Religion and the Reformation
The earliest surviving records of Protestantism in the city mostly concern immigrant
craftsmen or their immediate descendants. Gilbert Johnson, 'Dutchman and carver',
abjured his heresies in the archbishop's court in 1528. He had rejected the confessional,
prayers for the dead, holy bread and water, fasting, and other ceremonies; he had also
denied the authority of popes and bishops to curse any man, denounced the venality of
the priesthood, and refused to pay tithes. Having abjured, he went on four long penitential processions about the city, undergoing discipline at the hands of the Dean of the
Christianity of York. (fn. 54) Such spectacles doubtless acted as a deterrent, while helping to
increase the rising tide of anti-clericalism which can be clearly traced throughout the
diocese. In 1540 Denise Johnson abjured the heretical belief 'that the sacrament is not
the blessed body of Christ' and was ordered penance in the minster. (fn. 55) Earlier in the year
John Burne from Belford (Northumb.) was overheard by parson Joye of All Saints',
North Street, ridiculing St. Mary Magdalen in the churchyard. His ribaldry—it seems
little more—brought him into the archbishop's Court of Audience. (fn. 56)
Much more serious were the cases of the brothers Edward and Valentine Freez, sons
of the Dutch immigrant Frederick Freez, one of York's earliest book-printers. (fn. 57) Though
the story of Edward is related at some length by Foxe, its sensational episodes did not
occur in York. An apprentice painter, later a novice in a monastery, he escaped to
secular life and married; eventually, having been arrested for heresy, he was driven mad
by a cruel imprisonment in the Lollards' Tower. (fn. 58) Foxe dates these latter events between
1529 and 1531. Edward's brother Valentine in 1533 engineered the escape of the Protestant Andrew Hewet from the house of the Bishop of London. (fn. 59) Imprisoned by Bishop
Rowland Lee the following year, (fn. 60) Valentine apparently obtained his release through
Cromwell's favour (fn. 61) and returned to York. In 1539, described as a cordwainer, he
attained the freedom of the city by patrimony, (fn. 62) but in 1540 both he and his wife were
haled before the Council in the North as sacramentarians, members of the extremist
sect which denied transubstantiation. (fn. 63) Shortly afterwards, records Foxe, the pair 'gave
their lives at one stake in York for the testimony of Jesus Christ'. (fn. 64) Independent evidence occurs in the York Register of Freemen opposite the name of Valentine 'Frees':
combustus erat apud Knavesmire propter heresem. The pair probably suffered condemnation not by the church courts but by the Council in the North itself under the recent
Six Articles. The House Book records under the year 1547 the adventures of two sacramentarian tailors, who had come from London to live in York. They are said to have
been indicted, put into the sheriff's kidcote, and condemned to burning, but to have
then recanted before the ecclesiastical judges in the chapter house and gone back to
prison. (fn. 65) These two should probably be identified with the two sacramentarians Burdone and Grove, who were in fact convicted by the Council in the North and pardoned
by the king a few days before his death. These were adherents of the Protestant martyrs,
Ann Askew and John Lassels, from whose execution they had recently fled. (fn. 66)
All these Henrican heretics must be considered in the general context of contemporary
heresy throughout the diocese of York. Despite the strong Dutch element, the recorded
beliefs of this group are neither Lutheran nor Anabaptist, but Lollard: they compare
very closely with other cases of the pre-Lutheran years. The immigrant families may
have been pre-disposed by their origins to receive heresy, but surprisingly little evidence
appears to connect their actual beliefs with foreign sources. It remains very hard to
avoid the suspicion that in York, as in other Tudor towns, an outsider, whether Netherlander, Northumbrian, or Londoner, ran special risks of denunciation if he expressed
heretical views.
In addition to these Lollard-sacramentarian heresies, the influence of the educated
'New Learning' was not wholly absent in the York area. One of its representatives was
Wilfrid Holme, head of the ancient family at Huntington, whose poem The Fall and
Evil Success of Rebellion was written in 1537 but remained unpublished until 1572.
