Ecclesiastical History
The ecclesiastical history of Oxfordshire begins at the year 634, the
date of the coming of Birinus. The account of him that is given
us in Bede is that, on his journey from Italy, Wessex was the first
part of Britain that he reached; that, finding it to be most pagan,
he preached the gospel there, and Cynegils, the king, became a catechumen.
When the time came for his baptism, Oswald, king of Northumbria, who
happened to be in Wessex at the time and was shortly to be his son-in-law,
stood to him as godfather; and the two kings joined in giving Birinus, who
was already a bishop, the 'city' called Dorcic as his episcopal seat. There,
after building churches and converting much people, he died and was buried,
but many years later his bones were translated to Winchester by Bishop
Haeddi. To this the Anglo-Saxon chronicle adds, that it was at Dorchester
that Cynegils was baptized, that in the following year (636) Cwichelm his
son was baptized there, dying soon after, and that Cuthred, son of Cwichelm,
was baptized at the same place in 639.
Why the bishop's seat was fixed at Dorchester, rather than at, or near,
Winchester, the capital of Wessex, we cannot tell. It may be that, as the
chronicle implies, Cynegils was not king of the whole of Wessex; or that a
spot towards the north was selected with a view to the conversion of Mercia;
or that a meeting between the kings of Wessex and Northumbria would
naturally take place near the northern boundary of Wessex, and the accident
that the king was baptized at that spot was the cause why the cathedral was
fixed there. How the king of Northumbria could join in the donation of the
site is not easy to understand.
Although Birinus was reckoned the apostle of Wessex and must have
worked mainly south of the Thames, yet his name is commemorated in
Oxfordshire only. The church of Dorchester bears the invocation of
St. Peter, St. Paul, and St. Birinus, and the village of Bicester, formerly spelt
Beren-cestre or Biren-cestre, connected with Dorchester by a small Roman
road, is generally supposed to bear his name. There is also in the parish of
Ipsden a place called Birin's Hill, and the word Ipsden, originally spelt
Bispesden, is said to mean 'hill of the bishop.'
About the year 642 Birinus died, and as the king died shortly after (fn. 1) and
his son and successor, Cenwalh, was a heathen, the bishopric remained vacant.
Ultimately after being in exile three years, Cenwalh returned to Wessex as a
Christian about 648, and being joined by Agilbert, a bishop from Gaul, but
without a diocese, who after studying in Ireland, preached the Gospel in
Wessex, he asked him to be bishop of Dorchester. But 'after many years,'
probably in 663, the king, who could talk nothing but Saxon, wearied with
the bishop's outlandish language, divided Wessex into two provinces, and set
up a new see at Winchester with a bishop named Wine, who knew the king's
language. Agilbert, in disgust, retired to Gaul and the bishopric of Dorchester came to an end. It may, however, have been revived some fifteen
years later; for Bede (fn. 2) mentions a certain Ætla, who was bishop of Dorchester,
and his latest editor thinks that about 679 the king of Mercia, having
extended his kingdom so as to include Oxfordshire, set up a Mercian see at
Dorchester, but that it came to an end in 686, when Caedwalla, king of
Wessex, recovered this district. The bones of Birinus were moved to Winchester by Haeddi, bishop of Winchester (676–703), though in later ages
Dorchester claimed to have them still. (fn. 3)
About two centuries later the bishopric was revived. It is true that the
tradition at Dorchester in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries was that there
had been an unbroken succession of bishops from the time of Birinus, and
even their names were given, Bertinus being the tenth (fn. 4) : but had it been so,
we could not have failed to find mention of them in history or as witnesses to
charters. It is not until we come to Bishop Ealheard, about 886, that we
meet the see of Dorchester once more. By the battle of Bensington in 777
Oxfordshire had passed finally under the kings of Mercia, and became part of
the diocese of Leicester, having previously been in the diocese of Sherborne;
and a century later, when the Danes overran the eastern and midland counties,
the bishop of Leicester removed his see, no doubt for safety, to Dorchester.
This change took place in the time of Bishop Ealheard (886–97); and as the
line of the bishops of Lindsey came to an end in 873 the jurisdiction of the
bishop of Dorchester reached to the Humber. When the conversion of
the Danes took place, the bishop of Dorchester was able to extend his see
once more, first over Leicestershire and then over Lincolnshire. When we are
told of Leofwine, bishop of Dorchester (953–65) (fn. 5) , that he united the sees of
Lindsey and Leicester, the meaning may be that he was the first after the
Danish invasion who was able to exercise episcopal functions in Lincolnshire.
Little is known of these bishops of Dorchester. We hear of a council
in 977 held at Kyrtlington, which there is good reason to think was Kirtlington in Oxfordshire, (fn. 6) but we are not given the names of those that were
present. In 1004 and 1005 we have the establishment of secular canons at
St. Frideswide's, and of Benedictine monks at Eynsham. (fn. 7) Also we know one
undoubted fact about Eadnoth I, bishop of Dorchester (1005–17), which
shows that Lincolnshire was part of his see. Hoveden mentions (fn. 8) that
Eadnoth, 'bishop of Lincoln,' (sic) founded a monastery at Stow in Lincolnshire. Freeman (fn. 9) thought the reference was to Eadnoth II (1034–50); but
a charter in the Eynsham Cartulary (fn. 10) not only mentions the monastery, but
asserts that it was founded before the time of Bishop Æthelric (1017–34),
and that he and his successor received two-thirds of the offerings that were
made there. This fact is interesting in view of the claim that was subsequently put forward by the archbishop of York, that Lincoln and Lindsey,
and in particular Stow and Louth, were by right part of his diocese. (fn. 11) Because
these claims were bought off by William Rufus, (fn. 12) it has been assumed that
they were valid: but the ecclesiastical authorities always decided that they
were untenable. Pope Nicholas in 1061 in a confirmation charter to Bishop
Wulfwig specially mentioned the district (parochia) of Lindsey and the church
of Stow, (fn. 13) and the action of Eadnoth in founding a monastery at Stow makes
it improbable that it was in the diocese of York at that time.
From the invocations of Oxfordshire churches little can be deduced about
the early history of Christianity in the county. The patron saint of Bicester
church, doubtless founded in early times, is Saint Edburga, but whether she
is the Edburga of Kent, or a local saint, commemorated also in the name Adderbury (originally Edburg-bury), is uncertain. On the southern slope of the site
of Oxford there were five adjacent parishes with unusual invocations; south of
the castle was the parish of St. Budoc or Buoc, a saint of Cornwall and Brittany,
now only commemorated at two churches in Devonshire and Cornwall; next
was the parish of St. Ebbe's, a saint found also at Shelswell, Oxfordshire,
and at two northern churches; next is St. Aldate, an unknown saint, who has
also a church in Gloucestershire; next was St. Frideswide to whose honour
there was dedicated only one other church in England; and lastly,
St. Edward King and Martyr, to whom there are three other churches.
St. Frideswide was undoubtedly a person who played some part in the ecclesiastical history of the county, but the details of her parentage and adventures
date only from the middle or end of the twelfth century, when she had been
made in a certain sense the tutelary saint of Oxford. Until the priory of
St. Frideswide was founded, she seems to have been of little fame; prominent
people desired to be buried at Abingdon, not at St. Frideswide's as far as we
know, (fn. 14) and the annual Oxford fair was not kept on her day but on the day of
St. Benedict even as late as the year 1228. (fn. 15) But we may credit the short
account given by William of Malmesbury, who wrote before, or about the
time of the foundation of the Augustinian canons of St. Frideswide, that she
was the daughter of a king or prince and founded a convent at Oxford. (fn. 16)
One record of the church in Oxfordshire during the Saxon period is to
be found in a manuscript of ecclesiastical canons, written about 1020, now
preserved in the Bodleian Library. (fn. 17) From the fact that there are notes on
one of the leaves in a contemporary hand, indicating that its owner had property at Thame, Banbury, and Aylesbury, localities where in later days the
bishops of Lincoln had possessions, it has been concluded that it belonged to a
bishop of Dorchester.
The Norman Conquest did not cause any violent change in the ecclesiastical affairs of the county. The Saxon bishop, Wulfwig, was not deposed; and
the lands which belonged to the see of Dorchester were not confiscated, but
the king treated them as he treated the lands of the great abbeys. He
imposed a certain amount of knight-service, and from the lands of the bishop
throughout the diocese the service of sixty knights could be demanded. The
bishop died in 1067 and the see was given to a Norman, named Remigius,
who had helped the Conqueror with men and money at the time of the
invasion.
Domesday Book shows how extensive were the possessions of the Church
in this county at the end of the reign of William I. The archbishop of
Canterbury had seven burgages in the town of Oxford, and 15 hides of land
in the county, being the manors of Newington and Britwell, given to his see
in 997 by Queen Emma. (fn. 18) The bishop of Winchester had similarly nine
burgages and the manors of Witney and Adderbury, containing 45 hides.
The bishop of the diocese had the three hundreds of Thame, Banbury,
and Dorchester, being 290 hides. Thame and Banbury were normal
hundreds, consisting of 100 hides, the manors in each hundred being adjacent;
but the hundred of Dorchester was composed of detached manors, viz.
Epwell in the north of the county, Waterstock (5 hides), a manor in Baldon
(7½ hides), South Stoke (17¼ hides), Dorchester, including Clifton Hampden,
Drayton, Stadhampton, and Chislehampton, and lastly a manor in Benson
called Fifhide, which is not actually mentioned in Domesday, but was
possessed by the bishop as early as we have any records about the parish;
these manors were thrown together into a hundred of 90 hides. The bishop
also had thirty houses in Oxford. But perhaps a better idea of the extent of
the bishop's holding is given by the number of his knights that were
enfeoffed in this county. In the year 1166 it was found that on his properties throughout the diocese the bishop had enfeoffed as many as 102 knights. (fn. 19)
Of this number thirty-two were reckoned to be within the hundreds of Banbury, Thame, and Dorchester; (fn. 20) and yet in each hundred the bishop had
retained for himself a manor, which belonged to the see until the Reformation, and he had also provided land for the foundation of the monasteries of
Thame, Dorchester, and Clattercote. (fn. 21) Although Oxfordshire was only oneeighth of the diocese, it supported more than a quarter of the knights of the
bishop.
In the year 1070 it was decided that the bishop's seat should be transferred from Dorchester to Lincoln. The Saxon system by which cathedrals
were erected in remote places had for some years been seen to be inconvenient, and on this ground it was decided that Remigius should remove to
Lincoln. It has generally been thought that this step was taken in consequence of the decision of the Council of London, in 1075, that episcopal sees
should be removed from insignificant towns; but a writ of William I (fn. 22) asserts
that he had moved the see with the counsel of Pope Alexander (1061–73),
and a charter of William II mentions that the transference of the see from
Dorchester 'where it had been founded of old without convenience or
adequate dignity,' was made 'with the authority of Pope Alexander and the
legates whom he sent hither especially to settle this matter.' (fn. 23) As the visit of
the legates was in 1070, we know the date when the decision was taken.
But, of course, it took many years before Lincoln was ready for the bishop:
a cathedral and other buildings had to be erected, and it was only in 1092
that the cathedral was sufficiently advanced for its dedication. Not only was
the cathedral to be transferred from Oxfordshire, but also the monastery of
Eynsham, which had been refounded by Remigius. (fn. 24) He did not, however,
live to see his plans completed, as he died in 1092, just before the date fixed
for the dedication.
The natural result of this removal was that Oxfordshire, which had been
the most episcopal county in the diocese, became the county least interested
in the see. It would not be true to say that it was in any way neglected by
the bishop, who, in spite of its distance from Lincoln, every year seems to
have paid visits to his manors of Banbury, Thame, and Dorchester; but the
cathedral, the choir, and the support of residentiary canons did not appeal to
the laity of Oxfordshire. Among the 1,500 charters in the muniment room
of the Dean and Chapter of Lincoln, conveying to the cathedral virgates,
rents, mills, and houses in the different counties of the diocese, there is no
gift from Oxfordshire, except that of the manor and church of Langford
given to the bishop by King Stephen, and 5s. in Langford given by a private
individual to the communa of the canons. Devout folk enriched the monasteries or hospitals in the county, but gave nothing to the cathedral.
The history of the bishops of the diocese will be found under 'Ecclesiastical History' in the Victoria County History of Lincolnshire, but something
may be said about the early archdeacons of Oxfordshire. Of the first, named
Alfred, nothing is known; but Walter, who succeeded him, was a man of
importance. He is described by Henry of Huntingdon (fn. 25) as a magnificent
orator (superlative rhetoricus), while Geoffrey of Monmouth (fn. 26) says 'he was
accomplished in the art of oratory and foreign history.' He is specially
famous as the patron and helper of Geoffrey, having provided him with a
book brought from Wales (ex Britannia), written in the Welsh language,
containing deeds of British kings. (fn. 27) Gaimar also, writing about the same
time, says that he had obtained 'the good book of Oxford, which belonged to
Walter the archdeacon.' (fn. 28) He was in office in 1112, (fn. 29) and was alive in 1149 (fn. 30)
or later. Le Neve assigns his death to 1151, and he was certainly dead by
12 May, 1151; for a deed of that date is attested by his successor, Robert
Foliot. (fn. 31) From a confirmation by Pope Eugenius (fn. 32) in 1145 we learn that he
was the provost or head of the secular canons of St. George's; and therefore
it was natural that when, in 1147, the canons of St. Frideswide's claimed the
church of St. Mary Magdalen, Oxford, against the canons of St. George's,
it fell to him to resist them. (fn. 33) Two years later all the possessions of
St. George's were given by the patrons to Oseney Abbey, saving the life
interest of each canon. Perhaps this step displeased him; for we are
informed (fn. 34) that he proceeded to erect on his prebend (fn. 35) a building, which he
called a church, in spite of the prohibition of the bishop of Lincoln, and gave
it to St. Frideswide's, whereby, in 1151, the latter house after his death laid
claim to his prebend, and apparently to the church of St. George's. (fn. 36) Both
Oseney and St. Frideswide's appealed to the pope, and the decision was given
against the latter, as had also been the case in 1147. Walter was probably
more prominent as a lawyer than as an ecclesiastic, and we find him one of the
judges in an important suit at Winchester in 1114 or earlier, (fn. 37) and justiciar at
Peterborough in 1125. (fn. 38) In 1129 the first witness to the foundation charter
of the abbey of Oseney is Walter the archdeacon, another being Geoffrey of
Monmouth; and the two names occur in a charter in the Godstow Cartulary, a grant by the archdeacon being witnessed by 'magister Galfridus
Artour.' (fn. 39) He was a benefactor to Godstow, leaving it his land at Shillingford, that had belonged to his wife (amica), by name Brityna, which she had
left to him. (fn. 40)
Of his successors it need only be said that Walter de Constantiis, who
was much employed at court, seems to have delegated his work as archdeacon
to subordinates; for we hear of a Philip, who was 'vice-archidiaconus' in
1175, while Nicholas of Lewknor held the same post in 1182. In the same
way Richard Grim of Aylesbury, canon of Lincoln, was vice-archdeacon to
John de Constantiis (1186–96), the reason in this case being that he was
taking a degree, 'dum in scolis moratur,' (fn. 41) and therefore unable to do his
work. His successor, Walter Map, appointed in 1196, was in possession of
the office in 1204 (fn. 42) and 1208. (fn. 43) When, therefore, we read (fn. 44) that John de Gray
was archdeacon of Oxford in 1200, we must conjecture 'Exoniae' for
'Oxoniae,' and substitute Exeter for Oxford. John de Tinemue, (fn. 45) the next archdeacon, was in office in 1215 and 1220, (fn. 46) and is said to have died in 1221. (fn. 47)
Some of these earlier archdeacons seem to have held the prebend of
Langford Ecclesia in Lincoln Cathedral. There is an original charter preserved at Lincoln, (fn. 48) no doubt of the year 1151, by which the Chapter gives
notification that
Robert, bishop of Lincoln, with our advice and assent, has granted to Robert, archdeacon
of Oxford, the church of Langford for his prebend, to be held with all its appurtenances as
freely as Ralph, dean of London, held it; so that this prebend should for ever be joined to
the archdeaconry of Oxford, and from henceforth every archdeacon of Oxford shall be a
canon of the church of Lincoln by means of this prebend.
Some such provision was necessary in 1151, on the death of Walter, the late
archdeacon, who having his canonry in the chapel of St. George's, Oxford,
would have required no provision from the cathedral of Lincoln. The new
arrangement, like many other schemes in connexion with the prebends of
Lincoln, was soon abandoned. The prebendary of Langford ecclesia about
1205–10, described (fn. 49) as 'magister W.,' may have been Walter Map, archdeacon of Oxford; in 1233 another archdeacon held the same prebend, (fn. 50)
and his predecessor therein was John de Tynemue, (fn. 51) who was also among the
archdeacons of Oxford. But in June, 1249, and October, 1275, it was held
by William de Pokelinton and William de Merleberge, (fn. 52) neither of whom
were archdeacons, and from 1330, at which date Le Neve begins his list of
the prebendaries of Langford Ecclesia, the archdeacons of Oxford rarely, if
ever, held this prebend.
Besides this prebend of Langford Ecclesia, Oxfordshire supplied the
maintenance for six other canons. As is well known, the number of
prebends at Lincoln Cathedral was gradually increased. Bishop Remigius
founded twenty-one, his successor, Robert Bloett, increased them to forty-two,
Bishop Alexander added 'several'; and Robert de Chesney added one,
raising the number to fifty-four. (fn. 53) This last addition we can identify with
the prebend of Langford Manor, a charter in the Godstow Cartulary (fn. 54)
definitely stating that Robert de Chesney turned his manor into a prebend.
It had originally been the property of Roger bishop of Salisbury, (fn. 55) and may
have passed from him to his nephew, Bishop Alexander. It was at first one
of the demesne manors of the bishop, but about 1152 was, as we have seen,
made a prebend.
Langford Ecclesia was granted (fn. 56) to Bishop Alexander by King Stephen,
probably in 1142, and seems to have been made a prebend at once, being
given to Ralph, who is distinguished in the list of deans of St. Paul's as
Ralph of Langford.
The churches of Thame, Banbury, and Cropredy supplied the maintenance for three more canons, but as we find Bishop Robert Bloett granting
portions of tithe in these churches to the monastery of Eynsham, (fn. 57) it is clear
that these three were not among the twenty-one prebends instituted by
Bishop Remigius, his predecessor.
Milton manor, which formed a sixth prebend, was probably set aside in
early times; perhaps by Remigius. A confirmation by Pope Eugenius in
1146 defines it as 'half the manor of Milton,' i.e. twenty hides, the remainder
being held by one of the knights of the bishop. In some of the Lincoln
deeds the prebend is described as 'Milton cum Binbrook,' no doubt because
land at Binbrooke, Lincolnshire, was attached to augment this prebend.
The last prebend, Milton Ecclesia, dates from 1290. The church of
Milton with several other churches had previously been attached to the rich
prebend of Aylesbury, but after the monks of Eynsham had surrendered (fn. 58)
their portion of tithes in Milton, there was sufficient maintenance for a
canon, and thus Bishop Oliver Sutton, with the consent of Pope Nicholas,
constituted a new prebend.
There were also in this county ten hides in Horley and Hornton
attached to the prebend of King's Sutton held with that prebend by the archdeacon of Bucks about the year 1219, (fn. 59) and also in 1239. (fn. 60) Oxfordshire
therefore, though in size only one-eighth of the diocese of Lincoln, supplied
more than seven prebends to the cathedral out of a total of fifty-six.
Passing now to the early ecclesiastical history of the parishes of the
county, when we ask at what date they were organized, and how many parish
churches there were in early times, we find that we have no complete
ecclesiastical survey of the county before the 'Taxatio' of 1291. Domesday
Book, which mentions churches in some counties, pays no attention to them
in Oxfordshire, but such evidence as there is suggests that there were more
than 150 churches in the county when the book was compiled. The number
has not usually been estimated as high as this, and because the 'Taxatio'
mentions only 188 churches, it is assumed that the number in 1086 would
not have been more than 100; but it is easy to prove from the Institutions
of the bishops of Lincoln, which begin in 1215, and from attestations to early
charters, that the 'Taxatio' is incomplete; for one reason or another, sometimes
because the churches were too poor to be taxed, sometimes because they were
appropriated to the Templars or the Hospitallers, it omits more than a
quarter of the churches that existed in 1291; and it would be safe to say
that there were as many churches and chapels-of-ease in the county in the
year 1200 as there were six centuries later. To constitute a new parish was
a difficult matter after the beginning of the thirteenth century, or even
earlier; the mother-church, without whose consent it could not be done,
was unwilling to part with its tithes; and it may be assumed as a general
rule that any parish mentioned in the Valor of 1535 was in existence in the
year 1200; at all events in Oxfordshire we have sufficient evidence to show
that this was the case.
The result of a survey of the county is to show that the number of
churches and chapels in 1291 must be raised to 260 or 265; and although
Milcombe Chapel and some others may have been built in the thirteenth
century, yet the evidence of charters and of the rolls of institutions proves
that in the year 1200 we cannot place the number lower than 250. In
the previous century the building of churches and the formation of
parishes was more rapid; but the cartularies of monastic houses of Oxfordshire which carry us back to 1130 or 1140 show that there was no radical
difference in the last sixty years of the twelfth century; and it would be
unwise to estimate the number of churches in the county at the time of the
Domesday Survey at much less than 180, of which 150 would be parish
churches.
The foundation of religious houses in Oxfordshire followed the usual
lines: first came Benedictine houses, then in the reigns of Henry I and
Stephen the Austin and Cistercian rules became more popular. The earliest
monastery of the county was Eynsham, a Benedictine house, dating from the
reign of William II. In the reign of Henry I the Austin houses of
St. Frideswide and Oseney were founded; Dorchester and Cold Norton in the
reign of Stephen; Bicester in the reign of Henry II; and Wroxton, the last,
in 1217. It must not be forgotten that those who followed the Austin rule
were not monks, and though their houses were called monasteries in later
days, and became much the same as houses of monks, this was not the
original intention. It was meant at first that the canons should take charge
of parish churches, living together in scattered clergy-houses, and as late as
1220 (fn. 61) it was expected that the canons of Oseney would, as a rule, be living
in parishes that were appropriated to their house, though there would be
vicars to do the parish work. All the Austin houses of Oxfordshire, except
Cold Norton, show in their foundation this feature of the Austin rule, in that
they were all endowed with churches. St. Frideswide's was given six or
seven churches at its foundation; Oseney was given five or six; Dorchester
was granted all the daughter churches of the old cathedral; Bicester was
given three or four churches; and even Wroxton was granted one church at
its foundation. But the Cistercian houses on the other hand—Thame and
Bruern—were given no churches, though they obtained a few rectories in
later days.
