HOUSE OF CARTHUSIAN MONKS
2. THE LONDON CHARTERHOUSE
The London Charterhouse, (fn. 9) known as the House
of the Salutation of the Mother of God, was founded
at Smithfield, a little to the north-west of the city
wall, by Sir Walter Manny and Bishop Michael
Northburgh of London in 1371, but the foundation
was only the final event in a prolonged series of
negotiations and changes of plan. (fn. 10) The Black Death
had reached England in the summer of 1348, and
was at its height in London in the early months of
the following year. When the capacity of the city
graveyards proved inadequate, Manny, as a work
of charity, rented from the Master and Brethren of
St. Bartholomew's Hospital for an annual sum of
twelve marks a close of some 13 acres known as
Spital Croft, with the understanding that he should
be granted full possession when he could provide
the hospital with property of equal value in exchange. (fn. 11) The graveyard was dedicated on the feast
of the Annunciation 1349 by Ralph Stratford,
Bishop of London, who preached on the word 'Hail'
of the angel Gabriel. This circumstance, itself
possibly a consequence of Manny's devotion to this
particular incident in the gospel, gave the name
that the future monastery was to bear, the House of
the Salutation of the Mother of God.
On the same day the foundations were laid of a
chapel wherein masses were to be celebrated for
those buried in the graveyard, for Manny intended
to establish a college of twelve secular priests with
a provost, of the type that was becoming common.
This project was never executed, although papal
permission for it was obtained. (fn. 12) Instead, a hermitage
for two inmates was erected, in which continual
prayers were to be offered for the dead. (fn. 13)
So matters stood for a number of years. The first
suggestion of a Charterhouse seems to have come
from Michael Northburgh, Bishop of London
1355-61, who on his journeys to and from the papal
court had visited and admired the Charterhouse at
Paris. He approached Manny with the suggestion
that they should co-operate in the foundation of a
monastery in Spital Croft. (fn. 14) The suggestion was in
harmony with a recent change in the policy of the
Carthusian Order. The Grande Chartreuse and all
early Charterhouses had been founded of set purpose in desert places, and even the conversi or lay
brethren had been accommodated in buildings at
a considerable distance from those of the monks.
Hitherto the English foundations at Witham and
Hinton (Som.) and at Beauvale (Notts.) had conformed to this pattern. More recently, however,
continental houses had been founded on urban
sites, as at Paris, Bruges, Cologne, and Liège,
where the strict and secluded community had served
as a living contrast to the worldliness and vice of
a great city. Northburgh hoped with reason for a
similar result in London. Manny was agreeable to
the proposal, (fn. 15) and the bishop approached the
priors of Witham and Hinton. (fn. 16) The Carthusians,
at least in the early centuries of their Order's
existence, rarely made foundations spontaneously as
a 'swarm', like the Cistercians, but responded to an
invitation from a founder who was expected to
provide the buildings and endowment. In this case
the priors accepted the invitation; both died shortly
afterwards, and it was left to a subsequent Prior of
Hinton, John Luscote, to raise the matter again
with Manny when on a visit to London. (fn. 17) Manny
was still willing to act, and after some delay the
general chapter in 1370 accepted the new foundation
and appointed Luscote, relieved of his charge at
Hinton, as its administrator. (fn. 18) When, however, he
arrived in London with a companion, a deaconredditus
(fn. 19) named John Gryseley, he found that no
building had been started. Manny had offered the
Hospital of St. Bartholomew the manor of Streetly
(Cambs.) in exchange for their lands; the manor,
however, owed service to the Bishop of Ely, who
was supported by his chapter in maintaining that
he could not alienate the rights of his see without
papal permission. (fn. 20) This was obtained with the
assistance of Simon Sudbury, Bishop of London,
whose aid Luscote had solicited, and who offered
the Bishop of Ely sufficient compensation for the
loss of service. The requisite papal permission was
given by Urban V in May 1370, when he committed
to Archbishop Whittlesey the decision as to the
sufficiency of Sudbury's proposed compensation,
and Whittlesey's licence was duly issued in June. (fn. 21)
These and other delays, caused partly by the chapter
of St. Paul's and partly by an anchoress who lived
alongside the graveyard chapel, had held up all
building operations. Even now events moved
slowly. It was not until December that the inquisition ad quod damnum returned a verdict that the
king would suffer no loss by the foundation, and
two more months passed before the royal licence
was issued. (fn. 22) At last, on 28 March 1371, came Sir
Walter Manny's foundation charter, (fn. 23) and about the
feast of the Ascension (15 May) the founder and
the prior made an agreement with Henry Yevele,
the celebrated master mason, for building the first
cell and beginning the great cloister. (fn. 24) Seven months
later, on 15 January 1372, Manny died, and was
buried before the high altar (fn. 25) in the chapel of the
graveyard, now to be the monastic church.
Meanwhile Prior Luscote, as 'visitor' of the
province, had been authorized to summon monks
from each of the existing houses to become founding
members of the new community: a monk and a lay
brother from Hinton, two priests from Witham in
addition to John Gryseley, and two from Beauvale. (fn. 26)
With them he lived in makeshift buildings for many
years; indeed, Prior Luscote died in 1398 before
the communal rooms and the great wall of the
enclosure had been completed.
In contrast to the slow progress with the buildings,
the nucleus of property owned by the Charterhouse
was complete within twenty years. (fn. 27) Spital Croft or,
as it was re-named, New Church Haw, was conveyed to Manny and others by St. Bartholomew's
Hospital in 1370, and at the same time the Hospital
conveyed to them about 3 acres of land north of the
main block; (fn. 28) the Hospitallers of St. John in Clerkenwell had conveyed another piece of 3 acres northwest of the Pardon churchyard to Manny, (fn. 29) but for
some reason it did not pass to the monks either by
Manny's foundation charter or at his death. It was
therefore bought on behalf of the monks and subsequently released, along with all the other properties, to King Edward III and by him granted to
the Charterhouse in 1376. (fn. 30) Shortly afterwards, in
1377, the builders were faced with a problem. The
great cloister was planned on the ample scale of 300
by 340 feet; as projected its eastern alley and cells
would lie outside the parish boundary, which was
also the eastern boundary of New Church Haw,
and the construction was in consequence halted.
