- William Greenfield
Infobox Archbishop of York
name = William Greenfield
consecration = 30 January 1306
began = unknown
term_end = 6 December 1315
predecessor =Thomas of Corbridge
successor =William Melton
birth_date =
birthplace =
death_date = 6 December 1315
deathplace = Cawood
tomb = York MinsterWilliam Greenfield (died 6 December 1315) served as both the
Lord Chancellor of England and theArchbishop of York . He was also known as William of Greenfield.Life
Greenfield was born in the eponymous Lincolnshire
hamlet of Greenfield - but the date of his birth is now lost but we do know that he was related to a predecessor in the See, Archbishop Giffard - and it was Giffard that paid for the young Greenfield's Oxford education. in the year 1269 Giffard instructed that his bailiff atChurchdown (near Gloucester), "...to pay to Roger the miller of Oxford twenty shillings, for our kinsman William of Greenfield while he is studying there, because it would be difficult for us to send the money to him on account of the perils of the ways". After Oxford Greenfield studied in Paris, where he became a doctor of both civil and canon law. Giffard's brother was BishopGodfrey Gifford - theBishop of Worcester .Greenfield was the first of a number of Archbishops who ruled the northern English Archiepiscopal diocese as well as being significant statesmen during the fourteenth century.
Before being made Archbishop he was variously:
*Dean ofChichester ,
*Rector ofStratford-upon-Avon
*Prebend ofRipon - where his stall was for a time sequestrated, on account of his non-residence - as at this time he was mainly occupied on affairs of state as a clerk and counsellor to Edward I
*Temporal Chancellor ofDurham
*Chancellor of England (1302-1305).Fryde "Handbook of British Chronology" p. 85] On 30 September 1302 Greenfield received the custody of the great seal as chancellor at St. Radegund's (near Dover). During his absence in France, one Adam of Osgodby, then theMaster of the Rolls , acted as his substitute.
*Employed in the service of the State by King Edward I from 1290 onwards.Election to the See of York
Greenfield was elected by the Chapter of York on the 4 December 1304; however there was delay in his consecration due to the death of Pope Benedict X; when finally consecrated it was by Clement V at Lyons, on the 30 January 1306.Fryde "Handbook of British Chronology" p. 282] Greenfield was strongly commended to the pope and cardinals by the King, who told them of his "...wisdom in council, industry, literary knowledge, and usefulness to the state".
Before his appointment Greenfield had lived for some time resident in Rome where the cost of his living and the procuring of the Papal assent were very heavy leaving Greenfield obliged to borrow money and to remark, "All the money lenders were ecclesiastics. The Jews had disappeared some years before and the greater part of the treasure of the country was now stored away in the chests of some wealthy clerk or in the coffers of the monastery." He was forced to raise money to pay his debts from the company of the
Bellardi of Lucca . In an attempt to free himself from the Italian money lenders he exacted aids from the clergy, and borrowed from many church dignitaries in the north of England.As a result of the ongoing war with Scotland York became almost the de facto capital of England, with Parliament being held there in 1298,9 and 1300. The Courts of Justice were also moved to York and did not return to London for seven years.
When the attack on the Templars in England began in 1308 Greenfield was favourable to them and so refused to take any part in actions against them within the province of
Canterbury ; he was however present at the Great Council ofVienne in 1312, when Pope Clement V issued an edict dissolving the Order of the Templars.
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