Although the Benedictine rule for men seemed to lose its popularity
early in the twelfth century, so that after that time the stricter Cistercian rule
superseded it, this did not apply to houses for women. There were no
Cistercian houses for women in the county, and though one of the earliest of
the nunneries, Goring, was of the Austin order, Godstow, Littlemore, and
Studley, which were founded in the reigns of Henry I, Stephen, and Henry II,
adhered to the Benedictine rule. But a fuller account of the foundation and
growth of the religious houses will be found elsewhere.
Besides monks and canons there were also in the county several anchorites
at various times and a few hermits. The former, who were also called
incluses or recluses, were men or women who had attached themselves to
some church, living in an annexed building like a vestry, with a window, if
not a door, opening into the church. One of the earliest is the Mathew
inclusus of Holywell Church of whom we hear about 1180. (fn. 62) At Iffley there
was a reclusa named Annora, to whom the king made grants of firewood in
1233 and 1234 (fn. 63) and of a pension of 100s. a year. (fn. 64) From these entries we
see that anchorites did not always lead a life of great discomfort or destitution;
and we hear in several Oseney charters of an inclusa of Faringdon in Berkshire,
who owned house property in Oxford. In 1242 the king 'grants to Alice,
who has taken a vow to serve God in some solitary place, that she may build
a reclusorium on the north side of the church of St. Budhoc in Oxford'; (fn. 65) and
in 1271 Nicholas de Weston (fn. 66) leaves by will the sums of 3s. to the anchorite
of St. Budoc's; 2s. to those of Crowmarsh and Faringdon (Berkshire); 1s. to
those of Horsepath, Hinxey, Seacourt (Berkshire), St. Giles's (Oxford), St.
Peter's and St. John's; and as the will contains legacies to all religious houses
in or near Oxford, it is probable that this is a complete list of the anchorites of
the neighbourhood. The word anachorita, which is used, need not imply that
they were men; probably the majority were women. Besides joining in the
service of the church, they were useful as caretakers of churches; for it is by
no means the case that they were immured in their cells. Of one, probably
the recluse of the church of St. Thomas, Oxford, we read (fn. 67) that while she
hardly ever left the building, most of her time was spent within the church,
and the young clerk, there mentioned, conversed with her, apparently as she
was coming into the church. From the entry in the Patent Rolls concerning
the church of St. Budoc, and from entries about anchorites in other counties,
it is clear that an anchor-hold could not be erected without the consent of the
patron of the church.
Hermits, who were fewer in number than anchorites, lived in secluded
places, and generally, if not always, had a chapel in which they ministered.
Such was Ralph, the hermit of Musewell Hill in the parish of Piddington,
who built there the chapel of St. Cross about 1140, and about 1153 gave it
with its endowments to Missenden Abbey. (fn. 68) In a Bruern deed, (fn. 69) certainly
earlier than 1175, one of the witnesses is Robert 'heremita, diaconus de
Holawella,' probably Holwell in Bradwell parish; and possibly this chapel,
which served an outlying part of the parish, was first constructed by or for
him. A third hermit was Simon Kirton, hermit of the chapel of Newelme
in Wychwood, who in 1403 had licence from the king to enclose two crofts
in the forest. (fn. 70) A successor of his was Thomas Wylkys, hermit of Newelme,
who made his will 23 September, 1458, leaving 3s. 4d. to the repair of the
chapel of Newelme, where he wished to be buried; 3s. 4d. to the abbey of
Bruern; money, a cow, and a horse to various relations; and vestments to the
chapel of Leafield. (fn. 71) Subsequently the chapel of Newelme must have been
granted to Bruern Abbey, but in the Valor of 1535 it was asserted that the
king did not allow the abbey to obtain possession of it. (fn. 72) At Finmere also
there was a hermit, apparently a monk from Bradwell in Buckinghamshire,
about whom we have the curious notice in the Close Rolls of 1228, that the
forester of Shotover Forest was to take the hermitage of Finmere into the
king's hand, and make provision for the celebration of divine service there,
enjoining William the monk of Bradwell to return to his monastery and
remain there. (fn. 73) As a hermit's life was considered to be more strict than life
in a monastery, those who had entered religion would occasionally become
hermits. Thus in the time of Abbot Clement (1205–21) a canon of Oseney
named Wiger retired with the consent of his superiors to a life of solitude 'at
a place called Kibbeclive.' (fn. 74)
Concerning the origin of vicarages and their extent in early times, we
have in Oxfordshire, in common with the other archdeaconries of the diocese
of Lincoln, unusually full evidence. The Liber Antiquus (fn. 75) gives the vicarages
that were in existence towards the end of the time of Bishop Hugh, and the
rolls of institution of himself (fn. 76) and his successors give us some additional
information. We are here using the word 'vicarage' as it was applied to
parishes where the church was held by a monastery; for, as the rolls of
institutions of Bishop Hugh reveal, there were in early days a large number
of vicarages of a different kind, where the rector of a parish presented a vicar,
either because he himself was not in holy orders, or because he was an official
of the church and unable to reside on his cure. In these cases the vicar was
more than a chaplain as he held his post for life, but on his cession or death,
the vicarage and rectory might be united, or, to use the technical term,
consolidated. Probably the words vicar and vicarage were first used in such
cases, and there is mention of a vicar of this kind as early as 1183 in Mickleton
in Gloucestershire. (fn. 77) In Oxfordshire we find several parishes with both
rectors and vicars: Haseley, Albury, Launton, Tackley, Islip, Godington,
Swalcliffe, Chesterton, Drayton, Swerford; (fn. 78) but when opportunity offered the
rectory and vicarage were consolidated. In most of these cases the rectory
was of less value than the vicarage, and at St. John's, Oxford, was worth only
2s. a year, (fn. 79) and the vicars were in some cases men of position; thus the rural
dean of Woodstock, 'Thomas de Bertona,' a witness to several charters, proves
to have been not the rector, but the vicar, of Westcot Barton. (fn. 80) Rectories of
this kind were created for the benefit of clerks of good family or high official
position, who by this means were enabled either to receive some of the
emoluments of a church without proceeding to holy orders, or to evade the
rule of the church that no one should hold more than one benefice with cure
of souls; for if the cure of souls was attached to the vicarage, it was legitimate to hold more than one rectory. Among these absentee rectors we find
Giraldus Cambrensis, rector of Chesterton, but with a resident vicar. (fn. 81) These
irregular vicarages were gradually suppressed, and the purposes for which they
were originated were in later ages secured by obtaining a papal dispensation.
Thus Ralf Despencer, whose father, Almaric, held six or eight knight's fees,
obtained a papal dispensation in 1234, that though he was already rector of
Ewelme (and apparently also canon of Southwell), he might hold in addition
the rectory of Great Rollright, because of his 'good birth, high character, and
scholarship.' (fn. 82)
Perpetual vicarages in Oxfordshire, with the rectory appropriated
to some monastic house, were as many as forty-six before 1235, (fn. 83) and this
without reckoning Benson, Warborough and the other daughter-churches
of Dorchester, which were treated as chapels rather than vicarages. And the
custom of appropriations continued down to the eve of the dissolution of the
monasteries. Under Bishop Grosteste vicarages were established at Cuddesdon
in 1237 and Fulwell in 1238; (fn. 84) under Bishop Gravesend at Clanfield in
1267, Bix Brand in 1275, (fn. 85) Brize Norton about 1268, (fn. 86) and St. Peter's in the
East in 1266. (fn. 87) In 1295 the church of Charlbury was appropriated to
Eynsham; (fn. 88) Northleigh to Hailes Abbey in 1304; (fn. 89) Great Tew to Godstow
in 1309; (fn. 90) Enstone to Winchcombe Abbey in 1310; (fn. 91) and Chalgrove to
Thame Abbey in 1319. (fn. 92) Under Bishop Burghersh we have two appropriations—St. Mary, Oxford, appropriated to Oriel College in 1326, (fn. 93) and
Ambrosden to the house of Ashridge in 1334. (fn. 94) Immediately after the
Black Death we find Beckley appropriated to the nuns of Studley in 1352,
Deddington to the canons of Windsor in 1353, and Merton to the monks of
Eynsham in 1354; (fn. 95) while Steeple Aston was obtained by Cold Norton in
1382, North Stoke by the nuns of Bromhall about 1392, and Adderbury by
New College in 1396. (fn. 96) In 1398 St. Frideswide's was allowed to appropriate
Churchill, and Eynsham the churches of South Stoke, South Newington, and
Combe. (fn. 97) In 1412 the canons of Chalcombe appropriated the church of
Barford, (fn. 98) but the troubles of the fifteenth century seem to have reduced most
churches to such poverty that it was impossible to allow an appropriation,
and the only other case is in 1506 when Stanton Harcourt with the chapel of
Southleigh was appropriated to Reading Abbey. (fn. 99) But though the monasteries
drew large sums from parish churches, they were not without conscience,
and occasionally when a vicarage sank in value would surrender the rectory
which had been appropriated to them. Thus in 1465 the abbey of Eynsham
consolidated the rectory and vicarage of Combe; (fn. 100) and Oseney Abbey did the
same at Chastleton in 1459. (fn. 101) Four years earlier the canon of Salisbury who
held the prebend of Shipton-under-Wychwood endowed the vicarage anew
because of its poverty. (fn. 102)
It is sometimes assumed that perpetual vicarages were first instituted
by Bishop Hugh Wells of Lincoln (1209–35), but several were settled by
his great predecessor, St. Hugh (1186–1200). Thus in 1197 he allowed
Eynsham to appropriate the church of Cassington, reserving for the vicar a
portion of 5 marks; (fn. 103) and shortly afterwards he instituted 'to the perpetual vicarage' of Souldern. (fn. 104) The language used in this case is noticeable,
for in later times the incumbent of Souldern was called rector, not vicar.
The explanation is that as Eynsham took an annual payment from the
church of Souldern, it was undecided at first in this and other instances,
whether this payment was to be considered the rector's share, in which case
the incumbent would be the vicar; and it is not easy to draw a sharp
distinction between an appropriated church and a church which paid a
pension, except that in the former case there was always a rectorial manse as
well as a house for the vicar, and the monastic rector collected his share of the
tithes and stored them at the rectory. At all events it was settled by the
year 1220 that the churches which paid pensions to Eynsham were to be
reckoned rectories, not vicarages.
In Oxfordshire we can illustrate—what was true of all other counties—
how great was the difference in wealth and social position between the higher
and the lower clergy. Whatever may have been the gulf between the wealth
of bishops and the poverty of the parish clergy in the seventeenth or eighteenth
centuries, it is as nothing to what we find in the Middle Ages. From the
rules of the Council of Oxford in 1222, and from the vicarages appointed by
Bishop Hugh we learn that 5 marks a year was a minimum stipend for the
parish clergy, while £5 was ample; and so little did prices vary for the next
three centuries that in the collection for the subsidy of 1526 we find that £5
a year was the average pay of a curate at that time, while a chantry was
adequately endowed with £6 or £7 a year. Nor must it be thought that
these were any casual emoluments to eke out the stipend; for in estimating
the value of a vicarage allowance was evidently made for all that might
be expected from legacies and offerings. (fn. 105) It may be estimated that a vicar
received nearly the same pay as an artisan or double the pay of a labourer.
When the buildings of Magdalen College were being erected in 1467 the
labourers received about 20d. a week (fn. 106) and skilled masons 3s.; two and a half
centuries earlier 2d. a day was the pension of old servants of the king; (fn. 107) and
the current allowance for anchorites was 1½d. a day and 10s. a year for
clothes. (fn. 108) But if it is true that the parish clergy were not in actual want,
their position was very different from that of those who by high birth or
abilities became prebendaries or archdeacons. In Oxfordshire we find
prebends ranging from that of Banbury worth £30 a year to Thame worth
£112; (fn. 109) and pluralism was so developed in the Middle Ages, that few were
content with one prebend. A return (fn. 110) made in 1366 of the benefices held
by some of the higher clergy of the diocese of Lincoln shows that one of the
canons held prebends in four cathedrals together with two rectories, that his
income from all sources was about £150, and that many others had as much.
Archdeacons were even more wealthy, the archdeacon of Oxford obtaining
from procurations and synodals the sum of £131, (fn. 111) his outgoings being
reckoned at only £30; in addition to this he always held the rectory of
Iffley and one of the prebends of Lincoln. More wealthy still was the bishop,
with an income of £1,008 in 1168, (fn. 112) reckoned at £1,340 in the year 1225, (fn. 113)
more than two hundred times the income of a vicar.
Of the inner life of the Church in this county during the Middle Ages,
of its working and influence in town or country it is difficult to form any
estimate. We know that during the century (1135–1220) when England
was seething with religious excitement, a century of miracles and visions, of
crusades and interdicts, Oxford felt the movement as much as any place. In
1180 after a succession of miracles, the bones of St. Frideswide were translated with the king's consent and in the presence of many bishops, and a
manuscript (fn. 114) describes how from parishes throughout the county those that
were sick journeyed to her tomb and recovered; one even that had obtained
no benefit at the shrine of St. Thomas was healed at hers. Sixteen years
later a vision (fn. 115) seen by Edmund, a monk of Eynsham, created no little stir,
and is doubly interesting if, as seems probable, the monk was a native of the
town of Oxford, and the instances he gives of virtue and vice rewarded in
the other world were taken by him from among his neighbours and acquaintances. The work as a whole gives the impression that there was much
intellectual and religious activity at Oxford at the end of the twelfth century,
the period when St. Edmund and Grosteste were studying and lecturing there.
It was a time when Oxford was specially prominent; in 1166 a council was
gathered there to condemn a certain heresy, the king himself being present. (fn. 116)
In 1180 he was in Oxford again when the bones of St. Frideswide were
translated, though he was unable to attend the ceremony; his son Richard I
was born at the palace of Beaumont, in the parish of St. Mary Magdalen;
the court was frequently at Woodstock, and a council was held there in 1186,
attended by five bishops; (fn. 117) while in 1197 there was a gathering (fn. 118) of bishops
and statesmen at Oxford to discuss the demands of Richard I. Probably the
town has never seen so much of kings and bishops as during those forty years.
Finally in 1222 there was a great council at Oseney Abbey under Stephen
Langton.
With the year 1215 the episcopal registers commence, but unfortunately
for the first seventy-five years only the rolls of institutions survive. The other,
and for our purpose more valuable, records of the general business of the
diocese, which certainly were at one time in existence, have been missing for
the last 300 years. But incomplete as they are, the registers throw some
light on the church history of the county. As the enthusiasm for monasteries subsided we find new kinds of religious foundations coming to the fore.
Apart from support given to the friars, of which the episcopal registers give
us no information, much money was spent in the thirteenth and following
centuries on the erection and maintenance of private chapels, to be served by
private chaplains. These chapels were of every variety of status, and had no
uniformity or fixed type. Some were temporary, some were permanent; in
a few cases there were endowments, generally none; sometimes there was no
separate building but only an oratory in the house. An early private chapel
was that of Roger de St. John, established by him at Great Barton about
1205–15 with the consent of Oseney Abbey, to whom the church of the
parish was appropriated. (fn. 119) The same house granted the right of a private
chapel to Ralf Hareng (fn. 120) (1221–8) at Thrup in the parish of Kidlington, and
at a later date to Hugh de Plecy on his manor of Kidlington; (fn. 121) in the former
case the privilege was temporary, lasting only for the life of the recipient, in
the latter case it was permanent and was to descend to Hugh's heirs, Oseney
receiving in return an annual payment of 5s. Matthew de Bixtrop (1221–8)
obtained a similar grant from Eynsham for his chapel at Forest Hill, and the
roll of Bishop Grosteste mentions the establishment of such chapels at Ewelme
in 1237 and at Hide in Whitchurch in 1244. In this last case the privilege
was to be permanent, and the chapel was to be endowed, but it might not
possess either bell or font; the chaplain, to be nominated by the patron, was
to be presented to the bishop and was called the rector of the chapel. Sometimes, in cases where the chapel was endowed, the rector or vicar of the
parish was willing to take charge of it, as at Little Haseley (fn. 122) or at Standhill in
the parish of Pyrton, so that though erected for the convenience of the
resident lord they became parochial chapels-at-ease. Standhill chapel, which
has long been destroyed, had good endowments, which still survive. (fn. 123) Sometimes the inhabitants of an outlying hamlet would build a chapel for themselves and engage a chaplain, as at Wheatley, where in 1523 the chapel was
served by a friar who celebrated mass on festivals for a stipend of 40s. paid by
the parishioners. (fn. 124) All such chapels could only be established with the consent
of the parson or the monastic house to which the church had been appropriated, and the terms that could be obtained from them varied in different
cases, but it was generally stipulated that the chapel should not be used by
the parishioners at large, at all events for rites and ceremonies to which
a payment was attached, and that the lord and his family should use the
parish church for baptisms, churchings, burials, and certain occasions on
which special offerings would be made. Sometimes it was laid down that
he should attend on the great festivals and make his confession there. At
Kidlington (fn. 125) it was also agreed that 'if a new knight was made at the manor
house, he should offer and redeem his sword, according to custom, at the
parish church,' not in the private chapel. These agreements were altered
from time to time, and more favourable conditions might be granted by the
parson in return for some benefit to the parish church.
Few of these private chapels survive, and probably there is only one
which has been in continual use from the fourteenth century—the chapel at
Stonor near Henley. This was probably erected in the reign of Edward II;
for it is recorded that with the consent of the bishop two of the daughters of
Sir John de Stonor were married there in 1331 by the vicar of Pyrton. (fn. 126)
Besides chapels, there were oratories licensed by the bishop for one or
two or five years, or sometimes for the life of the petitioner. Such licences
were given, it seems, only to a lord of a manor or to priests who for some
reason desired to have a private oratory. They were renewed from time to
time and occur in great numbers in the episcopal registers. In one case a
nobleman, Adam de Shareshulle, in 1338 obtained leave for one year to have
divine service said by his chaplain in two parochial chapels, at Lyneham and
Ascot respectively (fn. 127) ; and six years earlier the abbey of Dorchester had a
similar licence for a chapel they had erected at Huntercombe, (fn. 128) but as it was
not renewed at the termination of the year we may perhaps conclude that
Dorchester did not find it to be a satisfactory arrangement.
Towards the end of the thirteenth century we meet with another kind
of foundation, of more expense and wider benefit, namely chantries. They
were endowments of land or rent sufficient to maintain at least one priest,
whose work was to say mass and the hours daily in the parish church with
certain additional devotions at special seasons; in most cases a special chapel
was built for his use. The main purpose of those who founded them was,
according to their own assertions, the increase of the dignity of divine
worship; a secondary purpose was connected with the doctrine of purgatory;
a third was to supply the parish priest with an assistant; for though the
chantry priest had no share in the work of the parish, he was in some cases
to assist at mass according to the directions of the parish priest, and in all
cases it must have been a convenience to the parishioners to have a second
mass at which they could make their communions on the great festivals.
The first chantry to be instituted was apparently that at Minster Lovell,
founded and endowed by John Lovel in or about 1273 'in the chapel of
St. Cecilia in the cemetery of the church of Minster.' (fn. 129) In 1307 a chantry
was founded in a chapel of the church of Rousham by Walter de Ailesbury,
lord of the manor, and endowed with rents to the value of five marks; and
the rector of the parish considering that the said chantry would be useful to
his church granted a house for the use of the chaplain. (fn. 130) Earlier than this,
in fact before 1290, the chantry of St. Mary had been founded by Richard
Wale in the parish church of Chipping Norton, at the altar of St. James
'which was erected in the old chapel of Norton' (fn. 131) ; he endowed it with 60s.
of rent annually, and presented William Wale. In 1307 its establishment
is attributed to the late 'magister' William Wale, and the late rector of
Chipping Norton had augmented its income by 20s. a year. (fn. 132) At Chastleton
there was a chantry in the chapel of St. Mary, adjoining the parish church,
founded in 1336 by John de Trillowe, lord of the manor; (fn. 133) and at Standlake
a chantry at the altar of the Holy Cross, established in 1354 by Simon de
Evesham, rector of Standlake. (fn. 134) The regulations of this foundation forbade the
chantry priest to undertake a parochial chaplaincy for more than fifteen days
in the year, or any secular office which involved the rendering of accounts;
besides his duties of prayer and mass, he was to choose one of the boys of
the village and teach him the scriptures and singing for a period of ten years,
paying him 6d. a week for his maintenance; the patronage of this chantry
was to belong to the rectors of Standlake. But it was at Oxford that chantries
were chiefly founded, most of the leading burgesses of the fourteenth century
being commemorated in that way. In 1323 Robert de Wormenhale endowed
a chantry at the altar of St. Andrew in the church of St. Peter le Bailey
with rents worth 70s. a year, and presented a missal worth 40s., a chalice
worth 16s., 'four towels for covering the altar while service is being celebrated,' and two sets of vestments. (fn. 135) In 1336 John de Dokelinton, who had
been mayor nine times, ordained a chantry in St. Aldate's church 'in the
chapel which is of my own building' and endowed it with 5 marks a year. (fn. 136)
Four years later a similar foundation was made by Thomas de Leigh at the
altar of St. Mary in the church of St. Michael outside the south gate; the
chaplain was to receive 5 marks a year and live as far as possible among
'scholars'; he was even assigned some parochial work, and with the consent
of the rector of the parish might hear the confessions of those who, residing
outside the city, were seized with sudden illness at night, when the gates were
shut, so that the rector could not come to them. (fn. 137) But in 1357 it was found
that rents had fallen so much owing to the pestilence that the original endowments no longer sufficed to maintain a chaplain, and at the request of the
founder's son the chantry was granted to Oriel College. In 1350 Nicholas
de Burcester, son of the William de Burcester who was mayor twelve times,
left endowments for a chantry in All Saints' church, in the chapel of St. Anne,
which was 'founded and built by his progenitors.' (fn. 138) Finally, a chantry in
memory of John de Stodley, mayor eight times, was established by his widow
in 1379 in the chapel which he had founded in All Saints' church in honour
of the Holy Trinity. (fn. 139) In all these cases the patronage belonged to the heirs
of the founder, and the chaplain was presented to the bishop and instituted
as though to a cure of souls. But there were other chantries of which there
is no mention in the bishop's lists of institutions, where the endowments
were either not sufficient to maintain a priest, or were administered by
wardens who engaged a chaplain temporarily to perform the work of the
chantry. Of the latter kind were chantries connected with guilds, of which
there were instances at Oxford and Chipping Norton; of the former kind
we hear of several in early Oxford wills, and in many churches there was
a chantry managed by special wardens, but unable to keep a chaplain. Where
the funds would only suffice for a certain number of masses, the parish priest
was generally engaged to say them. After the beginning of the fifteenth
century, we hear of the foundation of only one chantry, the richest of all,
which was founded at Banbury by Henry V in 1413. (fn. 140)
In the bishops' registers some interesting details of church life may be
discovered, but it must be remembered that for the most part they deal with
what was exceptional rather than what was normal. When we find the
archdeacon commanded in 1290 and 1304 to put a stop to the veneration
shown by certain people in Oxford to a well in the parish of St. Clement, (fn. 141)
commonly called the well of St. Edmund, we must not think that such
superstition was general, any more than that all rectors were like that of
Stanton Harcourt, who would not allow the bells to be rung on anniversaries, cut down trees in the churchyard, and hindered the chaplains who
were paid by the parishioners. (fn. 142) Another exceptional case was Robert
Patteshulle, vicar of Pyrton in 1385, of whom the parishioners complained
that he lived far away, that there was no service in church, and that they
were deprived of the sacraments and their rights of divine worship. The
bishop decreed that the living should be sequestrated; the vicar was to
be allowed a maintenance; if what remained was not sufficient to pay a
chaplain, the parishioners and the monastery to which the church was
appropriated were to contribute. (fn. 143) Of church building we have some notices;
in 1292 the bishop issued an instruction that while the church of Sydenham,
which had fallen into ruins, was being repaired, a wooden chapel which the
parishioners had built for service might be licensed, if it were found to be
decent. (fn. 144) The playing of such games in churchyards as led to effusion of
blood had to be prohibited, (fn. 145) and cases of assaults in church were not uncommon; in 1364 a tailor who took sanctuary in Charlbury church was assaulted
and left half dead; (fn. 146) and it is curious that the possibility of such pollution
of the church had been provided for when a vicarage was ordained in Charlbury in 1296; for it was then settled (fn. 147) that if it were necessary to have a
dedication or reconciliation of the church the expense should not fall on the
vicar, unless it had been brought about through his fault, and in the case just
mentioned such a reconciliation would be necessary, blood having been shed
within the building.