The land, however, belonged to St. Bartholomew's,
who once more came to the rescue and made over
4 acres to the monks. (fn. 31) This transfer completed the
site of the monastery with its offices, gardens, and
orchards, today bounded on the east by Goswell
Road, on the north by Clerkenwell Road, and on the
west by the gardens at the rear of houses in St.
John's Street. Two more grants of land, the one
by the Hospitallers of St. John in 1384, the other
by Westminster Abbey in 1391, gave the Charterhouse fields to the north and north-west of their
existing property. (fn. 32) All these parcels of land combined to give the monks a compact area of some
30 acres, forming a parallelogram almost 300 by
600 yards in extent, and giving space not only for
an orchard surrounding three sides of the cloister,
but also for a vegetable garden, hayfield, and wilderness to the north-the last-named harbouring at
least the smaller species of game. (fn. 33) This area
remained without addition or diminution until the
suppression of the house.
The original endowment of the Charterhouse
consisted of £2,000 from Michael Northburgh,
together with some articles of plate, and the manors
of Ockholt in Romney Marsh (Kent) and Knebworth (Herts.) from Sir Walter Manny, together
with a claim to debts and arrears amounting to
£4,000, due to Manny from the king and the Black
Prince. (fn. 34) In the event the monks had little profit
from Manny's legacies, as Ockholt was partially
submerged by the tides, Knebworth taken from
them unjustly, and the royal debts permanently
dishonoured. (fn. 35) As a consequence the Charterhouse
depended for the major part of its income on the
gifts, large and small, in cash and in real estate,
occasional or substantial, from personal friends
and humbler donors, mainly Londoners. The
founders of cells are enumerated below; in addition,
the 'Register' and the evidence of wills show a
constant stream of gifts and legacies of property,
money, and valuables from the foundation to the
early 16th century. As might be expected, the greater
part of the property so devised lay in or near London,
and consisted of tenements in the City and suburbs,
and pastures and gardens on the outskirts, but there
were a few manors and some house property at a
distance, and the rectories of at least five churches.
The monks seem to have found difficulty with
distant property, no doubt because it was impossible
for one of their own body to visit or supervise it;
some of the original property was very soon lost,
and there is also mention of two manors in Kent,
Plumstead and Hintingford, and a church in
Somerset, Norton Veal (now Norton St. Philip), (fn. 36)
lost, so it was alleged, through the sharp practice
of enemies. The house was in financial difficulties
as early as 1393, and early in the reign of Henry IV
the monks were reduced to such straits by losses
and obligations that they were forced to appeal to
the king, who in 1403 took the Charterhouse into
his hands for a time and administered its affairs. (fn. 37)
Forty years later Henry VI acknowledged further
losses by a licence to acquire in mortmain property
of £40 annual rent, and added a second tun of wine
yearly to that given by Edward III. (fn. 38) The only
major benefaction of land in the later 15th century
was the gift by Edward IV, 'through the persuasion
and advice of Thomas Colt', of the alien priory of
Ogbourne (Wilts.), with a manor and other property
in Great Ogbourne (Ogbourne St. George) and
Little Ogbourne (Ogbourne St. Andrew). (fn. 39) Hitherto
King's College, Cambridge, had had a title to
Ogbourne, and it was some years before the Charterhouse was able to realize the gift. They were helped
by Bishops Alcock of Ely (1486-1500) and Russell
of Lincoln (1480-94) and the final arrangement was
in force from about 1500. By that time the College
was in possession, farming the property, and paying
a yearly rent of £33 6s. 8d., about half of the rent
they received, to the Charterhouse. (fn. 40)
The bulk of the land at a distance was, so far as
can be seen, farmed out for a lump annual sum,
but the monks appear to have kept in hand the
demesne at Bloomsbury, where they employed a
bailiff, to provide dairy produce for the house.
Their own gardens and orchards adjoining the
monastery would have sufficed for vegetables and
fresh fruit. So far as can be seen from the procurator's accounts over a run of nine years (1492-1500) (fn. 41)
receipts of all kinds fluctuated greatly according as
gifts and legacies were forthcoming or not, or as
house property fell into disrepair or was lost for one
reason or another. Moreover, a well-connected and
energetic procurator, such as Philip Underwood,
with wealthy relatives in the City, could manage, by
calling in debts, soliciting gifts, and making the most
of rents, to swell the annual receipts considerably.
Underwood's predecessor in 1492-3 could only
realize £589 in receipts; Underwood raised this to
£1,067 in his first year, and in his last account of
1500 this had risen to £2,012. There is some
evidence that Underwood cared more for administration and money-winning than for the Carthusian
life; he was removed from office after eight years
and in 1514 by special dispensation transferred
himself from the Charterhouse to the Knights of
St. John at the nearby Clerkenwell Priory. (fn. 42) Thirty
years after Underwood had ceased to be procurator
his successor of the day returned to the commissioners of the tenth in 1536 a gross income of £736. (fn. 43)
The fabric of the London Charterhouse was
constructed over a long period of years. The two
founders had provided land and a sum of money,
but both they and the monks seem to have relied
on private benefactors to come forward and finance
the building. Thus the great cloister was constructed cell by cell as funds permitted, and since
the names of the donors have been preserved, it is
possible to date the progress within fairly narrow
limits. The London monastery was from the first
intended to be a 'double' house, that is, one for
twenty-four monks and a prior. The cells were
built round the cloister in a clockwise direction
beginning at the south-western angle, where the
doorway led to the outer world, and they were
distinguished by the letters of the alphabet which,
with one letter doing duty for I and J, V representing
also U and W, and three bearing the letter S, gave
a total of twenty-five cells. The donors (fn. 44) and the
approximate date of the cells were as follows:
|
|
|
A. |
Sir Walter Manny and Sir William Walworth (1371) |
| B. |
Sir William Walworth (1371) |
| C. |
Adam Fraunceys (after 1374) |
| D. |
Walworth, applying bequest of John Lovekyn (after 1374-5) |
| E. |
and F. Adam Fraunceys (after 1374) |
| G., H., and J. |
Walworth and Lovekyn (after 1374-5) |
| K. |
Mary of St. Pol, Countess of Pembroke (after 1376) |
| L. |
and M. Adam Fraunceys (after 1374) |
| N. |
Felice Aubrey (after 1378) |
| O. |
Margaret Tilney (after 1393) |
| P. |
