Hugh of Wells

Hugh of Wells
Bishop of Lincoln
A stone tower rising above a group of stone buildings
Lincoln Cathedral, with the ruined Bishop's Palace in the foreground
Electedabout 14 April 1209
Term ended7 February 1235
PredecessorWilliam de Blois
SuccessorRobert Grosseteste
Other post(s)Archdeacon of Wells
Orders
Consecration20 December 1209
by Stephen Langton, Archbishop of Canterbury
Personal details
Died7 February 1235
Stow Park

Hugh of Wells[a] (died 7 February 1235) was a medieval Bishop of Lincoln. He began his career in the diocese of Bath, where he served two successive bishops, before joining royal service under King John of England. He served in the royal administration until 1209, when he was elected to the see, or bishopric, of Lincoln. When John was excommunicated by Pope Innocent III in November 1209, Hugh went into exile in France, where he remained until 1213.

When he returned to England, he continued to serve both John and John's son King Henry III, but spent most of his time in his diocese. He introduced new administrative methods into the diocese, as well as working to improve the educational and financial well-being of his clergy and to secure the canonisation of his predecessor Hugh of Avalon as a saint in 1220. Although the medieval writer Matthew Paris accused Hugh of being opposed to monastic houses and monks, there is little evidence of the bishop being biased, and after his death on 7 February 1235 parts of his estate were left to religious houses, including nunneries.

  1. ^ Cheney From Becket to Langton pp. 132–133
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference Moorman34 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Dunning Somerset Miscellany p. 30


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