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Lanfranc

Lanfranc, OSB (1005 x 1010 – 24 May 1089) was a celebrated Italian jurist who renounced his career to become a Benedictine monk at Bec in Normandy. He served successively as prior of Bec Abbey and abbot of St Stephen's Abbey in Caen, Normandy and then as Archbishop of Canterbury in England, following its conquest by William the Conqueror.[2] He is also variously known as Lanfranc of Pavia (Italian: Lanfranco di Pavia), Lanfranc of Bec (French: Lanfranc du Bec), and Lanfranc of Canterbury (Latin: Lanfrancus Cantuariensis).

Blessed

Lanfranc

Archbishop of Canterbury
Statue of Lanfranc from the exterior of Canterbury Cathedral
AppointedAugust 1070
Term ended24 May 1089
PredecessorStigand
SuccessorAnselm of Canterbury
Other post(s)Abbot of Saint-Étienne, Caen
Orders
Consecration15 August 1070
Personal details
Bornbetween 1005 and 1010
Died24 May 1089 (aged 79-84)
Canterbury, Kingdom of England
BuriedCanterbury Cathedral, Canterbury, England
NationalityItalian
DenominationCatholic Church
ParentsHanbald
Sainthood
Feast dayMay 28
Venerated inCatholic Church,
Anglican Communion[1]
Title as SaintBishop, Monk, Scholar
BeatifiedAfter the Council of Trent
Attributesbook, cross, episcopal vestments
ShrinesCanterbury Cathedral

Early life edit

Lanfranc was born in the early years of the 11th century at Pavia, where later tradition held that his father, Hanbald, held a rank broadly equivalent to magistrate. He was orphaned at an early age.[3]

Lanfranc was trained in the liberal arts, at that time a field in which northern Italy was famous (there is little or no evidence to support the myth that his education included much in the way of Civil Law, and none that links him with Irnerius of Bologna as a pioneer in the renaissance of its study). For unknown reasons at an uncertain date, he crossed the Alps, soon taking up the role of teacher in France and eventually in Normandy. About 1039 he became the master of the cathedral school at Avranches, where he taught for three years with conspicuous success. But in 1042 he embraced the monastic profession in the newly founded Bec Abbey. Until 1045 he lived at Bec in absolute seclusion.[4][5]

Teacher and scholar edit

Lanfranc was then persuaded by Abbot Herluin to open a school at Bec to relieve the monastery's poverty. From the first he was celebrated (totius Latinitatis magister). His pupils were drawn not only from France and Normandy, but also from Gascony, Flanders, Germany and Italy.[6] Many of them afterwards attained high positions in the Church; one possible student, Anselm of Badagio, became pope under the title of Alexander II; another, Anselm of Bec, succeeded Lanfranc as the Archbishop of Canterbury. The favourite subjects of his lectures were the trivium of grammar, logic and rhetoric and the application of these principles to theological elucidation. In one of Lanfranc's most important works, The Commentary on the Epistles of St. Paul, he is said to have 'expounded Paul the Apostle; and, wherever opportunity offered, he stated the premises, whether principal or secondary, and the conclusions of Paul's arguments in accordance with the rules of Logic'.[7]

As a result of his growing reputation Lanfranc was invited to defend the doctrine of transubstantiation against the attacks of Berengar of Tours. He took up the task with the greatest zeal, although Berengar had been his personal friend; he was the protagonist of orthodoxy at the Church Councils of Vercelli (1050), Tours (1054) and Rome (1059). To Lanfranc's influence is attributed the desertion of Berengar's cause by Hildebrand and the more broad-minded of the cardinals. Our knowledge of Lanfranc's polemics is chiefly derived from the tract De corpore et sanguine Domini, probably written c. 1060–63.[8] Though betraying no signs of metaphysical ability, his work was regarded as conclusive and became for a while a text-book in the schools. It is often said to be the place where the Aristotelian distinction between substance and accident was first applied to explain Eucharistic change. It is the most important of the surviving works attributed to Lanfranc.[4]

