| 1 |
1107 A.D. is the date given by Matt. Paris, Chron.
Maj. (Rolls Ser.), ii, 134; Matt. of Westm. Flores
Hist. (Rolls Ser.), ii, 40. In Lansd. MS. 448, fol. 6,
the date of foundation is given as 1108. |
| 2 |
The foundation has also been ascribed to Richard
de Belmeis, bishop of London, see Dugdale, Mon.
Angl. vi, 152, and to Norman, the first prior, see
Matt. Paris, Chron. Maj. (Rolls Ser.), ii, 134, but
there can be little doubt that the queen was the
founder. |
| 3 |
Cart. Antiq. R. N. 1. |
| 4 |
Ibid. N. 13. |
| 5 |
Lansd. MS. 448, fol. 3; and Cart. Antiq. R. N.
14. |
| 6 |
Stow, Surv. of Lond. (ed. Strype), ii, 5. |
| 7 |
Lansd. MS. 448, fol. 3; Cart. Antiq. R. N. 15.
It was £25 'ad scalam,' Cott. Chart. vii, 2; see
Madox, Hist. of Exch. i, 276, 277. |
| 8 |
Guildhall MS. 122, fol. 16. This is a transcript
of the register of Holy Trinity, now at Glasgow.
Stevens's account of the priory in Hist. of Abbeys, ii, is
taken from the register. |
| 9 |
Anct. D. (P.R.O.), A. 6242; Plac. de Quo Warr.
(Rec. Com.), 460, 461. |
| 10 |
Anct. D. (P.R.O.), A. 6286; Plac. de Quo Warr.
(Rec. Com.), 460, 471, 472. |
| 11 |
Cart. Antiq. R. N. 4. |
| 12 |
Anct. D. (P.R.O.), A. 6286 (A.D. 1108–28);
Plac. de Quo Warr. (Rec. Com.), 460, 471, 472. |
| 13 |
Cart. Antiq. R. N. 2. |
| 14 |
Guildhall MS. 122, fol. 12; Stevens, op. cit. ii,
77. |
| 15 |
Cart. Antiq. R. N. 3. Confirmation of the
grant by Henry I, Cart. Mon. de Ramesaia (Rolls
Ser.), i, 133. Convention between Reginald abbot
of Ramsey and Prior Norman, by which the abbot
gave up the claim which he had over the land of the
gild which had been given to Holy Trinity church
in return for the relinquishing of Norman's claim
over the chapel and garden of the abbot (1114–30). |
| 16 |
Guildhall MS. 122, fol. 639; Round, Commune of
Lond. 98. Stow gives 1115 as the date, op. cit. ii, 3. |
| 17 |
Guildhall MS. 122, fol. 11; Stevens, op. cit.
ii, 75. |
| 18 |
Stevens, op. cit. ii, 77. He was absolved from
his obedience by Arnulph, prior of St. Botolph's,
when he was appointed head of Holy Trinity. The
priory of St. Botolph appears to have claimed some
kind of right there, c. 1223, for the arbitrators appointed by Pope Honorius III referred the matter to
the bishop of London who decided that as the convent of Holy Trinity was only subject to the bishop
of London, it was free from all visitation, &c. Hist.
MSS. Com. Rep. ix, App. i, 24. |
| 19 |
Guildhall MS. 122, fol. 18; Stevens, op. cit.
ii, 79. |
| 20 |
Lond. Epis. Reg. Baldock and Gravesend, fol. 5. |
| 21 |
Stevens, op. cit. ii, 79. The author of the
register says that the revenues increased to double
their value through his wisdom. |
| 22 |
Ibid. 179. This date may be a mistake for
1135, when a fire occurred which spread from London
Bridge to St. Clement Danes. |
| 23 |
Dugdale, Mon. Angl. vi, 153. Queen Matilda
confirms Stephen's grant to Ralph the prior and the
monks of Holy Trinity of 100s. land in Braughing in
frankalmoign. |
| 24 |
Lansd. MS. 448, fol. 5. Queen Matilda grants
the priory the church of Braughing. |
| 25 |
See charter of Eustace, count of Boulogne, Cart.
