting to restore order and gain support for the House of Lancaster, and to many he would always be Henry Bolingbroke (Bullingbrook), who was named after the castle in Lincolnshire in which he was born).
Henry IV was the eldest son of John of Gaunt (Ghent), Duke of Lancaster and Blanche of Lancaster.
Henry IV was a studious, cautious monarch, who was suspicious of his son, Henry Prince of Wales (Prince Hal), and reticent to delegate authority.
comm2.fsu.edu /programs/comm/shakes/UnitHenryV.asp   (19612 words)

  
 Thomas Arundel Information
However, he was exiled by King Richard II of England, and his tenure was interrupted by that of Roger Walden.
On the accession of Henry IV, Roger Walden, his successor in the primatial see, was declared a usurper, and Arundel restored, 21 October, 1399, Walden being translated to London.
He is conspicuous as having taken an extremist stand against the Lollards whose new doctrine he, in company with the bishops of the province, petitioned Rome to condemn.
www.bookrags.com /wiki/Thomas_Arundel   (365 words)

  
 GNN - Government News Network
Primary school pupils from the Henry Chichele School in Higham Ferrers, Northamptonshire and offenders from the Northamptonshire Probation Service have been taking part in an unusual community project based around the design and creation of a large labyrinth with willow arches in the historic 14th century Chichele College gardens.
The children's findings are now presented in the form of a large grass labyrinth, with willow arches, constructed in the gardens of Chichele College by a group of offenders from the unpaid work/enhanced community punishment unit of the Northamptonshire Probation Service.
Chichele College is managed by Cultural Community Partnerships on behalf of English Heritage.
www.gnn.gov.uk /Content/Detail.asp?ReleaseID=192660&NewsAreaID=2&print=true   (864 words)

  
 AIM25: Senate House Library, University of London: Diplomatic agreement between England and Flanders
This manuscript shows the attempts of King Henry V to secure the support or at least the neutrality of John the Fearless, Duke of Burgundy, who controlled Flanders, before undertaking an invasion of France in 1415.
Scope and content/abstract: Agreement, made at Calais on 7 Oct 1413, between Henry Chichele, Bishop of St David's, William, Lord Zouche of Haringworth, and Richard Holme, all envoys of King Henry V, and William, Castellan of Furnes, and Thierry Gherbode, envoys of John, Duke of Burgundy, redressing infringements of the truce with Flanders.
The agreement bears portions of the seals of Henry Chichele and William, Lord Zouche, and the complete seal of Richard Holme, all in red wax.
www.aim25.ac.uk /cats/14/1958.htm   (507 words)

  
 Florilegium urbanum - Religion - Whittington's Charity
Chichele, I, ff.354-355; item 2: Archives of the Worshipful Company of Mercers, Ordinances for the Governance of Whittington College.
Nor did Henry or his son have any qualms about using a man of Whittington's experience and capabilities to undertake various administrative/judicial commisions, as was done with many leading townsmen.
And for several years during Henry IV's reign he held the post of mayor of the Calais staple.
www.trytel.com /~tristan/towns/florilegium/community/cmreli17.html   (7775 words)

  
 New Catholic Dictionary: Chichele, Henry   (Site not responding. Last check: )
(Chicheley, Henry) (1362-1443) Jurist and Archbishop of Canterbury, born Higham Ferrers, England; died Oxford.
Consecrated Bishop of Saint David's, 1408, he was transferred to Canterbury, 1414.
Chichele was a benefactor of Oxford University, where his name is perpetuated in the Chichele professorship of modern history.
www.catholic-forum.com /saintS/ncd01940.htm   (98 words)

  
 History of the College   (Site not responding. Last check: )
All Souls College, The College of All Souls of the Faithful Departed, was established by Henry Chichele, Archbishop of Canterbury, with King Henry V1 as its formal co-founder.
Chichele demonstrated his personal interest by making himself and his successors in the see of Canterbury VISITORS of his foundation.
Its numbers he restricted to a Warden and forty Fellows, all of whom were to have studied for three years in the University and to be between eighteen and twenty-five years of age on election.
www.all-souls.ox.ac.uk /about/history.php   (380 words)

  
 Chichele
Henry Chichele, born 1362, died 1443, Shepherd boy.
Accompanied Henry V to France to negotiate the Treaty of Troyes for the hand of Princes Katherine for Henry V. She was the daughter of Charles VI and Queen Isabean.
Below are early Chicheles of Canterbury who I am sure are related somehow.
www.chrisandjudith.netfirms.com /chichele.htm   (104 words)

  
 Canterbury   (Site not responding. Last check: )
He gives Henry the rationale for going to war with France.
Canterbury hopes his persuading word, and a large donation from the Church, will urge Henry to go to war with France and thus forgetting about the bill.
Henry Chichele actually did not even become the Archbishop until some time after the war began.
www.umich.edu /~shkspre/henryv/characters/canterbury.htm   (91 words)