Prior and abbot edit

In the midst of Lanfranc's scholastic and controversial activities Lanfranc became a political force. Later tradition told that while he was Prior of Bec he opposed the non-canonical marriage of Duke William with Matilda of Flanders (1053) and carried matters so far that he incurred a sentence of exile. Apparently, their relationship was within the prohibited degrees of kindred.[3] But the quarrel was settled when he was on the point of departure, and he undertook the difficult task of obtaining the pope's approval of the marriage. In this he was successful at the same council which witnessed his third victory over Berengar (1059), and he thus acquired a lasting claim on William's gratitude. In 1066 Lanfranc became the first Abbot of the Abbey of Saint-Étienne at Caen in Normandy, a monastery dedicated to Saint Stephen which the duke had supposedly been enjoined to found as a penance for his disobedience to the Holy See.[4]

Henceforward Lanfranc exercised a perceptible influence on his master's policy. William adopted the Cluniac programme of ecclesiastical reform, and obtained the support of Rome for his English expedition by assuming the attitude of a crusader against schism and corruption. It was Alexander II, possibly a pupil of Lanfranc's and certainly a close friend, who gave the Norman Conquest the papal benediction—a notable advantage to William at the moment, but subsequently the cause of serious embarrassments.[4]

Archbishop of Canterbury edit

When the see of Rouen next fell vacant (1067), the thoughts of the electors turned to Lanfranc. But he declined the honour, and he was appointed to the English primatial see as Archbishop of Canterbury as soon as Stigand had been canonically deposed on 15 August 1070. He was speedily consecrated on 29 August 1070.[9] The new archbishop at once began a policy of reorganisation and reform. His first difficulties were with Thomas of Bayeux, Archbishop-elect of York, (another former pupil) who asserted that his see was independent of Canterbury and claimed jurisdiction over the greater part of the English Midlands. This was the beginning of a long running dispute between the sees of Canterbury and York, usually known as the Canterbury–York dispute.[10]

 
Signatures at the council of Winchester (1072). The large crosses are the signatures of William and Matilda, the one under theirs is Lanfranc's, and the other bishops' are under his.

Lanfranc, during a visit which he paid the pope for the purpose of receiving his pallium, obtained an order from Alexander that the disputed points should be settled by a council of the English Church. This was held at Winchester in 1072.[4] At this council Lanfranc obtained the confirmation of his primacy that he sought; nonetheless he was never able to secure its formal confirmation by the papacy, possibly as a result of the succession of Pope Gregory VII to the papal throne in 1073.

Lanfranc assisted William in maintaining the independence of the English Church; and appears at one time to have favoured the idea of maintaining a neutral attitude on the subject of the quarrels between papacy and empire. In the domestic affairs of England the archbishop showed more spiritual zeal. His grand aim was to extricate the Church from the fetters of corruption. He was a generous patron of monasticism. He endeavoured to enforce celibacy upon the secular clergy.[4]

Lanfranc obtained the king's permission to deal with the affairs of the Church in synods. In the cases of Odo of Bayeux (1082) (see Trial of Penenden Heath) and of William of St Calais, Bishop of Durham (1088), he used his legal ingenuity to justify the trial of bishops before a lay tribunal.[4]

Lanfranc accelerated the process of substituting Normans for Englishmen in all preferments of importance; and although his nominees were usually respectable, it cannot be said that all of them were better than the men whom they superseded. There was a considerable mixture for this admixture of secular with spiritual aims. By long tradition, the primate was entitled to a leading position in the king's councils, and the interests of the Church demanded that Lanfranc should use his power in a manner not displeasing to the king. On several occasions when William I was absent from England Lanfranc acted as his vicegerent.[4]

