and a ring Henry was brought to England by King
Henry I, to be
Abbot of Glastonbury. On 4 October 1129, he was given the bishopric of
Winchester and allowed to keep his beloved Glastonbury Abbey. He was consecrated bishop on 17 November 1129. He had ambitions to become
Archbishop of Canterbury but refused to abandon his work and obligations to Glastonbury. Soon after his appointment to the see of Winchester, Henry came to resent his subservience to Canterbury. He therefore set about building a powerbase to persuade the king to create a third,
West Country archdiocese with himself at the head. This scheme was unsuccessful. However, on 1 March 1139, during the reign of his brother Stephen, Henry obtained a commission as
papal legate, which gave him higher rank than
Theobald of Bec, Archbishop of Canterbury, making him the most powerful figure in the English Church during the troubled times of
The Anarchy. Thus, when his brother was unavailable, Henry of Blois was the most powerful and wealthiest man in England. Stephen of Blois was crowned King of England in 1135, but the relations between the two brothers were not always peaceful. After the
Battle of Lincoln in 1141, Henry found it more advantageous to support
Empress Matilda; but later found her arrogant and greedy. Later that year, Henry rejoined his brother's side and, with the help of Queen Matilda and an army commanded by
William of Ypres, his successful defence of Winchester against the Empress was the turning point of the civil war. As Abbot of Glastonbury, Henry remained in contact with
Peter the Venerable at
Cluny and was made aware of most of the controversies on the continent, specifically the persecution of
Peter Abelard (whom Peter the Venerable defended) and
the translation of the
Koran from Arabic to Latin (which Peter the Venerable commissioned). ==Architecture==