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‘Above all these Charity’: the Career of Walter Suffield, Bishop of Norwich, 1244–57

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2017

Christopher Harper-Bill
Affiliation:
University of East Anglia
Nicholas Bennett
Affiliation:
Visiting Senior Fellow, University of Lincoln [Former Vice-Chancellor and Librarian of Lincoln Cathedral] Now retired - but still LRS General Editor [June 2013]
Janet Burton
Affiliation:
Professor of Medieval History, University of Wales: Trinity St David
Charles Fonge
Affiliation:
Charles Fonge is the University Archivist for the University of Warwick
Christopher Harper-Bill
Affiliation:
Christopher Harper-Bill is Professor of Medieval History at the University of East Anglia.
R. H. Helmholz
Affiliation:
Professor of Law, University of Chicago
B. R. Kemp
Affiliation:
B R Kemp is Professor of Medieval History at the University of Reading.
F. Donald Logan
Affiliation:
F. Donald Logan is Professor emeritus of History at Emmanual College, Boston, U.S.A.
Christopher Brooke
Affiliation:
Christopher Brooke is Life Fellow of Gonville and Caius College and Dixie Professor Emeritus of Ecclesiastical History in the University of Cambridge, UK.Christopher Nugent Lawrence BrookeDate of birth: 23.06.27; British
Philippa Hoskin
Affiliation:
Reader in Medieval History, University of Lincoln.
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Summary

Walter Suffield became well known beyond his own diocese of Norwich and the royal court through his enforced role as chief assessor of the 1254 valuation, for taxation purposes, of the resources of the English church. Some light is thrown on his reputation, and perhaps even on his character, in the pages of Matthew Paris. On one occasion he is criticised for securing from the papacy a privilege by which he might extort money from his diocese (within which St Albans had two dependent priories). Elsewhere, however, he is noted for preaching eloquently at the translation in 1247 of the relic of the Holy Blood to Westminster, and praised for his spirited protest at the curia against papal exploitation of the English church and for his notable charity, most particularly that in a time of great hardship he sold his plate to provide for the destitute. Paris reported, indeed, that after his death he was popularly regarded as a saint. Overall, this is a remarkably positive assessment from a chronicler who generally had little love for bishops and who displayed venomous hostility against those who encroached on the revenues of his own abbey. The aim of this paper is to amplify Matthew Paris's picture by consideration of the bishop's remarkable will, of Norwich synodal statutes which are at least near-contemporary and may well have been issued during his tenure of the see, and of his episcopal acta, a category of evidence in the study and publication of which David Smith has been pre-eminent in his generation.

It is clear from various sources that Suffield moved in a milieu of sanctity. He had acted as Archbishop Edmund Rich's official sede vacante in Norwich diocese in 1237, and the archbishop left him a cup which, in his own will made nine years after Edmund's canonisation, Suffield left to his foundation of St Giles's hospital. He also bequeathed twenty marks to the completion of the work which he had inaugurated on the saint's feretory at Pontigny, for which house he confirmed Edmund's grant of revenues from Romney church.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Foundations of Medieval English Ecclesiastical History
Studies Presented to David Smith
, pp. 94 - 110
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2005

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