The Black Death of 1349 has left curiously little trace in the registers.
The diocesan business was continued as usual, and it is only when the
institutions for the year are counted and found to be 103 instead of thirteen
or fourteen, that we realize what was happening. It need not, of course,
be the case that 103 of the parish clergy of the county died in that year;
many of the institutions may have been cases of promotion from one cure
to another; but it is safe to say that the death-rate during that year was
seven times what it usually was. Perhaps the only reference to the stress of
the time is when the bishop says that he was 'busy as all men know' (notorie
impeditus).
In the fifteenth century we have a few cases of the union of parishes.
In 1466 Asterley was united with Kiddington, (fn. 148) and in 1453 Boulney with
Harpsden. (fn. 149) In each case it was ordered that the churchyard should be
maintained, though the church was pulled down. The pestilences of the
last half of the fourteenth century lessened the numbers, while the progress
of inclosures, as sheep-farming was found profitable, diminished the need of
labourers, and villages ceased to be inhabited.
Fulwell, originally an independent parish, the church of which was given
to Oseney in 1205, had so sunk by the year 1434 that its population consisted only of the family and servants of Robert Ardern, and the church was
served from Mixbury, as it had been for many years. (fn. 150) Warpsgrove seems
to have had no inhabitants by the year 1453, (fn. 151) but none the less rectors were
presented and instituted for the next hundred years. Woodperry was another
parish where the church came to an end before the Reformation. To judge
from the remains that have been found, the church must have been burnt,
and as early as 1452 the parish had been united with Stanton St. John, (fn. 152) but
the outer walls of the church were standing as late as 1520. (fn. 153)
Though the first home of the teaching of Wycliffe was in the town of
Oxford, it had very little permanent influence there or in the county. The
devotion of the university to the new doctrines was very short-lived, (fn. 154) and
when once it had submitted to the authority of the bishops it showed its zeal
by rejecting all traces of Lollardism. Nor did the movement take root in the
county; we hear of it in Northamptonshire and Leicestershire, but not in
Oxfordshire. When we hear that a solemn inquiry was held at Oxford in 1413
concerning heretical depravity, (fn. 155) it only means that the bishop summoned all
the leaders of the university and warned them to avoid the new errors. But
it seems that Lollardism had a hold in south Buckinghamshire all through
the fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, especially at Wycombe, Marlow,
and Amersham, and occasionally it spread across the border into Oxfordshire.
We hear of heretics at Chinnor and Thame in 1464, and have a full record (fn. 156)
of one at Henley, named James Wyllys, aged fifty-nine, a weaver and
'lettred.' He was born and brought up at Bristol, where he learnt his
heresy and bought his books from one William Smith, who was afterwards
burnt in the diocese of Winchester. He had moved to London, and had
there been imprisoned for heresy and had abjured. Now he was arrested at
Henley in 1462 on the charge of having taught the following doctrines:
That after consecration in the Sacrament of the Altar there remains the
substance of bread, and that the true body of Christ is not there; that one
baptized by a priest in a river or pond in the name of the Father, Son, and
Holy Ghost is as well baptized as if all the solemnities of the Church had
been used; that priests living in sin, such as fornication, cannot absolve;
that it is vain to burn candles before images, they are but 'stokkes and
stonys'; offerings should not be made to them but given to the poor; saints
do not need our offerings; there is no purgatory, but after death souls go at
once to heaven or hell. He said 'making fun of the matter, as it seemed'
(ut apparuit, modo protervo) that he was sorry he had ever made offerings to
images in honour of saints. He also had taught that singing of the office,
organs, and bell-ringing were not necessary, but rather blameworthy (vituperanda). He said he was ready to maintain his opinions till death and to
defend them before any judges. The bishop, seeing that he was obstinately
fixed, pronounced a sentence of excommunication against him; whereupon,
'touched by the grace of God and, as it seemed, with a contrite heart, he
recalled his learned errors' (sapientes errores), declared them to be false and
with tears asked for absolution. The bishop, rejoicing at his contrition,
withdrew the sentence of excommunication; but he was, of course, a
relapsed heretic, and as such there was but one fate for him. If there was
any doubt what it was, it is set at rest by the heading of the record,
'Articuli Jacobi Wyllys combusti.' Some of his associates were also arrested:
one John Qwyrk, a labourer, 'not lettred,' who had learned from Wyllys the
Epistles of St. Paul in English, and besides the heresies of his master had
maintained that an ecclesiastical judge cannot separate man and wife, for
'what God hath joined let no man put asunder'; and that the Apostles
voluntarily submitted themselves to poverty, whereas bishops now had
excessive possessions. He abjured these errors, and as he had not been in
trouble before, escaped with a penance. Another pupil of Wyllys, who also
abjured, had maintained that a man might have two wives at once, 'even as
a priest holds two churches.' Another man of Henley, named John Polley,
abjured, and promised that he would not receive 'doctrine books and
qwayres concerning heresies,' while two years later there is a long record (fn. 157) in
English of the abjurations of William Ayleward of Henley, who had
taught—
that our holy Fadre, the Pope of Rome, is a grete best, and a devyll of hell and a synagogue,
and that he shall lye depper in hell ix sithes (= times) than Lucyfer; that the blessed
Sacrament of the Auter is a grete devyll of hell and a sinagogue, and that he can make as
good a sacrament betwene ii yrons as the prest doth upon his auter; that the blode of
Hayles is but the blode of a dog or a drake; that the king and all those that maynteyne the
churche shall go the devyll, and inespeciall the king, because of his grete supportacion of
the churche; that ther owte no man be baptized to (= till) he cam to olde age.
Seeing pilgrims going towards Canterbury, he had said they went 'offering
their souls unto the devil.' He had 'talked of the Gospellys and holy
scriptures, declaring in Englisch the Gospell of Nichodemus after the lettir.'
He confessed that he had been before the bishop of Salisbury, not for heresy
but for using a charm to cure children of 'the chinkow' (whooping-cough).
He therefore abjured his errors and escaped.
In 1522 King Henry VIII issued a writ to all mayors, sheriffs, &c. that
forasmuch as the bishop of Lincoln had within his diocese no small number
of heretics, to his no little discomfort and heaviness, they were to protect him
and his officers 'that they, ne none of them, shall bodily be hurt or damaged
by any of the said heretics or thair fautors, in the executing and ministering
of justice unto the said heretics, according to the laws of Holy Church.' (fn. 158)
Foxe in his Book of Martyrs has given us some account of the dealings of the
bishop with the heretics of his diocese both before and after this writ; he
derived his information from a register of Bishop Longland, and fortunately
has mentioned in particular the cases of heretics in Oxfordshire and
Buckinghamshire. (fn. 159) It is clear that it was not a new movement with
which the bishop had to deal; it was a survival of Lollardism, and though
in certain points it agreed with the Zwinglianism of the continent,
there was no connexion between the two; the books found among the
heretics did not come from Holland, Germany, or Switzerland, but were
Wickliffe's Wicket, The Shepherd's Kalendar, and a book called The King of
Beeme (? Bohemia). One of the chief offenders, the head of the family of
Collins of Burford, said that 'he had been of this doctrine since the year of
our Lord 1480.' The chief centre of the Lollards in Buckinghamshire
seems to have been at Wycombe and Amersham, as it was sixty years before;
but in Oxfordshire they were strong at Burford, where they had a secret
conventicle at the house of John Burgess; we also hear of several of the sect
at Asthall, Witney, Stanlake, and Henley, with isolated cases at Wheatley,
Checkendon, South Stoke, and Clanfield. They were not for the most part
of the peasant class, but artisans; several of them were weavers, one was the
bailiff of Witney, another a schoolmaster, and many of them were of sufficient
position to have their own servants. One of the charges against Robert
Collins of Burford was that he bought an English Bible for 20s., a large sum
in those days, and of many we are told that they were able to read. Whether
the inquiry was limited to the south of the county we have no means of
saying, but all the localities mentioned were in the valley of the Thames, and
perhaps Lollardism followed the trade route from London to Bristol. The
doings and words that were 'detected' were of a curiously mixed kind; there
was a certain element of Millenarianism or fanaticism in the movement, and one
John Hackar 'who could tell of diverse prophecies which should happen in
the realm' (fn. 160) was accused of speaking of 'a battle that should be, when all
priests should be slain, and then should be a merry world.' With such men
the Apocalypse was a favourite book, and at the house of Mr. Burgess of
Burford they 'communed concerning the opening of the book with the seven
clasps,' while Sir John Drury, vicar of Windrush, was accused of teaching his
servant 'the A, B, C, to the intent he should have understanding in the
Apocalypse.' In other cases Lollardism was merely the carping of sour and
censorious natures; the grumbling at holy days, at tithes, at bell-ringing, did
not spring from any conscientious principles, and would never have been
satisfied, whatever had been the reforms in the Church. But it must in fairness be said that these two classes cover only a small portion of the cases
enumerated, and that Lollardism was not merely fanatical or critical, but had
also a positive side. Their favourite parts of the Bible were the Gospels and
the Epistles of St. James and St. Peter, epistles which enforce practical
righteousness. Alice Collins of Burford was accused of reciting by heart the
Epistles of St. James and St. Peter in English, and her daughter Joan had
committed the crime of learning the Ten Commandments in English,
beginning 'I am thy Lord God, which led thee out of the land of Egypt and
brought thee out of the house of thraldom: thou shalt have no alien gods
before me.' There was some kind of discipline among the Lollards and
examination by themselves into the uprightness of the lives of the members,
and Thomas Rowland was accused of saying to his master, 'If I lie, curse,
storm, swear, chide, fight, or threat, then am I worthy to be beat.'
Pilgrimages and Transubstantiation were the two points which they
specially spoke against. The true pilgrimage was, they said, 'barefoot to go
and visit the poor, weak, and sick.' Perhaps for this reason part of the
penance imposed on them by the bishop was to go on pilgrimage every year
to Lincoln. The doctrine of the Material Presence in the Sacrament of the
Altar was too often denied in a blasphemous and offensive way, as when one
said that he had been threshing out God Almighty in the barn; but it was
not so in all cases. The words of one of them were 'that the Sacrament of
the Altar is an holy thing, yet is it not the same body of the Lord which
suffered for us on the Cross.' On the whole we cannot resist the verdict that
the Church was culpable in dealing so severely with these people whose lives
were morally upright, while those who were orthodox but immoral were let
go with a reprimand. If it were contrary to the ancient laws of the Church
to read the Sermon on the Mount in English, churchmen ought to have
perceived that the time had come when the laws of the Church should be
relaxed.
Among the Lollards there is only one person mentioned of gentle blood,
Mistress Cottesmore alias Doiley. Her first husband was Sir William
Cottesmore of Baldwin Brightwell, Oxfordshire; her second, Thomas Doiley
of Hambledon, Buckinghamshire. (fn. 161) Witnesses against her were brought
before Dr. London at the parsonage of Stanton Harcourt, and accused her of
having a book which spoke against pilgrimages; (fn. 162) of saying that John
Hacker of Coleman Street, London, 'water bearer,' (fn. 163) was very expert in the
Gospels and could explain 'the Pater Noster as well as any priest, and that
it would do one good to hear him'; of refusing to let her servant go on
pilgrimage to Our Lady of Walsingham, in fulfilment of a vow made by her
husband Sir William Cottesmore in his last illness. It was also deposed that
one day on a visit to Sir William Barrantine of Hazeley Court, about four
miles from Brightwell, seeing some images, she said to her servant, 'Look
here be my lady Barrantine's gods.' In the index to his book Foxe describes
her as 'martyr,' but there is no evidence what befell her. It may be
assumed that if she had been put to death the fact would have been recorded.
The penance imposed on those of Burford and that neighbourhood was that
on a market day they should stand on the highest 'greece' (i.e. step) of the
cross of Burford for a quarter of an hour with a faggot on their shoulders,
and on a Sunday go in front of the procession before high mass, bearing a
faggot, and so to kneel on the step of the altar throughout the service; they
were to be branded on the cheek, and some of them were sent to monasteries,
condemned to 'perpetual penance' there—a sentence which no doubt would
shortly be remitted, if they behaved well. (fn. 164) It seems that in all cases the
heretics abjured their errors, but if they returned to them, the punishment
would be death by burning at the stake.
Again in 1526 there was a search for heretics in Oxford itself, but at
this time not so much for Lollards as for those who were followers of the
foreign reformers. One Garret brought copies of Tyndale's New Testament
from London to Oxford, where he sold them secretly with other such books.
The graphic and affecting story of his arrest and of the examination of
Dalaber, his friend, by Dr. London, 'the rankest Papistical Pharisee' as
Dalaber puts it, may be read in Foxe's Martyrs. (fn. 165) For this reason, and for
the fact that those accused were not Oxfordshire men, and that their movement had no influence on the county, nothing more need be said here.
A return (fn. 166) made for the subsidy of 1526 throws not a little light on the
numbers and status of the clergy in the archdeaconry at that time. Unlike
the Valor of 1535, it gives the names of the curates (curati), chaplains and
stipendiaries, and the amount of their stipends. It appears that there were
6 prebendaries, and 170 rectors and vicars, beneficed in the county; beneath
them were 139 curati, or, as we should say, curates in charge; there were
also 38 who are described as chaplains or stipendiaries, and answer to our
curates or assistant priests; most of them were engaged to assist the parish
priests, but in six or seven cases they seem to have been engaged by the
wardens of chantries; 10 more are definitely described as chantry priests;
14 more have no designation to show what their position was; and lastly
there were 13 retired incumbents in receipt of pensions. This gives the
large total of 390 clergy who were in receipt of stipends from spiritual
property and liable to be taxed for the subsidy. If a similar return were
made now, the number of clergy would be a hundred less, although the
population of the county must be twice what it was in 1526.
In addition to these parochial clergy, there were the private chaplains
of nobles, and priests either engaged in teaching or earning a precarious livelihood by the saying of masses for the dead; there were also the fellows of
colleges at Oxford, for they are not included in the return for the subsidy of
1526. Reckoning must also be made of the regulars, whether friars, monks,
or canons. Of the number of the friars it is difficult to form an estimate;
but the numbers in the monasteries can be made out. The nine Oxfordshire
houses for men which remained after St. Frideswide's and Cold Norton had
come to an end contained about 100 members. From the returns made in
the Valor Ecclesiasticus of 1535, or in 1534 at the recognition of the royal
supremacy, we learn that Oseney contained 20 members, Eynsham 16,
Thame 13, Bruern 12, Wroxton 10, Bicester 8, Dorchester 7, Clattercote 4,
and Rewley probably 15: total 105. This estimate makes no reckoning of
novices, who were about 25 in number. The inmates of the nunneries were
about 30: Godstow 16 or 17, Studley 8 or 9, Goring 6 or 7.
Of the 176 incumbents of parishes it is certain that a large number
were absentees; in some cases this is stated in the return for 1526, in other
cases it may be assumed. Thus the rectors of Easington and Albury are
described as scholares, or undergraduates at Oxford. They had curates in
the charge of their parishes, who were practically the incumbents, paying to
the absentee rectors a portion of the income. And when we meet with
curates at such small places as Stoke Talmage (population ninety-seven) or
Shipton-on-Cherwell (population seventy-one), and in nearly one hundred
other small country parishes, we know that it cannot have been the amount
of work or the ill-health of the incumbent, but his absence, that made their
presence necessary. If curatus is rightly explained as meaning 'curate in
charge,' it is clear that two-thirds of the incumbents were absentees. The
duties of the cure were no doubt adequately performed by a substitute, who
received a stipend of £5 to £7; but the evil of pluralism and absenteeism,
against which the authorities of the Church had been faintly struggling for
three centuries, seems to have been at its worst shortly before the Reformation, and in the darkest days of the subsequent centuries never reached such
a pitch.
When the lot of country curates was so low, it is not surprising to find
that the parish clergy taken from them had in many cases a low standard.
The vicar of Thame was busy in 1536 with the issue of counterfeit coin, his
accomplice having interviews with him in the church while he was at
mattins. (fn. 167) In 1534 an incumbent beneficed in Suffolk, by name John Billingford, had the idea to leave his parish and ride round to the smaller monasteries
of Oxfordshire and Northamptonshire, pretending to be a chaplain of
the queen, demanding and obtaining money from simple-minded priors.
Sir Anthony Cope of Hanwell, when he heard about it, arrested him. (fn. 168) If,
as was often the case, the post-Reformation parochial clergy were ignorant
and unsatisfactory, it can hardly be denied that some were so before.
There is another record at Lincoln which makes it difficult to take a
rosy view of the eve of the Reformation. It is an episcopal visitation in
1517, and deals with every parish in the county, giving the presentments
made by the churchwardens. As a specimen, the beginning of the Aston
rural deanery may be taken:—
Wheatfield: the rectory is ruinous (ruinosa); (fn. 169) the rector does not say service at the
proper hours. Emmington: the chancel is out of repair above the altar, and also the floor,
through the fault of the rector; the walls of the churchyard have fallen to the ground
through the negligence of the rector; the rector is non-resident; the roof of the nave
is ruinous. Also the cure is neglected; for the parishioners have not had divine service
since Easter. Brightwell Baldwin: the chancel is ruinous; the glass windows of the
chancel have not been made; the rectory is ruinous. Ibstone: the walls of the rectory
are ruinous; the seats of the church are broken; the rector is non-resident; he is too old
and infirm. Adwell: the abbot of Reading withholds 2s., with which he used to find
two lamps in the church; John Chacobbe, churchwarden, has produced no accounts for
seven years; the chancel is ruinous; John Ewstace does not come to his parish church,
nor does he pay stipendium; the seats in the church are broken. Stokenchurch: Juliana
Everton owes the church 16d.; the church house is ruinous; William Rutt and John
Penny have given no account of the 10s. they received when they were churchwardens;
Richard Sore owes the church 5s.; John Shoer owes the church 12d.; Robert Hore
owes the church a quarter of malt, the legacy of John Croxford. Crowell: the walls
of the chancel are ruinous; Agnes Bride owes the church 7s. Chinnor: the rector
is non-resident; the rectory (i.e. the rectorial tithe) is leased to a layman; there are no
distributions. (fn. 170) South Weston: the oil and chrism are not kept under lock and key;
Thomas Reynold owes the church 3s. 4d. Shirburn: the roof of the chancel needs repair;
the seats in the chancel are broken; there are no distributions; the glass windows of the
chancel are ruinous. Watlington: the rectory is ruinous; the vicar is non-resident. Letice
Dorham is a witch. Cuxham: the chancel is out of repair. Richard Falle withholds two
lamps which should burn in church during divine service. Stoke Talmage: the chancel
needs repair; the glass windows are broken; the seats are broken; there is no door to the
chancel to close it; the stone walls of the church are ruinous. The rector is non-resident;
he lives at Haseley. Britwell Salome: the chancel is ruinous; the rector does not sleep
within the parish, but at the house of the lady Cotismore; (fn. 171) for what cause is unknown.
Chalgrove: there are no distributions; the chancel is out of repair in roof, walls, and
floor; the churchyard is not sufficiently fenced.
When this is compared with presentments of the eighteenth century
the difference is striking. Of course it must be remembered that in the
sixteenth century, when manorial courts still survived, the art of complaining
was highly developed; in later centuries the faculty remained, but not the
art: men could grumble but could not make presentments. Further, in all that
the churchwardens of 1517 mention in their presentments there is nothing
very scandalous; the parishioners seem to have kept their part of the church
in repair for the most part, and if incumbents did not make good the
dilapidations of their rectories it has been so in all ages; but the general
neglect of the chancels, though as nothing in comparison with what was
found fifty years later, is certainly astonishing, and bespeaks little religious
zeal on the part of rectors, whether they were private persons or monastic
corporations. In all times it would be possible to find some churches that
were out of repair, but it will be noticed that this return goes through all
the churches in order, and all are defective. And if the parishioners repaired
the nave, whether from love of their church or the threats of the archdeacon,
they would not proceed to help the rector in making the chancel decent. It
seems that the same selfishness and callousness which was noticeable in
political and social matters during the Tudor days was also shown in
ecclesiastical matters, and that it was not a noble age either in state or
church.
