John de Grandisson, Bishop of Exeter

How are you related to John de Grandisson, Bishop of Exeter?

Connect to the World Family Tree to find out

John de Grandisson, Bishop of Exeter's Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

John de Grandison

Also Known As: "de Grandeson", "John de Grandisson"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Ashperton, Herefordshire, England
Death: July 16, 1369 (76-77)
London, Middlesex, England
Place of Burial: London, Greater London, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:

Son of William de Grandison, 1st Lord Grandison and Sibilla de Tregoz, co-heiress of Ewyas-Harold
Brother of Peter de Grandison, 2nd Lord Grandison; Agnes de Grandison, Lady Bardolf; Lady Catherine, Countess of Salisbury; Mabel de Grandison, Lady of Bletsoe and Otto de Grandison

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About John de Grandisson, Bishop of Exeter

John de Grandisson (1292 – 16 July 1369), also spelt Grandison, was Bishop of Exeter, in Devon, England, from 1327 to his death in 1369. Several works of art associated with him survive in the British Library, the British Museum and the Louvre in Paris.

Biography

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Grandisson

Grandisson was born in 1292 at Ashperton near Hereford, the second son of five of Sir William Grandisson (died 1335). Sir William was the heir of Otto de Grandson (died 1328), close personal friend of King Edward I, and head of the English branch of a family that was based at Grandson Castle, now in Switzerland. His mother, Sybil (died 1334), was a younger daughter and co-heir of Sir John de Tregoz.

He studied at Oxford in 1306, then from 1313 to 1317 he studied theology at the University of Paris under Jacques Fournier, who later became Pope Benedict XII. He returned to study at Oxford 1326–7. Later in Avignon he became the chaplain and friend of Pope John XXII, who mentored him and sent him on diplomatic missions. The Pope rewarded Grandisson by making him prebendary at York, Wells, and Lincoln, and, in October 1310, Archdeacon of Nottingham.

When his elder brother Peter died in 1358 without an heir, John became the head of the family.

Bishop of Exeter

Grandisson was nominated as Bishop of Exeter on 10 August 1327 and was consecrated on 18 October 1327 at Avignon. His enthronement at Exeter was on 22 August 1328.[2] He then differenced his paternal coat of arms by substituting a bishop's mitre for the central eaglet on the bend.

The Diocese of Exeter was in some disarray after the murder of Bishop Stapeldon in 1326 and the two succeeding short-lived bishoprics of James Berkeley and John Godeley. On his arrival in Exeter, Grandisson encountered a number of problems including debt, hostility from his chapter, and poor relations with Hugh de Courtenay, later to become Earl of Devon. However, his registers record his forceful personality which exhibited itself in his diligent enforcement of discipline, the suppression of abuses and punishment of offenders. On the other hand he took great care for the education and religion of the laity, encouraging interest in St Sidwell and urging the lives of Cornish saints to be recorded. His principal residence was on his manor of Chudleigh and he was evidently an unwilling traveller, only rarely leaving his diocese to attend parliament or an ecclesiastical convocation.

From Bishop Stapledon, Grandisson inherited a partly-rebuilt Cathedral. In December 1328 he consecrated the high altar and then started raising funds from the diocese to complete the nave, of which only the first bay had been completed. He was assisted by master mason, Thomas Witney, who had been working on the cathedral since about 1313. After Witney's death, c.1342, the work was continued by William Joy. Grandisson's main interests for the cathedral were his own chantry chapel, some of the roof bosses (especially the one depicting Thomas Becket's murder – a particular interest of his), and probably the minstrel's gallery.

In 1335 Grandisson founded a College of Secular Canons at Ottery St Mary in Devon, as a choir school for eight boys and a Master of Grammar, which survives today as The King's School. However, his largest project – in which he took a great personal interest – was the rebuilding and establishment as a collegiate church of the church at Ottery St Mary. Taking ten years from 1337, the rebuilding was contemporaneous with work ongoing at Exeter Cathedral and its construction mirrors several features of the cathedral. Grandisson's younger brother Otho helped fund the church and family heraldry appeared widely throughout the building, much of which has been later destroyed or restored away.

Grandisson donated the tenor bell in the south tower of Exeter Cathedral. Named "Grandison" and re-cast at least three times, most recently in 1902 by John Taylor & Co, the current bell bears the inscription "EX DONO IOHANNIS GRANDISON EPISCOPI EXON GVLIELMVS EVANS FECIT 1729".
During his episcopacy, he faced a number of anticlerical movements in Devon. For example, the Order of Brothelyngham—a fake monastic order of 1348—regularly rode through Exeter, kidnapping both religious and laymen, and extorting money from them as ransom. He also outlawed a popular cult that was being promoted by a house of canons at Frithelstock Priory.

Death and burial

Grandisson died at Chudleigh on 16 July 1369 and was buried in the chapel on the south side of the central doorway of the west front of Exeter Cathedral, a chapel that he had caused to be built. The chapel, dedicated to St Radegund, was defaced and his tomb was destroyed, probably early in the 16th century.

Surviving works of art

There survive two ivory triptychs and a diptych made in England in the 1330s for private devotion and inscribed with the emblems of John Grandisson as Bishop of Exeter. One of them, now known as the John Grandisson Triptych, held at the British Museum in London, is considered a masterpiece of English mediaeval carving. The diptych is in the Louvre Museum in Paris.

An important psalter known as the Grandisson Psalter, owned by Bishop Grandisson, survives in the British Library in London. It records Grandisson's death and the fact that he bequeathed it to royalty.

When Grandisson's looted tomb was reopened in 1956, a small enamelled gold ring was discovered. It shows the Virgin and child and has similarities with enamels created in Paris around the 1330s. It has been suggested that as it is too small to be worn over a glove it may have been one of his most treasured possessions, probably worn hidden from view on his little finger."

Grandison and Tregoz

www.geni.com/media/proxy?media_id=6000000197370330846&size=large

Source: Baronia Anglica Concentrata; Baronies in Fee. Vol II. by Sir T. C. Banks. Page 137. < Archive.Org >


English: Coat of arms of John Grandisson, Bishop of Exeter from 1327-1369, in his psalter. Blazon: Paly of six argent and azure, a bend sable charged with a mitre upon a priest's stole between two eagles displayed argent "Lives of the Bishops of Exeter" blazons his arms as: Paly of six argent and azure, a bend gules charged with a mitre between two eaglets displayed or, being Grandisson paternal arms differenced by substitution of the mitre for the middle eagle. Grandisson bequeathed his Psalter to Isabella, dau. of King Edward III.

www.geni.com/media/proxy?media_id=6000000197374073824&size=large

Source: This file has been provided by the British Library from its digital collections. < link > This work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 70 years or fewer. < Wikipedia >


References

  1. Baronia Anglica Concentrata, Or, A Concentrated Account of All the Baronies … Volume ll. by Thomas Christopher Banks. Publication date 1843. Page 137.< Archive.Org >
  2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Grandisson
view all

John de Grandisson, Bishop of Exeter's Timeline

1292
1292
Ashperton, Herefordshire, England
1369
July 16, 1369
Age 77
London, Middlesex, England
1934
September 22, 1934
Age 77
1992
March 17, 1992
Age 77
May 22, 1992
Age 77
1994
October 12, 1994
Age 77
1995
June 26, 1995
Age 77
July 20, 1995
Age 77
????
London, Greater London, United Kingdom