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Guy (bishop of Amiens)

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Although the genealogy of early Ponthieu and Boulogne is scanty (and the 12th century versions utterly unreliable, because of their efforts to tie the ruling houses of Boulogne and Ponthieu into earlier noble houses), it is most likely that Guy, the bishop of Amiens, was the uncle (and not the brother) of count Enguerrand II and his brother count Guy I of Ponthieu. Count Guy's father Hugh II was the son of Enguerrand I by an earlier marriage: Enguerrand evidently married a Boulognnais countess, the wife of Arnold II, who died in battle: from this later marriage came Guy and his brothers Fulk (later abbot of Forest l'Abbaye) and Robert.

Bishop Guy was educated for a career in the church at the abbey of St Riquier and was one of its most brilliant students. He may have been an archdeacon by 1045, and was bishop by 1058. "His predecessor to the episcopate of Amiens, Fulk II, was caught up in the emerging struggle between the secular clergy, dominated by the political contentions of the great feudal familes, and the reforming popes, with their bias in favour of monastic houses, which they often rendered exempt from episcopal jurisdiction." When Guy became bishop of Amiens he inherited the legal struggles of his predecessor; this eventually resulted in Guy being suspended from his duties as bishop, although he continued to rule the see as lord.

He was in this state of papal disfavor at the time of the Norman Conquest. This may have been the (contributing) reason why bishop Guy composed The Carmen de Hastingae Proelio (Song of the Battle of Hastings), as an effort to flatter the new Norman king of England, William I, who was then in very high favor with the pope. But if so, bishop Guy's poem failed in its purpose. He was highly enough thought of at the Norman court to be assigned as queen Matilda's chaplain when she went over to England for her coronation in 1068. But when bishop Guy died in 1075, he still had not regained his bishopric.

Source

The Carmen de Hastingae Proelio of Bishop Guy of Amiens, edited by Catherine Morton and Hope Muntz, Oxford at the Clarendon Press, 1972.