On the vexed question whether there was anything in the state of the
monasteries to justify their dissolution, we have in Oxfordshire, in common
with the other counties of the diocese of Lincoln, less meagre evidence than
in many parts of England, for besides the bishop's registers, we have visitations
made in 1445, 1520, and 1530. (fn. 172) The impression derived from these sources
is that there was something unsatisfactory, especially in the religious houses
for men. For a century and a half it had been discussed whether the endowments of monasteries should be taken away, and a precedent had long been set
of transferring them to other branches of church work. In Oxfordshire we
find a devout churchman such as Henry VI granting the alien priories of
Minster Lovell and Cogges to endow his college at Eton; in 1496, when the
priory of Cold Norton became extinct for want of members, and the bishop of
Lincoln had acquired it by purchase, he made no effort to restore it, but
transferred it to his foundation of Brasenose. In 1524 there is the suppression
of St. Frideswide's, Littlemore, and other monasteries for the foundation of
Christ Church; and if Wolsey, because of his subsequent attitude about the
divorce, is accused by some of enmity to the Church, the same cannot be said
of Foxe, bishop of Winchester, founder of Corpus Christi College, who
deliberately refrained from establishing a monastic institution at Oxford.
Though he was a benefactor to the abbeys of Glastonbury and Netley, his
chief benefaction was a college for secular, not regular clergy. 'What, my
lord,' said his friend, Bishop Oldham of Exeter, co-founder of the College,
'shall we build houses and provide livelihoods for a company of "bussing" (fn. 173)
monks, whose end and fall we ourselves may live to see?' And a few years
later Foxe, in writing to Wolsey, complains how depraved and licentious the
clergy were, and particularly (what he had not at first suspected) the monks. (fn. 174)
Just as striking is the language of Bishop Longland in 1525, about the
monastery of Thame; (fn. 175) when the abbot of Waverley had made an unsatisfactory visitation and punished none of the faults of which there had been
complaint, the bishop wrote that unless a reformation took place, he, as patron
and founder of the monastery, would seize its possessions and apply them to a
use more acceptable to God.
It is not difficult to indicate what was amiss with monasteries in the
sixteenth century. It was not debt, which on the whole was much less than
two centuries earlier. And if monks in the sixteenth century were ignorant,
it must be remembered that it was the recognized career for those who lacked
ability; clever scholars became jurists and rose to be prebendaries and bishops.
And it must be confessed that noble efforts were made to advance the education
of the religious. Within a century before the dissolution of the monasteries,
St. Mary's College at Oxford had been founded for the benefit of Augustinian
canons, and Bernard College for Cistercians. That there was not a little vice
among the religious houses is certain, if the Oxfordshire houses are a fair
sample; and to those who form their ideas of monasticism from what it was
in the days of Bede or from our own times, the cases are astonishingly
frequent; but visitations of the colleges of Oxford, and of colleges of seculars
like Southwell, show that monks, if not better, were no worse than the
secular clergy, and probably less bad than the laity. But the main failing
was that in monasteries there was such a large proportion of monks who
cared little for monasticism and disliked the rule. In the records of visitations
the bishops or other visitors remind us of patient schoolmasters dealing with
schoolboys bent on evading the school regulations. At Dorchester in 1530
sometimes no more than two of the canons would rise to mattins, and in most
monasteries we hear of some who would not be present more than once or
twice in a month. The rule of silence was offensive to many and was
observed by few, while fasting and the rule of seclusion within the cloister did
not fare much better. In short, that which was distinctive of the monastic
life, for the sake of which men of other ages entered monasteries, the very
things which were considered the chief advantages of the place, were now
regarded as a drawback; and it seems as if half the monks would have liked
their monasteries better if there had been no monastic rule. If there were
men of religious earnestness in England the monasteries no longer attracted
them, or at all events attracted many others of quite a different character.
When the dissolution came, it was said by Cromwell's agents that in many
places the monks were glad to escape; this statement is generally discredited,
but there may be some truth in it. When St. Frideswide's was visited in
1520 complaint was made that the prior was hoarding for himself the money
of the monastery, because he had hopes of withdrawing; both statements seem
to have been untrue, but they show what was in men's minds.
Certain new practices that arose in the Oxfordshire monasteries towards
the end of the fifteenth century are instructive. When the lists of institutions are studied it is found that about that time religious houses granted
to laymen the next presentations to livings in their gift. Thus in 1502
the vicar of Watlington was presented by Sir Reginald Bray, to whom
Oseney had granted the next presentation; and when the next vicar was
appointed in 1538, we are informed that the abbey had granted the next
presentation to William Symcok, brewer, of Oxford; he to Silvester Todde,
goldsmith, of London; he to Charles, duke of Suffolk. (fn. 176) For Eynsham we
have similar evidence. As the laymen were men with no claims on the
monasteries, as far as can be seen, it is natural to surmise that it was a
monetary bargain. A similar indifference to the duties of patronage is
shown by the Knights Hospitallers in 1520, when in granting a lease of
all their lands in Oxfordshire, they mention that the tenant is bound to
perform all necessary repairs, 'and find a priest to say mass daily in Sandford
Chapel and priests to say mass in Temple Cowley and Sibford Gower three
times a week.' (fn. 177) There is no stipulation what kind of man is to be secured,
or that he is to be adequately paid. It would be hard to find grosser
callousness in lay patrons of any age. Another new feature, whatever it may
betoken, was the custom of turning abbots and priors into bishops; Miles,
abbot of Eynsham, was also bishop of Llandaff (1500–16), Roger Smith,
abbot of Dorchester, was suffragan bishop of Lydda (1513–18), and Robert
King, abbot of Thame, was suffragan bishop of Rheon. Whether this is
a proof of the unusual ability of these abbots, or an indication that the
governing of a monastery was not considered work of sufficient importance
for a clever man, it cannot have been conducive to the maintenance of strict
discipline. We may notice also during this period a difficulty in finding
men fit to be at the head of a monastery. In the thirteenth and fourteenth
centuries the rule was that the head of the monastery was chosen by the
members of the house, and generally, almost universally, they could find a fit
person from among themselves. But in the sixteenth century it appears as
if the monasteries often had no one with what is called the 'gift of leadership,' able to be the head of a house. The last two priors of Bicester had
never been of that priory, and at each vacancy the canons, as if distrusting
themselves, left the appointment to the bishop. Of the last three abbots of
Eynsham two, if not all three, came from without, and the last was not
chosen by the monks, but by the bishop. When the post of abbot was
vacant at Dorchester in 1533, the choice was left to Henry Morgan, 'legum
doctor.' Even in the case of Cistercian houses such as Thame, we find the
bishop using his influence with the abbot of Citeaux about the appointment
of an abbot, and asserting that among the monks of Thame there was no
one fit to succeed. With nunneries there was not the same difficulty; and
we can understand that, as they did not depend for their numbers so much
on the power of attracting volunteers as on offering a quiet home for widows
and unmarried women, the spirit of the age would have less effect on
them. But it is not unfair to say that in too many cases houses for men in
the sixteenth century were places where the dull, unambitious, or even slothful might live a life of no luxury, but of no hardship, giving in return for
their maintenance a grudging obedience to the rules of their order. There
were bright exceptions like Winchcombe Abbey, but we hear of no house in
Oxfordshire which showed a similar zeal for learning.
Of the way in which the dissolution of the monasteries was carried out
many hard things have been said of late years. It was certainly not done
with sympathy; but in fairness it must be remarked that the pensions granted
were liberal. The heads of small houses like Bicester, Bruern, or Rewley
received £22 or £24 a year, (fn. 178) and the monks or canons about £5, sums which
represented the full pay they would have been earning had they been secular
instead of regular clergy. The chief agent in the suppression of the Oxfordshire houses was Dr. John London, a typical specimen of the much-beneficed
ecclesiastic of the Middle Ages. He held canonries at Lincoln, York, Salisbury, and Windsor, the deanery of the collegiate church of Wallingford, the
wardenship of New College, and the rectories of Stanton St. John and
Adderbury. He was a man 'of no particular animosity against the monks,' (fn. 179)
ready to serve his employers whether by confiscating images or enforcing the
Six Articles, intent only on his own advancement. From the fact that he was
an enemy of Cranmer, and from the advice he is known to have given to his
nephew, (fn. 180) his opinions, as far as he had any, seem to have been on the Papal
side; but it is clear that in his case, and in most cases, religious opinions had
very little to do with the suppression of the monasteries. Even those who
were afterwards of the Papal party were not unwilling to enrich themselves
by the acquisition of monastic lands; Sir Leonard Chamberlain of Shirburn,
afterwards a strong supporter of Queen Mary, (fn. 181) whose descendants were recusants under Elizabeth, bought and sold monastic property on a large scale, (fn. 182)
while Sir Thomas Pope, founder of Trinity College, was another instance.
Dr. London had special knowledge of the religious houses of the diocese, as
he was archdeacon's official as early as 1518, (fn. 183) and we find him helping at the
episcopal visitation of Oseney in 1520. (fn. 184) As he was imprisoned for perjury
and came to a bad end, he has served to point a moral for historians of all
parties, and has been found useful to bring discredit whether on the persecution of Protestants in 1526, or the suppression of monasteries, or the enforcement of the Six Articles.
The suppression of the Oxfordshire monasteries seems to have been
effected without resistance or protest. As the three houses of St. Frideswide's, Littlemore and Cold Norton existed no longer, omitting the friaries
and hospitals, there remained twelve, of which eight had incomes under £200
—Rewley, Bruern, Dorchester, Clattercote, Wroxton, Bicester, Goring, and
Studley, the total of their incomes being £902 3s. 2½d.; the four larger
houses were Thame, Oseney, Eynsham, and Godstow.
The report of John Tregonwell to Cromwell, who employed him as
visitor of the Oxfordshire houses in 1535, shows that their state was not
unsatisfactory, (fn. 185) as appears under the separate accounts of Godstow, Eynsham,
Bruern, Wroxton, and Bicester.
At Oseney the visitor had commanded that none of the canons should go
outside the precincts of the monastery. In like manner orders had been
given at Godstow that a back entrance should be closed, evidently to prevent
the nuns from going abroad. (fn. 186) This strict enforcement of the monastic rule,
in a way that had not been observed for at least two centuries, made the life
of monks so burdensome that many were glad to surrender their houses, and
recover their freedom together with a pension. In the course of 1536 most
of the small houses were surrendered to the king, Bruern in October, (fn. 187) and
some of them earlier. By June 1538, the heads of six out of the eight
smaller houses were in receipt of pensions, (fn. 188) Clattercote and Studley not being
among them. The former house was surrendered shortly after by Robert,
bishop of Llandaff, 'commendatory master of the order of Sempringham.' (fn. 189)
The case of Studley is exceptional. In June, 1536, we find the king making
a grant of Corsley in Wiltshire 'parcel of the late priory of Studley, Oxon,
dissolved by Parliament'; (fn. 190) but it seems that it must have been refounded,
for the house was surrendered to the king on 19 November, 1539, and all
the possessions of the house, with the exception of Corsley, were sold in
February, 1540. (fn. 191)
When the turn of the larger monasteries came there was no difficulty.
Eynsham was under the rule of Anthony Dunstan alias Kitchin, who was
afterwards made bishop of Llandaff in 1545, and held that post through all
the changes of religion until 1565. He was a learned and upright man,
but evidently one able to comply with the powers of the day. Oseney and
Thame were both under Robert King, who had been suffragan of the bishop
of Lincoln since 1528 with the title 'Rheonensis.' Like most Englishmen
of the time he was in favour of nothing more than a mild reformation.
Preaching at Stamford on 19 September, 1535, he is reported to have 'accused
of hideous sin those who explained the New Testament in taverns (i.e.
Cromwell's hired preachers); to have inveighed against those who try to
overturn the order which had lasted for 1500 years, and pull down the images
of saints, and who deny the Virgin and saints are mediators.' (fn. 192) But he was
ready to punish one of his monks who, preaching at St. Mary Magdalen,
Oxford, 'without leave of the curate or of his abbot,' asserted that there
was a purgatory. (fn. 193) He was a good administrator, and had been appointed
for this reason to the abbey of Thame, through the influence of the bishop
of Lincoln. (fn. 194) When the abbey of Oseney was vacant by the death of John
Burton on 22 November, 1537, the prior wrote to Cromwell, asking him to
procure from the king that the new abbot might be one of the brethren. (fn. 195)
As we have already seen, the heads of monastic houses, though nominally elected
by the brethren, had for some time been chosen by authorities from outside.
In this case Cromwell nominated Robert King; and on 22 December,
Dr. London wrote to Cromwell that the canons of Oseney had elected 'the
abbot of Thame according to your instructions'; (fn. 196) two months later he writes
again thanking him for his goodness to 'your' abbot of Oseney, 'by whose
preferment you have done a great benefit to that ruinous house.' (fn. 197) Naturally,
under these circumstances, there was no difficulty about the surrender of
Oseney and Thame. In the same manner the abbess of Godstow was a
nominee of Cromwell. On 26 February, 1535, leave was given to the
convent to elect an abbess, on the resignation of Margaret Tewkesbury, on
account of old age. (fn. 198) Katherine Bulkeley alias Bewmarys was elected, (fn. 199)
evidently through the influence of Cromwell. In her letters to him she
says 'Of your mere goodness you have of nothing brought me to all I have,' (fn. 200)
and that the opposition of Dr. London had been overcome by Cromwell's aid: (fn. 201)
she grants him the post of steward of the monastery, worth 40s. a year; (fn. 202)
she doubles his pension of £2 a year granted by her predecessor, and offers to
settle it on himself and his son Gregory for their lives; (fn. 203) she thanks him for
his help against the encroachments of the citizens of Oxford, (fn. 204) and for
relieving her from the indignity of surrendering her house to her 'ancient
enemy,' Dr. London. But she adds that she was ready to surrender whenever the king or Cromwell wished; that she and her nuns 'had no regard for
Pope, purgatory, or praying to dead saints,' and did not value highly the
monastic life. (fn. 205) This was written in December, 1538; the house was
surrendered the following November, and Oseney at the same time; (fn. 206)
Eynsham had been surrendered 4 December, 1538. (fn. 207) It is noticeable
that at Eynsham the number of inmates, which was sixteen in 1534, had
dropped to ten; at Oseney from twenty to seventeen; (fn. 208) and Godstow from
twenty in 1535 (fn. 209) to seventeen. Large pensions were given to the abbess
of Godstow and the abbot of Eynsham, £50 to the former, £133 to the
latter. The abbot of Oseney was reserved for a higher post. In 1539 we
hear of a scheme for a bishopric of 'Oseney and Thame' with a cathedral
at Oseney; (fn. 210) and in 1542 it was carried into effect, but the title was 'bishop
of Oxford,' (fn. 211) though his cathedral was at Oseney; Robert King was
appointed bishop, and was assigned Gloucester College for his palace. The
chapter consisted of John London as dean, and six prebendaries nominated
by the king; for their residences the king gave them all the buildings
of Oseney Abbey.
By the dissolution of the monasteries those tithes which had come into
the hands of religious houses by appropriations were finally lost to the Church.
A minute survey, (fn. 212) made about 1460, shows what a large proportion it was.
It records that omitting the property of the Hospitallers and of the poor nunneries, such as Littlemore and Studley, the total value of church property
within the county, whether land or tithes, that was liable to pay to a royal
subsidy, amounted to £3,580 a year. Of this amount £1,930 belonged to
religious houses, £1,130 being derived from temporal possessions and £800
from tithes in various Oxfordshire parishes; while £1,650 represented
the stipends of prebendaries, rectors, and vicars. The reckoning, however,
is not quite accurate, as six or seven churches which had been appropriated
to monasteries in the fifteenth century are enumerated as if they were
unappropriated; and it would be safe to say that by the year 1535 the
religious houses held as much as £900 of the tithe of this county, leaving
about £1,200 for rectors and vicars, while the income of prebendaries,
amounting to £370, was derived partly from tithe and partly from land.
If it is remembered that several of the prebends were ultimately seized by
the crown, it will be seen that about two-fifths of the tithes of the county
were lost by the suppression of the monasteries.
Local charities, also, were robbed at the same time. Many of the
monasteries were practically trustees of charities, being bound to distribute
so much to the poor in bread or money on certain days. In the Valor of
1535 these various 'distributiones' are enumerated, amounting for the whole
county to almost £100 a year. When the monastic lands were dispersed,
this charge on the monastic lands ought to have been maintained, like the
other fixed charges, but it has not been possible to find a case where this
was done, and there can be no doubt that the charities were seized with
the monasteries. (fn. 213) It has been said that the rise of pauperism was the result of
this robbery. This indeed is absurd; for by the suppressions of the hospitals
of St. Bartholomew and St. John at Oxford in previous centuries the poor
had been deprived of more than they were by the suppression of the
monasteries, yet pauperism had not resulted from that diversion of endowments. But whatever may have been the results, our indignation at the
robbery of the poor is not lessened.
To all this confiscation no opposition was offered in Oxfordshire, and the
changes in religion seem to have been accepted with greater calmness than
might be expected. Here and there we find traces of discontent. In 1534
it is reported to Cromwell that one at Henley had declared that he was for
the Princess Mary against any issue of Anne Boleyn, (fn. 214) and several truthful but
coarse remarks were made about the queen. But when she fell there was
sympathy for her, and we hear of murmuring against the king at Eynsham
because of her execution. (fn. 215) In 1537 Sir Richard Crowley, priest of
Broughton, was accused of preaching 'the authority of the bishop of Rome
by the name of Pope,' and of asserting that Sir Thomas More died for the
true faith; but when examined by Sir William Fermour of Somerton, he
denied the words. (fn. 216) In July, 1537, it was reported of a certain Robert Johns
of Thame that he had said that he 'feared the king would have the crosses
and jewels of their church,' and that it would be better that they themselves
should sell their jewels; and when the conversation turned on the recent
rebellion in the north, he said: 'Let us speak no more of this matter, for
men may be blamed for speaking the truth.' (fn. 217) The people also of Thame
observed the feast of St. Thomas the Martyr in spite of the commands of
the king. As we have proof that there was discontent in the county,
especially in the country districts, in the year 1547, it is safe to assume that
ten years earlier many did not approve of the action of the king; but the
county made no move at the time of the Northern Rebellion. In fact, all
through the reign of Henry VIII there was curiously little opposition; if a
man deviated into courage, it was only for a moment, and straightway he
was anxious to recall what he had done or said, whereas a few years later
the same men showed a very different constancy, as martyrs under Mary or
Elizabeth.
But among the few who resisted the king concerning the rejection of
the papal supremacy, and refused to take the oath of the royal supremacy,
was a leading Oxfordshire nobleman, Sir Adrian Fortescue of Stonor, Shirburn,
and Brightwell. As his first wife was Anne, daughter of Sir William Stonor,
and his second Anne, daughter of Sir William Rede of Boarstall, he was
connected by marriage with two of the most prominent of the county
families; he was also a cousin of Anne Boleyn. He seems to have made
no objection to the divorce proceedings; and, in fact, so many discreditable
divorces had been allowed by the authorities of the Church for many years
past, that it is easy to understand that even a good man might not be shocked
by the doings of the king; but on the rejection of the papal supremacy he
took a different line. By having himself enrolled among the knights of
St. John of Jerusalem, who were known to be strongly on the papal side, and
were accused of stirring up enemies against the king of England, he became
a marked man; he was imprisoned in 1536 and 1537, then released for a
while; finally arrested again, and after a Bill of attainder for sedition had
been passed in April, 1539, he was beheaded on Tower Hill on 10 July. (fn. 218)
Probably it is not fanciful to trace the result of his example in the line taken
by his relatives the Stonors twenty years later. At the time they showed no
inclination to follow him, and among Cromwell's correspondents Sir Walter
Stonor was as anxious as any to oblige him, and to report to him the least
trace of treason. But in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, not only did the family
become recusant, but induced other county families that were related to
them (e.g. the Symeons and the Chamberlains) to take the same step. It is
possible, therefore, that it was Sir Adrian Fortescue who originally was the
cause of the strength of the Roman Catholics in Oxfordshire in the sixteenth
and seventeenth centuries.
The final establishment of the bishopric of Oxford dates from 4 November, 1546. The arrangements made in 1542 came to an end on 20 May,
1545, when the dean and chapter surrendered their property into the king's
hands; on the same day the dean and chapter of the King's College of
Christ Church, under which title Cardinal Wolsey's College had been refounded
in 1532, also surrendered their house to the king. After a delay of nearly
eighteen months the college and cathedral, now united, were founded again.
The bishop ceased to hold Gloucester College as a residence, and built for
himself the house in St. Aldate's Street, now known as Bishop King's house.
The new chapter was to consist of a dean and eight canons; the dean was
Dr. Cox, who had been dean at Oseney since 1 January, 1544, after the death
of Dr. London; (fn. 219) and of the eight canons that were nominated, four had
been of the chapter of Oseney Cathedral. (fn. 220)
After the suppression of the monasteries there remained a scant
gleaning from the endowments of chantries, guilds, obits, and lamps. The
commissioners for Oxfordshire—Sir John Williams, John Doyly, and Edward
Chamberlain—who were appointed 6 February, 1547, reported (fn. 221) that there
were endowments for obits and lamps in eighty parishes, with an annual
income of about £45 from rents and 'the profits of cattle.' (fn. 222) There were
also twenty-three chantries, guilds, or fraternities in seventeen different
parishes. In Oxford there was 'the taylors' stipendiary' at St. Martin's,
worth 62s. a year; at St. Mary Magdalen's a stipendiary with an income of
47s., and 'our Lady chantry,' value nearly £13, of which the incumbent
received £4; at St. Michael's there was a stipendiary with 50s. a year, a
chantry which had been founded only about twenty years; at St. Giles's a
stipendiary with an income of 75s.; at St. Mary's the fraternity of
St. Nicholas had endowments of more than £4, of which they paid £3 to
the curate of the parish to serve as their chaplain; at St. Aldate's there was
Aldaster's chantry, worth 76s. At Thame the chantry of St. Christopher (fn. 223)
had an income of £10; at Witney there was 'the free chapel or chantry of
our Lady,' value £7 7s., and Farmer's chantry, founded by Thomas Farmer,
value £6 13s. 4d.; at Standlake there was an old chantry, worth 117s.; and
the chantry in St. Cecilia's chapel at Minster Lovell, worth 40s., and Alysbury's
chantry at Rousham, worth £3, were also ancient foundations; at Burford
there was the guild of our Lady, with an income of about £14, of which £8
was paid to the chaplain, and the rest expended on the repair of highways
and bridges; and there was the chantry of our Lady, value £8. At Chipping Norton there were three foundations—the Trinity Guild, with an income
of £14, which supported a priest and also a schoolmaster, 'Sir Hamlet
Malban,' and the two chantries of St. James and St. John, each with an income of about £7. At Banbury the Guild of our Lady, founded by Henry V,
had an income of nearly £45, and supported three stipendiary priests, a clerk,
and a sexton, whose salaries came to £25; this was far the richest foundation
in the county. At Henley there was St. Katherine's chantry, worth £6; and
there had been another, called Elmes' chantry, 'which one Elmes hath withdrawn more than four or five years past, which was founded by his ancestors.'