Antiq. R. N. 8. |
| 26 |
Anct. D. (P.R.O.), A. 6242. Grant by King
Henry to the canons of Christchurch, London, that
they shall hold their tenements in peace with all the
liberties which they had in the time of King Henry
his grandfather (1155–62). |
| 27 |
Rymer, Foedera (Rec. Com.), i (1), 21. |
| 28 |
Stevens, op. cit. ii, 79. The statements have
to be taken with caution. The author of the register
says that the death of the archbishop was that night
revealed to Ralph in a dream. Ralph, however, was
certainly dead at the time of Becket's murder. |
| 29 |
Robertson, Materials for the Hist. of Thomas Becket
(Rolls Ser.), vi, 632–3. A similar letter was sent to
the pope by Stephen, the next prior. Ibid. vii, 490. |
| 30 |
Rymer, Foedera (Rec. Com.), i (1), 82. |
| 31 |
Roger of Wendover, Chron. (Rolls Ser.), ii, 174.
It is not stated, however, that the convent sent to the
abbot a distinct refusal to obey, as the deans did. |
| 32 |
Lansd. MS. 448, fol. 5; Cott. R. xiii, 18 (2). |
| 33 |
The author of the register makes him prior from
1197 to 1221 (Stevens, op. cit. ii, 80), but Newcourt
(Repert. Eccl. Lond. i, 560) gives Gilbert, 1214, between
two priors, either of whom might be Peter de Cornwall, as the initial letter of both names is P. |
| 34 |
Stevens, op. cit. ii, 80. |
| 35 |
Stubbs, Introd. to Memorials of Ric. I (Rolls Ser.),
i, pp. lxvi, lxvii. |
| 36 |
Robert Grosteste, Epistolae (Rolls Ser.), 191. |
| 37 |
Matt. Paris, Chron. Maj. v, 124. |
| 38 |
Cal. Pap. Letters, i, 264. |
| 39 |
Ibid. 276. |
| 40 |
The church had been given to them by William
Corbeuil, archbishop of Canterbury, the grant being
afterwards confirmed by Archbishops Theobald and
Thomas Becket, and by Popes Innocent II, Eugenius III,
Innocent III. Lansd. MS. 448, fol. 9; Rymer, Foedera
(Rec. Com.), i (1), 14, 15, 82. |
| 41 |
Harl. MS. 6839, No. 23. Pope Innocent IV
died Dec. 1254, and Alexander IV, his successor,
ordered the sentence to be carried out in 1255. |
| 42 |
Rymer, Foedera (Rec. Com.), i (1), 362. |
| 43 |
Cal. Pap. Letters, i, 299. |
| 44 |
The papal letter above merely says he was suspended in his absence, but the letter of the pope in
1254, printed in Rymer, Foedera, i (1), 306, makes it
clear that he had been to Rome. |
| 45 |
Albert had been sent to England in 1252 to
offer Sicily to the earl of Cornwall. Gasquet, Hen. III
and the Church, 349. |
| 46 |
Chron. Maj. (Rolls Ser.), v, 571. |
| 47 |
Cal. of Chart. R. i, 427; Guildhall MS. 122,
fol. 790. |
| 48 |
Stow, Surv. of Lond. (ed. Strype), ii, 5. |
| 49 |
Guildhall MS. 122, fol. 750–4; Ducarel, 'Hist.
of Hospital of St. Katharine,' in Bibl. Topog. Brit. ii,
3 et seq. |
| 50 |
Rymer, Foedera (Rec. Com.), i (1), 439. |
| 51 |
Rot. Hund. (Rec. Com.), i, 407, 412, 418. |
| 52 |
They are on a little membrane which is fastened
into the Lond. Epis. Reg. Baldock and Gravesend, fol. 5,
at the place where the ordinances of Archbishop
Robert Winchelsey, 1303, are given. If they are by
Chishull their date would be 1275 or 1276. |
| 53 |
It may have been owing to this injunction that
Eustace refused to act in person as alderman of
Portsoken Ward and appointed a deputy. Maitland,
Hist. of Lond. 1011. |
| 54 |
Parl. R. (Rec. Com.), i, 17. |
| 55 |
It seems to have reached the priory on 13 Dec.
1290. Chron. of Edw. I and Edw. II (Rolls Ser.), i, 99. |
| 56 |
Cal. of Pat. 1281–92, p. 420. |
| 57 |
Lond. Epis. Reg. Baldock and Gravesend, fol.
