Godfrey of Chichester | |
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Bishop of Chichester | |
See | Diocese of Chichester |
Appointed | 1088 |
Reign ended | 25 September 1088 |
Predecessor | Stigand |
Successor | Ralph |
Personal details | |
Died | 25 September 1088 |
Denomination | Catholic |
Godfrey (died 1088) was a medieval Bishop of Chichester. The first Bishop of Chichester, was Stigand who died in 1087, it seems that he was followed by Godfrey.[1] Confusion over the succession, was generated by William of Malmesbury, who suggested that Stigand was succeeded by a Bishop William.[1]
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Godfrey was nominated, by Lanfranc, Archbishop of Canterbury, in 1087-1088; his nomination is recorded in the Acta Lanfranci a text recorded in the 11th or 12th century.[1][2][3] Godfreys death on 25 September 1088 is recorded in the Annales Cicestrensis, under 1088.[1][4]
Little is known of his background, except he had been a royal chaplain.[5][6][7] So little was known of him, that the medieval historians, William of Malmesbury and Florence of Worcester mistakenly called him William instead of Godfrey, and had nothing else to say of him.[8][9]
In Christianity, it was unusual for the deceased to be interred with the accoutrements of life, the only exceptions were the vestments that some great men such as bishops were buried.[10] According to Lanfranc's Constitutions a written absolution of sins would be placed on the chest of a dead monk in their tomb, while an inscribed lead cross served a similar purpose for prelates.[10] In 1830, some workmen, digging a drain in the medieval burial ground, known as Paradise, a part of the cathedral cloisters, discovered a lead cross.[1] Four years earlier a stone coffin had been found in the same area, it is believed that the two were linked.[1] The cross had a Latin inscription on it, the translation in English reads:
We absolve you, O Bishop Godfrey, in place of St. Peter, prince of the Apostles, to whom the Lord gave the power of binding and releasing, so that in so far as your accusation warrants and the remission pertains to us. God the omnipotent redeemer, the kind forgiver, may be to you the healing of all your sins. Amen. On 25th September, on the feast of St Fermin bishop and martyr, Bishop Godfrey of Chichester died. On the same day it was five days after the (new) moon. [1]
The first part of the text, as far as the amen, is a papal absolution relating to Godfrey.[1]
After Godfrey's death, the see lay vacant until 1090 or 1091.[11] The 19th century historian W.R.W. Stephens said that the cause of the vacancy was due to "the grasping avarice of the red king, who protracted episcopal vacancies to the utmost extent, that he might enrich his own treasury with the temporalities of the sees."[12] The church and William II were certainly in conflict for much of his reign.[13] When bishoprics and abbeys became vacant William was able to take the revenues from them until the post was filled by a new bishop or abbot, William would often auction these positions off to the highest bidder. [14]
Catholic Church titles | ||
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Preceded by Stigand |
Bishop of Chichester 1088 |
Succeeded by Ralph de Luffa |