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THEOBALD (d. 1161)

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 760 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THEOBALD (d. 1161)  , archbishop of Canterbury, was of Norman parentage, but the date of his birth is unknown . Early in
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life he entered the
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great abbey of Bec, of which he became prior in 1127 and abbot ten years later . In 1138 he was selected by Stephen, king of England, to fill the vacant see of Canter-bury . Apparently he owed this
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advancement to his character for meekness, and as archbishop he behaved with 'a moderation which is in striking contrast to the conduct of his
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rival, Henry of
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Blois, bishop of Winchester . During the struggle between Stephen and Matilda it was Bishop Henry who fought for the privileges of the Church; Theobald, while showing a preference for Stephen's title, made it his
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rule to support the de facto
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sovereign . But as Stephen's cause gained ground the archbishop showed greater independence . He refused to consecrate the king's
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nephew to the see of York, and in 1148 attended the papal council of Reims in
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defiance of a royal prohibition . This
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quarrel was ended by the intercession of the queen, Matilda of Boulogne, but another, of a more serious character, was provoked by Theobald's refusal to
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crown Count Eustace, the eldest son of Stephen, the archbishop pleading the pope's orders as the excuse for this contumacy . He was banished from the
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kingdom, but Pope
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Eugenius terrified Stephen into a reversal of the sentence . In 1153 Theobald succeeded in reconciling Stephen with Henry of
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Anjou, and in securing for the latter the succession to the
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throne . On the accession of Henry in 1154, Theobald naturally became his trusted counsellor; but
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ill-
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health prevented the archbishop from using his influence to its full extent . He placed the interests of the Church in the hands of Thomas Becket, his archdeacon, whom he induced Henry to employ as chancellor .

Theobald died on the 18th of

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April 1.161 . He is said to have recommended Becket as his successor . In
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history Theobald lives chiefly as the
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patron of three eminent men: Becket, who began life as a clerk in his house-hold; Master Vacarius, the
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Italian jurist, who was the first to teach
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Roman law in England; and John of Salisbury, the most learned scholar of the age . Theobald's household was a university in little; and in it were trained not a few of the leading prelates of the next generation . See the Vita Theobaldi printed in J . A . Giles, Lanfranci Opera, vol. i . (Oxford, 1844) ; W . Hook, Lives of the Ar,chbishops of Canter-bury, ii. c. vi . (
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London, 1862) ; and K . Norgate, England under the Angevin Kings, vol. i . (London, 1887) .

(H . W . C .

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