Online Encyclopedia

HUGH DE PUISET (c. 1125-1195)

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Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 858 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HUGH DE PUISET (c. 1125-1195)  , bishop of Durham, was the
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nephew of Stephen and Henry of
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Blois; the latter brought him to England and made him an archdeacon of the see of Winchester .
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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
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personal visit to Rome . Hugh took little
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part in politics in the reign of Henry II., remaining in the north, immersed in the affairs of his see . He was, however,
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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
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quarrel between Henry and Becket, but he at least connived at the
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rebellion of 1173 and William the Lion's invasion of England in that
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year . After the failure of the rebellion the bishop was compelled to surrender Durham, Norham and
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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
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cross . At the general sale of offices with which Richard began his reign (1189) Hugh bought the earldom of Northumberland . The archbishopric of York had been vacant since 118r . 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

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life . Hugh was nominated justiciar jointly with William Longchamp when Richard
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left the
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kingdom . But Longchamp soon deprived the bishop of his place (1191), even going so far as to imprison Hugh and make him surrender his castle, his earldom and hostages . Hugh's chief
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object in politics was to avoid acknowledging Geoffrey of York as his ecclesiastical
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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 . 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
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great German princes, a
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local
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sovereign in all but name . See Kate Norgate's England under the Angevin Kings (1887); Stubbs's preface to Hoveden, in .

End of Article: HUGH DE PUISET (c. 1125-1195)
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