John Walton (bishop)

John Walton (d. ca. 1490) was an English canon regular who became Archbishop of Dublin.

Life

Little is known of his early life. In 1452 Walton was made Abbot of Osney, and in 1472 was elected as Archbishop of Dublin, and consecrated in England. In 1478 he managed through the Irish Parliament to obtain the restitution of some manors alienated by his predecessors. During his tenure Pope Sixtus IV authorized the re-establishment of the unsuccessful University of Dublin, but the plan was not carried out.[1]

Walton kept out of politics, and was overshadowed by his suffragan, William Sherwood, Bishop of Meath. He was completely unable to control Sir James Keating, the violent and turbulent Prior of the Order of Knights Hospitallers of Kilmainham. When he was replaced as Prior by the English monk Marmaduke Lumley in 1482, Keating had Lumley seized and imprisoned. Despite repeated orders from both Walton and the Archbishop of Armagh, Keating refused to release Lumley, who died in prison.

In 1484, blind and in bad health, he resigned the archbishopric. He retired to his manor of Swords, Dublin. On 17 March 1489 he emerged to preach a sermon for the Feast day of St. Patrick before the Lord Deputy at his former cathedral. He died soon afterwards, leaving bequests to Osney Abbey, where he had hoped to be buried, were his death to have occurred in England.[1]

Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Michael Tregury
Archbishop of Dublin
1472–1483
Succeeded by
Walter Fitzsimon

Notes

  1. Lee, Sidney, ed. (1899). "Walton, John (d.1490?)" . Dictionary of National Biography. 59. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Lee, Sidney, ed. (1899). "Walton, John (d.1490?)". Dictionary of National Biography. 59. London: Smith, Elder & Co.


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