5, 6. |
| 58 |
Wilkins, Concilia, ii, 334, 335, 337, 344. |
| 59 |
Dugdale, Mon. Angl. vi, 848. |
| 60 |
Year Books, Mich. 33 Edw. I to Trin. 35 Edw. I
(Rolls Ser.), 84. |
| 61 |
The priory seems to have needed help, however,
in 1250, when a chantry was erected for Master
Richard de Wendover in return for 30 marks given
by him to amend the state of the house. Doc. of
D. and C. of St. Paul's, A. Box 24, Nos. 1748 and
1750. |
| 62 |
Eustace son of David de Staunford granted to the
prior and convent in 1256 rents and land in London
for an annuity of 6 marks. Guildhall MS. 122 fol.
827–8. In 1284 Michael of St. Albans and Gonilda
his wife quitclaimed to the priory some land and
houses, or rather the lease of them, and in return
Michael could have board and lodging if he chose
to live in the priory, or if he wished to live with his
wife a certain allowance of money. Sharpe, Cal. of
Letter Bk. A, 158. |
| 63 |
Rymer, Foed. i (2), 609. |
| 64 |
Cott. R. xiii, 18 (18). |
| 65 |
Lond. Epis. Reg. Baldock and Gravesend,
fol. 37. |
| 66 |
Abbrev. Plac. (Rec. Com.), 344. |
| 67 |
In 1316 the king sent to the convent requesting
them to assign a suitable pension to his clerk John
de Funtenay until they shall provide him with a
suitable benefice. Cal. of Close, 1313–18, p. 424;
ibid. 1323–7, p. 506; ibid. 1330–3, p. 332; ibid.
1339–41, p. 464, &c. . . . |
| 68 |
Cal. of Close, 1318–23, p. 694. Request to
prior and convent to grant to William de Lughteburgh, the king's envoy, for life such maintenance as
Simon le Kew, deceased, had in their house at
request of the late king. |
| 69 |
Cal. of Close, 1313–18 p. 69; ibid. 1318–23,
p. 694; ibid. 1323–7, p. 345; ibid. 1331–3,
p. 392. |
| 70 |
Cal. of Pat. 1334–8, p. 117. |
| 71 |
Cal. of Close, 1343–6, p. 565. In 1345 Walter
de Stodleye was sent to the priory to receive such
maintenance as Master John de Stretford, deceased,
had there at the king's request. |
| 72 |
Ibid. 1288–96, p. 396. |
| 73 |
Ibid. 1307–13, p. 227. |
| 74 |
Cal. of Pat. 1340–3, p. 28. |
| 75 |
Ibid. 1313–17, p. 434. |
| 76 |
Cal. of Close, 1272–9, p. 233. |
| 77 |
Parl. R. (Rec. Com.), ii, 430a. |
| 78 |
Chron. of Edw. I and Edw. II (Rolls Ser.), i,
321. |
| 79 |
Liber Custum. in Mun. Gildhall Lond. (Rolls Ser.),
ii (1), 5, 'privilegio et antiqua dignitate.' |
| 80 |
Chron. of Edw. I and Edw. II (Rolls Ser.), i,
278. 1315 was a year of great scarcity, and a
solemn procession was ordained to go up to the
church every Friday; ibid. i, 358, the procession
of rejoicing for the taking of Berwick, 1333, went
from St. Paul's to Holy Trinity. |
| 81 |
Mun. Gildhall Lond. (Rolls Ser.), ii (1), 149. |
| 82 |
Cal. of Close, 1307–13, p. 307. |
| 83 |
Harl. MS. 60, fol. 7, 8. |
| 84 |
Ralph le Blund was sheriff in 1291. |
| 85 |
Sharpe, Cal. of Wills, i, 126. |
| 86 |
Ibid. i, 238. Thomas Romayn was mayor in
1309. |
| 87 |
Ibid. 594. |
| 88 |
Ibid. ii, 10. |
| 89 |
Ibid. ii, 39. |
| 90 |
For other bequests to them see Sharpe, Cal. of
Wills, i, 536, 537, 580, 597, 636; ii, 17, 67, 155,
163, 197, 333, &c. |
| 91 |
From 1339 to 1345 there are continual acknowledgements of debt by the prior: £55 in 1339, see
Cal. of Close, 1339–41, pp. 239, 339; £10 and
£106 13s. 4d. in 1340, ibid. pp. 477, 490; £100 in
1341, ibid. 1341–3, p. 271; in 1343, £80, £200,
and two sums of £40, ibid. 1343–6, pp. 102, 229,
233, 241; £40 in 1344, ibid, p. 363; and £120 in
1345, ibid. p. 572. |
| 92 |
Cal. Pap. Letters, iii, 434. |
| 93 |
Cott. MS. Nero, C. iii, fol. 179, 180. The gift
is said to be in relief of the debt by reason of erecting
and rebuilding of the church. |
| 94 |
The indenture between the convent and Robert
de Denton, Cal. of Pat. 1377–81, p. 194, states that
the pension of 25 marks and the 100 faggots yearly,
&c., are given to him for a sum of money paid by
him to the convent, and though there is not the same
evidence in the other cases (ibid. 72 and 74), it is
plain that they are agreements of the same kind. |
| 95 |
Stevens, op. cit. App. 328. |
| 96 |
When he appointed the archbishop of Canterbury, the Chief Justice of the King's Bench, &c., to
the custody and rule of the priory, 1 Jan. 1381.
