Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Herman (bishop)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Church
  
Roman Catholic Church

Successor
  
Osmund

Term ended
  
20 February 1078


Name
  
Herman Herman

Appointed
  
1075

Province
  
Canterbury

Consecration
  
c. 1045

Jeanius jane herman bishop vogue


Herman (died 1078) was a medieval cleric who served as the Bishop of Ramsbury and of Sherborne before and after the Norman conquest of England. In 1075, he oversaw their unification and translation to Salisbury (then at Old Sarum). He died before the completion of the new cathedral.

Contents

Herman was a native of Flanders (Lotharingia). As chaplain of Edward the Confessor, he was named Bishop of Ramsbury shortly after 22 April 1045. He visited Rome in 1050, where he attended a papal council with his fellow English bishop Ealdred. He was named abbot of Malmesbury Abbey by King Edward in 1055 and planned to move his seat there as well, apparently in the hope of increasing the income from his poor see. The king revoked this position after three days, however, when the monks and Earl Godwin objected.

Herman then abandoned Ramsbury to the administration of Ealdred and traveled to the continent to become a monk at the abbey of St Bertin at Saint-Omer. He returned three years later when the bishopric of Sherborne fell vacant; he was elected, faced no opposition from King Harold, and resumed administration of Ramsbury around 1058 or 1059. He later moved the see to the royal fortress at Salisbury. Approval for this translation and the unification of his sees was given at the council held at London between 1074 and 1075.

Herman was a patron of Goscelin of Saint-Bertin, a noted medieval historian and musician.

Herman died on 20 February 1078.

Bishop herman murray jr remember what god said to you


References

Herman (bishop) Wikipedia