Sir Robert Knolles and Constance his wife (after 1389) |
| Q. |
John Buckingham, Bishop of Lincoln (probably after 1398) |
| R. |
and S. Thomas Hatfield, Bishop of Durham (probably after 1381) |
| T. |
William Ufford, Earl of Suffolk (after 1381-2) |
| V. |
Richard Clyderhow (after 1419) |
| X. |
John Clyderhow (c. 1436) |
| Z. |
Joan Brenckley (after 1406) |
| S. |
Margery Nerford and Christine Upstones (probably before 1394) |
| S. |
Robert Manfield, Provost of Beverley (probably after 1419) |
This list of donors of cells shows very clearly how
wide was the appeal of the Charterhouse. We can
divide the twenty-odd benefactors into at least five
distinct classes-the nobility, the hierarchy, the
soldiers of fortune, the office-holding, administrative
class, and the prosperous citizens and their wives. It
may be noted that the last two cells on the south
side near the church (Z and S) may well have been
completed before those in the east alley of the cloister,
as also the sacrist's cell, below the treasury near
the church. Altogether the completion of the full
tale of cells took some sixty years. We are told that
in 1412 nineteen had been completed. (fn. 45)
The other buildings were even longer in achieving
completion. The chapel, originally built for the
graveyard by Manny, was used as the conventual
church. The Carthusians, differing from every other
order of monks and canons in this, gave no architectural prominence to their churches. The only
one to remain in a fair state of preservation, that of
Mount Grace (Yorks. N.R.), is even smaller and
meaner in exterior appearance than that of the
London Charterhouse must have been. The
original building was a simple rectangle of 94 by
38 feet, divided internally into presbytery, choir,
and a small (25 by 35 ft.) 'body of the church' at
the western end, divided from the choir by a wooden
screen with two altars against its western face. Into
this space the public, including even women,
asserted their right of entry, and it was only in 1405
that an extension to the west, 30 feet in length,
was provided in response to urgent commands
of Visitors to exclude women from the monastic
church. (fn. 46) This ante-chapel was separated from the
original church by a second screen, and called the
chapel of St. Anne. In the year of its consecration,
however, the two regular visiting superiors from
abroad forbade women to visit the church at all.
Nevertheless, the original 'body of the church',
augmented now by the 'chapel' of St. Anne, remained accessible to men, and benefactors continued
to found chapels and to erect tombs. Some of these
chapels are specifically mentioned in the records of
the monastery, (fn. 47) others have been identified after
excavation, and yet others are only known to have
existed through mention in a post-Dissolution
survey. Those whose sites are known with certainty
were as follows: (fn. 48) due south of the high altar the
small (12 by 15 ft.), almost square chapel of St. John
the Evangelist was built out of a legacy by Robert
Boteler, and consecrated in 1437. South of the
original 'body of the church' was a somewhat larger
chapel (19 by 22 ft.) dedicated to St. Michael and
St. John the Baptist, and adjoining this to the east
a smaller one (12 by 16 ft.) of St. Jerome and St.
Bernard. Both were built and endowed by Sir John
Popham (d. 1463-4), whose tomb was in the larger
of the two, and were consecrated in 1453. On the
north side lay two chapels: that to the west, corresponding to Popham's chapel of St. Michael, was
the chapel (18 by 20 ft.) of Sir Robert Rede (d. 1519),
dedicated to St. Catherine; adjoining it to the east
was that of St. Agnes, founded by William Freeman
and consecrated in 1453. The exact position and
dimensions of this last chapel are unknown, as its
site is covered by existing buildings. Adjoining the
presbytery to the north, beneath the existing 'tower',
was the vestibule to the chapter-house, and in it
were two altars dedicated to St. John the Baptist and
St. Hugh of Lincoln. Finally, there is documentary
record of two small chapels to the east of the high
altar, but it is not clear whether they were on ground
level or were on the first floor and connected with
the prior's 'new cell' which lay behind the church. (fn. 49)
The chapter-house, an essential requirement for the
regular life, had not been begun at the death of
Prior Luscote, and the altar in the room, dedicated
to St. Michael, was not consecrated until 1414. (fn. 50)
A Carthusian church, by primitive tradition and
decrees of general chapter, was simple, austere, and
without elaborate ornament, but here, as in some
other respects, the monks of London had to pay a
price for the support and endowment they received
from the city at their gate. Rich well-wishers not
only gave them ornaments and built and furnished
chapels, but demanded that their bodies should rest
in the church under tombs of their own specification. (fn. 51) From the instructions of testators (fn. 52) and
the inventory of the commissioners of suppression (fn. 53)
we can gain an impression of the appointments of
these chapels, with their screens and retables.
Woodwork, alabaster carvings, paintings, and silverwork were set off by the damask and brocades of the
curtains, frontals, and vestments.
In a Charterhouse, in contrast to other monastic
houses, the community rooms were very small and
few in number. Dormitory and warming-house,
infirmary, noviciate, and abbot's lodging formed no
part of the complex, and the refectory or frater was
used only on Sundays and feast-days, and had to
accommodate only a small community. At the
London Charterhouse the frater lay between cell A
(the prior's) and cell B, and was presumably built
in conjunction with those cells about 1371. Accommodation for the lay-brothers, stores, and guests lay
outside the great cloister to the south-west of the
south-west angle, where the exit lay to the outside
world. Here there were ultimately two courts. One,
immediately to the west of the church, formed the
so-called Little Cloister (41 by 35½ ft.), the Master's
Court of the modern establishment. It was constructed in 1436 (fn. 54) and its western range of buildings
held the guest rooms, needed in any case for visiting
monks, and occupied also in London in the early
16th century by a few privileged laymen. Beyond
this again to the west lay the slightly larger court
(the modern Wash-House Court) round the three
outer sides of which lay the quarters of the laybrothers, kitchens, brewhouse, and cellars. The
laundry apparently lay outside the cloister east of
the chapter-house. Of these buildings, the Little
Cloister was constructed in 1436 from a legacy of
John Clyderhow. For the lay-brothers' quarters no
documentary evidence is available, but the existing
buildings are clearly of the early Tudor period
(1490-1535), and it is possible that the letters I.H.,
which are picked out in darker brick on an external
wall of the court, are those of Prior Houghton.
