About St. William of York
St. William (WILLIAM FITZHERBERT, also called
WILLIAM OF THWAYT).
Archbishop of York. Tradition represents him as
nephew of King Stephen, whose sister Emma was
believed to have married Herbert of Winchester,
treasurer to Henry I. William became a priest, and
about 1130 he was canon and treasurer of York. In
1142 he was elected Archbishop of York at the
insistance of the king, in opposition to the
candidature of Henry Murdac, a Cistercian monk. The
validity of the election was disputed on the ground
of alleged simony and royal influence, and
Archbishop Theobald refused to consecrate him
pending an appeal to Rome. St. Bernard exercised his
powerful influence against William in favour of
Murdac, but in 1143 the pope decided that William
should be consecrated, if he could clear himself
from the accusation of bribery, and if the chapter
could show that there had been no undue royal
pressure. William proved his innocence so
conclusively that the legate consecrated him
archbishop at Winchester 26 September, 1143. He set
himself at once to carry out reforms in his diocese,
and his gentleness and charity soon won him
popularity; but he neglected to obtain from Cardinal
Hincmar the pallium which Lucius II sent him in
1146, and the pope died before William had been
invested. The new pope, Blessed Eugenius III, was
himself a Cistercian, and the English Cistercians
soon renewed their complaints against William, which
St. Bernard supported. Meanwhile Hincmar carried the
pallium back to Rome, so that, in 1147, William had
to travel there to obtain it, raising the expenses
of his journey by sale of treasures and privileges
belonging to York. This afforded fresh matter of
complaint and finally the pope suspended him from
his functions on the ground that he had enthroned
the Bishop of Durham without exacting the pledges
required by the former pope.
William took refuge with his friend, the King of
Sicily, but his partisans in England took an unwise
revenge by destroying Fountains Abbey, of which
Murdac was now prior. This further inflamed St.
William's enemies, who again approached the pope,
with the result that in 1147 he deposed the
archbishop from his seat; and on the failure of the
chapter to elect a successor, he consecrated Murdac
in his stead. St. William devoted himself to prayer
and mortification at Winchester till 1153, when the
pope and St. Bernard were both dead. He then
appealed to the new pope, Anastasius IV, for
restoration to his see, a request which the death of
Murdac in October made it easier to obtain. St.
William having received the pallium, returned to
York, where he showed the greatest kindness to the
Cistercians who had opposed him, and promised full
restitution to Fountains Abbey. But his death, so
sudden as to cause suspicion of poison, took place
within a few weeks. Miracles took place at his tomb,
and in 1227 he was canonized by Pope Honorius III.
In 1283 his relics were translated to a shrine
behind the high altar of York Minster, where they
remained till the Reformation. His festival is
observed in England on 8 June.