Cal. of Pat. 1379–81, p. 599. |
| 97 |
Devon, Issues of the Exch. (Pell Rec.). It is the
more mysterious as this canon, John Asshewell, is
called prior, and William Clerk, who was elected in
1420, was still prior in 1438. See Dugdale, Mon.
Angl. vi, 151; Lond. Epis. Reg. Gilbert, fol. 84. |
| 98 |
Ibid. |
| 99 |
Pat. 17 Hen. VI, pt. 2, m. 31. The king states that
it has come to such want that of the lands, tenements,
&c., belonging to it, alms and other works of piety for
the souls of his ancestors cannot be maintained. |
| 100 |
Pat. 17 Hen. VI, pt. 2, m. 31. |
| 101 |
A certain measure of favour may have been shown
to religious houses. |
| 102 |
£20 was required from the prior, £100 from
one of the aldermen, Nicholas Wyfold, and £40 from
Thomas Tyrelle, knt. Letters and Papers I llust. the
Wars of English in France (Rolls Ser.), ii (2), 489. |
| 103 |
Tanner, Notit. Mon. quotes MS. 170, C. C. Camb.
fol. 197. |
| 104 |
Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. ix, App. i, 119. Fabyan
says, 'in this year (1493) Dr. Hylle, bishop of London, grievously pursued Percy, then prior of Christchurch in London.' Chronicle (ed. Ellis), 685. |
| 105 |
Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. ix, App. i, 119. 'The
bishop . . . by taking the law into his own hands
had been guilty of contempt of the executive, and was
condemned to make amends.' |
| 106 |
L. and P. Hen. VIII, xvi, 503 (15). A lease by
Prior Thomas Newton, Feb. 1506. |
| 107 |
Anct. D. (P.R.O.), A. 1773. |
| 108 |
He died prior in 1512. Lond. Epis. Reg.
Fitz James, fol. 84. |
| 109 |
In the cellarer's account, L. and P. Hen. VIII,
ii (1), 115, there are notices of presents to the queen,
to the king's footmen, the king's waits, the lord of
misrule of the king's house. |
| 110 |
See the Liber Coquinae, Mich. 1513–Mich.
1514. Ibid. Brewer remarked that the provision
made for the guests was more plentiful and varied than
that for the convent. The weekly bill for the steward
who arranged for the guests amounted to more than
that for the convent. On Trinity Sunday they entertained thirteen persons, and the menu was a very long
one. |
| 111 |
L. and P. Hen. VIII, i, 1639 and 3497. |
| 112 |
The priory may have paid this debt, but if so, it
contracted another before the surrender. Ibid. v,
823. |
| 113 |
Lond. Epis. Reg. Fitz James, fol. 121. |
| 114 |
Ibid. Tunstall, fol. 156. |
| 115 |
Lansd. MS. 968, fol. 50, 51. |
| 116 |
He says that all his friends turn from him and
make slanderous reports of him, saying he reckoned on
good profit and quietness in giving up his house.
L. and P. Hen. VIII, v, 1735. |
| 117 |
Ibid. v, 1731. |
| 118 |
Ibid. v, 1732. |
| 119 |
Ibid. v, 1065 (34). 20 May, 24 Hen. VIII,
1532. |
| 120 |
'Chron. of Grey Friars,' Monum. Francisc. (Rolls
Ser.), ii, 194. |
| 121 |
L. and P. Hen. VIII, v, 1744. |
| 121 |
a Parl. R. 25 Hen. VIII (10). |
| 121 |
b L. and P. Hen. VIII, vi, 115. |
| 121 |
c Lansd. MS. 968, fol. 52–4. |
| 121 |
d Rec. of the Corp. of Lond. Repert, x, fol.