Finally in the last decades of the House's existence,
a new cell was built for the prior and three little
cells to accommodate the influx of postulants under
Tynbygh or Houghton. These were situated at the
south-east corner of the precinct, east of the church,
and approached from the cloister by a door or
passage west of cell Z. (fn. 55)
One more feature of the monastery remains to
be noted: the piped water-system. (fn. 56) Originally the
monks no doubt depended upon wells, but a Carthusian monastery, with its numerous individual
cells, felt the need for a distributed supply, and in
1430 we find John Ferriby and Margery his wife
enfeoffing the prior and convent with a spring in
their meadow called Overmede at Islington, and
with a strip of land for laying the pipes of a conduit. (fn. 57)
This spring was a mile north of the Charterhouse,
and the monks secured permission from the owners
of the intervening land, the Hospitallers of St. John
of Jerusalem at Clerkenwell and the nuns of St.
Mary's Priory, Clerkenwell, to lay lead pipes under
their pastures. (fn. 58) Later both those houses drew water
from the Islington springs by similar conduits.
The cost of this installation was met by gifts from
William Symmes and Anne Tatersale, and in the
latter half of 1431 the water was brought into the
great cloister. Medieval water engineers, like their
modern counterparts in the public utility services,
often drew plans of the piping to assist future
maintenance workers. This was done at the Charterhouse, and an elaborate plan exists, (fn. 59) giving not only
the location of the pipes, buildings, and taps, but
showing also in elevation the church and other
features of the southern range, together with the
age
(fn. 60) or conduit-house in the middle of the great
cloister, which resembles the fountain in the Great
Court at Trinity College, Cambridge. It was an
elaborate erection containing the cistern into which
the main discharged, and whence the water was
drawn off by pipes to the cells and offices of the
house. Several copies of this plan exist; the oldest
and most elaborate, covered with descriptive annotations, may date from soon after the installation
and is certainly earlier than about 1500, although it
bears later notes dated 1512. Fifteen years after the
water had been laid on, three brewers endeavoured
to assert the right of those living near the Charterhouse to the regular overflow, and filed a bill in
Chancery that the executors of William Symmes
should be summoned to support their claim. The
executors, however, gave testimony in favour of the
monks; they were left by their benefactor entirely
free to do what they willed with their surplus water,
and judgement was given accordingly in 1451. (fn. 61)
Six years later the original spring in Overmede
showed signs of failing. Margery, the widow of the
original donor, was still alive and was now married
to Lord Berners; she and her husband therefore
gave permission for the monks to use other springs
in the same field. (fn. 62)
The site of the Charterhouse, alongside a public
graveyard on the outskirts of the city, rendered its
inmates liable to disturbances and visits of all kinds,
especially in the early years before the cloister and
enclosure wall were completed. The two last decades
of the 14th century were a time of general unrest.
The Peasants' Revolt of 1381 had met with some
support in the City and the Archbishop of Canterbury had been murdered by the mob, while almost
at the same time the Lollards and their supporters
were responsible for anti-clerical and anti-monastic
agitation. These currents of feeling may have helped
to excite irresponsible citizens who already had a
grudge against the nuns of Clerkenwell and the
Carthusians for occupying what was claimed as a
public space hitherto used by the citizens for games
and recreation. On three or four occasions crowds
surrounded the house, destroying buildings and
moving boundary walls. (fn. 63) Less violent, but felt as a
more constant burden, was the practice of citizens
in regarding the church as a public one in which
women as well as men could worship. Fear of
violence and sense of obligation for benefactions
combined to make the monks chary of enforcing
their rights, (fn. 64) and privacy was not finally secured
until 1405, when the regular Visitors from abroad
ordained that a strong wall should be built south of
the church, and that women should not be allowed
within it. (fn. 65)
The London Charterhouse came into being when
the Carthusian Order was about to undergo a period
of stress. The hermits of the Grande Chartreuse,
originally a group who had every expectation of remaining remote and alone, had gradually developed
into an order with a constitution modelled in part
on that of the Cistercians. The governing body was
the General Chapter, meeting yearly at the Grande
Chartreuse on the fourth Sunday after Easter, and
consisting of the community there and the priors of
all other Charterhouses, under the presidency of the
Prior of the Grande Chartreuse. This chapter passed
legislation, settled appeals, ratified elections, and
appointed Visitors. As the Order spread it was divided
into provinces for the purpose of visitation and supervision; provincial Visitors were appointed, usually
from among the priors, although General Chapter
could always depute Visitors from outside for a
particular purpose. As the Order for a long time
had only two small houses in England (Witham,
1178, and Hinton, 1227), no province had been
erected and Visitors had been appointed from
France, but in 1343 a third house had been founded
at Beauvale (Notts.), and it may be that the experience of thirty years of war between England and
France, together with the prospect of an important
foundation in London, led the chapter in 1370 to
institute an English province. John Luscote was
appointed 'rector' of the new venture and provincial
prior over the other houses. (fn. 66) Henceforth the London Charterhouse came to have a kind of unofficial
precedence, and the disciplinary missives or, as they
were called, 'charters', of the General Chapter to the
various houses all passed through the hands of its
prior.
The English province and the London Charterhouse had been in existence for less than ten years
when the Great Schism began in 1378. The Carthusians, like the other international orders, were
divided regionally in their allegiance. The English
province followed the nation into the camp of the
Roman Pope Urban VI in 1380, and in 1385 the
general chapter of this section of the Order was
transferred to Seitz in Austria. English priors were
excused from the long and circuitous journey, but
English affairs were discussed at Seitz and decisions
communicated to England until the Order was
reunited in 1411.
Decisions of General Chapter from time to time
directly affected the London Charterhouse. Thus in
1405 the chapter at Seitz sent two Visitors from
Holland who made rigorous decrees on enclosure; (fn. 67)
in 1490 the chapter allowed the Bishop of Lincoln,
John Russell, at the time 'conservator' of the rights
and privileges of the Carthusians, to build a house
within the precincts. (fn. 68) Shortly after this, a more
important question arose. One of the Visitors, Prior
John Ingleby of Sheen, took exception to the frequent acceptance of gifts and benefactions made to
individual religious. The community of London
took this ill, and in 1494 brought up at General
Chapter a series of questions on the subject. Might
a prior allow a donor to give a sum of money to be
spent for the benefit of a particular monk? Might
small objects such as books be given to individuals
for life? Might a gift, made without conditions to an
individual, be kept by the prior for that individual's
use? Might the sick and aged be allowed to retain
a few pence for medicine? Might lands or rents be
accepted on condition that the income should be
divided between the monks or priests for their use?
