Italian Benedictine from Pavia who, as archbishop of Canterbury (1070-89) and trusted counsellor of William the Conqueror, was largely responsible for the excellent church-state relations of William's reign after the Norman Conquest of England.
Originally a lawyer, Lanfranc won a reputation as a teacher at a school he established at Avranches, Normandy (1039-42). He then entered the Benedictine monastery at Bec, where, after three years of seclusion, he became prior and resumed teaching. He was at first an opponent of the marriage of William of Normandy to Matilda of Flanders (1053), but he and William were later reconciled and thereafter maintained a relationship of mutual respect. William made Lanfranc first abbot of St. Stephen's at Caen (c. 1063) and after the Conquest nominated him to the see of Canterbury as soon as the incumbent, Stigand, was deposed.
Lanfranc embarked upon a successful reform and reorganization of the
English Church. Although a firm supporter of papal sovereignty, he assisted
William in maintaining the fullest possible independence for the English
Church. At the same time he protected the church from royal and other secular
influence. His concern for the separate responsibilities and prerogatives
of state and church shaped a memorable ordinance that divided the ecclesiastical
from the secular courts (c. 1076). His policy, in accord with that
of the King, was to replace native English bishops with Normans, but he
remained on friendly terms with Wulfstan of Worcester, the last of the
Anglo-Saxon prelates. Perhaps his greatest service to the King was his
detection in 1075 of the conspiracy formed against him by the earls of
Norfolk and Hereford. On the death of the Conqueror in 1087, Lanfranc secured
the succession for William II Rufus, inducing the English militia to support
him against the partisans of his elder brother, Robert II Curthose, Duke
of Normandy.
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