17b. |
| 121 |
e Ibid. ix, fol. 262–3, 270. |
| 122 |
Pope Nicb. Tax. (Rec. Com.), 9, 12b, 13b, 14b,
18, 21, 21b, 22, 22b, 26, 26b, 29b, 37, 51b, 52. |
| 123 |
From Harl. MS. 60, fols. 7, 8, 19, 25, 29, 39,
41, 54, 56, 57, 61, 62, 64, 70, 78, the total appears
to be a little over £290. |
| 124 |
A marginal note in the Lond. Epis. Reg. Tunstall, fol. 51, gives it as £508 13s. 9d. Wolsey's procurations in 1524 were rated on a value of £333 6s. 8d.
L. and P. Hen. VIII, iv (1), 964. |
| 125 |
Pope Nich. Tax. (Rec. Com.) According to
Harl. MS. 60, fol. 7, 8, £129 3s. 2½d. |
| 126 |
Stevens, op. cit. ii, 83. This was the worth of
the rental. |
| 127 |
L. and P. Hen. VIII, xii (2), 777. |
| 128 |
In 1291 the priory held tenements in 72
parishes (Harl. MS. 60, fol. 7, 8); and in 1354 in 71
parishes. Anct. D. (P.R.O.), A. 2529. |
| 129 |
Close, 34 Edw. III, m. 41 in Add. MS. 15664,
fol. 142. |
| 130 |
This pope in his fourth year confirmed the annexation of the church of St. Botolph and the chapel
of St. Katharine and St. Michael within the cemetery
of the monastery made by apostolic authority. Cott.
R. xiii, 18 (28); Stevens, op. cit. ii, 85. |
| 131 |
There was a dispute about the church between
the priory and the chapter of St. Paul's, which was
settled by Gilbert Foliot when bishop of London
(1163–1189). It was then decided that the priory
should present after the death of the present holder
and should give half its pension to St. Paul's. From
a confirmation of the settlement in 1300 the pension
was evidently 13s. 4d. Cott. R. xiii, 18 (23 & 24). |
| 132 |
Lib. Custum. in Mun. Gildhall. Lond. (Rolls Ser.),
ii (1), 234. |
| 133 |
Cott. Chart. xi, 52. The church itself is said
to have been given to them in the time of Prior
Norman, but was granted away for a small pension.
Guildhall MS. 122, fol. 566. |
| 134 |
L. and P. Hen. VIII, xix (1), 812 (32). The
prior's manor of 'Tottenham' is mentioned in a
deed of 1310 (Anct. D. [P.R.O.], A. 7312), but in
1348 and in 1375 the earl of Pembroke held the
manor. Chan. Inq. p.m. 22 Edw. III (1st Nos.), 47,
file 46; 49 Edw. III (1st Nos.), 70, file 83. |
| 135 |
Cott. MS. Nero, C. iii, fol. 187. The grant
was confirmed to the canons by Pope Innocent II in
1137. Rymer, Foedera (Rec. Com.), i (1), 14; B.M.
Chart. L.F.C. xxx, 3. |
| 136 |
L. and P. Hen. VIII, xvii, p. 696. |
| 137 |
Ibid. xiii (1), 646 (13). |
| 138 |
Charter of 11 Hen. III, Dugdale, Mon. Angl. vi,
154. |
| 139 |
Cott. R. xiii, 18 (1); Lansd. MS. 448, fol. 5. |
| 140 |
Cott. R. xiii, 18 (2). |
| 141 |
Lansd. MS. 960, fol. 54. |
| 142 |
The charter by which the queen confirms her
husband's grant is given in Dugdale, op. cit. vi, 153.
For Hubert's gift of 4 librates of land in 'Brackinges'
see charter 11 Hen. III, ibid. The prior was holding the manor in 1274. Hund. R. (Rec. Com.), i, 191. |
| 143 |
Lansd. MS. 968, fol. 54. |
| 144 |
Eustace, count of Boulogne, confirmed to the
canons the land of 'Cornea' which Hugh Tricket sold
to them. Cart. Antiq. R. N. 8. In 1253 they are
said to hold the manor. Cal. of Chart. R. i, 427.