All these questions reflected common problems in
the London Charterhouse. Those who had received
advice or edification, or who wished to secure
prayers, naturally wished to show their gratitude or
gain their end by means of gifts to an individual.
Every one of the above questions had been answered
implicitly in the affirmative by the contemporary
black monks, and it is therefore significant that the
chapter returned a firm negative to all. This produced division in the London convent, since certain
legacies had been accepted, one of which allotted
a yearly half-mark to the prior and procurator, in
return for prayers, and the other an annual 20s. to
be divided among all the priests celebrating an
anniversary. Prior Ingleby, the Visitor, was called
in as arbitrator, and used his powers to suspend
several of the capitular decisions, but the stricter
party appealed to the General Chapter of 1496, and
the fathers there upheld the firm answers of their
predecessors. (fn. 69)
Few details of the lives of individual monks have
been preserved. The elderly monk who compiled
the 'Register', apparently between 1488 and 1500,
had, when a young monk, known three elders, John
Nevyll, Thomas Gorwey, and William Hatherley,
sometime Prior of Hinton, who had themselves
known John Homersley, who had entered the house
in 1393. Gorwey in particular, one of Homersley's
novices, had often told the chronicler of his way of
life. 'Homersley', he recorded, 'was a man of great
simplicity and gentleness, who walked without
blame in the way of the commandments of God and
the observances of the Carthusian Order. He loved
his cell and its solitude, and he shut his mouth
against evil, lest he should transgress in his speech.
He spoke rarely and in few words of things of good
repute, but he justified the word of God by his
works.' He never ceased from copying books for the
church, frater, and cells, and when written he took
them to the prior's cell; 'he took no steps to see that
they were given to anyone in particular, or put in
any special place, but leaving them with the prior
he went back in silence to his cell'. If he was ever
pressed to receive gifts or money from a benefactor,
'he took it straightway to the prior's cell and left it
with him. If he failed to find the prior there he left
the money on the ground by his door, laying a tile
on it if it was windy, and thought no more about it'.
The chronicler goes on to relate various visions and
trials of Homersley, who died shortly after 1440. (fn. 70)
After the account of Homersley in the 'Register',
and the notes of various gifts, we have no personal
details of individuals before the priorate of William
Tynbygh, which began in 1500. Thenceforward
until the end, the principal authority for the domestic
life of the house is the 'history' of Maurice Chauncy,
who was a young monk there in the last half-dozen
years of its existence. The son of John Chauncy, a
landowner of Sawbridgeworth (Herts.), he was born
in 1509 and became in due course a student of the
law at Gray's Inn. He took the habit at the Charterhouse at about the time of Prior Houghton's election.
Although, as we shall see, he failed to stand firm to
the end in opposition to the Royal Supremacy, he
retained his sense of vocation, crossed to Flanders
in 1546, and became a professed monk of the
Charterhouse of Bruges, whence he returned in 1555
as leader of the group that refounded Sheen in
Mary's reign. His chronicle of the last days of the
London priory, Historia aliquot Martyrum, has a
complicated literary history, still to be fully elucidated, and exists in at least five versions. The work
is in aim a piece of hagiography or propaganda;
Chauncy was neither a critical historian nor a writer
of genius; he was frankly a panegyrist, and had a
love of the marvellous which impairs his credit even
when he is writing of what he knows well. He often
digresses from his narrative and expatiates in scriptural quotations and parallels. Nevertheless, his
basic sincerity and trustworthiness are unquestionable, and he was an eyewitness of much of what he
describes. (fn. 71)
He begins with a short notice of Prior Tynbygh.
Here he was writing, long after the event, of what
he had only hearsay information. He tells us that
Tynbygh, a native of Ireland, although not necessarily an Irishman by race, joined the community in
1470 after a conversion of which the details give
every sign of being mythical. William Tynbygh
was indeed almost certainly the son of Nicholas
Tynbygh, gentleman, a member of a well-known
Dublin family whose fortunes can be traced in the
records of the city of Dublin from 1332 onwards. (fn. 72)
He became in turn sacristan and vicar (or second-incommand), and was elected prior in 1500, remaining
in office for nearly thirty years; he resigned in 1529
and died less than two years later. Whatever discount we allow for Chauncy's enthusiasm, there can
be no question of Prior Tynbygh's holiness of life,
and he duly received from the General Chapter of
1531 the single word of the traditional laconic
panegyric: 'qui sexaginta annis laudabiliter vixit in
ordine'. (fn. 73) To him, more than to any other, must be
attributed the high standard of discipline and observance that distinguished the House of the Salutation even among its sister houses in the reign of
Henry VIII. (fn. 74) He is recorded as having solemnly
warned his brethren that their strength and security
lay in unity; in later years these words were taken
as evidence of a spirit of prophecy. It was he who
received to the habit John Houghton, Sebastian
Newdigate, and others who were to show themselves
true Carthusians in the hour of trial.
Tynbygh was succeeded by John Batmanson,
around whose name some confusion has occurred. (fn. 75)
There were in fact two men of that name. The elder,
a civilian and judge of some eminence, who appears
in the records shortly before and after 1500, disappears from sight about 1516, and the opinion has
become current that he joined the Carthusians and
became prior. Recently, however, it has been shown
that the Carthusian Batmanson was ordained deacon
in 1510; this clearly distinguishes him from his
namesake, and other evidence makes it possible, if
not probable, that the two were father and son.
The younger Batmanson became in due course
Prior of Hinton 1523-9 and was called thence tc
hold office at London. He was a scholar of some note,
although without university training, and wrote
against Luther. He was even considered sufficiently
qualified to be asked by Edward Lee, later Archbishop of York, to criticize Erasmus's New Testament
when it appeared in 1516. This drew upon him not
only some caustic comments from the sensitive
humanist, but a long letter from Sir Thomas More
in which More, who had known the Carthusian when
he was a student of the law, attacked Erasmus's
opponent with considerable asperity. (fn. 76) Although
by no means an old man when he was elected prior,
Batmanson died after two years in office, and was
succeeded by John Houghton.
