Henry de Sully | |
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Abbot of Fécamp | |
Other posts | Bishop-elect of Salisbury and Archbishop-elect of York |
Personal details | |
Birth name | Henry |
Died | 1189 Fécamp, Normandy, France |
Denomination | Roman Catholic Church |
Parents | William, count of Chartres and Agnes of Sully |
Henry de Sully was a medieval Abbot of Fécamp and Bishop-designate of Salisbury and Archbishop-elect of York.
Henry was the son of William, count of Chartres the eldest brother of King Stephen of England and Henry of Blois, Bishop of Winchester.[1] Henry's mother was William's wife Agnes who had been attached to the household of Adela of Blois, William's mother. Although William was the eldest son of Adela and her husband Stephen II, Count of Blois, he was passed over for the comital title and his younger brother Theobald became Count of Champagne on their father's death.[2]
Henry became a Cluniac monk, and was nominated in March 1140 by Henry of Blois to be Bishop of Salisbury, but the nomination was quashed.[3][4] As compensation, Henry of Blois then named Henry de Sully the abbot of Fécamp Abbey in Normandy.[1] Later in 1140, after his grandmother's death, Henry was nominated to become Archbishop of York,[5] but his election was again quashed this time by Pope Innocent II because Henry wished to hold both the abbacy of Fécamp along with the archbishopric.[6][7] Henry died at Fécamp in 1189.[3]
Catholic Church titles | ||
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Preceded by Roger of Salisbury |
Bishop-designate of Salisbury 1140 (nomination rejected) |
Succeeded by Philip de Harcourt |
Preceded by ? |
Abbot of Fécamp 1140–1189 |
Succeeded by ? |
Preceded by Waltheof |
Archbishop-elect of York 1140 (election quashed) |
Succeeded by William of York |