For Hugh's grant of the church then called Lefstanchirche, see Cott. R. xiii, 18 (5), and for both manor
and church, Chauncy, Hist. of Herts. 128. |
| 145 |
Newcourt, op. cit. i, 843. |
| 146 |
Lansd. MS. 968, fol. 54. |
| 147 |
He made the grant in the presence of Thomas,
archbishop of Canterbury. Cott. R. xiii, 18 (8). |
| 148 |
L. and P. Hen. VIII, xii (2), 1027. |
| 149 |
Charter of Confirmation 1227, Dugdale, op. cit.
vi, 153. |
| 150 |
L. and P. Hen. VIII, xii (2), 1027. |
| 151 |
Charter of Confirmation 1227, Dugdale, op. cit.
vi, 153. |
| 152 |
Chauncy, op. cit. 119. |
| 153 |
At this date the grant was confirmed to the prior.
Dugdale, op. cit. vi, 153. |
| 154 |
Chauncy says this came into the possession of the
priory at some time after 6 Ric. I, and the canons
held it and the church until the surrender of the house.
Op. cit. 120. |
| 155 |
L. and P. Hen. VIII, xiii (1), 1519 (69). |
| 156 |
Lansd. MS. 448, fol. 4. |
| 157 |
Harl. MS. 60, fol. 29; Feud. Aids, ii, 465. |
| 158 |
Feud. Aids, ii, 463. |
| 159 |
L. and P. Hen. VIII, vi, 94; Morant, Hist. of
Essex, i, 31. |
| 160 |
Newcourt, Repert. Eccl. Lond. ii, 639. |
| 161 |
Cott. R. xiii, 18 (15). |
| 162 |
Rymer, Foedera (Rec. Com.), i (1), 15. |
| 163 |
Newcourt, op. cit. ii, 635. |
| 164 |
Rymer, Foedera (Rec. Com.), i (1), 15. |
| 165 |
Cott. R. xiii, 18 (14). |
| 166 |
Harl. MS. 60, fol. 56, and Feud. Aids, ii, 204. |
| 167 |
Harl. MS. 60, fol. 57; Feud. Aids, ii, 204. |
| 168 |
Harl. MS. 60, fol. 62; Feud. Aids, ii, 194. |
| 169 |
It was confirmed by Henry I. Cart. Antiq.
R. N. 6. See also Charter, 11 Hen. III, Dugdale,
Mon. Angl. vi, 153. |
| 170 |
Hasted, Hist. of Kent, i, 166. |
| 171 |
Lansd. MS. 448, fol. 11. |
| 172 |
Ibid. fol. 12. |
| 173 |
Cart. Antiq. R. N. 20. Stephen confirmed the
grant. B.M. Chart. L.F.C. xiv, 6. The priory still
held land there (parish of Erith) in 1518. L. and P.
Hen. VIII, ii (2), 4654. |
| 174 |
B.M. Chart. L.F.C. xiv, 14, 20, 23, and L.F.C.
xxiii, 22, 23. |
| 175 |
Thorpe, Reg. Roff. 325. |
| 176 |
B.M. Chart. L.F.C. xiv, 22. |
| 177 |
Add. Chart. 8793 and 9000. |
| 178 |
Cal. Chart. R. and Inq. a.q.d. (Rec. Com.), 378. |
| 179 |
Feud. Aids, iii, 383. |
| 180 |
Ibid. iii, 376. |
| 181 |
Ibid. ii, 446. |
| 182 |
Ibid. ii, 446, 453. |
| 183 |
Ibid. ii, 446. |
| 184 |
Ibid. ii, 453. |
| 185 |
Lib. Nig. Scacc. (Hearne), i, 390. |
| 186 |
Dugdale, Mon. Angl. vi, 150. |
| 187 |
Cott. Chart. xi, 6. |
| 188 |
Stevens, Hist. of Abbeys, ii, 79. |
| 189 |
Ibid. |
| 190 |
Robertson, Materials for the Hist. of Thomas Becket
(Rolls Ser.), vi, 632, 633. |
| 191 |
Stevens, op. cit. ii, 79. |
| 192 |
Ibid. 80. Newcourt, however, gives Gilbert
elected 1214 between two priors whose names began
with P. Repert. Eccl. Lond. i, 560. |
| 193 |
Cal. of Pat. 1216–25, p. 342; Stubbs, Introd. to
Mem. of Ric. I (Rolls Ser.), lxvii. |
| 194 |
Guildhall MS. 122, fol. 170. According to the
list given by Stevens, op. cit. ii, 80, he died in 1248.