At Woodstock the chantries of St. Margaret and our Lady had incomes of
nearly £8 and £11; and, lastly, there was Newes chantry at Tackley, worth
£4 10s. This must not be taken as a complete list of the chantries that had
once been in existence. Elmes of Henley was not the only person who had
been 'withdrawing' what his ancestors had given. At Deddington there
had been a chantry which in 1526 (fn. 224) supported two priests, and was still in
existence in 1543. (fn. 225) In this case the crown was the patron, and no doubt
had 'withdrawn' the endowments. Again, in 1526 there were four chantry
priests at Henley, so that two foundations must have been withdrawn besides
the Elmes chantry. (fn. 226) Others had been granted by the patrons to various
religious foundations: Leigh's chantry in the church of St. Michael's South,
at Oxford, had been granted to Oriel College; Montacute's chantry to
St. Frideswide's. A chantry at St. Peter-le-Bailey disappeared early. (fn. 227) But,
as has been said, there remained twenty-three in the year 1547, with a clear
income of £192.
In most cases petitions were made by the inhabitants that the chantries
might not be suppressed. If, as we have seen, there was no great eagerness
for the dignity of divine worship in Tudor times, yet Oxfordshire people had
no wish that their endowments should be seized by the crown, and certainly
had no objection to the doctrine of prayers for the dead. As grounds for the
continuance of these foundations it is stated that out of twenty-six chantry
priests twenty-two held no other posts and had no other means of livelihood,
and that there were in many parishes so many 'howseling people,' that the
parish priest without the assistance of the chantry priest would have difficulty
in administering to them the Holy Communion at the great festivals. The
numbers given would be very useful as a guide to the populations of the
parishes, if they could be trusted; but in some cases they are certainly too
low, in others too high. In days when a person was likely to be presented in
the archdeacon's court if he did not make his Communion, there must have
been more than 144 howseling folk at Burford, however strong Lollardism
might be. Again, there must have been more than 140 at Chipping Norton;
and on the other hand, the number of 203 given for a small village like
Rousham seems impossible.
In two respects this act of confiscation has been misunderstood: it has been
represented as a general dismantling of parish churches, and as a robbing of
parochial charities. It is true that the plate and jewels of the chantries were
seized, but the amount was only 167 ounces. Several of the chantries had no
plate, and probably not more than ten churches in the whole county were
affected. When it is remembered that the parish church of Thame sold more
than 170 ounces of plate in the years 1549 and 1550, and apparently more
than 100 ounces in 1548, (fn. 228) and that the monastery of St. Frideswide produced
more than 600 ounces, (fn. 229) the confiscation of the ornaments of the chantries
becomes a small thing. Furthermore, the doles for the poor, which were
often associated with obits and chantries, were not, or were not meant to be,
seized. This is clear from the wording of the return made by the commissioners:—
Sum total of all lands, &c., of chantries, guilds, stipendaries, obits, lamps, &c.,
£275 12s. 8d.; reprises yearly (with £24 7s. 5½d. given to the poor) £40 8s. 2½d.: so
remaineth clear £236 4s. 10½d.
Even of this amount the king did not receive the whole. One of the
injunctions of 1547 ordained that the profit of cattle, and money bequeathed
to the finding of lamps, should be put in the poor-box or spent on the highways, or even in the repairing of churches. (fn. 230) The return of the commissioners was that for the support of lamps and obits there were £45 in annual
rent, 'stocks in money 105s.; stocks in cattle, priced at 84s.; stocks in cattle,
unpriced, kyne 7, sheep 72.' In the parish of Pyrton the churchwardens'
accounts show that the 'lampe cowe' was sold in 1548 for 15s., and next
year that amount was spent upon repairing the roads.
There was no doubt much robbing of churches, but the culprits were
the churchwardens and other parishioners. In 1552 the inhabitants of
Thame asserted that within the last few years the churchwardens had sold
'four chalices of silver, two crosses of silver, two basons of silver,' &c.,
including the great bell and the fore bell, that almost nothing was left,
that no account had been rendered for three years, that what had been
sold was worth £300 and more, and that the money had been divided
among the churchwardens and their friends. (fn. 231) The accounts, which are
still extant, prove that there was not much exaggeration in this statement.
In 1548 they sold plate to the value of £70, in 1549 the great silver
cross worth £22, in 1550 a pix, two chalices, and two censers worth
£28, while in 1551, the second silver cross produced £19 10s. and the great
bell £23. There is nothing to show what became of the money; though
the church expenses did not require a quarter of this sum, there is no appearance of any balance carried on to the next year. (fn. 232)
To put a stop to this certain commissioners, Sir Francis Knollys,
Leonard Chamberlain, and Edmund Ashefield, were sent round the county in
1552 to make inventories of church goods, and the returns for fifty-eight
parishes which have come down to us show what had been happening. (fn. 233) At
Baldon St. Lawrence the churchwardens declare that since the last inventory
there have been stolen 'two vestments of whyte silk, and ii surplese: item, ii
crosses, one of copper and thother of brasse: item, ii candlesticks of brasse, and
ii hand-bells: item, iiii alter clothes and one towell.' At Beckley 'a
chalyce, a cope of whyte damask, ii owld coops of redd sylke, ii vestments of
sylke' were missing. At Piddington a vestment had been sold by the
churchwardens for 9d. In several places 'the residewe of the old inventory
was stolen.' Many churchwardens assert that as no inventory had ever been
taken, they did not know what the church ought to possess; but where we
find there was no paten or no chalice, we feel sure there had been recent
theft. At Rotherfield Peppard 'my lady Stoner syns ye deathe of Sir
Walter Stoner, hyr husbond, toke away another great chalyce, abowt ye
value of ten poundes in to hyr owne keapyng, and hath not delyvered it
agayn.' In several cases the spoiling was done in a straightforward way by
churchwardens and parishioners, as a simple means of raising money for
church expenses. At Bix a chalice had been sold for 40s., and the Paraphrase of Erasmus and the Book of Common Prayer had been bought for
15s., a Bible for 13s. 4d., books they were ordered to purchase by the
injunctions, and the residue spent on 'pewing of the churches' (i.e., the two
churches of Bix Brand and Bix Gibwin). In the same way at St. Thomas's,
Oxford, 'with the whole concent of the paryshyoners,' a chalice and two
pyxes, weighing in all 24 ounces, had been sold for £7 16s., and the money
spent on buying land 'for the relief of the poore people.' The authorities
of the church either made no effort or were powerless to stop it, but it seems
that it was hoped to effect this by the taking of inventories by royal commissioners every year. There are returns of thirty-eight inventories taken in
spring, 1553, in many cases from the same parishes as in 1552. But ornaments that were unnecessary were carelessly kept and soon disappeared, and all
through the reign of Elizabeth this process was going on. In 1584 William
Lucas of Churchill, cited in the archdeacon's court, says 'he knoweth not
wheare there challice is become, or in whose custodie it remayneth, nether
doth he know of any other reliques of superstition to remayne in anye man's
hands within there parishe, and saith that he receyved the parcels exhibited
from Henry Medecroft.' Medecroft in his turn said he had received 'the
relicks' from one Kerne about seven years before, and that there had also
been two crosses, one of which 'they put to the belfounder's in Oxford to
make there sauncebell withall.' (fn. 234)
At the time of the rebellion in Devon and Cornwall early in 1549 there
was evidently some serious outbreak in Oxfordshire, but our knowledge of the
events is slight. Foxe says, (fn. 235) 'During this Hurly-burly among the Popish
rebels in Cornwall and Devonshire, the like commotion at the same time by
such like Popish priests as Homes and his fellows began to gender in the parts
of Oxford and Buckingham, but that was soon appeased by the Lord Gray.
. . . Of the rebels 200 were taken and a dozen of the ringleaders delivered
unto him, whereof certain were after executed.' The State Papers show that
Foxe has minimized what happened, and that those executed were considerably more than a dozen. The document is entitled (fn. 236)
The order devised by the Lord Gray with the advice and consent of the gentlemen of
the county of Oxford at Witney, July 19, for appointing the said gentlemen, whose names
be under written, to cause further execution to be done in sundry towns within the said
county of certain traitorous persons. . . . First it is thought good by the said Lord Gray
and the rest that these traitorous persons whose names be under written shall suffer execution
in these several towns under written immediately, or else the next market days following in
any of the same towns to be kept, according as the other like offenders have in other places
suffered, and after execution done the heads of every of them in the said towns severally to
be set up in the highest place in the same, for the more terror of the said evil people. It is
also ordered by the said Lord Gray that . . . the said gentlemen shall cause the said traitorous
persons to be safely conveyed to the said towns and to be present with their aide to cause
the execution to be done accordingly. The names of the gentlemen appointed by the said
Lord Gray:—Sir Anthony Cope, Sir John Williams, Sir William Barandyne, Sir William
Raynsford, Leonard Chamberlain, esq., Richard Fyner, esq., William Fermor, esq., &c., &c.
The names of the prisoners appointed and ordered to suffer:—John White, of Combe,
Richard Tompson, vicar of Dunstew, to be hanged at Banbury. Sir Henry Mathew,
parish priest of Deddington, to be hanged at Deddington. John Brookyns, a craftsman, to
be hanged at Islip. William Boolar, of Watlington, to be hanged at Watlington. Two
of the most seditious, which are not yet apprehended, to suffer at Thame. Two other of
the most seditious to be hanged at Oxford. Richard Whittington, of Deddington, weaver,
to be hanged at Bicester. The vicar of Chipping Norton to be hanged there upon the
steeple there. John Wade, parish priest of Bloxham, to be hanged on the steeple there.
Bowldry, of Haseley, to be hanged at Oxford.
The last is known from local deeds to have been a small freeholder of the
yeoman class. (fn. 237) The ferocity of this order shows how nervous the Government was. From the fact that so many parish priests were executed, we
gather that the rebellion in Oxfordshire was more on religious than socialistic
grounds; but it is noticeable that none of the gentry joined it, and among
those who took part in the execution of the priests we find the heads of the
Barantine, Chamberlain, and Fermor families, which in Queen Elizabeth's
reign were leading recusants in the county.
During the reigns of Edward VI and Mary several events, important in
connexion with the religious history of the country, took place at Oxford.
In 1548 Peter Martyr, brought from the Continent by Cranmer to propagate
Reforming doctrine, was installed as Regius Professor of Divinity at Christ
Church and began to deliver theological lectures on semi-Zwinglian lines.
But this belongs rather to the general history of the nation than to the history
of the county; and the same is true of the great event of the reign of Mary,
the martyrdom of Hooper, Latimer, and Cranmer. They did not belong to
the county nor had they much connexion with the town of Oxford; and a
full account of the matter will be found in any history of the Church. (fn. 238) The
county itself seems to have been free from persecution during the reign of
Mary, and the bishop, Robert King, who survived until 1557, had a reputation
for being a man of peace and tolerance.
The various changes in church services between 1547 and 1558 can be
traced in some of the parish accounts that have survived, and if we may judge
by the language of the entries, and by the regular succession of churchwardens
and of incumbents, they were accepted with a curious calmness, without
enthusiasm or regret. In the churchwardens' account of Pyrton (fn. 239) we find
that they purchased the Homilies and the King's Injunctions for 1s. 2d.
in the autumn of 1547, and shortly before May, 1548, 'a copy of the King's
Injunctions,' price 4d., by which may be meant the Order of the Communion,
which came into use on 10 April, 1548, and might be described as the King's
Injunctions because it was issued by the king's authority like the Injunctions; the church already possessed a Bible.
In 1548 'a boke for the churche' was bought, price 6s., no doubt the
Paraphrase of Erasmus, which by the Injunctions of 1547 was to be acquired
within twelve months. The cost for 'the delyveryng of the lamppe cow'
was 4d., probably the expense of driving it to the appointed centre that it
might be sold. By the Injunctions of 1547 all lands, rents, and cattle which
had been given for the maintenance of lamps were to be surrendered, and the
money given to the poor or applied to the mending of roads, 'except by the
King's Majesty's authority it be otherwise appointed.' As regards lands
and rents the king did appoint otherwise, but the price of the cattle seems
to have been left; Pyrton received 15s. for the cow, and next year
spent that amount on repairing the roads. In the same year 18s. 8d.
was received for 'olde brasse,' no doubt for the processional cross, and perhaps candlesticks as well. As the Injunctions ordered that processions in the
church before high mass and at other times were to be discontinued, the
cross and the banners were unnecessary; the 'banner clothys' were sold in
1551 for 1s. 8d.; at Thame (fn. 240) the two silver crosses were sold in 1549 and
1551, and the 'Banner clothes,' worth only 3s. 4d., in 1550. Also as the
Injunctions laid down that no candles were to be set up except two on the
altar, there was a selling of superfluous candlesticks. Between 22 May,
1549, and 16 May, 1550, 'the boke of the quere' (choir) was bought for
3s. 8d., no doubt the first Prayer Book of Edward VI, and later in the year
4d. was paid for 'carrying the boke to Oxford,' i.e. for carrying the old
service books to the bishop to be destroyed, according to the king's order
issued to the archbishop of Canterbury, in December, 1549. (fn. 241) The books at
Thame (fn. 240) were carried 'to the Bysoppe to Thame Park,' which was at that
time one of his manors. In 1550 there was a great white-washing of Pyrton
church at a cost of 5s. 8d., no doubt to obliterate pictures of saints; and
early in 1551 Injunctions were bought for 4d., possibly some injunctions issued
by the bishop, like those which Ridley issued at London. (fn. 242) Between May,
1551 and May, 1552, we find 'paid for making of the Lord's Tabull 10s. 8d.,'
this process being performed at Thame in December and January, (fn. 240) and during
the next year, May, 1552, to May, 1553, the churchwardens of Pyrton
bought for 4s. 'a boke of Common Praar sett forth by the Kynge,' i.e. the
second Prayer Book of Edward VI. In July, 1553, Queen Mary ascended
the throne, and in October, by the repeal of the ecclesiastical legislation of
Edward VI, the state of religion at the end of the reign of Henry VIII was
restored, and the churchwardens, who were elected in May, 1553, show in
the accounts that were presented on 26 April, 1554, that they had paid
14s. 9d. for a chalice, 6s. 8d. for a mass book, 8d. for 'making of the superaltar,' and 1s. 6d. 'for making of the Paschal and Wantaper' (i.e. font-taper).
Next year they bought a manual for 3s. 8d., a processioner for 4s., a cope
and four vestments from the neighbouring vicar of Shirburn for 40s., while
the rebuilding of the altar cost 3s. 4d.; it was evidently made of the local
stone, and required 'a lode of chalk, a lode of earth and a bushell of lyme.'
Next year a cross and a banner were purchased for 30s., and 3s. was paid as
half the price of a 'portes' (i.e. breviary). The expenses of the year ending
Whitsuntide, 1557, included 1s. 3d. for 'a heare (fn. 243) to the altar,' and 26s. 8d.
for 'the Rode (i.e. rood) and the other images,' the work of a carpenter
from a distance, who was boarded in the village; and besides the paschal and
font-taper there were 'tapars for the Rode.' Next year 'the painting of the
hy awter' cost 6s. 8d., and of the 'dowme' (? dome) 13s. 4d., and 'three
quartans of say to hange over the peaks' (pix) cost 1s. 2d. In November,
1558, half way through the next account, Queen Mary died, but there seems
to have been no alteration in ritual for the year ending Whitsuntide, 1559,
and 'the Paschal' was lighted in Holy Week as usual; but during the next
year 5d. was paid for the Injunctions of 1559, and in accordance with their
directions the altar was pulled down by the clerk at a cost of 8d.; and a
'book of Common Prayer and a plaine book' were bought for 6s. 8d. What
the second book was is uncertain; but at Thame the book of Homilies was
bought for 12d., and three small 'processioners' (i.e. copies of the Litany).
Next year 1s. 8½d. was paid at Pyrton 'for the tabels' (or as it is called at
Thame 'the table of the Commandments'), 1s. 6d. 'for wipinge oute of the
images,' no doubt painted above the altar. In the year ending 12 May,
1562, there is an entry of 2d. 'for making clene of the church, when the
rood-loft was pulled down,' and 1d. 'for mending of the surplesses.' At
Thame the rood-loft and the side altars were pulled down in 1560, but the
high altar remained until 1564. The last ripple of the storm is an entry in
1565, 'for thinkes sold 11s. 8d.' Unfortunately there is no means of telling
what were the wishes and feelings of the parishioners; the entries are
colourless; the images are not called 'idols,' the 'thinkes sold' are not called
relics of superstition; the language used shows no regret or enthusiasm, one
way or the other. Further, when the church was beautified or defaced it is
hard to tell whether it was of choice or compulsion, by the wish of the
parishioners or at the order of the archdeacon; if the retention of the old
ceremonies in the first months of the reign of Queen Elizabeth is taken to
indicate a preference for that form of religion, we have on the other hand
the alienation of church goods in the reign of Edward VI, often with the
consent of the parishioners, not ordered by any authority; and in fact, as the
returns of the commissioners in 1552 show, the churchwardens were expected
to preserve them. The mending of bells and repairing of windows is the
same in the reign of Edward VI as in the reign of Mary; the mode of
raising money was the same in both reigns, namely the 'church ale' at
Whitsuntide; but a large part of the money was spent on roads in the one
reign, on church ornaments in the other.
The bishopric of Oxford, for the first century after its establishment, had
a very broken history. On the death of Robert King, who occupied the see
from 1542 to 1557, Queen Mary nominated Dr. Thomas Goldwell, the bishop
of St. Asaph, to be his successor; but before he could be instituted Queen
Elizabeth had ascended the throne, and he retired to the Continent. For ten
years the see remained vacant, the revenues being appropriated by the queen;
but in December, 1567, Hugh Curwen, archbishop of Dublin, who had
petitioned the Queen that he might retire to a more quiet sphere, was translated to Oxford and settled himself at Swinbrook. He was one of those who
had accepted all the changes of religion. He had first acquired notoriety by
his defence of the king's marriage with Anne Boleyn; yet he had been a
chaplain to Queen Mary, and had been promoted by her to the archbishopric
of Dublin. He had the reputation of being an honest secular judge, but a
negligent and indifferent bishop; but in his case it is not easy to say which
party should be saddled with the discredit. He survived his appointment to
Oxford less than one year, and another long vacancy followed, until in 1589,
Sir Francis Walsingham urged the queen to appoint to the see. This step,
we are told, was not suggested because he had any interest in the spiritual
welfare of the county, but 'out of pure devotion to the leases, that would
yield good fines.' (fn. 244) The custom at that time was to grant leases of farms and
manors at a small annual rent, but with a heavy fine, to be paid every twentyone years, when the lease was renewed. As the vacancy of the see had lasted
twenty-one years, a bishop was necessary to renew the leases, but apparently
arrangements were made that he should not secure the temporalities until
after the queen or her courtiers had secured the fines. The queen nominated
Dr. John Underhill, rector of Lincoln College, and one of her chaplains; he
was consecrated in December, 1589, but his tenure of the post was brief, as
he died at London in 1592 'in much discontent and poverty,' (fn. 245) and there is a
note in the diocesan registers that there was no ordination in his time, because
he never entered his diocese from the day that he was appointed to it. (fn. 3)
Again there was an interval of twelve years, and in 1604 Dr. John Bridges,
dean of Salisbury, was elected to the see. He took up his residence at March
Baldon, as there was no episcopal palace at that time, and there he was buried
in 1618. His successor was John Howson, a canon of Christ Church, who
as vice-chancellor of the university in 1602 resisted certain Puritan preachers,
and in 1616 had preached a course of sermons against Bellarmine, Saunders, and
the Papists. In 1628 he was translated to the see of Durham, leaving behind
a reputation for 'learning and those virtues which were most proper for a
bishop.' (fn. 247) The next to be appointed was Dr. Richard Corbet, dean of Christ
Church, a noted wit, author of 'Poems, Jests, Romantic fancies and exploits,
which he made and performed extempore,' renowned as a most quaint
preacher, and for this reason highly esteemed by King James. (fn. 248) He was
elected in 1629, but translated to Norwich in 1632. His successor, Dr. John
Bancroft, nephew of Richard Bancroft, archbishop of Canterbury, at the
persuasion of Laud, at that time archbishop, took the important step of
building a palace at Cuddesdon, and nominated himself first rector, and
subsequently vicar as well, of the parish; and until recent times the bishops
of Oxford were the vicars of Cuddesdon. Before this time the bishops had
no fixed residence, but each lived at the parsonage-house of whatever parish
he held together with the bishopric. The palace was finished in 1632, but
in 1644 it was burnt for strategic reasons by the Royalist soldiers, and was
not rebuilt until 1679. Bancroft died in 1640, having been reputed by the
Puritans 'a corrupt, unpreaching, Popish prelate,' and was succeeded by
Robert Skinner, bishop of Bristol. He had been a successful tutor at Oxford,
and subsequently for nine years had been preacher at St. Gregory's Church in
the city of London, where he preached twice every Sunday (at that time a most
unusual thing), and had 'obtained love, honour, and applause, especially from
the Puritans.' None the less he was selected by Laud for preferment, and
was made bishop of Bristol in 1636. In 1641 he was translated to Oxford,
and shortly afterwards, with eleven other bishops, was imprisoned in the
Tower for eighteen weeks. On his release he retired first to Cuddesdon,
then joined the garrison of Oxford, and shortly before the city was surrendered retired to his rectory at Launton, Oxfordshire, to which he had
been appointed before 1636, and which he had retained. There he lived
unmolested until the Restoration, and according to his own statement as many
as three or four hundred clergy were secretly ordained by him during those
years, among them being the renowned Bishop Bull. On the return of the
king there were those who cast in his teeth the fact that he had suffered no
persecution under the Puritans, and that he had subscribed no more than £30
to the cause of Charles I; but he was able to make a satisfactory defence, and
in 1663 was promoted to the richer see of Worcester.
During the first part of this period, when for forty-four years out of
forty-seven the see was vacant, much of the work of the diocese devolved
on the archdeacons, who received their authority from the archbishop of
Canterbury. The first of these was Dr. Walter Wright, who held the post
from 1543 to 1561, accepting all the changes of religion in turn; and on
this point there can be little doubt he was typical of the vast majority of the
beneficed clergy of Oxfordshire. He was one of Cardinal Pole's visitors of
the University, and is said to have been particularly zealous at that time for
the restored religion, but under Queen Elizabeth he was equally zealous on
the other side, and according to Nicholas Saunders was stricken with mortal
illness immediately after preaching a sermon against the supremacy of the
pope. (fn. 249) His successor, John Kennall, held the post from 1561 to 1592, and
John Drury from 1592 to 1614. They must have both played an important
part in the management of the diocese during the long vacancies of the see,
but unfortunately little or nothing is known about them.
