- Richard of Chichester
:"Saint Richard" redirects here. For other saints with this name, see
Saint Richard (disambiguation) Infobox Saint
name=Saint Richard of Chichester
birth_date=c. 1197
death_date=April 3 ,1253
feast_day=April 3 (Roman Catholic Church),June 16 (Anglican Communion)
venerated_in=Roman Catholic Church Anglican Communion
imagesize=175px
caption="A wall painting of St. Richard of Chichester"
birth_place=Droitwich ,Worcestershire ,England
death_place=Dover ,Kent , England
titles=Bishop and Confessor
beatified_date=
beatified_place=
beatified_by=
canonized_date=1262
canonized_place=Viterbo ,Lazio ,Papal States
canonized_by=Pope Urban IV
attributes=Bishop with achalice on its side at his feet because he once dropped the chalice during a Mass and nothing spilled from it; kneeling with the chalice before him; ploughing his brother's fields; a bishop blessing his flock with a chalice nearby
patronage=Coachmen ;Diocese of Chichester ;Sussex , England
major_shrine=Chichester Cathedral
suppressed_date=
issues=
prayer=
prayer_attrib=Infobox bishopbiog
name =Saint Richard of Chichester
caption =
religion =Roman Catholic
See =Chichester
Title =Bishop of Chichester
Period =1244–1253
Predecessor =Robert Papelew
Successor =John Climping
ordination =
bishops =
post =Vicar of Deal
date of birth =1197
place of birth =Droitwich
death of date=April 3 ,1253
place of death=Dover, England Saint Richard of Chichester (also known as Richard de Wych or variations thereof) (
Droitwich , 1197 – 1253 inDover ) is asaint (canonized 1262) who wasBishop of Chichester . Hisshrine inChichester Cathedral was a richly-decorated centre ofpilgrimage which was destroyed in 1538.Life
St. Richard was born in the town of Wyche (modern
Droitwich ,Worcestershire ) [http://british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=34293 British History Online Bishops of Chichester] accessed on October 21, 2007] and was an orphan member of a gentry family. He took up farming his elder brother's estates, and, according to legend, the brother offered him all of the lands and a marriage arrangement, but Richard refused them for the life of study and the church. Educated at Oxford, he soon began to teach in the university, of which he became chancellor, probably after he had studied in Paris and in Bologna. About 1235 he became chancellor of thediocese of Canterbury under ArchbishopEdmund Rich , and he was with the archbishop during his exile inFrance .Richard supported Edmund in exile and the rights of the
Pope over the king. Having returned to England some time after Edmund's death in 1240 he became vicar of Deal and chancellor of Canterbury for the second time. In 1244 he was electedBishop of Chichester , being consecrated at Lyons byPope Innocent IV in March 1245,Fryde "Handbook of British Chronology" p. 239] although Henry III refused to give him thetemporalities of the see, the king favouring the candidature of Robert Passelewe (d. 1252). By seizing all the revenues of the see, Henry thus forced Richard into the same struggle over legal priority that Edmund had fought.In 1246, however, Richard obtained the full rights of his see. The new bishop showed much eagerness to reform the manners and morals of his clergy, and also to introduce greater order and reverence into the services of the Church. Richard overruled Henry on other occasions as well. A nobleman who had become a priest was accused of
fornication , and Richard defrocked him, turning aside a petition from the king in the priest's favour. He was militant in protecting the clergy from abuse. The townsmen ofLewes violated the right ofsanctuary by seizing a criminal in church andlynching him, and Richard made them exhume the body and give it a proper burial in consecrated ground. He also imposed severe penance onknight s who attacked priests. Hisepiscopate was also marked by the favour which he showed to the Dominicans, a house of this order atOrléans having sheltered him during his stay in France, and by his earnestness in preaching acrusade . After dedicatingSt Edmund's Chapel atDover , he died at theMaison Dieu there at midnight onApril 3 1253 , where he had been ordered by the Pope to preach a crusade. His internal organs were removed and placed in that chapel's altar, before Richard's body was carried to burial at Chichester.hrine
It was generally believed that miracles were wrought at Richard of Chichester's tomb in Chichester cathedral, which was long a popular place of pilgrimage, and in 1262 he was canonized at
Viterbo byPope Urban IV . Hisfeast day is onApril 3 in the West, but because this date generally falls within Lent or Eastertide this is normally translated toJune 16 in theAnglican Communion , which venerates St. Richard more widely than does Rome, i.e. (theRoman Catholic Church ).Richard furnished the chronicler,
Matthew Paris , with material for the life of St. Edmund Rich, and instituted the offerings for the cathedral at Chichester which were known later as "St. Richard's pence."During the episcopate of the first
