Walter of Lorraine explained

Type:bishop
Walter
Bishop of Hereford
Religion:Roman Catholic Church
Appointed:December 1060
Term End:1079
Predecessor:Ealdred
Successor:Robert the Lotharingian
Consecration:15 April 1061
Consecrated By:Pope Nicholas II
Death Date:1079

Walter of Lorraine (or Walter of Lotharingia; died 1079) was a medieval Bishop of Hereford.

Life

Walter was a native of Lorraine,[1] although some sources state he was a Norman.[2] He was chaplain to Edith of Wessex, wife of Edward the Confessor sometime before his appointment as bishop.[3] He was appointed to the see of Hereford about Christmas 1060.[4] His appointment was because Aldred, the Bishop of Worcester, who had been supervising the see of Hereford after the death of Leofgar in 1056, was appointed Archbishop of York and this opened the way for an appointment to Hereford.[1]

Walter was consecrated on 15 April 1061[5] by Pope Nicholas II at Rome.[4] He, along with Giso, who was elected to the see of Wells, and Tostig Godwinson,[6] went to Rome for consecration because Stigand, the Archbishop of Canterbury, was excommunicated and could not consecrate bishops.[7] They were unable to have the Archbishop of York consecrate them, because Ealdred, who was the appointee to York, had not yet received his pallium, the symbol of the authority of an archbishop, and was in fact traveling to Rome with Giso and Walter to receive it.[7] [8] Walter seems to have been little involved in public affairs after his appointment as bishop.[1]

After the Norman Conquest of England, Walter swore loyalty to William the Conqueror at Berkhamsted after the Battle of Hastings.[4] He attended the church councils held at Windsor in 1072 and at London in 1075. But otherwise, his diocesan business is unclear, as no charters of his survive.[1]

The Vita Edwardi, the saint's life of King Edward the Confessor of England, said of Walter that he was "most suitably and excellently trained in office".[9]

Walter died in 1079.[5] The medieval chronicler William of Malmesbury records that he was stabbed to death while attempting to rape a seamstress, but William reports this as rumor, so it is unclear if that was actually how he died. No tomb survives, and his burial place is unknown.[1]

References

Notes and References

  1. Barrow "Walter" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  2. Huscroft Ruling England p. 124
  3. Mason House of Godwine pp. 94–95
  4. Barrow Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1066–1300: Volume 8: Hereford: Bishops
  5. Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 250
  6. Smith, et al. "Court and Piety" Catholic Historical Review p. 574
  7. Barlow Godwins p. 89
  8. Brooks Early History p. 306
  9. Quoted in Huscroft Ruling England pp. 48–49