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GEOFFREY FITZ See also: earl of See also: Essex and chief justiciar of See also: England, began his official career in the later years of See also: Henry II., whom he served as a
See also: sheriff, a See also: justice itinerant and a justice of the See also: forest
.
During See also: Richard's See also: absence on Crusade he was one of the five justices of the See also: king's
See also: court who stood next in authority to the See also: regent, See also: Longchamp
.
It was at this See also: time (1190) that Fitz See also: Peter succeeded to the earldom of Essex, in the right of his wife, who was descended from the famous Geoffrey de Mandeville
.
In attempting to assert his hereditary rights over See also: Walden priory Fitz Peter came into conflict with Long-champ, and revenged himself by taking an active See also: part in the baronial agitation through which the regent was expelled from his office
.
The king, however, forgave Fitz Peter for his share in these proceedings; and, though refusing to give him formal See also: investiture of the Essex earldom, appointed him justiciar in succession to Hubert Walter (1198)
.
In this capacity Fitz Peter continued his predecessor's policy of encouraging See also: foreign See also: trade and the development of the towns; many of the latter received, during his administration, charters of self-See also: government
.
He was continued in his office by See also: John, who found him a useful instrument and described him in an official letter as " indispensable to the king and
See also: kingdom." He proved himself an able instrument of extortion, and profited to no small extent by the spoliation of See also: church lands in the
See also: period of the See also: interdict
.
But he was too closely counected with the baronage to be altogether trusted by the king
.
The contemporary Histoire See also: des ducs describes Fitz Peter as living in See also: constant dread of disgrace and confiscation
.
In the last years of his See also: life he endeavoured to See also: act as a mediator between the king and the opposition
.
It was by his mouth that the king promised to the nation the See also: laws of Henry I
.
(at the council of St Albans, See also: August 4th, 1213)
.
But Fitz Peter died a few See also: weeks later (Oct
.
2), and his See also: great office passed to Peter des Roches, one of the unpopular foreign favourites
.
Fitz Peter was neither a far-sighted nor a disinterested statesman; but he was the ablest pupil of Hubert Walter, and maintained the traditions of the great bureaucracy which the first and second Henries had founded
.
See the See also: original authorities specified for the reigns of Richard I. and John
.
Also See also: Miss K
.
Norgate's Angevin England, vol. ii
.
(1887), and John Lackland (1902); A
.
Ballard in See also: English See also: Historical Review, xiv. p
.
93 ; H
.
W
.
C
.
See also: Davis' England under the See also: Normans and Angevins (1905)
.
(H . W . C . |
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