Houghton, who was born in 1485-6, came of
gentle family in Essex. (fn. 77) He had taken a degree in
laws at Cambridge from God's House, later Christ's
College, and had then studied in private for the
priesthood and lived at his father's home as a
secular priest before taking the monastic habit in
1515. Seven years later he became sacrist and after
five more years procurator. In 1530-1 he was
elected Prior of Beauvale, but in six months' time
the unanimous vote of the London community
recalled him to be prior of the house of his profession.
Under his rule the good observance was raised to a
still higher level by the personality and example of a
prior who combined holiness of life with a genius
for leadership and inspiring guidance. Maurice
Chauncy's glowing pages describing the Charterhouse as he knew it in the years 1531-5 may reflect
both the youthful hero-worship and the later sorrowful nostalgia of the writer, but in their main lines
they carry conviction, and we may well believe his
statement that Houghton would have deserved
canonization as a monk, even had he not died as a
martyr.
The reputation of the Charterhouse had stood
very high for at least fifty years. At the end of the
previous century the young Thomas More had
spent four years as an inmate of the house in his
early days at the law, attending the offices and
following much of the monastic routine before
deciding that his call lay elsewhere. Twenty years
later Chauncy, also a law student, was familiar with
the remark that those who wished to hear the divine
service worthily performed should go to the Charterhouse. (fn. 78) In Houghton's day we are told that Sir
John Gage, vice-chamberlain of the court, thought
of becoming a monk there when he could no longer
serve the king. Not only the quality, but the number
also of recruits was remarkable, and it is probable
that here, as at contemporary Mount Grace, (fn. 79) there
was a 'waiting-list' of postulants, and that it was this
that made necessary the addition of a group of 'little'
cells at one corner of the cloister.
There were in Prior Houghton's day thirty choir
monks and eighteen lay brethren, and of the monks
some twenty were under the age of thirty-eight
when he took office. (fn. 80) Of several of these we have
information from Chauncy or elsewhere. After the
prior, the two personalities most clearly visible are
those of William Exmew and Sebastian Newdigate. (fn. 81)
Exmew, born c. 1506, was of good family and had
received a humanist's education at Christ's College,
Cambridge; his knowledge of Greek in particular is
noted. Under Prior Houghton he served first as
vicar and then as procurator, a very common
sequence of offices. Newdigate came of a landowning
family of Harefield (Mdx.), later of Arbury (Warws.).
He had many connexions with families in other
counties: his mother was a Nevill of Lincolnshire
and two of his sisters were to become ancestresses
of the Dormers and Stonors, two well-known
recusant families of the Elizabethan age. Two other
sisters were nuns, of Haliwell and Syon, and two
brothers, knights of Malta. He himself had been a
page at court and later a gentleman of the privy
chamber; he had left the royal service for the Charterhouse when the matter of the divorce was mooted.
Other members of the community were Humphrey
Middlemore, another man of good family (fn. 82) and
procurator in 1535; Richard Bere, nephew of the
great Abbot of Glastonbury, John Rochester,
brother of Sir John Rochester, comptroller of the
household under Mary; and James Walworth,
perhaps a son of the City family that had been among
the first benefactors of the house. Of the others,
Everard Digby, Oliver Batmanson, and John Boleyn
bore well-known names. Equally well-known to
history, although for other reasons, was Andrew
Boorde or Bord, (fn. 83) a medical student of some note.
Boorde had always been something of a misfit, and
in 1535 had already received some kind of dispensation from the full observance. (fn. 84) He was later, after
the first executions, but before the end of the house,
to depart altogether for the career of a secular priest.
Boorde was not the only difficult character with
whom Houghton had to deal. There were George
Norton, who fell into melancholy, threatened suicide,
and was dispensed, later becoming a canon in the
West Country; Nicholas Rawlings, sometime
secular priest, who had been professed when ill
before his full noviciate was up, and had ever since
cherished a grievance; John Darley, who left during
the troubles to take a 'service' as a secular priest at
Salisbury; and Thomas Salter, who spoke ill of his
brethren and superiors to their enemies. (fn. 85)
The Carthusians, along with all other subjects of
the king, were required in the spring of 1534 to
swear to the first Act of Succession, and thus to
accept the annulment of Henry's first marriage by
Cranmer and the legitimacy of Anne Boleyn's offspring. (fn. 86) Their sympathies had unquestionably lain
with Queen Katherine, whose marriage they considered valid, and they had shown interest in Elizabeth Barton, although they were not so far committed
with her as their brethren at Sheen. When the
commissioners arrived on 4 May to tender the oath
Houghton replied in the name of all that Carthusians
did not meddle with the king's affairs; they asked
only to be left in peace. He added that he could not
see how a marriage of such long standing could be
declared invalid. He was therefore conveyed to the
Tower along with his procurator, Humphrey
Middlemore. After deliberation there they agreed
to take the oath, so far as was lawful, and were sent
home, where they found the community still unwilling to swear. The commissioners, Bishop Roland
Lee and Thomas Bedyll, were unsuccessful at their
first visit, and at their second, on 29 May, they
obtained the adhesion only of Houghton, Middlemore, and six others. Finally, Lee and Sir Thomas
Kytson, one of the sheriffs of London, who brought
a band of men-at-arms, were successful in extracting
an oath from all. (fn. 87) So far as can be seen from
Chauncy's narrative, the opposition of the monks
was based on a disapproval of the Boleyn marriage
rather than on a realization, such as influenced More
and Fisher, that papal supremacy was at stake, for
when in June 1534 commissioners endeavoured to
extract an acceptance of the royal supremacy, at
least nine of the community refused to take the
oath, when such a refusal was not as yet criminal. (fn. 88)
Houghton knew well that further demands would
come, and urged his monks to spend their time in
prayer and preparation for their trial. Less than a
year in fact elapsed before the Act of Supremacy
(November 1534), followed by the Treasons Act,
laid anyone who denied that the king was supreme
head on earth of the Church of England under
liability to a charge of high treason. In the spring
of 1535 commissioners were appointed to secure
general acknowledgement of the royal supremacy;
this was usually obtained by administering an oath
upon the gospels in terms of acceptance. The preparations made at the Charterhouse for the day of
ordeal, and the scenes in chapter-house and church
described by Chauncy, are a familiar page of Tudor
history made immortal by Froude. (fn. 89) While awaiting
the summons, Houghton was visited by the Priors
of Beauvale and Axholme. The former, Robert
Laurence, was a professed monk of London who had
succeeded Houghton on the latter's recall. After a
series of interviews and examinations before Cromwell, (fn. 90) the three priors were lodged in the Tower;
they were tried on 28-29 April and condemned to
death for refusal to accept the royal supremacy. (fn. 91)
They were executed at Tyburn on 4 May. (fn. 92) When
Houghton had been imprisoned Humphrey Middlemore, now vicar, was in charge, and had as his
principal counsellors William Exmew, the procurator, and Sebastian Newdigate; when they
resisted all persuasions to take the oath (fn. 93) they also
were removed to Newgate, where they remained for
a fortnight chained by neck and legs to posts.