Previously taken as an account of the Pilgrimage of Grace, it has recently found recognition as a startling manifestation of the New Learning, devoted not merely to the glorification of Henry VIII, but to fierce invective against clerical privilege, monasticism,
and scholastic pedantry. (fn. 67) Behind such an outburst one may sense the anti-clericalism
from which even northern England was not immune. Everywhere it had been intensified by the pride and pretensions of Wolsey, whose long absentee tenure of the archbishopric (1514-30) and claims for his servants appear to have made him widely
unpopular in York. (fn. 68) As far as can be judged, the number of the unorthodox in York must
have remained small. The York wills of the twenties and thirties, with their numerous
bequests to the friars and their conventional provision for satisfactory masses, suggest
no imminent religious cataclysm. Alongside this démodé piety, runs the materialist and
unromantic attitude revealed by the municipal dissolution of chantries in 1536. (fn. 69) The
action appears to have had no protestant doctrinal overtones, but it indicates that by this
date chantries founded in the previous century for the repose of their predecessors'
souls now commanded little veneration amongst the York oligarchy.
As for the sympathy toward the Pilgrimage of Grace shown by so many York men,
it forms part of a problem which passes far beyond religious history. The year 1536
saw the city restive and divided over issues unrelated to the ecclesiastical policy of the
Crown. The old schism persisted between the commons and the ruling oligarchy. In
May the commons riotously cast down recent inclosures on Knavesmire, quoting
their M.P. Sir George Lawson as saying that a parliamentary Act had forbidden the
inclosure of commons. Two citizens' wives were subsequently carted round the city
for three days, to punish them for putting a curse on the mayor and his brethren for
inclosing the common land. (fn. 70) A long series of inquiries in August 1536 ended in the
confession and punishment of various persons who had persistently set up by night
slanderous bills directed against Aldermen Hodgson, North, and Gale. (fn. 71) The lastnamed, it appears, had been slandered to the effect that he gave presents to escape the
office of sheriff. (fn. 72) In September a violent altercation occurred in the Merchant Adventurers' Hall between Hodgson and Peter Robinson, merchant, who accused the
alderman of being 'false both to God and unto the king'. Under examination Robinson
alleged that his adversary had brought about his discharge from the common council
contrary to the royal charter and so was untrue to God and the king. (fn. 73) On 3 November,
during the Pilgrimage itself, the city council noted 'a murmur and great grudge' amongst
the commons of the city occasioned by sinister rumours emanating from 'certain
malicious persons'. That this movement had been directed at the conduct of the city
finances then appears from the appointment of 2 aldermen, 2 of the 'twenty-four', and 4
honest commoners as auditors of the chamberlains' accounts. (fn. 74) This was specifically done
to pacify the malcontents. A similarly secular conflict between the oligarchy and the unprivileged at Beverley had just played a clear and important part in the inception of the
Yorkshire Pilgrimage of Grace. (fn. 75)
At York the commons took no such part in the earliest stages of the rebellion, yet
their sympathies lay predominantly with the rebels. Wilfrid Holme relates that the mayor,
William Harrington, would have resisted had he not mistrusted the commons of the
city; amongst the other loyalists mentioned by Holme are Dr. Stephens (i.e. Stephen
Thomason, M.D.), physician to the Earl of Northumberland, Roger Ratcliff, and the
parson of St. Mary's, Castlegate. (fn. 76) On 9 October Lord Darcy, still behaving correctly,
ordered the mayor to resist, pointing out that the rebels lacked artillery. (fn. 77) The following
day the Sheriff of Yorkshire urged Darcy to send a force immediately to York to overawe its rebel faction. (fn. 78) The subsequent testimony of Lancelot Colyns, treasurer of the
minster, illuminates the next stages. On 10 October Colyns heard of the rising under
Aske in Howdenshire, and the very next day 'they were up in York itself', the insurrection being spread by the letters of a friar of Knaresborough, who said churches should
be pulled down and men taxed for christening and marriage—the usual false rumours
which contributed so powerfully to rouse the common people. The same day it became
known that Archbishop Lee, Lord Darcy, and others of the king's council had fled to
Pontefract: Colyns thought their flight encouraged the insurrection. (fn. 79) Darcy himself
reported to the king from Pontefract on 13 October that he had told the mayor to look
to the safety of the city and the good order of the people there, 'who, I hear, are lightly
disposed'. In detailing the extent of the rising he adds that 'the city of York favours
them'. (fn. 80)
On Sunday 15 October the main host of the Pilgrims, variously estimated from
20,000 to 40,000, (fn. 81) assembled at the city gates, and the next day Aske with 4,000 or 5,000
horsemen was permitted to enter. Footmen were excluded to avoid looting: they presumably found shelter in the suburbs and neighbouring villages. At the minster door
the whole cathedral clergy received Aske and thence took him in procession to the high
altar, where he made his oblation. (fn. 82) As for William Harrington and the aldermen, they
wisely left no incriminating minutes of their actions in the House Book. Ironically
enough the king was writing them a letter of thanks for their efforts on the day after
Aske had made his triumphal entry. (fn. 83) Nevertheless, the wavering of Darcy and the
royal counsellors must bear chief responsibility for the fall of York and the consequent
further progress of the rising. The grievances of the York commons were local in
character and their participation might have been avoided by firm yet conciliatory
leadership.
