Thomas Fastolf
Doctor Thomas Fastolf | |
---|---|
Bishop of St David's | |
Province | Canterbury |
Diocese | St David's |
Installed | 1352 |
Term ended | June 1361 |
Predecessor | Reginald Brian |
Successor | Adam Houghton |
Orders | |
Ordination | unknown |
Consecration | 1352 |
Personal details | |
Born | Perhaps at Great Yarmouth, date unknown. |
Died |
June 1361 St David's |
Nationality | English |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Alma mater | Probably Cambridge |
Thomas Fastolf, sometimes spelt Fastolfe (died June 1361) was an English canon lawyer and Bishop of St David's from 1352 until his death.
Probably educated at Cambridge and then overseas, he held the degree of Doctor of Laws and his first career was as a canon lawyer in Avignon, which was then the seat of the Papacy. He is credited as the first identifiable reporter of cases in the papal court known as the Rota. As Fastolf advanced in the service of the Avignon popes, he gained a series of preferments in the British Isles, concluding with the bishopric of St David's.
Early life
Fastolf was one of three sons of another Thomas Fastolf, of Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, who became lawyers, the others being Nicholas and Lawrence. He was mentored by William Bateman, bishop of Norwich, and probably read law at the University of Cambridge, as did others who came under Bateman's wing, but his studies were continued overseas and it is not known where he took his doctorate. His brother Nicholas Fastolf (died 1330) became a serjeant-at-law and Lord Chief Justice of Ireland, while his brother Lawrence was auditor of the audience court of Canterbury.[1] Nicholas was probably the direct ancestor of Sir John Fastolf.
Career
By 1326, Fastolf was a clerk of Cardinal Giovanni Gaetano Orsini (d. 1335), and by about 1335 he was a papal judge at Avignon, with a seat in the rota. He became an auditor of the apostolic palace before 1340, probably during the life of his patron Bateman, who had great influence at the Avignon curia.[1] In 1340 he and Robert de Tresk were appointed the proctors at Avignon of John de Stratford, Archbishop of Canterbury.[2]
Fastolf gained various preferments at home as rewards for his services. In 1326 he was appointed prebendary of York and archdeacon of Coventry and later gained several other prebends. From 1340 to 1347 he was archdeacon of Norwich, and from 1347 to 1352 archdeacon of Wells.[1]
Although common lawyers had begun reporting cases in England during the 1260s, Fastolf is credited as the first to report cases in the Rota who can be identified.[1] In the tradition of common law, Fastolf wrote a series of reports on thirty-six cases heard at the Rota in Avignon between December 1336 and February 1337, constituting a journal of the debates among the first grade auditors over some two and a half months, the Decisiones rotae.[3] This work by Fastolf was published in Rome in 1475 under the name of Thomas Falstoli, providing a model for the reporting of secular cases in Italy and France, so that reports of cases became a feature of the European jus commune until the time of Napoleon.[1]
In 1352 Fastolf's services in Avignon were rewarded with the bishopric of St David's. He resigned his seat in the rota, the English presence there being continued by Simon Sudbury.[1] He received the spiritualities of St David's on 29 March 1353 and the temporalities of the diocese on 4 June.[4]
As Bishop of St David's for nine years, Fastolf appears to have presided over a period of quiet order, with no major new projects undertaken. Indeed, a historian of the bishop's palace at St David's goes so far as to say
Of Bishop Thomas Fastolf, who held the See from 1353 to 1361, practically nothing is known. There is no reason to suppose that any important work was initiated during this period, though it is possible that buildings begun by Gower, may have been completed under his successors.[5]
In 1358, Fastolf made a statute, later confirmed by Richard II, to make it easier and safer for the prebendaries of his diocese to collect their share of the tithes.[6]
Fastolf made a will on 9 June 1361[4] and died before the end of June. As he had requested in his Will, which was proved on 1 July 1361, his body was entombed "at the right hand of the image of the Blessed Mary, in her Chapel", in St David's Cathedral. He left all his possessions to be disposed of by David Ley, precentor of St David's, Robert of Grymeston of the church of Dyserth, and Phillip Dyer, rector of Llanychllwydog. No books are mentioned.[1][7][8]
Notes
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 J. H. Baker, 'Fastolf [Falstoli], Thomas (d. 1361), canon lawyer and bishop of St David's' (subscription required), in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004), online edition accessed 5 December 2010
- ↑ Roy Martin Haines, Archbishop John Stratford, Political Revolutionary and Champion of the Liberties of the English Church, ca. 1275/80-1348 (1986), p. 117
- ↑ John Hamilton Baker, Monuments of endlesse labours: English canonists and their work (1998), p. 22
- 1 2 George William Manby, The history and antiquities of the parish of Saint David, South-Wales (1801), p. 143
- ↑ Courtenay Arthur Ralegh Radford, The Bishop's palace, St David's, Pembrokeshire (1953), p. 5
- ↑ Edward Yardley, Francis Green, Menevia sacra (Cambrian Archaeological Association, 1927): "We have a Statute remaining of Bishop Thomas Fastolf, made 1358, & confirmed by King Rich. II, to enable ye Prebendaries severally to gather their share of ye Tythes with ye more ease & safety."
- ↑ W. B. Jones and E. A. Freeman, The history and antiquities of Saint David's, pp. 121–122
- ↑ Cambrian medieval Celtic studies, Issues 41–44 (2001), p. 64
Further reading
- J. H. Baker, "Dr Thomas Fastolfe and the history of law reporting", in Cambridge Law Journal, vol. 45 (1986), pp. 84–96
Religious titles | ||
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Preceded by Reginald Brian |
Bishop of St David's 1352–1361 |
Succeeded by Adam Houghton |