  
 Book of Hours : Localization
This marriage and the Treaty of Troyes with Charles VI (1420) wrested the French inheritance from the Dauphin Charles of France, but the death of Henry V and the old French king in 1422 necessitated the Regency of the Duke of Bedford, who ruled northern France in the name of his nephew Henry VI.
In 1423 the Duke of Bedford married Anne of Burgundy, the younger sister of Philip of Burgundy (by marriage the uncle of Henry VI), strengthening England’s alliance with the powerful ruler of Flanders.
The miniature and pride of place given to St. George in the Suffrages certainly reflects the elevation of his Feast Day to the status of a "greater double" in the English Missals by Archbishop Henry Chichele of Canterbury in memory of the saint’s intercession on behalf of the English troops at Agincourt.
fllc.smu.edu /latin/advent2000/bridwell/bridwell7.html   (1053 words)

  
 HIgham Ferrers, Northamptonshire - on the All Hallows Wellingborough webpage
Various views of Chichele College, founded by Henry Chichele (1362-1441).
Born in Higham, Chichele founded the college so a group of monks could pray for his soul and the royal family.
Needless to say, the college was dissolved under the iconoclastic Henry VIII, and served various jobs in later times including an inn.
www.gleneagleschurch.co.uk /allhallows/higham.htm   (208 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Henry Chichele
The pope again passed him by in 1439, when Kemp, Archbishop of York, was created cardinal and given precedence over him in Parliament in spite of Chichele's
poor students at Oxford; this sum was preserved in a chest known as "Chichele's Chest".
College of All Souls for a warden and forty fellows, who were to spend their
www.newadvent.org /cathen/03656a.htm   (742 words)

  
 Chichele Professorship at AllExperts
The Chichele Professorships are statutory professorships at the University of Oxford named in honour of Henry Chichele (also spelt Chicheley or Checheley, although the spelling of the academic position is consistently "Chichele"), an Archbishop of Canterbury and founder of All Souls College, Oxford, fellowship of that College accompanying the award of a Chichele chair.
* Chichele Professorship of Medieval History: The outgoing Professor is Sir Rees Davies, as of March 2005 his successor, appointed October 2005 is Christopher Wickham.
Probably the best known former Chichele Professor is Sir Isaiah Berlin.
en.allexperts.com /e/c/ch/chichele_professorship.htm   (247 words)

  
 Be a DayTripper
The upper level has a statue which depicts his body clad in all his ecclesiastical glory; the lower level is a representation of his decaying corpse.
It was destroyed by Henry VIII in the Reformation, and today only a large candle burns where the saint is interred.
The massive dark oak screen was donated by Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn (his queen of the moment.) There's a wonderful museum which shows the Catholic piety of Henry VI, the founder of the college.
people.delphiforums.com /foodtech/daytrip.htm   (1347 words)

  
 thePeerage.com - Person Page 1722
     Captain Henry Keppel was born on 7 August 1848.
She married Reverend Henry Chichele Bampton, son of Reverend Richard Hart, on 28 July 1874.
Child of Maria Keppel and Reverend Henry Chichele Bampton
www.thepeerage.com /p1722.htm   (654 words)

  
 Tomb of Henry Chichele, Archbishop of Canterbury by UNKNOWN MASTER, English
Tomb of Henry Chichele, Archbishop of Canterbury by UNKNOWN MASTER, English
The worldly honours of the deceased are juxtaposed with the mortal body's inevitable decay.
The Tomb of Henry Chichele, Archbishop of Canterbury illustrates the basic form of the transi.
www.wga.hu /html/m/master/yunk_en/tombchic.html   (196 words)

  
 Higham Ferrers
The town was the birthplace of Henry Chichele who went on to become the Archbishop of Canterbury in 1414.
St Mary's Church, as with most of Higham Ferrers important architectural buildings, it is connected with Henry Chichele who was known as 'the Patron of the Church'.
The brass to Laurence Seymour, rector from 1289 to 1337 is said to be one of the finest in England.
www.rutnet.co.uk /pp/silver/viewsilver.asp?ID=1023   (167 words)

  
 Downloadable Wills & Documents
First, I leave and commend my soul to almighty God, my creator and my saviour, to the Blessed Virgin Mary his mother, and to all the saints, and my body to be buried in the nave of the parish church of St. James Garlickhithe, London, of which I am presently a parishioner.
Chichele, I, ff.450-52, 467-69, 484-85 Transcription in: E.F. Jacob, ed.
Law, and Henry Bing, Sergeant at law of Granchester, county Cambridge.
members.tripod.com /c_s_carson/id43.html   (4778 words)

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