But if the external history of the diocese is almost a blank from 1550
to 1640, a flood of light is thrown on the internal state of church affairs at
that time by the records of the archdeacon's court for ecclesiastical offences
in 1584, 1593, 1598, and other subsequent years. (fn. 250) It is at once apparent
from them that the rejection of the supremacy of the pope and the prohibition of appeals to him, so far from putting an end to the ecclesiastical courts
in England, had practically no effect at all. The archdeacon's court, as we
see it in these records, is exactly as Chaucer describes it; (fn. 251) the offences tried
are the same, the language and form of procedure are the same, and the
penalties are the same. The offences which we find brought before it are
blasphemy, brawling in church, non-payment of church dues, absence from
church, neglecting to communicate at Easter, working on Sundays and holy
days, keeping schools and practising medicine without the bishop's licence,
witchcraft, and above all the two great offences of defamation or libel, and
immorality. These were the matters which churchwardens would present
at the archdeacon's visitation, and the court dealt with them after the Reformation exactly as before. The same technical language was retained, and
that much-dreaded official of the Middle Ages, the archdeacon's summoner,
was in full activity in Oxfordshire until the end of the seventeenth century.
The penalties imposed were penance and fines, backed by excommunication,
which had not lost all its terrors even as late as 1662. We have even in
these records that abuse of the archdeacon's court mentioned by many
mediaeval writers, the relaxation of penance in the case of the well-born
in consideration of a payment of money. Thus in 1631 a gentleman and
lady of Adderbury were allowed to escape the disgrace of public penance by
the payment of 20s. (fn. 252) Just as the 'church ales' continued after the Reformation and the custom of making legacies to the Church, (fn. 253) so the traditional
ecclesiastical law, as administered by the archdeacon, was not altered by the
changes of doctrine.
The cases of defamation and immorality do not, of course, throw much
light on the church life of the time. If they are numerous after the Reformation, there is reason to think it was the same before. In the presentments
for 1517, already quoted, there are not a few cases of immorality reported,
and the alteration of doctrine cannot be shown to have had much effect on
this matter in one direction or the other. But the other charges brought
before the court are at times most illuminating as regards church customs
and ways of thought. As regards witchcraft, for instance, two women of
Long Combe, presented on that charge in 1593, deny that 'they did ever
commit any witchcraft, neither have they any such skyll, neither hath the
devill tempted them to that.' The judge orders that they are to produce
four compurgators to testify to their innocence. (fn. 254) In a similar case five years
later the bare denial of the woman is adequate. (fn. 255) Although as late as 1812
the churchwardens were asked to present any who practised 'chirurgery'
without the bishop's licence, it is evident that this regulation had not been
enforced for centuries: in our records we have only one case in which
certain women were forbidden in 1633 to 'practice physic.' (fn. 256) To work on
Sunday and also on holy days was an ecclesiastical offence; this regulation
had no connexion with Sabbatarianism or Calvinism, but was the same before
the Reformation as after. John Ewer of Yarnton, cited in 1621 for working
on holy days, confesses that he set his servant to work, not knowing that
it was St. Mark's Day, but that as soon as he was told he 'discharged
his servant from his work': he confesses that on an urgent occasion he
had winnowed a little wheat on Candlemas Day. (fn. 257) Even as late as 1665
a man was cited for working on Michaelmas Day. (fn. 258) Saints' days were
observed not only by absence from work, but also by divine service. John
Ragnall of St. Aldate's, Oxford, cited in 1584 for bowling during divine
service, confesses that he did bowl on Saturday, 24 June, at five o'clock in
the afternoon. (fn. 259) In a case in 1584 where two women contended in church
about a pew, the brawling occurred on Monday, 1 November, during the
Gospel. (fn. 260) There was also service on Wednesday and Friday, and evidently it
was fairly well attended; for in 1630 four men of Ledwell having a commission of rebellion against Richard Parsons of Nether Worton, hid in the
chapel to arrest him when he appeared, 'it being Wednesday'; but he
did not come. (fn. 261) The vicar of Mapledurham in 1598 confesses to negligence
in that he has not always had service on Wednesday and Friday (fn. 262) ; and
in 1633 the vicar of St. Peter in the East, Oxford, was commanded to have
service always on those days. (fn. 263) Attendance at the parish church on Sunday
was compulsory for all parishioners, as before the Reformation, but the
judge was satisfied with an attendance once in three or four weeks. Absence
from church was made a civil offence early in the reign of Queen
Elizabeth, and as such was dealt with by the magistrates, but in the
archdeacon's court it was treated as an ecclesiastical offence. There seems
to have been no difficulty in enforcing this law except with recusants; all
others promised amendment and were dismissed with a caution; but recusants
who would not conform were ultimately excommunicated, and if they died
unrepentant were liable to be refused burial in consecrated ground.
Of open Puritanism there is little trace, nor does history tell us of
the organization of any classis in Oxfordshire, after the pattern used in
Northants, Norfolk, Suffolk and elsewhere. It is true that we hear (fn. 264) of
letters sent by Presbyterians in the reign of Queen Elizabeth to 'our
brethren' at Oxford and Cambridge, but in each case this refers not to
the counties or the towns, but to the universities. In the archdeacon's court
there were some cases of neglecting to wear the surplice, but whether it was
from idleness or done with an object is not easy to state. Mr. Lancaster, vicar
of Bloxham, confessed in 1598 'that he doth not weare the surplysse, but he
maketh not skropple of yt, but will were it.' (fn. 265) In 1633
Thomas Dilch of Alvescott saith that hee never is absent from the church, nor did he give
him (Mr. Twilty) any reviling speeches; only this respondent tould him that if hee did
make him leave the carryinge of his gunne, hee would make him weare the surplese—the
said Mr. Twilty, not usinge to weare the surplesse. (fn. 266)
In 1667 the rector of Over Worton, (fn. 267) cited for 'administering the sacrament
without a surplice' replied that he did not wear it 'for the foulness of it, it
having been washed but once these three years.' The only clear instance of
nonconformity is supplied by Mr. Dodd, the rector of Hanwell, in 1593,
who was unwilling to conform to the wearing of the surplice and the use of
the cross in baptism; and was granted six months by the archbishop in
which to conform. (fn. 268) We have, too, in 1630 one who at all events, was
accused of a Puritan temperament, in Richard Cotterell, who confessed that
he had not 'gone procession' with the rest of his neighbours this last year, but
hereafter hee undertaketh for himself and his family that they shall conforme themselves.
Hee denyeth that hee ever sayde that the readinge of the Gospel at the tyme of perambulation was a vayne thing, neither doth hee conceive it soe to bee. (fn. 269)
To judge from these records there was in Oxfordshire no dissent from the
Church to the year 1640, except on the part of recusants; and the fact that
when the courts begin again in 1660 they are full of the cases of Quaker
dissent, proves that had there been any similar opposition to the Church in
earlier times the records would have shown its existence. A few cases of
blasphemy occur, as when some men at Henley baptized a cat in church, or
when six men of Chipping Norton in 1631, 'drinking together on a Sabbath
day, pretended to baptize all those whose names were not John', (fn. 270) but this
was evidently a drunken frolic, not a protest against the doctrine of sacraments,
and they were ordered to do penance on the next Sunday in their parish
church 'between the first and second lesson,' each appearing with a paper
on his head,
with capitall letters written in it to this effect:—I doe come to doe this penance for
prophaning the Holy Sacrament of baptism on the Sabbath daye . . . by sprinkling
drinke on the faces of those whose names were not John.'
Down to 1640 none refused to make their communion on Easter day except
recusants.
If services were comparatively frequent sermons were somewhat rare.
A sermon every three weeks was considered an adequate allowance, and the
vicar of Mapledurham, cited in 1598 for not reading the homilies, 'saith that
he is a preacher, and preacheth every other Sunday.' (fn. 271) In 1633, Martin
Royse, curate of Bladon, when cited, makes answer 'that he doth preach a
sermon commonly once in three weeks, but confesseth that in harvest time
there was not a sermon preached in six weeks.' (fn. 272) Even at the end of the
eighteenth century to be a preacher meant to preach once a Sunday.
Some ancient customs and ways of thought which dated from before the
Reformation still survived. As late as 1633 a woman was accused of slandering
the marrying of priests; she denied it, and said that 'she doth not dysteeme,
nor revile, the same.' (fn. 273) But it is evident that some did. Again, in 1584, the
curates of Charlbury and Chadlington were cited for celebrating marriages in
Advent, which though not apparently illegal was contrary to old custom. (fn. 274)
But the outstanding feature of this period is the strength of the Roman
Catholics, and the archdeacon's court was much occupied with their cases.
Until the history of each parish has been written it is difficult to estimate how
many there were, but among them were some of the highest and richest
families, and probably they held one-third of the manors of the county. In
the south of Oxfordshire in particular they were very strong, mainly no doubt
through the influence of the Stonors. This family owned a large estate
extending over, or into, the manors of Stonor, Bix, Rotherfield Peppard,
North Stoke, Watlington, Nettlebed, and Highmore, and with their relatives,
the Chamberlains of Shirburn and Clare, and the Symeons of Chilworth,
Brightwell, and Britwell, owned or influenced a tract of land 15 miles long by
5 miles wide. Adjacent manors were held by other recusant families:
Stokenchurch and Kingston Blount by the Belsons, Swyncombe by the Fettiplaces, Waterperry by the Cursons, Great and Little Haseley by the Lenthalls,
Huddlestones, and Horsemans, Mapledurham by the Blounts; at Forest Hill
and Sandford there were the Powells, at Thame the Wolfes and certain
branches of the Wenmans and Dormers; at Whitchurch the Hides. Towards
the north of the county were the old families of Fermor of Somerton and
Browne of Kiddington. At Chastleton we meet with the names of Catesby
and Ansley, and after the Restoration Mr. Sheldon of Great Barton and Sir
Walter Mildmay of Ambrosden. (fn. 275) On the other side there were in the north
of the county the strongly Puritan families of Fiennes of Broughton and
Cope of Hanwell, but in the south only such minor gentry as Ellwood of
Crowell, father of the well-known Quaker, or Colonel Scrope the regicide.
In a list of the justices in 1574, it is stated that there were no resident justices
in the hundreds of Binfield and Pyrton, apparently because all the gentry
were recusants. (fn. 276) Out of the six gentry who in 1580 were in command
of the musters from the Chiltern Hundreds three were recusants, Francis
Stonor, Robert Belson, and Robert Chamberlain. (fn. 277) The great majority of
the middle and lower classes accepted the reformed religion, but showed no
enthusiasm for it, and if in Oxfordshire a poll of the gentry had been
taken at any time during the reign of Queen Elizabeth, it is likely that
the decision would have been to return to the unreformed religion. According to Strype the university was full of recusants, and out of eighty members
of Exeter College he asserts that all but four were secret or open 'Roman
affectionaries.' (fn. 278)
Though the recusants lived under cruel laws, the records of the archdeacon's courts show they were usually administered somewhat leniently,
and it is evident that among the ordinary folk of Oxfordshire there was no
hostility or suspicion towards the Papists or their religion. Had it not been
for pressure from above, exercised in the last resort by the king's council,
there would have been no persecution. Churchwardens were unwilling to
present their kindly landlords and squires for non-attendance at church, and
tried to evade it. The churchwarden of Mapledurham, cited in 1630 for not
presenting Sir Charles Blount for a recusant, replied 'that hee can neither
write nor reade, but his intent was to present Sir Charles Blount for a recusant,
but he knoweth not how to express it in forme.' (fn. 279) In 1633 the churchwardens of Somerton acknowledge that they should have presented Sir Richard
Fermor, 'who had not been to church or received the Sacrament for a year.' (fn. 280)
Also the authorities of the court were evidently not anxious to proceed
to extremities. In July, 1630, Lady Elizabeth Stonor, cited to appear
at Oxford, sends a servant who 'offereth to make faith that his Lady
is so infirme and ill at ease that she is not able to come abroad,' and an
adjournment for three months was granted. At the end of that time the
servant appeared again, with the excuse that the coach of his mistress 'brake
on Friday last,' and again the case was adjourned for three months; and
though the lady herself was in the archdeacon's court, proving a will, only
eight days later, it excited no remark, and the adjournment was not curtailed.
Those recusants who desired delay because they were not yet satisfied in
conscience about receiving the Communion were readily granted a year's
respite, during which they might confer with some divine, though it was
patent to all that their minds were fixed. Some of them conformed so far as
to attend church: thus in 1593 William Lenthall of Wilcote says, 'that he
has heretofore absented himself from church, but he hath reformed himself
thereof, but for the receiving of the Communion he is not yet satisfied in his
conscience,' and the same position was adopted by Edmund Ansley of
Chastleton.
How much sympathy there was for the hard position of the recusants,
and how few wished them harm, is shown by a curious case which came
before the bishop's court in 1631. Mrs. Horseman of Wheatley and Holton,
a recusant, died on 31 December excommunicate, no doubt for not attending
church. Her friends had promised her that she should be buried in Holton
church, but as their conscience would not allow them to say to the archdeacon that she had died penitent, he could not give permission for the
burial. It is evident that the vicar was anxious that it should take place, but
could not disobey the archdeacon's decision. On the morning of Thursday,
6 January, it was found that the door of the church had been forced in the
night, a grave made 'under the Communion table,' and though all the village
was aware that the body had been buried there, no one could be found to
bear witness against the perpetrators. In the course of the inquiry it came
to light that there had been a large gathering and supper at the house of
Mrs. Horseman on the night of Wednesday, 5 January; and the story of
the servants of the house was that for sanitary reasons they placed the coffin
in the garden at night, and that unseen hands removed it. The feelings of
the village were evidently expressed by a woman who was reported to have
said 'God's blessing on the hands that buried the dead.' There was certainly
no such tension and hostility towards the church of Rome at this time as
there was in the days of Charles II; the clergy, so far from informing against
their recusant parishioners, tried to shield them; and on the other hand, we
find Mr. Thomas Stonor, a recusant, presenting a bell to the parish church
of Watlington in 1660, and six years later, building and endowing there a
free grammar school, where the master was to be of the Church of England.
That the persecution of Papists was more political than religious is
proved by the fact that it was instigated by politicians, it varied with the state
of the political barometer, and was directed against those who, rightly or
wrongly, were accused of political intrigue, namely those who harboured
Jesuits and the itinerating secular priests called seminarists. Thus in 1589
Thomas Belson of Aston Rowant was arrested at Oxford in the company of two
seminarists, and all were condemned to death. (fn. 281) Again in 1610 George Napper,
a seminarist, a native of Holywell, Oxford, was apprehended at Kirtlington
and hanged at Oxford. (fn. 282) Also Campion himself, though arrested outside the
county, had long been harboured at Stonor, where he and Parsons had a
secret printing press. (fn. 283) On the other hand, the case of Edmund Reynolds,
openly a Papist, who had conducted a public disputation against his younger
brother, John Reynolds, president of Corpus Christi College, and lived in
peace at Oxford and Wolvercote until 1630, shows that the persecution was
not directed against certain doctrines, but against suspected individuals. Yet
even at the best of times the recusants suffered many irritating restrictions
and endured for 200 years what the Church of England had to endure for
twenty years at the time of the Commonwealth. Excluded from political
influence themselves, they had to own as masters over them those who were
their inferiors in education, rank, and often in character. (fn. 284)
If the recusants were particularly strong in the south of the county,
other opponents of the Church of England were strong in the north. Banbury and its neighbourhood was renowned for its Puritanism even in the
reign of Queen Elizabeth, so that in the 1608 edition of Camden's Britannia
the joke was made that Banbury was famous for its 'cakes and zeal' (i.e. Puritanism), (fn. 285) the previous edition reading 'cakes and ale.' Ben Jonson, in 1614,
uses the phrase 'a Banbury man' for a 'Puritan,' and in the Journeys of
Drunken Barnaby, of about 1616, the author makes fun of a Sabbatarian
Puritan of Banbury:
I came to Banbury, O profane one,
And there I found a Puritan one
Hanging of his cat on Monday
For killing of a mouse on Sunday. (fn. 286)
No doubt Sir Anthony Cope of Hanwell, a staunch Puritan, was to some
extent responsible for the strength of the movement. Though not as influential as the Stonors, the Copes were a rich and powerful family, and for three
generations had been of ultra-reforming opinions. (fn. 285) In 1588 Sir Anthony
composed a prayer book of his own, and moved in Parliament 'that all laws
then in force touching ecclesiastical government should be void,' and that his
own book should alone be used; but the queen stopped the matter by placing
him in prison until Parliament was dissolved. (fn. 287) He appointed clergy at
Hanwell of Nonconforming ways; first John Dodd, of whom we have spoken,
and then Robert Harris, both of them energetic and conscientious men, but
hostile to the arrangements of the church. (fn. 288) Possibly it was through his
influence that Thomas Brasbridge was appointed by the crown to the vicarage
of Banbury in 1581. He was deprived in 1590 for Nonconformity, or, as
his supporters phrased it, 'for some matters of ceremonies'; but so popular
was he that ninety-five of the leading inhabitants of the town made a petition
to the Lord Treasurer on his behalf, and subscribed to provide him a salary,
whether he was allowed to preach or not. He himself wrote to the Lord
Treasurer for leave to preach, promising that in his sermons he will 'handle
no matters but only Papistry,' asserting that many recusants sojourned hard
by the town, and that many of the inhabitants were too much inclined to
Papistry. (fn. 5) Another vicar of Banbury, William Whateley, who held the cure
from 1610 to his death in 1638, an exemplary man, was a Puritan, though
not a Nonconformist. (fn. 290) In the immediate neighbourhood Robert Cleaver,
rector of Drayton, was suspended for Nonconformity about 1605, (fn. 291) and John
Prime, fellow of New College and vicar of Adderbury about 1580, was a
noted Puritan preacher. (fn. 292) It is noticeable that all these Puritan clergy were,
unlike many of their clerical neighbours, men of learning and earnestness; that
'zeal' was considered synonymous with disloyalty to the Prayer Book, and
that indifference was considered the correct attitude for the Church of England.
There can be no doubt that, almost without exception, people of real religion
in the days of Queen Elizabeth were either recusants or Puritans. (fn. 293)
When the Civil War broke out, the clergy of Oxfordshire were even
more strongly on the king's side than the clergy throughout the country.
After the dissolution of the monasteries, so many of the advowsons within
the county came into the possession of Oxford colleges that the clergy were
more closely connected with the university than before, and parishes were
often held by fellows of colleges. If the University of Oxford adopted a
strong attitude in defence of the crown, it was inevitable that the clergy of
Oxfordshire would follow; but some of them of humbler position—vicars
and curates—were less pronounced in their hostility to the Roundheads, as
Anthony Wood noticed of the vicar of Thame. It was natural, therefore,
that when the cause of Parliament was triumphant many incumbents who
had been the most energetic on the side of the king should be dispossessed
of their cures. It is computed that twenty-eight of the clergy, i.e. about
one-sixth of them, suffered in this way, (fn. 294) being deprived of their preferments
and allowed as a maintenance one-fifth of the stipend. It must, however, be
remarked that others had reason to be thankful to the Parliament, which in
at least five cases made grants to augment poor livings. (fn. 295) When the king
returned, as many as twenty-four ministers were ejected from their parishes.
As they were not, and would not be, episcopally ordained, it was impossible
that they should retain their cures, but fairness demanded that some provision
should be made for them, especially after the promises made by the king
before his restoration.
The history of Nonconformity in Oxfordshire, as an organized body
apart from the Church, dates from the Commonwealth, and the first to set up
separate places of worship were the Quakers. (fn. 296) From the Autobiography of
Thomas Ellwood, of Crowell, Oxfordshire, we gather that their chief focus
was in Buckinghamshire, where they were supported by men of position, but
in Oxfordshire also they were fairly numerous. Three Quaker tracts describe
the first advent of the doctrine into the town of Oxford, and of the way it
was received by the Presbyterians and Independents, who were then in
power. (fn. 297) In 1654 two northern women, Elizabeth Heavens and Elizabeth
Fletcher, came to Oxford in the month of April, and 'passed through streets
and colleges, and steeple-houses, declaring the word of the Lord.' One
Sunday they went into a church, and when 'the priest' (the preacher) had
done, one of them began to answer him. For this they were at once carried
to 'Buckerdo' (i.e. Bocardo, the prison), and 'the justices' and the vicechancellor ordered that they should be whipped as vagrants; the mayor was
unwilling, but 'those who were zealous and thought that they had done God
good service' agreed that they should be soundly whipped, and next day this
was done, although the executioner was very reluctant. They had previously
'been mocked and buffeted at John's College, being tied together and jumped
[upon] and kicked and thrust into a pool called Gileses pool.' 'Magistrates
and scholars and they who pretend to be ministers of the Gospel are the
chiefest actors in the persecution.' The second pamphlet deals with the
ancient Calvinistic doctrine, that salvation is a matter of the next life, not of
this, the Quakers emphasizing strongly the need and effect of grace. The
third pamphlet, to which Wood has added the note 'some but not all of the
things in this pamphlet are true,' deals in particular with attempts to break
up the meetings at the house of Richard Betteris, a surgeon residing in New
Inn Hall Street. Scholars had broken the windows of the house, had locked
the door and removed the key: they 'which title themselves ministers of
Christ' had tried to break up the gatherings by gunpowder and squibs, or
had burst in, saying, 'Give us beer and tobacco,' and stamped up and down,
and were 'more like swine than ministers.' Some had come in with beer
and poured it down the necks and clothes of the Quakers. Scholars had
come in and used indecent language, and because the Friends would not
speak, had forced their mouths open with violence. 'The scholars of John's
College' seem to have been the worst; and when complaint was made
to the heads of Houses, no redress could be obtained; 'Doctor Owin' (dean
of Christ Church) 'hath spewed up some things against the people of God
called Quakers'; at Banbury also the Quakers endured similar ill-treatment in
1654 and 1655 at the hands of the Puritans. (fn. 298)
After the Restoration the church took up the persecuting work of the
Presbyterians and Independents, but it may fairly be said, without the same
violence, fury, and malignity. There is extant a letter to the lord chancellor,
from Richard Baylis, the vice-chancellor, dated 12 May, 1662, which
describes how he was
hasting homeward after the morning sermon at St. Mary's, when a complaint met me that
the Quakers by scores were gathered together at one of their exercises in the house
of Mr. Bettrice . . . I found them all hushed. What they had already said or intended
to say, they would not confess. I fairly besought them to depart; they absolutely refused.
