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Encyclopedia > Thomas Beckington

Thomas Beckington (c. 1390 - January 14, 1465), English statesman and prelate, was born at Beckington in Somerset, and was educated at Winchester and New College, Oxford.


Having entered the Church he held many ecclesiastical appointments, and became dean of the Arches in 1423; then devoting his time to secular affairs he was sent on an embassy to Calais in 1439, and to John IV, count of Armagnac, in 1442.


At this time Beckington was acting as secretary to Henry VI, and soon after his return in 1443 he was appointed Lord Privy Seal and bishop of Bath and Wells. The bishop erected many buildings in Wells, and died there on the 14th of January 1465. The most important results of Beckington's missions to France were one Latin journal, written by himself, referring to the embassy to Calais; and another, written by one of his attendants, relating to the journey to Armagnac.


Beckington's own journal is published in the Proceedings of the Privy Council, vol. v., edited by NH Nicolas (1835); and the other journal in the Official Correspondence of Thomas Bekynton, edited by G Williams for the Rolls Series (1872), which contains many interesting letters. This latter journal has been translated into English by NH Nicolas (1828). See GG Perry, Bishop Beckington and Henry VI., in the English Historical Review (1894).


Source

  • This article incorporates text from the public domain 1911 Encyclopędia Britannica.
Preceded by:
John Stafford
Bishop of Bath and Wells
1434–1465
Followed by:
Robert Stillington
Preceded by:
William Lyndwood
Lord Privy Seal
1443–1444
Followed by:
Thomas Moleyns

  Results from FactBites:
 
Thomas Beckington at AllExperts (287 words)
1390 – January 14, 1465), English statesman and prelate, was born at Beckington in Somerset, and was educated at Winchester and New College, Oxford.
At this time Beckington was acting as secretary to Henry VI, and soon after his return in 1443 he was appointed Lord Privy Seal and bishop of Bath and Wells.
The most important results of Beckington's missions to France were one Latin journal, written by himself, referring to the embassy to Calais; and another, written by one of his attendants, relating to the journey to Armagnac.
Beckington, Somerset, UK (4879 words)
Thomas Beckington was the son of a weaver and was born in Beckington in the 15th century.
Thomas Beckington eventually entered the church and was consecrated at Eton as Bishop of Bath and Wells by the Bishops of Lincoln, Salisbury and Llandaff.
In 1624 Beckington, Orcherley (Orchardleigh) and Phillips Norton (Norton St. Philip) each contributed an infantryman for Colonel Ralph Hopton's Frome contingent which, with other units of the British Army, was sent to the continent to re-instate the Queen of Bohemia, daughter of James 1st, on the throne.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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