Dugdale gives the date of his death as 1252. Op. cit.
vi, 150. |
| 195 |
Stevens, op. cit. ii, 80. He occurs 1250, Doc.
of D. and C. of St. Paul's, A. Box 24, No. 1748.
Dugdale says he received the royal assent to his election
in 1252, op. cit. vi, 150. |
| 196 |
Anct. D. (P.R.O.), A. 1664. |
| 197 |
Ibid. A. 2394. |
| 198 |
Stevens, op. cit. ii, 80. He was appointed
papal chaplain in 1264. Cal. Pap. Letters, i, 408. |
| 199 |
He received the temporalities according to Stevens,
December 1264, according to Newcourt, op. cit. i,
560, in 1268. |
| 200 |
Cal. of Pat. 1281–92, p. 147. |
| 201 |
The royal assent to his election was given
10 Jan. 1285. Ibid. 151. |
| 202 |
Cott. R. xiii, 18 (18). |
| 203 |
Cal. of Pat. 1292–1301, p. 70. |
| 204 |
Ibid. |
| 205 |
Ibid. 1301–7, p. 120. |
| 206 |
Ibid. 123. |
| 207 |
Stevens, op. cit. ii, 80. |
| 208 |
Ibid. He did not receive the royal assent until
1316 (Cal. of Pat. 1313–17, p. 478), so that the date
of his election is doubtful. |
| 209 |
According to Cal. of Pat. 1324–7, p. 124, he
appears to have resigned, but Stevens says he was
deposed. Op. cit. ii, 80. |
| 210 |
Cal. of Pat. 1324–7, p. 125. |
| 211 |
Ibid. 1330–4, p. 120. |
| 212 |
Ibid. p. 121. |
| 213 |
Ibid. 1338–40, p. 429. |
| 214 |
Ibid. 443. |
| 215 |
Ibid. 1377–87, p. 5. |
| 216 |
Ibid. 23. |
| 217 |
Lond. Epis. Reg. Braybrook, fol. 294. |
| 218 |
Ibid. |
| 219 |
Dugdale, op. cit. vi, 151. In March, 1399, the
pope conferred the dignity of papal chaplain on John
Buntingford who is called prior of Christchurch,
London (Cal. Pap. Letters, iv, 308), but in August,
1399, Robert Exeter was prior. Nicolas, Test. Vet.
149. |
| 220 |
Stevens, op. cit. ii, 80. |
| 221 |
Ibid. |
| 222 |
Dugdale, op. cit. vi, 151. |
| 223 |
Devon, Issues of the Exch. 410. |
| 224 |
Anct. D. (P.R.O.), A. 2648. |
| 225 |
Lond. Epis. Reg. Gilbert, fol. 84. |
| 226 |
Dugdale, op. cit. vi, 151. |
| 227 |
Anct. D. (P.R.O.), A. 2020. |
| 228 |
Dugdale, op. cit. vi, 151. |
| 229 |
Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. ix, App. i, 54. |
| 230 |
Dugdale, op. cit. vi, 151. |
| 231 |
Hist. MSS. Com. Rep. ix, App. i, 119. |
| 232 |
Dugdale, op. cit. vi, 151. A lease in which
Thomas Newton figures as prior is dated 20 February,
21 Hen. VII. See next note. |
| 233 |
L. and P. Hen. VIII, xvi, 503 (15). |
| 234 |
Lond. Epis. Reg. Fitz James, fol. 84–6. |
| 235 |
Ibid. In a deed of 1509, however, he is called
prior. Anct. D. (P.R.O.), A. 1773. |
| 236 |
Harl. Chart. 44 F. 50–4; 44 G. 1, 3. |
| 237 |
Lond. Epis. Reg. Tunstall, fol. 51, &c. |
| 238 |
Ibid. He was sub-prior. |
| 239 |
Lansd. MS. 968, fol. 50. |
| 240 |
Cott. Chart. xi, 52. |
| 241 |
B.M. Seals, lxviii, 35. |
| 242 |
Harl. Chart. 44, F. 52. |