Peter of Savoy (Archbishop of Lyon)


Peter of Savoy, died in November 1332, was a prelate of the 14th century.
Peter was the son of Thomas III of Piedmont and Guyonne de Chalon. In 1304, he was Dean of Salisbury Cathedral and a canon.
In December 1308, he was appointed Archbishop of Lyon and Primate of Gaul.
Unlike his predecessor, Peter of Savoy does not accept the gradual takeover of the kingdom of France in Lyon. It therefore encourages residents to révolt, encourages them to strengthen the city walls, and he puts aside the historical dispute between the archbishop and cathédral chapter, providing a pretext for Philip the Fair to send his son Louis, King of Navarre and his brother Charles of Valois to lead an army besieging Lyon in 1310. The war ended with the intervention of the Archbishop's uncle, Amédée V of Savoie, who reluctantly agreed with the king's side not to be the next victim. A treaty was signed on 10 April 1312. But Peter losses control of Lyon to the King. The people of Lyon receive several franchises, such as the right to establish fees for the service of the city.
These are the subject of two written papers, one by clerics Lyon between the opening of the Council of Vienna on 16 October 1311 and the Treaty of 10 April 1312, appointed Grauamina, the other by the prosecutor of the bailiff Macon, between this treaty and the end of 1312. The first seeks to demonstrate that the royal depredations were huge, considering the 150 000 pounds tournaments; the second minimizes the contrary, bringing the cost to 10 000 pounds tournaments only. Of this, the royal treasury will not give in that 2000 livres, which the king added, by "royal munificence" 500 Other livres. These compensations are paid to the archbishop 27 December 1312.
In 1316, he sees the election and coronation of Pope John XXII in his city.