Finally, on 11 June, they were tried (fn. 94) and condemned, and on 19 June executed. After their departure the monks of the orphaned community were
subjected to every kind of persuasion and petty
persecution, deprived of their books, harassed
by visitors, vexed by the continual presence in the
cloister of Cromwell's men, (fn. 95) and urged by the
Bridgettines of Syon to submit; (fn. 96) some months later
(perhaps in April 1536) they were given as superior
William Trafford, sometime procurator of Beauvale,
who had at first made a brave show of refusing the
oath to the royal supremacy, (fn. 97) but had subsequently
capitulated and become entirely subservient to
Cromwell. A little later a further expedient was
tried. Four of the most stubborn were exiled;
Chauncy and John Foxe were sent in May 1536 to
Beauvale, Rochester and Walworth to Hull; (fn. 98) a little
later eight more were sent to Syon, (fn. 99) and between
1535 and 1538 half-a-dozen monks from other houses
were imported to London. At last in May 1537, when
the Council threatened to suppress the house out of
hand if the oath were refused, a division was created,
some agreeing to swear in order to save their way of
life; among these was the chronicler Chauncy. (fn. 1) Ten,
however, still refused to swear; three priests, a
deacon, and six lay brothers. (fn. 2) On 18 May these were
lodged in Newgate and chained to posts, where all
save one died of starvation or disease during the summer. The one survivor, William Horne, was kept a
prisoner and executed at Tyburn on 4 August 1540. (fn. 3)
Meanwhile the two at Hull had been executed at York
by the Duke of Norfolk in May 1537, on the same
charge as their brethren in London. (fn. 4) In all, eighteen
Carthusians were executed, seventeen of them
professed monks of the London Charterhouse.
Within a few weeks of the removal of the recalcitrants in May, the rump of the community was
induced to surrender the house (10 June), (fn. 5) but it
was not until 15 November 1538 that the House of
the Salutation was actually disbanded. (fn. 6) When that
was done William Trafford and sixteen choir monks
received pensions; the six surviving lay brothers
received nothing. Of the seventeen pensioners
eleven were among those who swore to the Act of
Succession in 1534. The others must have been
newcomers to London from other Carthusian
houses, as it is not conceivable that recruits would
have been professed during the years 1534-8.
Despite the existence of several lists of names and
two or three precise statements by Chauncy, it is
impossible to account exactly either for the full
number of those known to have been in the house
shortly before 1534 or for the subsequent arrivals
and departures. (fn. 7)
When the monks had been ejected, the church,
cloister, and buildings were almost immediately
divided up into three portions. (fn. 8) The church and
perhaps the chapter-house were given into the care
of a Dr. Cave; the prior's cell and the new cells
were given to the owner of an adjacent house, Sir
Arthur Darcy; the residue of the fabric was, until
March 1539, controlled for the commissioners of
suppression by a certain William Dale. In June
1542, when the commissioners had ceased to be
responsible, the whole place was turned over to the
king's servants, John Bridges and Thomas Hale,
and used as a storehouse for tents, hunting-nets,
and the like. It was thus for some years virtually
derelict, save for the occupation of some of the cells
by a family of Italian court musicians of the name
of Bassano, and it was at this time that Maurice
Chauncy seems to have revisited the place and seen
the profanation of the church. Finally, on 14 April
1546, the whole place was sold to Sir Edward (later
Lord) North. With its subsequent fortunes and the
establishment of the school in 1614, (fn. 9) we are not
concerned.
Of the monks, Maurice Chauncy, John Foxe, and
the converse Hugh Taylor fled overseas in 1546-7
and joined the Charterhouse of Val de Grace at
Bruges. (fn. 10) They were sent back to England in 1555,
when Queen Mary was contemplating the refoundation of a Charterhouse. Foxe died before this could
be accomplished, and it is noteworthy that of those
who joined Chauncy at Sheen not a single monk
came from the London Charterhouse. (fn. 11) The converse Hugh Taylor, however, was there, and shared
Chauncy's exile in 1559; he died at the priory of
Sheen Anglorum at Bruges in 1575; Maurice
Chauncy, his prior, died on a journey at the Paris
Charterhouse on 12 July 1581. (fn. 12)
The complex of buildings of a Carthusian monastery (fn. 13) can be considered as made up of three parts:
first, the rectangular cloister of four alleys, giving
access to the individual cells and gardens arranged
along the cloister's external wall; next, the relatively
small group of buildings serving the common need
of all-church, chapter-house, prior's cell, sacristy,
infirmary, (fn. 14) and refectory, grouped together at an
angle (at London the south-western angle) of the
cloister; and, thirdly, outside the claustral buildings,
the guest-house, kitchens, offices, and lay-brothers'
quarters, which at London were grouped round two
courts, the 'Little Cloister' and the modern 'Washhouse Court'. Of these it may be said that at London
the third group has in great part survived to the
present day in use as the domestic and administrative offices of the North-Norfolk Mansion and its
successor, Sutton's Hospital, while the great cloister
has disappeared save for portions of the external
wall incorporating the entrance of cells A and B in
the western alley, and T and V on the eastern. (fn. 15) As
for the conventual buildings, these were partly
destroyed soon after the Suppression, and partly
incorporated in the mansion which later became the
Master's Lodge, Gallery, chapel, library, and diningroom of the modern Charterhouse. These buildings
have been described frequently and authoritatively,
in particular by Sir William St. John Hope and
Sir Alfred Clapham, (fn. 16) but as all these descriptions,
with their accompanying plans and illustrations,
have been largely superseded by more recent discoveries, it may be well to mention these latter
briefly.
