Hubert Walter
Hubert Walter (c. 1160 – 13 July 1205) was an English cleric and statesman who served as Archbishop of Canterbury from 1193 to 1205, Chief Justiciar of England from 1193 to 1198, and Lord Chancellor under King John from 1199 to 1205.[1] A key figure in the Angevin administration, he governed England effectively during King Richard I's absence on crusade and captivity, implementing measures to secure royal finances and maintain order.[2][3] The son of the Suffolk knight Hervey Walter and Matilda de Valoines—whose sister married Ranulf de Glanvill, Henry II's chief justiciar—Walter received his early training in Glanvill's household.[2] He rose through clerical and royal service, becoming dean of York in 1186, bishop of Salisbury in 1194 after election in 1189, and then archbishop following the death of Baldwin of Exeter.[2][1] Enthroned in November 1193 and appointed justiciar by year's end, he also received legatine authority from Pope Celestine III in 1195, enhancing his influence over church and state.[2] Walter's tenure as justiciar involved raising Richard's ransom through a unprecedented 25 percent levy on movables and revenues, alongside organizing shrieval audits and itinerant justices to improve accountability and justice administration.[3] These reforms bolstered fiscal efficiency but provoked monastic chroniclers' accusations of rapacity, though his actions preserved stability amid external threats. After Richard's return, he resigned the justiciarship in 1198 but continued advising, later serving John loyally until dismissed as chancellor in 1205 over policy disputes; he died weeks later at his Teynham manor.[1][2]