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Lanfranc and was
Lanfranc, the first post-Conquest archbishop, was dubious about some of the saints venerated at Canterbury.
Lanfranc retorted that " you will not seize the bishop of Bayeux, but confine the earl of Kent ": Odo was both bishop of Bayeux, and earl of Kent.
In his treatment of ecclesiastical policy and ecclesiastical reform, Gregory did not stand alone, but found powerful support: in England Archbishop Lanfranc of Canterbury stood closest to him ; in France his champion was Bishop Hugo of Dié, who afterwards became Archbishop of Lyon.
By the time this letter was received by Lanfranc in Rome, it had been read by several other people ; and as Berengar was not well thought of there, Lanfranc feared his association with him might prejudice his own interests, and laid the matter before the pope, Leo IX, who excommunicated Berengar at a synod after Easter, 1050, and summoned him to appear personally at another to be held at Vercelli in September.
The latest was either Garsenda of Forcalquier, who died in 1242, though her period of poetic patronage and composition probably occurred a quarter century earlier, or Guilleuma de Rosers, who composed a tenso with Lanfranc Cigala, known between 1235 and 1257.
In 1218 – 1220 Genoa was served by the Guelph podestà Rambertino Buvalelli, who probably introduced Occitan literature to the city, which was soon to boast such troubadours as Jacme Grils, Lanfranc Cigala, and Bonifaci Calvo.
The 14th abbot, he was appointed by the new Archbishop of Canterbury, Lanfranc.
For her sons, she secured Lanfranc, Archbishop of Canterbury of whom she was an ardent supporter.
It was held by Archbishop Lanfranc of Canterbury.
It was held by Archbishop Lanfranc of Canterbury.
It was held by Bainiard from Archbishop Lanfranc of Canterbury.
At this Chapter Lanfranc Settala, the leader of the Bonites, was elected Prior General.
Lanfranc ( c. 1005 – 1089 ) was Archbishop of Canterbury, and a Lombard by birth.
Lanfranc was born in the early years of the 11th century at Pavia, where later tradition held that his father, Hanbald, held a rank broadly equivalent to magistrate.
Lanfranc was then persuaded by Abbot Herluin to open a school in the monastery.
In this way Lanfranc set the seal of intellectual activity on the reform movement of which Bec was the centre.
At this council Lanfranc obtained the confirmation of primacy that he sought ; nonetheless he was never able to secure its formal confirmation by the papacy, possibly as a result of the succession of Gregory VII to the papal throne in 1073.
By long tradition the primate was entitled to a leading position in the king ’ s councils ; and the interests of the Church demanded that Lanfranc should use his power in a manner not displeasing to the king.
On several occasions when William I was absent from England Lanfranc acted as his vicegerent.

Lanfranc and at
In 1066 Lanfranc became the first abbot of St Stephen's at Caen, a house which the duke had supposedly been enjoined to found as a penance for his disobedience to the Holy See.
Lanfranc assisted William in maintaining the independence of the English Church ; and appears at one time to have favoured the idea of maintaining a neutral attitude on the subject of the quarrels between papacy and empire.
However, Lanfranc was honoured in 1931 when The Archbishop Lanfranc School was opened in Croydon, where he resided at the Old Palace.
He was the son of a Flemish Priest, and studied under Lanfranc at Caen.
However he repented, confessing his guilt first to Archbishop Lanfranc and then in person to William, who was at the time in Normandy.
Lanfranc, who was already famous for his lectures at Avranches, came to teach as prior and master of the monastic school, but left in 1062, to become abbot of St. Stephen's Abbey, Caen, and later Archbishop of Canterbury.
Archbishop Lanfranc also wrote a Chronicon Beccense of the life of Herluin, and of the first four abbots, which was published at Paris in 1648.
Ivo is claimed to have studied at the Abbey of Bec in Normandy under Lanfranc, where he would have met Anselm of Aosta, the great Scholastic.
Archbishop Lanfranc of Canterbury, amongst others, brought Odo to account at the trial of Penenden Heath c. 1072.
He officiated at the saint's translation to a more fitting shrine at Malmesbury and helped Lanfranc to obtain his canonization.
Roscellinus seems to have put forward this doctrine in perfect good faith, and to have claimed for it at first the authority of Lanfranc and Anselm.
Ernulf studied under Lanfranc at the monastery of Bec, entered the Benedictine Order, and lived long as a brother in the monastery of St-Lucien, Beauvais.
While at Canterbury, Ernulf had taken down the eastern part of the church which Lanfranc had built, and erected a far more magnificent structure.
Sheriff of Kent ; a judge at Penenden in case between Lanfranc and Odo of Bayeux.

Lanfranc and time
At the time of the Norman Conquest, Archbishop Lanfranc had contacts with the parish.
At the time of the Domesday survey in 1086 the tenant-in-chief of the manor was Archbishop Lanfranc, a stern and very capable man, rivalling the King himself in statesmanship, who had been appointed to the see of Canterbury in 1070 after the Conquest.
At the suggestion of Lanfranc he went to England, some time after 1070, and joined the monks of Christ Church, Canterbury.
He mentions Lanfranc as having been " famous in our own time ", which places Henry's birthdate a few years before 1109, the year Lanfranc died.

Lanfranc and which
Probably in the early part of 1050, Berengar addressed a letter to Lanfranc, then prior of Bec Abbey in Normandy, in which he expressed his regret that Lanfranc adhered to the eucharistic teaching of Paschasius and considered the treatise of Ratramnus on the subject ( which Berengar supposed to have been written by Johannes Scotus Eriugena ) to be heretical.
Lanfranc, during a visit which he paid the pope for the purpose of receiving his pallium, obtained an order from Alexander that the disputed points should be settled by a council of the English Church.
Although Theobald was pious and well-educated, he had only become abbot the year before, and his election was probably influenced by the reputation of his monastery, which had already produced two archbishops of Canterbury, Lanfranc and Anselm.
He also established a Benedictine monastery, with monks from Bec Abbey in Normandy, which had provided the first two post-Conquest Archbishops of Canterbury: Lanfranc and Anselm.
In 1075 a council was held in London, under the presidency of Archbishop Lanfranc, which, reciting the decrees of the council of Sardica held in 347 and that of Laodicea held in 360 on this matter, ordered the bishop of the south Saxons to remove his see from Selsey to Chichester ; the Wiltshire and Dorset bishop to remove his cathedra from Sherborne to Old Sarum, and the Mercian bishop, whose cathedral was then at Lichfield, to transfer it to Chester.
The trial, ordered by William I at the behest of Lanfranc, Archbishop of Canterbury challenged the Earl's purported landholdings in the county, an event which represented an important attempt by Saxon landowners to reassert their pre-Norman rights and privileges.
The King eventually persuaded Thomas to submit, but Thomas and Lanfranc continued to clash over ecclesiastical issues, including the primacy of Canterbury, which dioceses belonged to the province of York, and the question of how York's obedience to Canterbury would be expressed.
His letter to Toirdelbach calls him " magnificent king of Ireland ", a title which might seem the more impressive had Lanfranc not also addressed Gofraid of Dublin as " glorious king of Ireland ".
Stigands organisational skills brought him into a dispute with Lanfranc over the Archbishops peculiars in Sussex, which were numerous.

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