For other people with similar names, see Philip of Poitiers (disambiguation).
Philip of Poitou
Bishop of Durham
Appointed
November 1195
Predecessor
Hugh de Puiset
Successor
Richard Poore
Other post(s)
Archdeacon of Canterbury
Orders
Ordination
15 June 1196
Consecration
20 April 1197 by Pope Innocent III
Personal details
Died
22 April 1208
Denomination
Roman Catholic
Philip of Poitou (sometimes Philip of Poitiers; died 22 April 1208) was Bishop of Durham from 1197 to 1208, and prior to this Archdeacon of Canterbury.
Taranto Philipof Burgundy, Count of Auvergne PhilipofPoitou, Prince-Bishop of Durham Philip Simonsson, claimant to the throne of Norway Philipof Saint-Pol...
1208 – PhilipofPoitou, Prince-Bishop of Durham 1322 – Francis of Fabriano, Italian writer (b. 1251) 1355 – Eleanor of Woodstock, countess regent of Guelders...
Julian of Cuenca, Spanish bishop (b. 1127) February 18 – Mark Ibn Kunbar, Egyptian Coptic priest April 22 – PhilipofPoitou (or Poitiers), bishop of Durham...
of England. Poitou was conquered by King Philip II of France in 1205 after he declared it a confiscated fief of the crown. Henry III of England failed...
called to the French court. Philip argued that he was summoning John not as the duke of Normandy, but as the count ofPoitou, which carried no such special...
II to answer complaints of the barons ofPoitou. Philip confiscates English lands in France, granting many of them to Arthur of Brittany. July – King John...
King Philip II of France. Both Henry and Hugh were the sons of the bishop's long term mistress, Alice de Percy. Alice may have been the mother of two more...
Empire gained him Poitou, Saintonge, Périgord and Angoumois as well as numerous cities in Languedoc, thus leaving the Angevin Kings of England with Gascony...
After the accession ofPhilip II of France, the throne became de jure as well as de facto hereditary, so that on the death of the king, the legal heir...
Roger the Poitevin or Roger de Poitou (mid-1060s – before 1140) was an Anglo-Norman aristocrat possessing large holdings both in England and through his...
title of Count of Poitiers (French: Comte de Poitiers, Latin: Comes Pictaviensis; or Poitou, in what is now France but in the Middle Ages became part of Aquitaine)...
John, and Philip and Gwyn fall in love. Pryde 2003, p. 37. Pryde 2003, p. 36-37. "Comptes d'Alfonse de Poitiers", Archives historiques du Poitou, vol. 4...
predeceased their father. By the age of 16, Richard had taken command of his own army, putting down rebellions in Poitou against his father. Richard was an...
of Durham is responsible for the diocese of Durham in the province of York. The diocese is one of the oldest in England and its bishop is a member of...
Philip V (c. 1291 – 3 January 1322), known as the Tall (French: Philippe le Long), was King of France and Navarre (as Philip II) from 1316 to 1322. Philip...
de Rancon, Dame de Fontenay in Poitou, at that time a part of the French duchy of Aquitaine, held by Queen Eleanor of England, her son Richard the Lionheart...
death of bishop PhilipofPoitou in 1208 King John appears to have raised money in the palatinate, but this was regarded as an infringement of local privilege...
recognition of John of England as king of England. 1204: confiscation of the Duchy of Normandy, the Touraine, Anjou, Saintonge and, temporarily, of the Poitou from...
youngest of the three sons of Empress Matilda and Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou. His brothers were Henry II of England and Geoffrey, Count of Nantes...
it was restored to his successor, PhilipofPoitou. The latter showed himself to be loyal to King John. When Philip died in 1208 the castle reverted to...
Seneschal ofPoitou was an officer carrying out and managing the domestic affairs of the lord of the County ofPoitou. During the course of the twelfth...