On the night of 10-11 May 1941, during a particularly heavy air-raid upon the City, the buildings of
Charterhouse caught fire, and those that had formed
the main parts of the Tudor mansion and Sutton's
Hospital, partly covering the site of the conventual
buildings, were entirely burnt out. When rebuilding
became practicable a remarkable series of discoveries and deductions were made which made it clear
that the existing chapel, hitherto considered to be
identical with the choir and presbytery of the original
monastic church, was in fact the monastic chapterhouse and that the original church must have
occupied a site to the south of the chapter-house in
Chapel Court, an hypothesis which received dramatic
confirmation by the discovery of the tomb and
coffin of the founder exactly in the recorded position (fn. 17) before the high altar of the original church.
Consequently the south alley of the cloister was
seen to lie considerably further to the south than
had been supposed, which left space for the prior's
cell at the south-west angle of the cloister, with the
refectory adjoining it to the north as had been
indicated in the waterworks plan, whereas hitherto
it had been impossible to find room for it in this
position.
All these discoveries were due to the research
and investigations of the architects; subsequent
excavations, besides confirming them, established
the complete plan and disposition of the chapels in
the monastic church, and also the dimensions of the
Little Cloister, the exact dimensions and further
details regarding the Great Cloister, and many
details of the courses of the water-supply. Subsequent documentary research (fn. 18) made it clear that
shortly before the suppression a 'new' prior's lodging and three 'little' cells had been constructed, and
enabled the excavators to indicate their position in
the monastic plan, although the site where they had
lain was covered by existing buildings. As a result
of all this work, it was possible to draw a plan of the
medieval monastery which, unlike previous plans,
could be based securely upon visible and measurable
remains. (fn. 19)
No catalogue of the library of the London
Charterhouse is known to exist, but there are four
lists of books (fn. 20) taken on loan or by gift: (i) books
carried away from London by John Spalding, when
returning to Hull, probably in the early 15th century; (ii) books lent in 1500 to Roger Montgomery
on his departure to Coventry Charterhouse; (iii) an
inventory of goods, including some books, taken to
Mount Grace in 1519; and (iv) books taken c. 1530
by John Whetham to Hinton Charterhouse. The
surviving books known to have belonged to the
house have been listed by Dr. N. R. Ker. (fn. 21)
There is no direct information about the spiritual
doctrine on the ascetical or mystical life given to the
young monks. The lists mentioned above are interesting as showing the presence, as at Mount Grace,
of copies of the mystical treatises current in England
in the later Middle Ages. Thus there are two copies
of The Cloud of Unknowing, two of The Chastising of
God's Children, two of the English writings of Rolle
and one of the Incendium Amoris, one of the enigmatic Mirror of Simple Souls, two of works of
St. Bridget of Sweden, two of Ludolph of Saxony,
one of the revelations of St. Mechtild, and one of
Gerson's De Contemptu Mundi. Of the two copies
of The Cloud, we know that one was written by
William Exmew for the benefit of Maurice Chauncy. (fn. 22)
A letter (fn. 23) of Prior Houghton to the vicar of the
Cologne Charterhouse, written 23 July 1532, is
chiefly concerned with the ordering of copies of the
printed editions of Denis the Carthusian, whose
writings 'appeal to us above those of all other
spiritual authors', and as he asks for ten copies of
the complete works, twenty of a minor work, and
twelve of any future work printed, he clearly has
the needs of his community, and perhaps those of
other houses also, in mind. The pages of Chauncy,
as also those of the earlier chronicle, show clearly
that members of the London Charterhouse at all
periods were proficient in the ways of the spiritual
life as traditionally presented by the medieval
mystical theologians.
The commissioners for the tenth, early in 1536,
returned the gross income of the house as £736,
with obligatory rents and outgoings of £94, and a
net income of £642. (fn. 24) Their list of properties tallies
almost exactly with that given by the Suppression
Commissioners of 1537. (fn. 25) This includes numerous
tenements near the monastery and scattered about
the City, pastures in Marylebone and Holborn, a
'messuage' (in the Valor Ecclesiasticus a 'manor')
called 'Blumsburye', the manors of Rolleston
(Leics.), Westfield (Norf.), (fn. 26) and rents from the
manors of Ogbourne (Wilts.) and Cardones (Kent), (fn. 27)
the rectories of Edlesborough (Bucks.), (fn. 28) Stockton
Magna (Hunts.), (fn. 29) Braintree (Essex), (fn. 30) North Mimms
(Herts.), and Cromer (Norf.); lands at Kingstonon-Thames (Surr.) and Higham (Kent), the 'Bull
Inn' at Rochester (Kent), 'Atherley's lands' in or
near the Lea valley, and a wood called 'Arnold's' in
Middlesex.
Priors of the London Charterhouse (fn. 31)
John Luscote, (fn. 32) occurs 1370; died 1398
John Okendon, (fn. 33) occurs 1398; resigned 1412
John Maplested, occurs 1412-c. 1440
John Thorne, (fn. 34) occurs c. 1440; resigned c. 1448
John Walweyn, (fn. 35) occurs c. 1448; died 1449
John Seman, (fn. 36) occurs 1449-c. 1468
Edmund or Edward Storer, (fn. 37) occurs 1469; resigned 1477
John Walsingham, (fn. 38) occurs 1477-c. 1488
Richard Roche, (fn. 39) occurs c. 1488; resigned 1500
William Tynbygh (Tynbegh), (fn. 40) occurs 1500;
resigned 1529
John Batmanson, (fn. 41) occurs 1529; died 1531
John Houghton, (fn. 42) occurs 1531; executed 1535
William Trafford, (fn. 43) occurs 1536-8
The common seal, as used in 1379 (fn. 44) and still in use
in 1537, (fn. 45) is a pointed oval, 1¾ by 1¼ in., showing the
Annunciation within a niche with a carved canopy,
pinnacled and crocketed, with tabernacle work at the
sides; between the two figures a scroll with the
legend 'Ave Maria'. Legend, black letter:
SIGILLUM COMUNE DOMUS MATRIS DEI ORDINIS
CARTUSIANORUM LONDONIARUM