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'Hugh de Puiset' (c.
1125 -
1195),
bishop of Durham, was the nephew of
Stephen and
Henry of Blois; the latter brought him to England and made him an
archdeacon of the
see of Winchester.
Hugh afterwards became archdeacon and treasurer of York. In
1153 he was chosen bishop of Durham, in spite of the opposition of the
archbishop of York; but he only obtained consecration by making a personal visit to
Rome. He was elected on January 22, and consecrated on December 20, 1153.
[Powicke ''Handbook of British Chronology'' p. 220]
Hugh took little part in politics in the reign of
Henry II, remaining in the north, immersed in the affairs of his see. He was, however, present with
Roger, archbishop of York, at the coronation of young Henry (1170), and was in consequence suspended by
Alexander III. He remained neutral, as far as he could, in the quarrel between Henry and
Becket, but he at least connived at the
rebellion of 1173 and
William the Lion's invasion of England in that year.
After the failure of the rebellion the bishop was compelled to surrender Durham,
Norham and
Northallerton to the king. In
1179 he attended the
Lateran Council at Rome, and in
1181 by the pope's order he laid
Scotland under an
interdict. In
1184 he
took the cross.
At the general sale of offices with which
Richard began his reign in 1189 Hugh bought the earldom of Northumberland. The archbishopric of York had been vacant since 1181. This vacancy increased Hugh's power vastly, and when the vacancy was filled by the appointment of
Geoffrey he naturally raised objections. This quarrel with Geoffrey lasted till the end of his life. Hugh was nominated
justiciar at first jointly with
William de Mandeville then on his own until Richard nominated him jointly with
William Longchamp when Richard left the kingdom in 1190.
[Powicke ''Handbook of British Chronology'' p. 70] But Longchamp soon deprived the bishop of his place in 1191, even going so far as to imprison Hugh and make him surrender his castle, his earldom and hostages.
Hugh's chief object in politics was to avoid acknowledging Geoffrey of York as his ecclesiastical superior, but this he was compelled to do in 1195. On Richard's return Hugh joined the king and tried to buy back his earldom. He seemed on the point of doing so when he died on March 3, 1195.
Hugh was one of the most important men of his day, and left a mark upon the north of England which has never been effaced. Combining in his own hands the palatinate of Durham and the earldom of Northumberland, he held a position not much dissimilar to that of the great German princes, a local sovereign in all but name.
Notes
References
★ Powicke, F. Maurice and E. B. Fryde ''Handbook of British Chronology'' 2nd. ed. London:Royal Historical Society 1961
★ Kate Norgate (1887). ''England under the Angevin Kings''.
★ William Stubbs. Preface to Hoveden, iii.