Powys-Lybbe Forbears - Person Sheet
Powys-Lybbe Forbears - Person Sheet
Death8 Dec 1241
BurialLichfield cathedral
GeneralClerk of Exchequer, Treasurer of England, Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield.
FatherSir Simon de Patshul (-ca1217)
MotherAmice
Notes for Hugh de Patshul Bishop of Lichfield
Yr son.
DNB Main notes for Hugh de Patshul Bishop of Lichfield
Pateshull, Hugh de d. 1241

Name: Pateshull, Hugh de
Dates: d. 1241
Active Date: 1221
Gender: Male

Field of Interest: Religion and Occultism
Occupation: Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield
Place of
    Death
: Potterspury, Northamptonshire
    Burial: In his cathedral at Lichfield
Sources: Foss's Judges, ii. 437; Matt. Paris's Chron. Maj. iii. 296, 542, iv...
Contributor: W. H. [William Hunt]

Article
Pateshull, Hugh de d. 1241, bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, son, and apparently heir, of Simon de Pateshull (d. 1217?) [q.v.], judge, was a clerk of the exchequer, and received the seal of the court, holding the office called somewhat later the chancellorship of the exchequer. He appears to have belonged to the baronial party in the reign of John, and, his father being then dead, received restitution of his lands in 2 Hen. III. He received several benefices, holding in Northamptonshire the churches of Church Stowe, Ettingdon, and Cottingham (Bridges), and was a prebendary of St. Paul's, London. On 1 June 1234 he was, against his will, made treasurer of the kingdom in place of Peter de Rievaulx [q.v.], receiving a grant of a hundred marks as stipend. He bore a high character for honourable dealing, and discharged the duties of his office faithfully. The see of Lichfield having fallen vacant in 1238, and a double election having been made by the canons of Lichfield, who chose William of Manchester, and the monks of Coventry, who chose Nicholas of Farnham [q.v.], and both the elect having declined the see, the king ordered a new election, and Hugh was chosen unanimously about Christmas 1239. He took a moving farewell of the barons of the exchequer, telling them that he left the exchequer because God had called him to the cure of souls; they all wept, and he kissed each of them (Paris, Chronica Majora, iv. 2). He was consecrated at Newark, near Guildford, on 1 July 1240. He opposed the monks of Coventry, who formed one of his two chapters, probably with reference to the episcopal right of visitation (comp. ib. p. 171 with Annales Monastici, iii. 143, 152). In 1241 he went a pilgrimage to the shrines of St. Edmund and other saints, and on its termination attended a council of bishops held at Oxford. On his return thence he died at Potterspury, Northamptonshire, on 8 Dec., and was buried before the altar of St. Stephen in his cathedral at Lichfield, in which he had founded the prebend of Colwich, endowing it with the impropriation and advowson of Colwich in Staffordshire.

Sources
Foss's Judges, ii. 437; Matt. Paris's Chron. Maj. iii. 296, 542, iv. 2, 31, 171, 175 (Rolls Ser.); Ann. de Dunstap. ap. Ann. Monast. iii. 149, 152, 157; Rot. Litt. Claus. i. 340 (Record Publ.); Madox's Hist. of Excheq. ii. 35, 255; Bridges's Northamptonshire, i. 90, 566, ii. 299; Le Neve's Fasti, i. 547, 591, ii. 414, ed. Hardy.

Contributor: W. H.

published  1895
Last Modified 28 Nov 2009Created 14 May 2022 by Tim Powys-Lybbe
Re-created by Tim Powys-Lybbe on 14 May 20220