Anglican bishop of Chichester,Richard Sampson , KingHenry VIII of England ordered the destruction of the Shrine of St. Richard inChichester cathedral in 1538. For that purpose, and as a test of loyalty to hisroyal supremacy over theChurch of England (1534), King Henry sent members of the previously-staunch Catholic Sussex gentry to carry out the removal of the Shrine and the despatch of its jewels and ornaments to the Crown, including William Ernle, esquire, whose family, theErnle 's ofEarnley inSussex , had long made contributions to the Shrine in honor of the saint for which it was established. In the case of William Ernle, he was expected to show his enthusiasm for the new Supreme Head of the Church of England by carrying out thecæsaropapal commands for the destruction of the Shrine and the discarding of the bones of his own family's patron saint, a saint for whom he had named his son and heir. The Shrine of St. Richard had, up to this point, enjoyed a level of popularity approaching that accorded toSt Thomas à Becket at Canterbury. It seems that someone associated with the parish ofWest Wittering in Sussex, possibly WilliamErnle himself, using his position as royal commissioner for the destruction of St. Richard's Shrine, may have spirited away the relics and bones of St. Richard and hidden them in their own parish church there as there are persistent legends of the presence there of the remains of the saint:"The Lady Chapel not only contains the Saxon Cross but also an ancient broken marble slab engraved with a Bishop's pastoral staff and a Greek cross believed to have come from a reliquary containing the relics of St. Richard of Chichester, a 13th century bishop who often visited West Wittering. Part of his story is shown in the beautiful red, white and gold altar frontal presented by Yvonne Rusbridge in 1976. On the left St Richard is shown feeding the hungry in Cakeham and on the right leading his followers from the church, his candle miraculously alight despite the gust of wind which blew out all the other candles."
Since the
Anglo-Catholic revival within theChurch of England in the nineteenth century, St Richard's Shrine at Chichester cathedral has been re-established, culminating in the adoption of his translated Anglican feast day, June 16, as Sussex Day in 2007.Prayer
Saint Richard is best remembered today for the popular
prayer ascribed to him as his last words on his deathbed where, surrounded by the clergy of his diocese, he prayed:"Thanks be to Thee, my Lord Jesus Christ"
"For all the benefits Thou hast given me,"
"For all the pains and insults Thou hast borne for me."
"O most merciful Redeemer, friend and brother,"
"May I know Thee more clearly,"
"Love Thee more dearly,"
"Follow Thee more nearly,"
"Day by day.This prayer was adapted for the song "Day by Day" in the musical "
Godspell ".His life by his confessor,
Ralph Bocking , is published in the "Acta Sanctorum" of theBollandists , where a later and shorter life byJohn Capgrave is also to be found.Current Patronal Festival and Patronship
St Richard of Chichester is the
patron saint of the county ofSussex inEngland . Since 2007, his translatedsaint's day ,June 16 has been celebrated as Sussex Day [ [http://www.westsussex.gov.uk/ccm/content/your-council/news-room/press-releases/2006/2006-10/a-day-to-show-you-re-proud-of-sussex.en West Sussex County Council A Day To Show You're Proud Of Sussex] accessed on August 25, 2007] .Notes
Day of Saint Richard,
February 7 References
*
* [http://british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=34293 British History Online Bishops of Chichester] accessed on October 21, 2007
* Butler, Alban. "Lives of the Saints." Tan Books and Publishers: Rockford, 1955
*
* [http://www.stgeorgesnews.org/2004/02f14.htm St George's News Country Churches St Peter and St Paul, West Wittering] accessed on October 21, 2007
* [http://employees.csbsju.edu/roliver/richard.html St. Richard of Chichester] accessed on October 21, 2007
* Stephens, William Richard Wood "Memorials of the South Saxon See and Cathedral Church of Chichester", 1876, pp. 213-214
* Stephens, William Richard Wood "The South Saxon Diocese, Selsey--Chichester", 1881, p. 179
* [http://www.westsussex.gov.uk/ccm/content/your-council/news-room/press-releases/2006/2006-10/a-day-to-show-you-re-proud-of-sussex.en West Sussex County Council A Day To Show You're Proud Of Sussex] accessed on August 25, 2007External links
* [http://www.catholic.org/saints/saint.php?saint_id=4603 Biography of St Richard of Chichester from "Catholic Encyclopedia"]
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13043b.htm Catholic Encyclopedia: "St. Richard de Wyche"]Persondata
NAME=Richard Wich
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Richard of Chichester, St. Richard of Chichester
SHORT DESCRIPTION=Bishop of Chichester, Saint
DATE OF BIRTH=1197
PLACE OF BIRTH=Droitwich
DATE OF DEATH=1253
PLACE OF DEATH=
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