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Richard Courtenay

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Appointed
  
June 1413

Consecration
  
17 September 1413

Term ended
  
September 1415

Name
  
Richard Courtenay


Predecessor
  
Alexander Tottington

Parents
  
Philip I Courtenay

Successor
  
John Wakering

Other posts
  
Dean of St Asaph Dean of Wells

Died
  
September 15, 1415, Harfleur, France

Place of burial
  
Westminster Abbey, London, United Kingdom

Grandparents
  
Margaret de Bohun, Countess of Devon, Hugh de Courtenay, 2nd Earl of Devon

Great-grandparents
  
Humphrey de Bohun, 4th Earl of Hereford, Elizabeth of Rhuddlan, Hugh de Courtenay, 9th Earl of Devon

Alma mater
  
Exeter College, Oxford

Richard Courtenay (died 15 September 1415) was an English prelate and university chancellor.

Contents

Life

Courtenay was a son of Sir Philip Courtenay of Powderham Castle near Exeter, and a grandson of Hugh de Courtenay, 10th Earl of Devon (died 1377). He was a nephew of William Courtenay, archbishop of Canterbury, and a descendant of King Edward I of England. From an early age he was renowned for his intellect and personal beauty. He was nicknamed "the flower of Devon".

Educated at Exeter College, Oxford, Courtenay entered the church, where his advance was rapid. He held several prebends, was Dean of St Asaph and then Dean of Wells, and became Bishop of Norwich in June 1413, being consecrated on 17 September 1413.

As Chancellor of the University of Oxford, an office to which Courtenay was elected more than once, Courtenay asserted the independence of the University against Thomas Arundel, Archbishop of Canterbury, in 1411; but the Archbishop, supported by King Henry IV and Pope John XXIII, eventually triumphed.

Courtenay was a close friend of King Henry V both before and after he came to the throne; and in 1413, immediately after Henry's accession, he was made treasurer of the royal household. On two occasions he went on diplomatic errands to France, and he was also employed by Henry on public business at home. Having accompanied the king to Harfleur in August 1415, Courtenay succumbed to dysentery and died about 15 September 1415,. Henry was so distraught that he bathed Richard’s body and ordered that he was to be buried alongside him in Westminster Abbey, rather than his wife. This was confirmed in 1953 when the grave was opened. The closeness of the attachment has led to speculation that Courtenay may have played a critical role in mentoring Henry to become a respected monarch, and that his relationship with Henry may have been more than a friendship.

Family

Another member of this family was Peter Courtenay (died 1492), a grandnephew of Richard. He also attained high position in the English Church.

References

Richard Courtenay Wikipedia