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  1. Roger of Worcester (c. 1134 – 9 August 1179) was Bishop of Worcester from 1163 to 1179. He had a role in the controversy between Henry II of England, who was Roger's cousin, and Archbishop Thomas Becket.

  2. ROGER OF WORCESTER. Bishop; b. c. 1133; d. Tours, France, Aug. 9, 1179. He was the son of Earl Robert of Gloucester (d. 1147) and grandson of henry i of England. He was educated at Bristol with his cousin (later henry ii) and at Paris under robert of melun. Roger doubtless owed his swift promotion to his royal connections, but was Thomas beck ...

  3. Cheney, M, Roger, Bishop of Worcester 1164–1179 (Oxford, 1980) Google Scholar. 11. Sayers, J, Papal Judges Delegate in the Province of Canterbury, 1198–1254 (Oxford, 1971), p 10 Google Scholar. Other frequent judges delegate during this period were Gilbert Foliot, Bishop of Hereford and later Bishop of London, and Bartholomew, Bishop of Exeter.

  4. Roger, Bishop of Worcester. Died at Tours, 9 August, 1179. A younger son of Robert, Earl of Gloucester, he was educated with the future king, Henry II, afterwards ordained priest, and consecrated Bishop of Worcester by St. Thomas of Canterbury, 23 Aug., 1163.

  5. Roger of Worcester was Bishop of Worcester from 1163 to 1179. He had a role in the controversy between Henry II of England, who was Roger's cousin, and Archbishop Thomas Becket.

  6. The Profession of Ecclesiastical Lawyers - May 2019

  7. Roger, Bishop of Worcester, 1164–1179. By Mary G. Cheney. Pp. xvi + 397 + 2 plates. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1980. £20. - Volume 33 Issue 4