Lanfranc's greatest political service to the Conqueror was rendered in 1075, when he detected and foiled the conspiracy which had been formed by the earls of Norfolk and Hereford. Waltheof, 1st Earl of Northumberland, one of the rebels, soon lost heart and confessed the conspiracy to Lanfranc, who urged Roger, the earl of Hereford to return to his allegiance, and finally excommunicated him and his adherents. He interceded for Waltheof's life and to the last spoke of the earl as an innocent sufferer for the crimes of others; he lived on terms of friendship with Bishop Wulfstan of Worcester.[4]

 
Near-contemporary depiction of Lanfranc in Oxford Bodleian Library MS Bodley 569

On the death of the Conqueror in 1087 Lanfranc secured the succession for William Rufus, in spite of the discontent of the Anglo-Norman baronage; and in 1088 his exhortations induced the English militia to fight on the side of the new sovereign against Odo of Bayeux and the other partisans of Duke Robert. He exacted promises of just government from Rufus, and was not afraid to remonstrate when the promises were disregarded. So long as he lived he was a check upon the worst propensities of the king's administration. But his restraining hand was too soon removed. In 1089 he was stricken with fever and he died on 24 May[9] amidst universal lamentations. Notwithstanding some obvious moral and intellectual defects, he was the most eminent and the most disinterested of those who had co-operated with William I in riveting Norman rule upon the English Church and people. As a statesman he did something to uphold the traditional ideal of his office; as a primate he elevated the standards of clerical discipline and education. Conceived in the spirit of popes such as Pope Leo IX, his reforms led by a natural sequence to strained relations between Church and State; the equilibrium which he established was unstable, and depended too much upon his personal influence with the Conqueror.[4]

Beatification and the cause for canonisation edit

The efforts of Christ Church Canterbury to secure him the status of saint seem to have had only spasmodic and limited effect beyond English Benedictine circles. However, in the period after the Council of Trent, Lanfranc's name was included in the Roman Martyrology, and in the current edition is commemorated as a 'Blessed' (beatus) on 28 May.[11][12]

Modern commemoration edit

In 1931, the Archbishop Lanfranc School (now The Archbishop Lanfranc Academy) was opened in Croydon, where he had resided at Croydon Palace. Canterbury Christ Church University have named their accommodation block Lanfranc House. He is also remembered in road names in London and Worthing, West Sussex.

Lanfranc is remembered in the Church of England with a commemoration on 28 May.[13]

Sources edit

The chief authority is the Vita Lanfranci by the monk Milo Crispin, who was precentor at Bec and died in 1149. Milo drew largely upon the Vita Herluini, composed by Gilbert Crispin, Abbot of Westminster. The Chronicon Beccensis abbatiae, a 14th-century compilation, should also be consulted. The first edition of these two sources, and of Lanfranc's writings, is that of L. d'Achery, Beati Lanfranci opera omnia (Paris, 1648). Another edition, slightly enlarged, is that of J. A. Giles, Lanfranci opera (2 vols., Oxford, 1844). A more recent edition of the Vita Lanfranci was provided by Margaret Gibson.[14] The correspondence between Lanfranc and Pope Gregory VII is given in the Monumenta Gregoriana (ed. P. Jaffi, Berlin, 1865).[4] A more modern edition (and translation) of Lanfranc's correspondence is to be found in H. Clover and M. Gibson (eds), The Letters of Lanfranc, Archbishop of Canterbury (Oxford, 1979). His On the Body and Blood of the Lord is translated (along with Guitmund of Aversa's tract on the same matter) in volume 10 of the Fathers of the Church Medieval Continuation (Washington, DC, 2009).

