Hilary of Chichester

Hilary of Chichester
Bishop of Chichester
Interior view of a tall long building. The roof is light coloured with darker arches providing support for the stonework. The walls are in three layers, each layer consisting of a set of arches.
The interior of Chichester Cathedral, showing the Romanesque stonework. The interior was reworked after a fire in 1187, but the basic structure dates from before Hilary's episcopate.[1]
AppointedJuly 1147
PredecessorSeffrid I
SuccessorJohn of Greenford
Other post(s)Dean of Christchurch
Orders
Consecration3 August 1147
by Theobald of Bec
Personal details
Bornc. 1110
DiedJuly 1169

Hilary (c. 1110–1169) was a medieval bishop of Chichester in England. English by birth, he studied canon law and worked in Rome as a papal clerk. During his time there, he became acquainted with a number of ecclesiastics, including the future Pope Adrian IV, and the writer John of Salisbury. In England, he served as a clerk for Henry of Blois, who was the bishop of Winchester and brother of King Stephen of England. After Hilary's unsuccessful nomination to become Archbishop of York, Pope Eugene III compensated him by promoting him to the bishopric of Chichester in 1147.

Hilary spent many years in a struggle with Battle Abbey, attempting to assert his right as bishop to oversee the abbey. He also clashed with Thomas Becket, then chancellor to King Henry II of England, later Archbishop of Canterbury; Hilary supported King Henry II's position in the conflict with Becket. Henry appointed Hilary as sheriff and employed him as a judge in the royal courts. The papacy also used Hilary as a judge-delegate, to hear cases referred back to England. Known for supporting his clergy and as a canon lawyer, or someone trained in ecclesiastical law, Hilary worked to have Edward the Confessor, a former English king, canonised as a saint.

  1. ^ Kerr and Kerr Guide to Norman Sites pp. 37–38

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