Online Encyclopedia

ROBERT OF JUMIEGES (d. c. 1070)

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Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 401 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ROBERT OF JUMIEGES (d. c. 1070)  , archbishop of Canter-bury, was a Norman who became prior of St Ouen at
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Rouen and then abbot of Jumieges . A close friend of the future king of England,
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Edward the
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Confessor, he crossed over to England with Edward in 1042, and in 1044 became bishop of
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London . In
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English
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history Robert appears as the most trusted and the most prominent of the king's
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foreign friends, and as the leader of the party hostile to the influence of
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Earl Godwine: In 1051, although the chapter had already made an election, Edward appointed him archbishop of Canterbury . He seems to have been sent by the king on an errand to Duke William of
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Normandy, and on the return of Godwine from exile in 1052 he fled in
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great haste from England . He was outlawed and deposed, and he died at Jumieges about 1070 . The treatment of Robert by the English was put forward by William the Conqueror as a pretext for invading England . See Two Saxon Chronicles, edited by J . 'Earle and C . Plummer (Oxford, 1892) ; and E . A . Freeman, History of the Norman
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Con-quest (Oxford, 1870-76) .

End of Article: ROBERT OF JUMIEGES (d. c. 1070)
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