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ "The Calendar". The Church of England. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
  2. ^ "Lanfranc." The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed. 2012. Web. 22 October 2012.
  3. ^ a b Birt, Henry Norbert (1910). "Lanfranc" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 8. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Davis 1911.
  5. ^ Dudley, Leonard (2008). Information Revolutions in the History of the West. Cheltenham: Elgar. p. 53. ISBN 978-1848442801. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  6. ^ Vita Heluini, in Gilbert Crispin, The Works of Gilbert Crispin, Abbot of Westminster, ed. A.S. Abalufia and G.R. Evans, Auctores Britannici Medii Aevi(1986), pp. 194–97
  7. ^ Sigebert of Gembloux, Liber de Scriptoribus Ecclesiasticis, ed. J. P. Migne, Patrologia Latina vol. 160, cols, 582-3, 'Paulum apostolum exposuit Lanfrancus, et ubicumque opportunitas locorum occurrit, secundum leges dialecticae proponit, assumit, concludit. Richard Southern, Saint Anselm: a Portrait in a Landscape (Cambridge, 1993), p. 40
  8. ^ Southern, Saint Anselm, p. 44, n. 7 discusses various possible dates
  9. ^ a b Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I. (1996). Handbook of British Chronology (Third revised ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 232. ISBN 0-521-56350-X.
  10. ^ Barlow, Frank (1979). The English Church 1066–1154: A History of the Anglo-Norman Church. New York: Longman. pp. 39–42. ISBN 0-582-50236-5.
  11. ^ Martyrologium Romanum, ex decreto sacrosancti oecumenici Concilii Vaticani II instauratum auctoritate Ioannis Pauli Pp. II promulgatum, editio [typica] altera, Typis Vaticanis, A.D. MMIV (2004), p. 308
  12. ^ Farmer, David Hugh (2004). Oxford Dictionary of Saints (Fifth ed.). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. pp. 309–310. ISBN 978-0-19-860949-0.
  13. ^ "The Calendar". The Church of England. Retrieved 27 March 2021.
  14. ^ Gibson, Margaret (1993). Lanfranco di Pavia e L'Europa del secolo xi. pp. 661–715.

References edit

Further reading edit

  • LePatourel, John (September 1946). "The Date of the Trial on Penenden Heath". The English Historical Review. 61 (241): 378–388. doi:10.1093/ehr/LXI.CCXLI.378.
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by Archbishop of Canterbury
1070–1089
Succeeded by