I read the Act unto them, newly published for the suppression of such conventicles, and
added another short sharp lecture unto it, that I would presently put the same into severe
execution. The threat no whit moved them but to high terms of scorn, and vaunts that
neither prison or gallows should make them change their resolution. Disquieted I was with
such sottish impudence, and betwixt pity and just indignation forgot my duty; for stead of
exacting the mulct prescribed in statute, I fell to intreaty and persuasion that they would
have pity upon themselves, their proper goods and souls, and quietly depart: all in vain.
Thus provoked to just execution according to the Act, yet foolish pity prevailed against my
judgement and overcame me to dispense, where the law did not warrant me. In fine with
some show of force I made a shift to clear the room and dissolve the congregation and to
carry my old prisoner Bettrice to Bocardo.
He craved pardon for his remissness, and promised not to be seduced by
foolish pity again. The lord chancellor replied that:
we have instruction from experience that these Quakers are a sort of people upon whom
tenderness or lenity do not at all prevail, and that now the Act against them is made
public, it is of absolute necessity to put it severely in execution against all or at least
some of the principal of them, especially where you are, since it would be of very ill
example that we should not be able to root them out of an University. (fn. 299)
About the same time we meet with them in abundance in the ecclesiastical courts. To the archdeacon they were a new feature, and one with
which he was unable to cope; and as they were quite indifferent to the
archdeacon's excommunication, they remained masters of the field. Thomas
Dringe of Brize Norton, cited January, 1663, 'saith his conscience will not
permit him to goe to the parishe church to theire prayers, for hee is a church
himselfe and the Temple of the Lord'; Thomas Minchin of Burford 'doth
not allowe of the prayers at the parishe church, using then scandalous
speeches against Mr. Glyn, the vicar there. He is excommunicated for his
obstinate and schismaticall answer.' Lawrence Wellyer of St. Giles', Oxford,
wishing to argue, said 'wee could not prove that in ancient time Christians
used any churches. The judge to avoyde argument, monished him to be
better advised and to appeare the next court day.' Thomas Busby of
Sandford, James Weaver of Enstone, and Henry Shodd of Charlbury,
were summoned for absence from church; they refused to put off their
hats in court; and the last, when 'inhibited from teaching schoole, said
hee believed hee should not observe that command either.' (fn. 300) They had no
hesitation, no doubt; they did not desire a year's delay, that they might
consult a learned divine; they held out no prospect of alteration. With
such the archdeacon was powerless; and when others who had separated
from the Church showed a similar callousness to the punishment of excommunication, the court, though it was held as late as 1696, (fn. 301) was robbed of its
main weapon.
A prominent figure among the early Quakers, Anne Downer, was by
birth from Oxfordshire, having been born at Charlbury in 1624, where her
father was vicar. She subsequently resided in London, where she became
a Quaker in 1654, and was the first woman who preached in public in
London. In 1656 she visited Charlbury and Chadlington, and preached
there, and 'convinced many.' Soon after she married Robert Greenwell,
who died in Newgate Prison in 1664; her second husband was George
Whitehead. On her death, in 1686, an account of her was given in a
work containing 'Testimonies concerning that true Servant of God, Ann
Whitehead.' (fn. 302)
Some of the earliest, if not the earliest, meeting-places of dissenters
were those of the Quakers at Banbury and Adderbury; the former dated
from 1664, the latter seems to have been earlier. (fn. 303) About the same time
the Independents and Presbyterians began to organize themselves. Wood
describes (fn. 304) how those fellows of colleges that were banished from Oxford
for attending conventicles became preachers in the country around—Dr. John
Owen at Stadhampton, Thomas Cole at Nettlebed, Henry Cornish at Stanton
Harcourt; others lived as guests or as tutors in those county families which
were inclined to Puritanism. One of the earliest Nonconformist congregations was gathered at Bicester, where Mr. Troughton, fellow of St. John's
College, when he was expelled from Oxford in 1662, acted as minister. On
his death, in 1681, he was succeeded by Henry Cornish, who was a canon of
Christ Church during the Commonwealth. Of the abilities of the former
Wood speaks with great respect. The chapel was at first Presbyterian,
subsequently Independent. (fn. 305)
Of the bishops of Oxford in the reign of Charles II the ablest and
most active was Dr. John Fell, 1676–86. Having been a student of Christ
Church in the reign of Charles I he was ejected by the Parliament and lived
quietly in Oxford until 1660. He was then made dean of Christ Church,
and proved himself an efficient ruler. Being a man of strong will and quick
decision, and not very considerate of the feelings of the sensitive—'one who
did not value what the generality said of him' (fn. 306) —he was unpopular; but no
reader of Anthony Wood can fail to admire his liberality, love of scholarship, and genuine religion. Immediately on his appointment to the bishopric
he began the rebuilding of Cuddesdon Palace. Dr. Paul, who occupied the
see from 1663 to 1665, had collected timber for the work, but had done
nothing more; Dr. Fell, at his own expense, completed the work in 1679.
He also granted an endowment to St. Martin's Church, Oxford, for the
maintenance of daily morning and evening service. Together with his
bishopric he retained the office of dean of Christ Church, and as at the
same time he took a leading part in the conduct of all University business
it is not surprising that he shortened his life by overwork.
The latter part of the episcopate of Bishop Fell was a period of much
bitterness and tension. The stories of popish conspiracies, and the attempts
of the party of James II to secure converts, raised feelings against the
recusants such as had never existed before, and Anthony Wood reveals in his
diary with what suspicion he himself was regarded because he had Roman
Catholic friends. At one time also the hostility of the Church towards
Nonconformists was very sharp, and the regulation of the Act of Uniformity
that those who failed to attend their parish church should be fined 1s. for
each Sunday seems to have been put in force in some places. The churchwardens' book of Watlington, Oxon., records:—
Feb. 23, 1681, distrained by John East, churchwarden of Watlington, of William Marson,
labourer, as followeth, viz., one brass porrige pot, weight 7 lbs., for seven Sundays absence
from our parish church by his wife, appraised by the praisers at 12s. 10d. Distrained the
same day of John Pocock one kittle, weight 15 lbs., at 8d. per pound, and one warming pan
at 2s., for 15 Sundays absence from our parish church.
There are similar entries in 1682 and 1683, but none after or before.
It is said that the stringent laws passed against the recusants in the
reign of William III reduced their numbers, but lists drawn up in 1706
and 1715 show that they were still numerous and influential in Oxfordshire. The former list, (fn. 307) which professes to give the names of all Roman
Catholics in the county, the amount of their property, and in particular
whether they possess any advowsons, is certainly very incomplete even for
the parishes from which we have a return. (fn. 308) The other list, (fn. 309) which is
complete for all properties of recusants that were in their own hands,
though it seems to omit those that were in the hands of Protestant
trustees, shows that the recusants of Oxfordshire had land of the annual
value of approximately £10,000, whereas in Buckinghamshire, a county
of equal acreage, population, and wealth, the amount was only £5,000.
No sooner was the Church safe from the schemes of James than
another trouble arose. A considerable number of the most earnest churchmen refused to take the oath of allegiance to William III and the
oath of abjuration of the Stuart line. The Universities of Oxford
and Cambridge produced many non-jurors, but it does not appear that
among the clergy of Oxfordshire the proportion was any higher than
in other counties. The rectors of Harpsden and Stanton St. John and the
vicars of Charlbury and Pyrton surrendered their cures rather than
take the oath; (fn. 310) but the university was full of sympathizers, and generally
made some provision as far as possible for ejected fellows and incumbents.
Thus at Pyrton, when Mr. Acworth the vicar resigned, the patrons, Christ
Church, Oxford, appointed as successor a friend of his named William
Howell, (fn. 311) who, as it is assumed by Hearne, (fn. 312) allowed his predecessor a portion
from the vicarage of Pyrton sufficient for his maintenance.
In 1690 John Hough, who as president of Magdalen had played such
a prominent part in resisting James II, was appointed bishop of Oxford. In
1699 he was followed by William Talbot, who had obtained the deanery of
Worcester through the interest of the duke of Shrewsbury, (fn. 313) and according
to Hearne was addicted to cards. (fn. 314) Unfortunately, owing to the attitude of
so many of the clergy both in the time of William III and also under the
Hanoverian kings, the choice of bishops was limited to the Whigs, who
with all the virtues of reasonableness and moderation, were not men of enthusiasm or great strictness of life. In 1715 John Potter, Regius Professor of
Divinity, was appointed bishop, a man of learning, whose edition of Clement
of Alexandria is still the best. There is extant a charge that he delivered
to the clergy in 1719, but it throws little light on the state of the diocese.
He complains of the hostility to the clergy: 'our frailties and imperfections
are highly aggravated'; he dwells on the great scandal that arises if any of
the clergy are 'immersed in worldly cares and business,' an unfortunate topic
to select in the age of courtier bishops.
The successor of Bishop Potter was Secker, who was translated from
Bristol, and after holding the see from 1737 to 1758 was promoted to the
archbishopric of Canterbury. From his triennial charges some idea may be
formed of the state of religion in the diocese. In 1738, like his predecessor,
he laments the laxity of the times: 'disregard to religion is become the
distinguishing character of the present age,' and he implies that there was
a malignant hostility to the Church and all Christianity. In 1741 he gives
some rules about parochial matters: candidates for confirmation must not be
under fourteen years old as a general rule; the clergy ought not to absent
themselves from confirmations, but present their own candidates; there should
be not less than four celebrations of the Holy Communion every year, and
he hopes that ultimately a monthly celebration will be attained; it is not a
proper custom that people should sit for the psalms; large numbers stay
away from church, but if they will not alter for entreaties they must be
presented by the churchwardens; communicants formed a very small proportion of the congregations; the clergy should make an effort to have
service on Wednesdays, Fridays, and holy days; some had no service on
Good Friday and Christmas Day; servants, who according to the canons ought
to be brought to church for catechizing, displayed an unwillingness to say the
catechism publicly. In 1753 he acknowledges that 'immorality and irreligion have grown almost beyond the reach of ecclesiastical power'; yet
churchwardens must present gross offenders, and if the court pronounces
excommunication they are to be publicly denounced as excommunicate, and
the churchwardens are to see that they are not allowed within the church;
he speaks too of the difficulty of persuading congregations to keep their
churches in repair. Amid much which conveys an impression of gloom he
mentions one brighter fact, that his diocese, omitting the university, contributed more than one-fortieth of the income of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel; the proportion now is only about one-eightieth.
The Methodist movement, which started at Oxford, for some years
made little progress in the town. It hardly needs to be said that one of the
first works of Wesley and his circle was to visit the prisoners, apparently
both in the Castle and Bocardo, which was done with the approval of the
bishop; in fact, the bishop's chaplain, who had formerly undertaken the
work, resigned it to them. At South Leigh in Oxfordshire John Wesley
preached his first sermon in 1725; but when his diary begins, and for some
years afterwards, he speaks of Oxford with much despondency. In 1741,
when he had occasion to preach in St. Mary's, he was told that every one
was so prejudiced against him that it did not matter what he said; and when
his turn came to preach in August, 1744, the vice-chancellor immediately
after the sermon sent his beadle for his notes, no doubt with a view to
discover heresy; but Wesley was only delighted that some one should read
his sermon. Next year he speaks of Oxford as 'poor and miserable and
blind and naked'; but we must remember that he was one who found it
difficult to see religion unless it took exactly his form. In 1751, when he
came to Oxford for an election, he noticed an improvement; there was no
laughter when he appeared, or pointing, or calling of names, and henceforth
his visits were more frequent. In 1769 he speaks of a dissenting meetinghouse, which it seems he sometimes borrowed for his preaching; and in 1775
his society, which was now a numerous congregation, owned a large house
that had formerly belonged to the Presbyterians. In 1780 there was a new
chapel at Oxford, and he mentions with pleasure that many gentlemen and
scholars came to hear him and behaved well. At Burford, as early as 1739,
he preached to as many as 1,500 people; as it was a winter evening, this
must have been in the parish church; but afterwards he seems to have paid
few visits there. He had several followers at Finstock, and always enjoyed
their company, but there is no doubt that Witney was the strongest centre
of Methodism in the county, and in Wesley's eyes the most satisfactory in
all England. He began his ministry there in 1764, and then, and on all
subsequent occasions, praised the quietness, diligence, sobriety and civility of
the people. Next year he again visited this 'congregation of late standing,'
and by 1767 he describes his audience as 'huge.' In 1769 'we have a large
and commodious house at Witney,' which however in a few years was too
small. In 1783 another visit was paid to the town, and on Sunday Wesley,
who always maintained that his followers were a society within the Church
of England and should attend the parish church, was present there himself
and the Methodists with him, so that the church was crowded, to 'the
surprise and delight of the rector.' But it is evident from these words that
unless Wesley was in the town it was not the custom for the Methodists
to come to church; and seeing that as early as 1739, to Wesley's grief, some
of his followers 'made a jest of going to church and to the sacrament,' (fn. 315)
every one but Wesley must have realized in 1783 what had happened. He
alone was blinded by his theory.
Whatever the causes may be, it is certain that church matters in
Oxfordshire became more and more lifeless as the eighteenth century drew
on. Whether it was from the dread of enthusiasm, or from a succession
of bishops selected for moderate principles and political services, certain
returns (fn. 316) made in 1781 and 1783 show how slovenly and meagre were the
church services at that time. Out of 207 churches in the county, seventyfour had only one service on Sunday; and with the four exceptions of
Bicester, Henley, Bampton and Chipping Norton, none had two sermons.
The only church which according to the return had service on holy days
was St. Mary's, Oxford, and one church, Adderbury, had service on Wednesdays and Fridays. It seems that no church had daily prayers, although
St. Martin's, Oxford, had an endowment for that purpose. About one-third
of the incumbents were not, and as they were pluralists could not be, resident
on their cures. It is true that they kept curates, but as a curate in some
cases was engaged by two or more different incumbents to serve their
churches, there were some parishes with no resident clergy. Pluralism was
rampant, and in the next century there was the crowning instance of
Mr. Pretyman, son of the bishop of Lincoln, who from 1819 to 1866
held the rectory of Middleton Stoney with five other pieces of preferment,
his total income from them being £4,006 per annum. (fn. 317)
Of the bishops of Oxford of the nineteenth century several were men of
mark. Charles Lloyd, who occupied the see for only two years and died at
the age of forty-four, was one who might have done great things if his life
had been prolonged. After a brilliant career at Oxford, he became lecturer,
tutor, and censor of Christ Church, and in 1822, when he was thirty-seven
years old, was made Regius Professor of Divinity. Though he held the post
for only five years, he accomplished some valuable work, and his text of the
Greek Testament was the standard text in use at Oxford for sixty years or
more. Besides his statutory lectures he had a class for some of the younger
tutors, a precedent which was followed in later days by J. B. Mozley, and
among those who attended were Newman, Pusey, Greswell, Churton, and Jelf.
A description of one of these classes, written by Miss Mozley, (fn. 318) gives us a
picture of Lloyd as one with somewhat unepiscopal manners—rough, hearty,
and with little care for dignity, but fond of his pupils, and with a genuine
zeal for learning. It was through him that Pusey went to Germany to study
and was promoted to the Professorship of Hebrew; and when Newman
began the study of the Fathers it was with his approval. He was a scholar
of the type that was more common at Cambridge than at Oxford, with more
belief in hard work than in brilliancy, distrustful of dialectic and philosophy,
laying emphasis on accurate exegesis and historical evidence. Many of the
Tractarians affirmed that they first learnt from him that the Prayer Book
was to be understood from the point of view of those who first composed and
accepted it, and that the mediaeval service books were to be used as a commentary to explain it—ideas which are common now but were novel then.
Newman, who never felt strongly the appeal to history, and had a bent for
philosophy, was not much influenced by him, though he felt strongly the vigour
of his mind and his personal kindliness; (fn. 319) but Pusey and Sir William Palmer,
and other Tractarians of the historical school, probably owed much to the
training of Lloyd. In 1827 he was made bishop of Oxford, and died two
years later while still quite young. Good judges have thought that if he had
lived a few years longer he would have been of the greatest value in dealing
with the rise of the Tractarian Movement. He certainly would not have
allied himself with the dominant old High Church party in Oxford, who
were content to remain in ignorance and condemned as erroneous all that was
new to them; he would have been in sympathy with much of the theology
of the Tractarians, but whether he would have been also in sympathy with
the religious side of the movement remains uncertain.
His successor was Richard Bagot, sixth son of Lord Bagot. He had
passed through the stages which were customary at the time for one of high
birth and good abilities; he was B.A. in 1803, Fellow of All Souls in 1804,
M.A. and ordained in 1806, a canon of Windsor and the holder of family
livings in 1807, a canon of Worcester in 1817. He was appointed to the
see of Oxford in 1829, and at his own request was translated to Bath and
Wells in 1845. It was his misfortune to be called upon to decide some
momentous questions in connexion with the rise of the Oxford Movement,
and there can be no doubt that the responsibility weighed upon him, but he
acquitted himself well in his difficult post. If he was unable to place himself
at the head of the movement, he could appreciate well much of its practical
side, and all the Tractarian leaders bore testimony to his courtesy, fairness,
and personal goodness. Newman, who had a high opinion not only of his
character, but also of his abilities, and described one of his charges as 'strong
and bold,' (fn. 320) was grieved that he said in his charge in 1838 that there were
points in the movement of which he did not approve, and asked what the
points were; the bishop's reply was that nothing definite was meant,
that he was thankful for the movement as a whole, but received many
letters, anonymous and otherwise, disapproving of his friendliness to
the Tractarians. (fn. 321) He continued to exhort Pusey and Newman to 'moderation' and to avoid 'superstition,' but in each case he meant what he
himself was accustomed to consider superstition and moderation. He was
not like Lloyd, a deep and original scholar, capable of judging whether the
position of the Church of England needed to be re-stated; but he was
unwilling to hinder the work of those whom he knew to be personally
honest and earnest men, and it was only in 1841, as it seems in response to
pressure put upon him, that he asked that the series of Tracts for the Times
might be discontinued.
During his tenure of the see the extent of the diocese underwent a
great change. Since the Reformation it had consisted of the county of
Oxford, but the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, about whom Bishop Bagot
hazarded the gloomy prophecy that they would be more powerful than all
the bishops, shortly after their establishment brought forward a scheme for
the transference of Berkshire from the diocese of Salisbury and its union
with Oxford. This was accomplished in 1837 by an order in Council; but
when next year, in the same way, the county of Bucks, part of the old
diocese of Lincoln, was also added, the bishop of Oxford refused this second
addition on the ground that it would make the see larger than any one man
could supervise. The scheme, therefore, was not carried into effect until he
was succeeded in 1845 by Samuel Wilberforce.
This great bishop was appointed to the see when he was only forty
years old. Born in 1805, he was archdeacon of Surrey in 1839, canon of
Winchester in 1840, dean of Westminster in May, 1845, and six months
later bishop of Oxford; in 1869 he was translated to Winchester. Few
men have had more influence on the English Church than he, not so much
by his teaching as by the example he gave. He was the first, at all events
in the diocese of Oxford, to break with the old ideal of a bishop's life—
courtly, dignified, and peaceful; he had marvellous powers of work, and
by his energy and activity welded the three counties into one body and
infused new energy into its church life. If modern English bishops are
men of much labour, and for the most part of simplicity of life, it was
Wilberforce who set the pattern; and what is now expected from all was
originated by him when he came to the diocese of Oxford.
In another way his influence was equally great; he was one of the first
to see clearly that other methods of worship and church organization were
needed in the nineteenth century from those in use in the sixteenth. In
studying the religious history of the county, nothing is more remarkable
than the almost Oriental changelessness between the years 1560 and 1820,
and in particular between 1700 and 1820. It is true that the Puritans
between 1560 and 1600 had made one or two small experiments, such as the
institution of lectureships; between 1620 and 1640, during the Laudian
revival, there was no doubt a certain development in the dignity of worship,
and churches were restored and embellished; also after the Restoration there
were some innovations, especially in London and town parishes, such as more
frequent services and the establishment of guilds and societies for church
objects, culminating in the foundation of the Society for Promoting Christian
Knowledge and the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel; but during
the whole of the eighteenth century there was no alteration except the
institution of Sunday schools. For the most part church matters in 1820
were exactly as they were two centuries earlier: the churches were kept in
the same way, the service was said at the same hours, and with the same
kind of ritual; Tate and Brady or Sternhold and Hopkins was still the
Hymn Book; and during all that time the parish organization and modes of
church-work remained unchanged. An awakening had already taken place,
and some new churches had been built, when the Oxford Movement arose
and added its force to the revival. The Tractarians laid stress not merely
on doctrine and still less on ritual, but rather on personal religion, and soon
saw the necessity of altering the customs of the sixteenth century. They
saw the necessity of new churches, and indeed built many; Newman erected
one at Littlemore in 1836, Pusey another at Leeds, and their followers
imitated their example throughout the country. Existing churches were
restored and beautified, services were more frequent and reverent, and church
life found new openings in various directions. Although Bishop Wilberforce
was never quite able to do justice to the Tractarian position, and remained to
the end of his life a somewhat insular, rather than Catholic, High Churchman,
yet he was at one with them in his desire to make religion a force in the life
of individuals and the nation, and not a mere form. He set to work at once
to procure the formation of new parishes and the erection and endowment of
new churches; parsonages were built in order that there might be resident
clergy in all parishes; and church restoration was taken in hand. In 1847
he founded the Oxford Diocesan Society for such objects, the immediate
programme being the erection of twenty-two new churches and fifty parsonages, (fn. 322) and when he resigned the see, 250 churches had been restored and
seventy parsonages built. It was estimated that during those twenty-two
years the amount of money spent within the diocese on new churches,
church endowments, church restoration, new parsonages, and houses of
mercy amounted to over £2,000,000. (fn. 323) When it is remembered that
during the 300 years from 1520 to 1820 there had been, it seems, no new
church erected, and probably not twenty during the 600 years from 1220 to
1820, we see what an epoch the episcopate of Wilberforce was. In his
extreme care about confirmations and ordinations he set a new example, and
what is now the rule of every bishop was initiated by him. Other novelties
in church life he was one of the first to encourage, if he did not originate
them; for instance, missions, retreats, sisterhoods, and theological colleges.
