Robert de Bethune

Robert de Bethune
Bishop of Hereford
Interior view of Hereford Cathedral, where Robert de Bethune is buried.
Appointed1130
Term ended16 April 1148
PredecessorRichard de Capella
SuccessorGilbert Foliot
Other post(s)Prior of Llanthony
Orders
Consecration28 June 1131
Personal details
Died16 April 1148
Reims
BuriedHereford Cathedral

Robert de Bethune[a] (died 1148) was a medieval bishop of Hereford. From a knightly family, he became a teacher before becoming a canon by 1115. He was elected prior of Llanthony Priory in the middle 1120s, and was named bishop by King Henry I of England in 1130. As bishop, he was often appointed a judge by the papacy, and was known for the care he took of his diocese.

After Henry's death in 1135, Bethune first supported King Stephen, who seized the throne from Henry's heiress the Empress Matilda, but when Matilda's forces captured Stephen, Bethune switched sides to support Matilda. When Matilda did not secure the throne, Bethune once more switched back to supporting Stephen. Construction of Hereford Cathedral was completed under Bethune's episcopate, and consecrated in 1142 and 1148. Stephen appointed Bethune as one of the English bishops that the king allowed to attend the Council of Reims in 1148, and Bethune died there in April 1148. A hagiography is the only surviving evidence of Bethune's cathedral chapter's attempts to promote him as a saint.

  1. ^ Green Government of England p. 160
  2. ^ Sharpe Handlist of Latin Writers p. 525


Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha> tags or {{efn}} templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} template or {{notelist}} template (see the help page).