lanfranc, other, uses, disambiguation, 1005, 1010, 1089, celebrated, italian, jurist, renounced, career, become, benedictine, monk, normandy, served, successively, prior, abbey, abbot, stephen, abbey, caen, normandy, then, archbishop, canterbury, england, foll. For other uses see Lanfranc disambiguation Lanfranc OSB 1005 x 1010 24 May 1089 was a celebrated Italian jurist who renounced his career to become a Benedictine monk at Bec in Normandy He served successively as prior of Bec Abbey and abbot of St Stephen s Abbey in Caen Normandy and then as Archbishop of Canterbury in England following its conquest by William the Conqueror 2 He is also variously known as Lanfranc of Pavia Italian Lanfranco di Pavia Lanfranc of Bec French Lanfranc du Bec and Lanfranc of Canterbury Latin Lanfrancus Cantuariensis BlessedLanfrancOSBArchbishop of CanterburyStatue of Lanfranc from the exterior of Canterbury CathedralAppointedAugust 1070Term ended24 May 1089PredecessorStigandSuccessorAnselm of CanterburyOther post s Abbot of Saint Etienne CaenOrdersConsecration15 August 1070Personal detailsBornbetween 1005 and 1010Pavia Holy Roman EmpireDied24 May 1089 aged 79 84 Canterbury Kingdom of EnglandBuriedCanterbury Cathedral Canterbury EnglandNationalityItalianDenominationCatholic ChurchParentsHanbaldSainthoodFeast dayMay 28Venerated inCatholic Church Anglican Communion 1 Title as SaintBishop Monk ScholarBeatifiedAfter the Council of TrentAttributesbook cross episcopal vestmentsShrinesCanterbury Cathedral Contents 1 Early life 2 Teacher and scholar 3 Prior and abbot 4 Archbishop of Canterbury 5 Beatification and the cause for canonisation 6 Modern commemoration 7 Sources 8 See also 9 Citations 10 References 11 Further readingEarly life editLanfranc was born in the early years of the 11th century at Pavia where later tradition held that his father Hanbald held a rank broadly equivalent to magistrate He was orphaned at an early age 3 Lanfranc was trained in the liberal arts at that time a field in which northern Italy was famous there is little or no evidence to support the myth that his education included much in the way of Civil Law and none that links him with Irnerius of Bologna as a pioneer in the renaissance of its study For unknown reasons at an uncertain date he crossed the Alps soon taking up the role of teacher in France and eventually in Normandy About 1039 he became the master of the cathedral school at Avranches where he taught for three years with conspicuous success But in 1042 he embraced the monastic profession in the newly founded Bec Abbey Until 1045 he lived at Bec in absolute seclusion 4 5 Teacher and scholar editLanfranc was then persuaded by Abbot Herluin to open a school at Bec to relieve the monastery s poverty From the first he was celebrated totius Latinitatis magister His pupils were drawn not only from France and Normandy but also from Gascony Flanders Germany and Italy 6 Many of them afterwards attained high positions in the Church one possible student Anselm of Badagio became pope under the title of Alexander II another Anselm of Bec succeeded Lanfranc as the Archbishop of Canterbury The favourite subjects of his lectures were the trivium of grammar logic and rhetoric and the application of these principles to theological elucidation In one of Lanfranc s most important works The Commentary on the Epistles of St Paul he is said to have expounded Paul the Apostle and wherever opportunity offered he stated the premises whether principal or secondary and the conclusions of Paul s arguments in accordance with the rules of Logic 7 As a result of his growing reputation Lanfranc was invited to defend the doctrine of transubstantiation against the attacks of Berengar of Tours He took up the task with the greatest zeal although Berengar had been his personal friend he was the protagonist of orthodoxy at the Church Councils of Vercelli 1050 Tours 1054 and Rome 1059 To Lanfranc s influence is attributed the desertion of Berengar s cause by Hildebrand and the more broad minded of the cardinals Our knowledge of Lanfranc s polemics is chiefly derived from the tract De corpore et sanguine Domini probably written c 1060 63 8 Though betraying no signs of metaphysical ability his work was regarded as conclusive and became for a while a text book in the schools It is often said to be the place where the Aristotelian distinction between substance and accident was first applied to explain Eucharistic change It is the most important of the surviving works attributed to Lanfranc 4 Prior and abbot editIn the midst of Lanfranc s scholastic and controversial activities Lanfranc became a political force Later tradition told that while he was Prior of Bec he opposed the non canonical marriage of Duke William with Matilda of Flanders 1053 and carried matters so far that he incurred a sentence of exile Apparently their relationship was within the prohibited degrees of kindred 3 But the quarrel was settled when he was on the point of departure