Henry Bowet
Henry Bowet | |
---|---|
Installed | October 7 1407 |
Term ended | October 20 1423 |
Predecessor | Robert Hallam |
Successor | Philip Morgan |
Personal details | |
Died | October 20 1423 |
Buried | York Minster |
Henry Bowet (died 20 October 1423), was both Bishop of Bath and Wells and Archbishop of York.
Life
He was a royal clerk to King Richard II of England, and at one point carried letters of recommendation to Pope Urban VI from the king.[1]
He became Bishop of Bath & Wells on August 19 1401,[2] and succeeded to the Archbishopric of York on October 7 1407, after it had been vacant for two and a half years.[3]
The Pope had already appointed Robert Hallam to the northern primacy, but, finding that Henry IV desired to see Bowet installed, he nominated Hallam to the See of Salisbury and gave the pallium to Bowet.
In 1402 he briefly served as Lord High Treasurer, from February to October.[4]
In 1417 the Scots invaded England and sat down before Berwick. The Duke of Exeter marched to the relief of the town and Archbishop Bowet, then very old and feeble, had himself carried into the camp where his addresses are said to have greatly encouraged the English Soldiers.
The Scots decamped hastily in the night, leaving behind them their stores and baggage.[5] Bowet died on October 20 1423[3] at Cawood Bishop's Palace and was buried in his cathedral of York Minster.
Notes
References
- Allmand, Christopher Henry V Berkeley: University of California Press 1992 ISBN 0-520-08293-1
- Chaplais, Pierre English Diplomatic Practice in the Middle Ages London: Hambledon and London 2003 ISBN 1-85285-395-6
- Fryde, E. B. (1996). Handbook of British Chronology (Third Edition, revised ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-56350-X.
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