In 1850 he conducted missions in several parts of the diocese; in 1860 he
instituted a retreat for clergy at Cuddesdon; sisterhoods were founded in
1849 at Wantage, in 1852 at Clewer, and though at first his evangelical
training made it hard for him to appreciate this new development, he soon
learnt to value it, and guided it with wisdom. Cuddesdon Theological
College was founded by him in 1854, one of the first, though not quite the
first, of such institutions; and the bishop appointed Liddon vice-principal,
recognizing his genius for that work. When the college and its viceprincipal were violently attacked in the Press in 1858 the bishop defended
them, and though Liddon subsequently resigned, it was in connexion with
another matter. The bishop did much to encourage evening services and
surpliced choirs; he urged the abolition of family pews and all that hindered
the poor from taking their rightful place in worship. Though he was not
without friends in high places, and had not to endure the continuous storm of
insult and misrepresentation which fell on Pusey, yet he deserves to be
reckoned among those who have suffered persecution for righteousness' sake;
as he said himself, if he had not followed his convictions and left the evangelical school to which his father belonged, he would have been enthroned
at Lambeth before he was fifty by the dominant evangelical party; (fn. 324) and
any reference to the back numbers of the newspapers will show that like
John Wesley he was called upon to endure much unpopularity with the
unthinking public because of his zeal for religion.
John Fielder Mackarness, who was appointed in 1869, was in many
points a contrast to his brilliant predecessor, but he was of equal industry
and perhaps greater judgement. He had been an incumbent in two parishes
for twenty-four years, and no bishop of Oxford had so much experience of
parish work. During his episcopate St. Stephen's House at Oxford was
opened in 1876 as a place of training for candidates for orders; in 1878
Dorchester Missionary College was founded, not indeed through the efforts
of the bishop, but before long he became its visitor: Pusey House was
established in 1884 at a cost of nearly £40,000, the bishop himself taking
a leading part in the scheme; and in the same year the Society of St. John
the Evangelist, Cowley, at their first general chapter requested him to become
their visitor. (fn. 325) He did not aim at ministering to a wider sphere than his
own diocese, but in one matter he was brought forward more prominently.
In 1879 when he was requested to allow proceedings to be taken against
Canon Carter of Clewer for illegal practices in the conduct of divine service,
he gave a refusal on the ground that the promoters of the suit were not
parishioners. Application was then made in the Queen's Bench for a
'Writ of Mandamus,' and in the first instance the decision was that a bishop
had no power to withhold his consent to legal proceedings under the Church
Discipline Act; but in the two higher courts this judgement was reversed, so that
it fell to Bishop Mackarness to be the first to secure the episcopal right of
veto. There can be no doubt that his action has saved the Church from
much strife, and that if he had not appealed from the first verdict, the
position of a bishop would, as he said, have been intolerable. He resigned
the see in 1888 through failing health, and died the next year. William
Stubbs, bishop of Chester, the historian, was elected his successor 24 December, 1888, and occupied the see for more than twelve years. During 1889
and 1890 he served as an assessor to the archbishop of Canterbury during
the Lincoln Judgement, but with this exception his episcopate was uneventful. He died 22 April, 1901, and Francis Paget, dean of Christ Church,
was appointed.
Appendix
Ecclesiastical Divisions Of The County
The connexion of Oxfordshire with the dioceses of Dorchester, Lincoln, and Oxford having
been traced, there remains the question of the ecclesiastical subdivision of the county. Henry of
Huntingdon states that the first archdeacon of Oxford was Alfred, appointed by Bishop Remigius,
and that Walter, of whom we have evidence as early as 1112, was the second. (fn. 326) It appears certain
that from the first the county and archdeaconry of Oxford have been co-terminous.
The Taxatio divides the county into nine rural deaneries, which had the same titles, and
almost the same boundaries, as were in use in 1840. How old these divisions are, and how they
originated, is uncertain, but the rural dean appears frequently among the witnesses in Oxfordshire
charters in the twelfth century; and in some rural deaneries it is possible to recover the successions
from the time of Henry I. Thus in Oxford we have 'Thomas le Den' about 1120; (fn. 327) William
about 1138; (fn. 328) Odbrich 'decanus Oxenefordie' before 1151; (fn. 329) 'Johannes de Oxenford decanus
ecclesie beate Marie de Oxenford' before 1165, (fn. 330) when he was promoted to the deanery of Salisbury; he was succeeded by 'Radulfus decanus de sancto Martino,' 1165 to c. 1183; (fn. 331) he was
followed by his son Nigel de sancto Martino, who died in 1199. (fn. 332) That the rural deaneries were
always nine in number, and contained the parishes which we find in 1291, cannot definitely be
proved; but all the evidence, as far as it has been collected, agrees with this assumption. It is
certain, however, that some of the names of the rural deaneries cannot be primitive; as Woodstock
did not come into existence until the reign of Henry I, there could have been no rural deanery of
Woodstock in Saxon times; and in fact the deaneries seem to have had no distinctive names at
first; rural deans and ruridecanal chapters are in the twelfth century expressed by the phrases
'decanus loci' and 'capitulum loci,' or if the name of the place is added to decanus it is the parish
where the rural dean was beneficed. This style has not always been understood, so that (to give
an example) Anthony Wood drew the conclusion from the title 'decanus ecclesie sancte Marie'
that the church of St. Mary in Oxford always had a dean, the true explanation being that the post
of rural dean was held by the rector of St. Mary's, just as it was afterwards held by two successive
rectors of St. Martin's. Perhaps the earliest instance of a rural deanery with a distinctive name is
in 1192, when what is now known as the rural deanery of Henley is spoken of as the deanery of
Chiltern, the title being 'Thomas decanus de Ciltra'; (fn. 333) again in 1240 a certain agreement is to be
enforced for all time by the 'rural dean of Aston,' which evidently cannot mean 'the vicar of Aston
Rowant, now rural dean.' (fn. 334) When soon after the middle of the thirteenth century it became the
custom for rural deans to have a seal of office, it was inevitable that each rural deanery should have
a fixed name, (fn. 335) but at what date they obtained the titles which we find in 1291 is uncertain. That
this did not take place at the time of the Taxatio is proved by an Eynsham charter of 1270, (fn. 336) which
mentions by name the deaneries of Witney, Woodstock, Deddington, Bicester, Cuddesdon, and
Chipping Norton.
The boundaries of rural deaneries in Oxfordshire, as throughout southern Mercia, correspond
in no way with the boundaries of the hundreds, and even the original parishes occasionally extended
into two hundreds. Thus Pyrton parish originally included the manor of Easington in the hundred
of Ewelme, besides the forty hides in the hundred of Pyrton. (fn. 337)
Traces of the subjection of one church to another are found even where for a long time they
had been in independent parishes. Thus Launton, which figures in 1217 as a parish church
with both a rector and a vicar, (fn. 338) had not obtained the right of sepulture even two centuries later, but
brought the dead to Bicester church. (fn. 339) Sarsden church, which was given to Eynsham by its lord
as early as 1180, made an annual payment to the church of Churchill until 1375, (fn. 340) and Cokethorpe
made a similar payment to Ducklington. This last church had a curious position. An inquisition (fn. 341)
held in 1290 decided that the church of Cokethorpe had existed from beyond all memory, that
the incumbent was called rector of Cokethorpe, but that it was not certain whether the patron was
the rector of Ducklington or the lord of Ducklington; the church was to serve the two hamlets of
Cokethorpe and Hardwick, but the dead were buried in the former case at Ducklington, in the
latter at Bampton.
Taking the rural deaneries in order, we find that in the deanery of Aston the Taxatio
enumerates seventeen churches, but omits Tetsworth, Sydenham, Britwell Salome, Pishill, Stokenchurch, Ibstone, and Warpsgrove. Yet at that time there were churches at all these villages.
Roger 'persona de Tetsworth' and William 'presbiter de Tettleswode' attest deeds of 1160–90; (fn. 342)
Isaac, vicar of Sydenham, is mentioned about 1270; (fn. 343) and the reason why these two churches are
omitted in 1291 is that they must have been given by the patrons to augment the prebend of
Thame, and were served by curates appointed by the prebendary; in fact they remained curacies
of Thame until recent times. Ibstone, which was reckoned to be in Oxfordshire, (fn. 344) and Britwell
are both mentioned before 1235 in the Institutions of Bishop Hugh, and the former church was
given to Oseney Abbey before 1160, (fn. 345) though afterwards surrendered. Pishill was given to
Dorchester Abbey before 1189; (fn. 346) the rector of Warpsgrove is mentioned in 1279, (fn. 347) and the church
occurs in 1216; (fn. 348) and Stokenchurch, though only a chapelry of Aston as late as the eighteenth
century, had a chapel before 1206, and was even in possession of its own cemetery by that time. (fn. 349)
There were also the following chapels in this deanery: one at Standhill in the parish of Pyrton,
founded about 1200, (fn. 350) in existence in 1526, (fn. 351) but destroyed not long after; one at Ackhampstead
or Chyssebech, then in the parish of Lewknor, but now in the county of Bucks, mentioned in
1242, (fn. 352) and still existing in the eighteenth century; a chapel of St. James at Henton in the parish
of Chinnor, for the construction or repair of which the bishop granted an indulgence in 1308; (fn. 353)
a chapel at Berwick in the parish of Chalgrove, mentioned as early as 1319, (fn. 354) and still in use; and
a chapel at North Weston existing in 1526, and served by a curate under the prebendary of
Thame. (fn. 355) At Britwell Prior there was a chapel of ease to Newington before 1200, (fn. 356) which was
standing in 1846; but as Newington was a peculiar of the archbishop of Canterbury we have no
records about it. It may be added that the church of Warpsgrove, which has long since disappeared, seems to have existed until after 1535. (fn. 357) It will therefore be seen that in 1291 there
were twenty-three churches in the deanery and certainly three chapels of ease, probably four; and
that as far as our evidence goes they were all in existence in 1215.
In the Henley deanery the Taxatio mentions seventeen churches, including Swyncombe (now
in the deanery of Aston), and two chapels, Ipsden and Newnham Murren. To this list, however,
we must add Lashbrook, a chapel to Shiplake, founded before 1230; (fn. 358) a chapel at Woodcote in
South Stoke, which contains Norman work; (fn. 359) the parish church of Bolney, which is mentioned in
1235, and was destroyed in 1453, when the parish was united with Harpsden; (fn. 360) Nettlebed,
reckoned to be a chapel of Benson in 1279; (fn. 361) Bix Gibwin, the ruins of which show that it was of
Norman architecture, (fn. 362) of which there was a rector named Thomas in 1240, (fn. 363) and to which we find
presentations as early as the rolls of institutions begin. It may be pointed out that though
Newnham Murren was a chapel of Mongewell, yet the record of an inquisition (fn. 364) held in 1184
shows that both churches had at that time existed from beyond the memory of man. Thus in the
deanery of Henley there were twenty-four churches and chapels in 1291, of which all, or all but
one, date from before 1230.
In the deanery of Cuddesdon the Taxatio mentions twenty-two churches, one of them being
Thame, and another 'Dorchester with its prebendal chapels.' In 1526 these chapels are enumerated as: Warborough, Stadham, Benson, Clifton Hampden, Drayton, and Toot Baldon; to which
we must add Chislehampton, which was served by the chaplain of Stadham (= Stadhampton), (fn. 365)
and two chapels at Burcot and Overe, close to Dorchester. (fn. 366) Whether some of these were built
after 1291 we cannot say, but the churches of Benson, Warborough, Clifton Hampden, Drayton,
and Toot Baldon prove (fn. 367) by their architecture that they existed by the year 1200. We must also add
to the list given in the Taxatio the church of Albury, which had both a vicar and a rector in 1217; (fn. 368)
of Sandford-on-Thames, built by Gerri de Planastre shortly after the Norman Conquest; (fn. 369) of
Culham, which was confirmed to Abingdon Abbey in 1111; (fn. 370) of Newington, which shows Norman
work; (fn. 371) of March Baldon, which certainly existed in 1219, (fn. 372) having, perhaps, been built not long
before. (fn. 373) We may also safely add the churches of Noke (fn. 374) and Piddington, thus obtaining a total of
thirty-five churches in this deanery at the beginning of the thirteenth century. Of these the church
of Woodperry exists no longer, having apparently been burnt in the fifteenth century, but fragments
of it have been found. (fn. 375) There was also a chapel of ease at Ascot in the parish of Great Milton,
built in the thirteenth century and standing as late as 1800; (fn. 376) also another at Latchford in the
parish of Haseley, built by Henry Fitz-Nigel, rector of Haseley, in 1300, (fn. 377) and according to the
complaint of the parishioners destroyed in 1347 by the abbot of Thame, who was bound to provide
a monk to serve the chapel. (fn. 378) There was also a chapel at Little Haseley in 1279, (fn. 379) one at
Little Milton in 1542, (fn. 380) and another at Rycott, built and also endowed by Richard Quartermain (fn. 381)
about 1450.
In the deanery of Oxford the Taxatio mentions ten churches, and four that are described
as chapels—Binsey, St. Thomas's, Holywell, and Wolvercot—but this return is utterly inadequate;
there were twenty-two churches in 1291, and the charters about Oxford are so abundant that we
are able to assert with practical certainty that they all existed a hundred years earlier, and that more
than three-quarters of them date from before the Norman Conquest. The charter of Henry I to
St. Frideswide's in 1122 gives the names of seven churches and three chapels—the churches of
St. Frideswide, All Saints, St. Mildred, St. Michael's North, St. Peter-le-Bailey, St. Aldate, and
St. Edward; with the chapels of Holy Trinity, St. Michael's South, and St. Clement. (fn. 382) None of
these are mentioned as though they were new churches, and a fact which we learn in charters of
Bishop Roger (fn. 383) of the year 1139, that there had been legal proceedings about the possession of
many of them in the reign of Henry I, proves that they cannot have been of recent foundation;
for in that case there would have been no doubt who was the patron. Four other churches date
from before the Conquest—St. Martin's given to Abingdon Abbey in 1032, (fn. 384) St. Ebbe's given to
Eynsham in 1005, and St. Mary's and St. Peter's-in-the-East, both mentioned in Domesday Book;
of the building of Holywell and Wolvercot, the two chapels belonging to St. Peter's-in-the-East, we
have no information, but they both existed before the end of the twelfth century, (fn. 385) and there is no
reason why their origin may not have been far earlier. The church of St. Budoc, which is
mentioned as early as 1140, (fn. 386) must date from before the Conquest; for the patronage of it belonged
to the king, (fn. 387) which would not have been the case if it had been founded after 1066. Of the
church of St. John we have no definite mention before 1215, (fn. 388) but the parish of St. John is
mentioned in charters at an earlier date. The chapel of Binsey or Margaretwell occurs in 1141, (fn. 389)
and as it was a sacred spot where Edith the founder of Godstow settled about 1120, it was
evidently not a recent foundation. The church of St. Mary Magdalen must also date from before
the Conquest, as there was a dispute about its possession as early as the reign of Henry I, who
confirmed it on one occasion to the canons of St. George's as granted them by Robert d'Oilly I,
and on another occasion to the priory of St. Frideswide, as part of the possessions of the original
secular canons. (fn. 390)
Only two churches out of the twenty-two were certainly later than 1066. The church of
St. Giles was founded by Edwin Godegose in the reign of Henry I, and the advowson was subsequently granted by him to Godstow Abbey. (fn. 391) Also the chapel of St. George's was erected by
Robert d'Oilly I in 1074 within the castle of Oxford. (fn. 392) At first it was a parish church, but in
1142, during the siege of Oxford, a chapel of St. Nicholas was built in the island of Oseney,
within the parish of St. George's, and was licensed in 1186, if not earlier, to serve as a parish
church for the residents in the island of Oseney. Finally, about 1220, its title was changed
to St. Thomas's, and the whole of the parish of St. George's, excepting only the castle, was
attached to it.
Of these old parish churches several have been suppressed. The church of St. Budoc about
1265 was given by the king to the Penitentiarian friars for their chapel, (fn. 393) and the parish was united
with St. Ebbe's; in 1298 the parish of St. Frideswide was suppressed and united with St. Edward's; (fn. 394)
and the church of St. Edward in its turn came to an end about 1450; (fn. 395) St. Mildred's Church was
pulled down in 1437, and the parish united with St. Michael's. (fn. 396) The church of St. Michael's
South was destroyed at the building of Cardinal College; and the chapel of Holy Trinity, the site
of which is uncertain, never attained the rank of a parish church.
In the deanery of Woodstock we notice again that the Taxatio is incomplete, for it omits the
churches of Begbroke, Stonesfield, and Wilcote, although we have institutions to them before 1224. (fn. 397)
Against the modern parish and church of Freeland we can set several chapels which have been
destroyed: one at Hensington, in Bladon, mentioned as early as 1200, and as late as 1545; (fn. 398)
another at Ledwell, in the parish of Sandford St. Martin, existing in 1220; (fn. 399) two more at Ludwell
and Hordley, in the parish of Wootton. (fn. 400) At Frees, in Kidlington, there was a chapel of
St. Leonard granted to Oseney before 1195, (fn. 401) while the Hospitallers had a chapel at Goseford in
the same parish in the year 1235. (fn. 402) Omitting Cogges and South Leigh, which have now been
transferred from the Woodstock to the Witney deanery, there were thirty-one chapels and churches
in the time of the Taxatio, but now only twenty-seven. Nor is there any reason to say that
they had then been recently erected. From the institutions of the bishop of Lincoln we know
that, with the possible exception of three of the chapels, they were all in existence in 1220. Of
Cassington we are fortunate enough to know the date; for this village, which was originally
part of the parish of Eynsham, a church was built about 1115–23, (fn. 403) and so badly that the tower
had to be taken down within a few years. (fn. 404) Yarnton, which was also originally part of the parish
of Eynsham, and paid tithes to that abbey, must have had a church before Cassington; otherwise the people of Yarnton would have been cut off from their church when Cassington was made
into a parish.
Once more when we reach the Chipping Norton deanery we notice how incomplete is the
Taxatio. It makes no mention of the churches of Cornwell, Sarsden, and Salford; yet the two
former were given to Eynsham Abbey before the end of the twelfth century, (fn. 405) while in Salford
church there is Norman work. Although the deanery contains four modern parishes and churches
—Finstock, Leafield, Milton-under-Wychwood and Ramsden—yet it had more churches in 1200
than now. For the five following have disappeared: a chapel at Showell in Swerford, given to
John, bishop of Norwich, before 1214 (fn. 406) ; a church at Asterleigh or Esterley, erected before 1216, (fn. 407)
and destroyed in 1466, when the parish was transferred to the rural deanery of Woodstock and
united with Kiddington (fn. 408) ; the parish church of Treton (in Domesday Drayton) was given to the
monks of Bruern about 1160 and absorbed by them (fn. 409) ; at Pudlicot there was a chapel given to
Eynsham before 1167, (fn. 410) but apparently destroyed soon after; and whereas Sarsden and Churchill
are now served by one church, there were formerly two. The Taxatio also mentions a chapel at
Linham, in the parish of Shipton (now Lyneham); but as we find no reference to it in a deed
of 1226, concerning the parish church of Shipton (fn. 411) and its dependent chapels, it is doubtful
whether it existed at that time. The case of Pudlicot in this deanery brings clearly before us
the fact that the process of destroying churches and amalgamating parishes began as early as the
end of the twelfth century, and that speaking generally there were more churches and parishes
in the thirteenth century than in the sixteenth or eighteenth. Excluding Swinbrook, which
was then in this deanery, the number of churches and chapels was twenty-seven, but now only
twenty-five.
In the deanery of Witney the Taxatio omits the churches Asthall Leigh, Bradwell, Kelmscot,
Fulbrook, Filkins, Little Faringdon, Hailey, Crawley, Holwell, Bampton Aston, Bampton Lew, Widford, and Yelford; but several of them were certainly in existence. The church of Yelford occurs
in 1221 (fn. 412) ; Fulbrook in 1229 (fn. 413) ; Bradwell was given to the Templars before 1185, (fn. 414) and its two
chapels of Kelmscot and Holwell are mentioned in 1220 (fn. 415) ; Widford and Little Faringdon are
omitted because they were at that time in the counties of Gloucestershire and Berkshire respectively (fn. 416) :
Filkins and Crawley, Aston and Bampton Lew are new churches. For Hailey and Asthall Leigh
we have no evidence. Of these churches Widford is now disused; and while the deanery contained
about thirty churches in 1291, it now has thirty-four.
In the deanery of Deddington, where there are now thirty-eight churches, the Taxatio gives
no more than fifteen; but it is easy to show that the number should be much higher. The
following churches, omitted by it, were in existence before the year 1200: Cropredy, which was a
prebend of Lincoln from early times, and Sibford Gower, which was given to the Templars in
1153 (fn. 417) ; while the churches of Barford St. John, Claydon, Horley, Hornton, and Wardington all
contain traces of Norman architecture. Balscote chapel and Milcombe were both in existence in
1220; (fn. 418) Over Worton in 1279 (fn. 419) and Epwell and Nether Worton show by their architecture that
these were erected before 1291. For the same reason the churches of Bodicote and Great Bourton are
certainly as early as the fourteenth century, and Mollington probably earlier. Shenington, which
is now in this deanery, was in the diocese of Worcester in old days. In the year 1396, when a
vicarage was ordained at Adderbury, we hear (fn. 420) of a chapel, now destroyed, at Milton, within
that parish; and we are also told of similar chapels at Clifton in Deddington, and Prescot in
Cropredy. (fn. 421) We have therefore good reason for thinking that the number of churches and
chapels in 1291 was very little, if anything, short of the number there now is. Of the origin of
these churches we can only fix the date for Milcombe; about the year 1200 it was in dispute (fn. 422) whether the church of Wigginton or the church of Bloxham could claim the tithes of
Milcombe; but twenty years later there was a chapel at Milcombe, built no doubt by the nuns
of Godstow, who had the appropriation of Bloxham church. It may be pointed out that the
name Cyric-tiwa (i.e. Church Tew), used in Saxon times for Great Tew, (fn. 423) proves the high antiquity
of that church.
In the deanery of Bicester the Taxatio gives a list of twenty-nine churches, some of which
are now transferred to the modern deanery of Islip; yet even this is incomplete. It omits Merton
church, given to Eynsham before 1140, (fn. 424) Newton Purcell, given to Bicester Priory about 1200, (fn. 425)
and Shelswell, to which we have institutions from 1220 onwards (fn. 426) ; and as the church of Hampton
Poyle is of early English architecture, it must have been standing by 1291. Early in the fourteenth
century there was a chapel at Stratton Audley, (fn. 427) but it is not mentioned in the ordination of the
vicarage of Bicester about 1220. (fn. 428) Two of the parishes and churches of this deanery have disappeared, Tusmore and Shelswell, the former before 1718, the latter about 1800. (fn. 429) The number
therefore in 1291 should have been thirty-three, and we see that there were more churches then
than now.
As at present constituted the county contains ten rural deaneries, a new deanery of Islip having
been formed by the removal of Noke from the deanery of Oxford; Bletchingdon, Charlton, Hampton
Gay, Hampton Poyle, Islip, Marston and Oddington from that of Bicester; and Beckley, Elsfield,
Forest Hill, Headington, Stanton, Studley, and Woodeaton from that of Cuddesdon.