and he undertook the difficult task of obtaining the pope s approval of the marriage In this he was successful at the same council which witnessed his third victory over Berengar 1059 and he thus acquired a lasting claim on William s gratitude In 1066 Lanfranc became the first Abbot of the Abbey of Saint Etienne at Caen in Normandy a monastery dedicated to Saint Stephen which the duke had supposedly been enjoined to found as a penance for his disobedience to the Holy See 4 Henceforward Lanfranc exercised a perceptible influence on his master s policy William adopted the Cluniac programme of ecclesiastical reform and obtained the support of Rome for his English expedition by assuming the attitude of a crusader against schism and corruption It was Alexander II possibly a pupil of Lanfranc s and certainly a close friend who gave the Norman Conquest the papal benediction a notable advantage to William at the moment but subsequently the cause of serious embarrassments 4 Archbishop of Canterbury editWhen the see of Rouen next fell vacant 1067 the thoughts of the electors turned to Lanfranc But he declined the honour and he was appointed to the English primatial see as Archbishop of Canterbury as soon as Stigand had been canonically deposed on 15 August 1070 He was speedily consecrated on 29 August 1070 9 The new archbishop at once began a policy of reorganisation and reform His first difficulties were with Thomas of Bayeux Archbishop elect of York another former pupil who asserted that his see was independent of Canterbury and claimed jurisdiction over the greater part of the English Midlands This was the beginning of a long running dispute between the sees of Canterbury and York usually known as the Canterbury York dispute 10 nbsp Signatures at the council of Winchester 1072 The large crosses are the signatures of William and Matilda the one under theirs is Lanfranc s and the other bishops are under his Lanfranc during a visit which he paid the pope for the purpose of receiving his pallium obtained an order from Alexander that the disputed points should be settled by a council of the English Church This was held at Winchester in 1072 4 At this council Lanfranc obtained the confirmation of his primacy that he sought nonetheless he was never able to secure its formal confirmation by the papacy possibly as a result of the succession of Pope Gregory VII to the papal throne in 1073 Lanfranc assisted William in maintaining the independence of the English Church and appears at one time to have favoured the idea of maintaining a neutral attitude on the subject of the quarrels between papacy and empire In the domestic affairs of England the archbishop showed more spiritual zeal His grand aim was to extricate the Church from the fetters of corruption He was a generous patron of monasticism He endeavoured to enforce celibacy upon the secular clergy 4 Lanfranc obtained the king s permission to deal with the affairs of the Church in synods In the cases of Odo of Bayeux 1082 see Trial of Penenden Heath and of William of St Calais Bishop of Durham 1088 he used his legal ingenuity to justify the trial of bishops before a lay tribunal 4 Lanfranc accelerated the process of substituting Normans for Englishmen in all preferments of importance and although his nominees were usually respectable it cannot be said that all of them were better than the men whom they superseded There was a considerable mixture for this admixture of secular with spiritual aims By long tradition the primate was entitled to a leading position in the king s councils and the interests of the Church demanded that Lanfranc should use his power in a manner not displeasing to the king On several occasions when William I was absent from England Lanfranc acted as his vicegerent 4 Lanfranc s greatest political service to the Conqueror was rendered in 1075 when he detected and foiled the conspiracy which had been formed by the earls of Norfolk and Hereford Waltheof 1st Earl of Northumberland one of the rebels soon lost heart and confessed the conspiracy to Lanfranc who urged Roger the earl of Hereford to return to his allegiance and finally excommunicated him and his adherents He interceded for Waltheof s life and to the last spoke of the earl as an innocent sufferer for the crimes of others he lived on terms of friendship with Bishop Wulfstan of Worcester 4 nbsp Near contemporary depiction of Lanfranc in Oxford Bodleian Library MS Bodley 569 On the death of the Conqueror in 1087 Lanfranc secured the succession for William Rufus in spite of the discontent of the Anglo Norman baronage and in 1088 his exhortations induced the English militia to fight on the side of the new sovereign against Odo of Bayeux and the other partisans of Duke Robert He exacted promises of just government from Rufus and was not afraid to remonstrate when the promises were disregarded So long as he lived he was a check upon the worst propensities of the king s administration But his restraining hand