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Samson (bishop)

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Church
  
Roman Catholic

Term ended
  
5 May 1112

Successor
  
Theulf

Name
  
Samson Samson

Elected
  
1096

Predecessor
  
St. Wulfstan II

Ordination
  
7 June 1096

Samson (died 5 May 1112) was a medieval English clergyman and bishop.

Life

Samson was a Royal Chaplain and a canon and Treasurer of the diocese of Bayeux.

In the Domesday Book Samson is referred to as the chaplain and is recorded as holding St. Peter's Collegiate Church, Wolverhampton and considerable properties in southern Staffordshire, most of which he sublet to either the canons of St. Peter's or to other clergy.

In 1096 Samson was elected Bishop of Worcester, he was ordained a deacon and priest on 7 June 1096 and consecrated bishop on 8 June 1096. Being a bishop did not prevent him from fathering a daughter, Isabelle of Douvres, known for her later liaison with Robert, 1st Earl of Gloucester. The son of Robert and Isabelle was Richard who was Bishop of Bayeux from 1135 to 1142. Samson had two sons who also became bishops. Richard was Bishop of Bayeux from 1108 to 1133, and Thomas was Archbishop of York from 1108 to 1114.

Samson has been suggested as possibly the scribe who oversaw the compilation of Domesday Book by the historian V. H. Galbraith.

Samson died on 5 May 1112.

References

Samson (bishop) Wikipedia