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Nicholas Farnham

13th-century Bishop of Coventry-elect and Bishop of Durham


13th-century Bishop of Coventry-elect and Bishop of Durham

FieldValue
nameNicholas Farnham
religionCatholic
titleBishop of Durham
elected2 January 1241
term_end2 February 1249
consecrationeither 26 May or 9 June 1241
predecessorThomas de Melsonby
successorWalter of Kirkham
other_postBishop of Coventry and Lichfield-elect
death_date1257
death_placeStockton manor
buriedDurham Cathedral

Nicholas Farnham (or Nicholas of Farnham; died 1257) was a medieval Bishop of Durham.

Farnham was probably a native of Farnham, Surrey. He studied at Oxford University before moving on to study at Paris and Bologna. At Paris he first studied theology, but later moved to medicine. He taught at the University of Bologna as a teacher of medicine before moving to England. He was at Paris when the riots of 1229 drove many teachers out of Paris. Farnham came to England because of King Henry III's offers of teaching chairs at Oxford to those displaced by the riots.

Farnham was a royal physician before he became confessor to the king and queen in 1237.

While bishop, Farnham continued to work for the king. In 1241 he was mediating with King Alexander II of Scotland, and in 1242 he was involved in the negotiations over the marriage of King Henry's daughter Margaret to the future Alexander III of Scotland. As a bishop, he became embroiled in a dispute with a dependency of St Alban's Priory, which was finally settled in 1248 in the priory's favour. The set of constitutions, or laws, he issued for the clergy of his diocese were heavily based on his predecessor's constitutions as well as Grosseteste's for Lincoln.

Farnham was often ill. In 1244, he almost died, and had to go to the south of England where he received a miraculous cure from drinking water which had had bristles from the beard of Saint Edmund of Abingdon soaked in it. Once more in 1248, his health declined, and it was this illness that caused Farnham to seek a licence to resign his see from the pope. and it was at one of these, Stockton in County Durham, that he died, possibly on 31 July, which was the date his death was commemorated at Durham. He was buried in Durham Cathedral.

Citations

References

References

  1. Franklin "Farnham, Nicholas of" ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''
  2. Moorman ''Church Life in England'' p. 163
  3. link. (19 July 2011 '')
  4. Ferruolo "Quid dant artes nisi luctum?" ''History of Education Quarterly'' p. 11
  5. In 1239, the [[cathedral chapter]] of Coventry elected him [[Bishop of Coventry]], but Farnham refused the office. He was elected to the [[see of Durham]] on 2 January 1241 and at first he wanted to decline the office, but [[Robert Grosseteste]], [[Bishop of Lincoln]] persuaded him to accept. Farnham was consecrated as bishop on either 26 May or 9 June 1241.Fryde, et al. ''Handbook of British Chronology'' p. 241
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