was too soon removed In 1089 he was stricken with fever and he died on 24 May 9 amidst universal lamentations Notwithstanding some obvious moral and intellectual defects he was the most eminent and the most disinterested of those who had co operated with William I in riveting Norman rule upon the English Church and people As a statesman he did something to uphold the traditional ideal of his office as a primate he elevated the standards of clerical discipline and education Conceived in the spirit of popes such as Pope Leo IX his reforms led by a natural sequence to strained relations between Church and State the equilibrium which he established was unstable and depended too much upon his personal influence with the Conqueror 4 Beatification and the cause for canonisation editThe efforts of Christ Church Canterbury to secure him the status of saint seem to have had only spasmodic and limited effect beyond English Benedictine circles However in the period after the Council of Trent Lanfranc s name was included in the Roman Martyrology and in the current edition is commemorated as a Blessed beatus on 28 May 11 12 Modern commemoration editIn 1931 the Archbishop Lanfranc School now The Archbishop Lanfranc Academy was opened in Croydon where he had resided at Croydon Palace Canterbury Christ Church University have named their accommodation block Lanfranc House He is also remembered in road names in London and Worthing West Sussex Lanfranc is remembered in the Church of England with a commemoration on 28 May 13 Sources editThe chief authority is the Vita Lanfranci by the monk Milo Crispin who was precentor at Bec and died in 1149 Milo drew largely upon the Vita Herluini composed by Gilbert Crispin Abbot of Westminster The Chronicon Beccensis abbatiae a 14th century compilation should also be consulted The first edition of these two sources and of Lanfranc s writings is that of L d Achery Beati Lanfranci opera omnia Paris 1648 Another edition slightly enlarged is that of J A Giles Lanfranci opera 2 vols Oxford 1844 A more recent edition of the Vita Lanfranci was provided by Margaret Gibson 14 The correspondence between Lanfranc and Pope Gregory VII is given in the Monumenta Gregoriana ed P Jaffi Berlin 1865 4 A more modern edition and translation of Lanfranc s correspondence is to be found in H Clover and M Gibson eds The Letters of Lanfranc Archbishop of Canterbury Oxford 1979 His On the Body and Blood of the Lord is translated along with Guitmund of Aversa s tract on the same matter in volume 10 of the Fathers of the Church Medieval Continuation Washington DC 2009 See also editCorrectoryCitations edit The Calendar The Church of England Retrieved 27 March 2021 Lanfranc The Columbia Encyclopedia 6th ed 2012 Web 22 October 2012 a b Birt Henry Norbert 1910 Lanfranc In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 8 New York Robert Appleton Company a b c d e f g h i j k Davis 1911 Dudley Leonard 2008 Information Revolutions in the History of the West Cheltenham Elgar p 53 ISBN 978 1848442801 Retrieved 30 October 2017 Vita Heluini in Gilbert Crispin The Works of Gilbert Crispin Abbot of Westminster ed A S Abalufia and G R Evans Auctores Britannici Medii Aevi 1986 pp 194 97 Sigebert of Gembloux Liber de Scriptoribus Ecclesiasticis ed J P Migne Patrologia Latina vol 160 cols 582 3 Paulum apostolum exposuit Lanfrancus et ubicumque opportunitas locorum occurrit secundum leges dialecticae proponit assumit concludit Richard Southern Saint Anselm a Portrait in a Landscape Cambridge 1993 p 40 Southern Saint Anselm p 44 n 7 discusses various possible dates a b Fryde E B Greenway D E Porter S Roy I 1996 Handbook of British Chronology Third revised ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 232 ISBN 0 521 56350 X Barlow Frank 1979 The English Church 1066 1154 A History of the Anglo Norman Church New York Longman pp 39 42 ISBN 0 582 50236 5 Martyrologium Romanum ex decreto sacrosancti oecumenici Concilii Vaticani II instauratum auctoritate Ioannis Pauli Pp II promulgatum editio typica altera Typis Vaticanis A D MMIV 2004 p 308 Farmer David Hugh 2004 Oxford Dictionary of Saints Fifth ed Oxford UK Oxford University Press pp 309 310 ISBN 978 0 19 860949 0 The Calendar The Church of England Retrieved 27 March 2021 Gibson Margaret 1993 Lanfranco di Pavia e L Europa del secolo xi pp 661 715 References edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Davis Henry William Carless 1911 Lanfranc Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed pp 169 170 Further reading editLePatourel John September 1946 The Date of the Trial on Penenden Heath The English Historical Review 61 241 378 388 doi 10 1093 ehr LXI CCXLI 378 Catholic Church titles Preceded byStigand Archbishop of Canterbury1070 1089 Succeeded byAnselm of Canterbury in 1093 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lanfranc amp oldid 1213685323, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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