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  1. 2 de ene. de 2003 · Lanfranc of Pavia was archbishop of Canterbury from 1070 to 1089, and so for nineteen critical years in the history of the Anglo-Norman church and kingdom after the Norman conquest of 1066. He came to Canterbury with long experience of intellectual and ecclesiastical currents, including reforming currents, in mid-eleventh-century western Europe.

  2. 11 de jul. de 2014 · Extract. It is the intent of this article to restore to Lanfranc's early career some of the luster that recent scholarly investigations have chipped away. I intend to show that historians have become overly skeptical of the traditional view of Lanfranc's dominating position during his eighteen years as prior of Bec ( c. 1045-63).

  3. Archbishop Lanfranc (b. about 1005 – d. 1089)William the Conqueror brought many followers from Normandy and put them in important positions in England to help him keep control. Lanfranc was the prior (the second-in-charge of a monastery after the abbot) of a Norman monastery at Bec. Before becoming a monk he had been a lawyer.

  4. 25 de mar. de 2011 · Extract. Lanfranc was born at Pavia early in the eleventh century, became a monk of Bee in Normandy about 1041, was promoted prior three years later, and was appointed abbot of Caen in 1063 and archbishop of Canterbury in 1070. He died in William Rufus's reign in 1089.

  5. Lanfranc. (1005-1089) Archbishop, Teacher & Scholar. Lanfranc was born around 1005 in Pavia, son of a Lombard local magistrate. He became a teacher, travelled north over the alps into France, and by 1039 was master of the cathedral school at Avranches in Normandy. After three years here he joined the Abbey of Bec as a monk, where he worked for ...

  6. Lanfranc crowned him at Westminster less than three weeks after the Conqueror's death. Lanfranc's name is, with that of his successor, St. Anselm, inseparably coupled with the thorny question of investitures, for the differences between king and primate, which came to a head under St. Anselm, showed their beginnings under Lanfranc.

  7. Lanfranc du Bec ( Lanfranchi en latin selon les textes mediévaux des abbayes normandes 1 ), également appelé Lanfranc de Cantorbéry ou Lanfranc de Pavie, né vers 1010 dans la région de Pavie ( Italie) et décédé le 28 mai 1089 à Cantorbéry ( Angleterre ), est un moine bénédictin, érudit, écolâtre et prieur du Bec en Normandie.

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