During the stay of the host, monks and nuns of the small houses already dissolved
were restored. Some of the gentry threatened to burn down the Treasurer's House,
since it bore the arms of Cromwell. (fn. 84) The occupation was necessarily brief. On 18
October Aske left for Pontefract with a small party, and the main body must have
started very shortly afterwards, since it reached Pontefract three days later. (fn. 85) The considerable force headed by Sir Thomas Percy and Sir Oswald Wolsthrope passed through
York as late as 20 October. They made the Abbot of St. Mary's carry his finest cross at
their head through the city, but he was unwilling, and stole away at the first opportunity. Sir Thomas, riding 'gorgeously' through the city 'with feathers trimmed', was
greeted with special affection by the commons as the true leader of the oppressed but
still popular house of Percy. (fn. 86) To the Pilgrims' conference with the Duke of Norfolk
early in December at Pontefract, the city sent an impressive delegation, headed by Sir
George Lawson and including an alderman, a sheriff, and two chamberlains. (fn. 87)
On the collapse of the rising an immediate royal visit came under discussion and in
February 1537 the corporation listed the available accommodation. (fn. 88) Relief was doubtless widespread at the postponement of the plan. Henry did not in fact appear until the
autumn of 1541, yet, even so, the city fathers were still justifiably flurried concerning
the submission and the presents expected by offended majesty. Repeatedly they consulted the Duke of Norfolk and Archbishop Lee in order to ascertain the king's wishes. (fn. 89)
They also perused the submission already made by the men of Lincolnshire and framed
their own on similar lines. Reaching York on 18 September with his flighty young
queen, Henry was met at the boundary cross along the Fulford road by the mayor,
Robert Hall, the recorder, the aldermen, the 'twenty-four', and 120 of the most discreet
commoners of the city wearing new gowns of fine 'sadde tawny'. Also in attendance were
60 notables drawn from The Ainsty. On the king's approach the assembly fell to their
knees and the recorder made his fulsome oration. Lacking knowledge of God's word
and ignorant of their bounden duty, they had heinously offended by the odious offence
of traitorous rebellion. The king, having the lives, lands, and goods of these 'wretches'
at his pleasure, had charitably and bountifully granted them his pardon. They 'from the
bottoms of [their] stomach repentant' promised to spend their all in the royal service.
This effusion over, the king was handed a paper bearing words to the same effect, and
this was reinforced by presents of cups of 'silver double gilt', that for the king containing
£100 in gold and that for the queen £40. (fn. 90) Whatever the domestic surprises then being
prepared for him, Henry had good reason for political satisfaction as he retired to the
King's Manor for the night. In the event, his visit proved an historical landmark of the
first order. Never did York again offend his dynasty. It stood staunchly behind the
reigning monarch until the universal defection of 1688. Above all, the king's appearance
marked the end of the initial phase of the Reformation in the north and the erection at
York of a reformed king's council destined to contribute so powerfully to the religious
and political unity of the nation. Henry came to York only once, yet herein he did more
than his three successors, who showed so marked a lack of curiosity concerning their
northern subjects and dominions.
The disappearance of the chantries affected townsmen more intimately than the
monastic dissolution. The York chantries fall into two groups: those founded in the
minster, about 47 in number; and those in the city, about 41 spread among 19 churches.
The former boasted somewhat better endowments, but the average annual income of a
minster priest remained only about £5, as opposed to £4 for the city priests. Of the
49 minster priests, at least 18 were also vicars choral with separate stipends, (fn. 91) while
nearly all the rest had other livings, or else pensions as ex-monks. Many of the city
priests were less comfortably situated: 33 of them held the 41 chantries and of these 15
were not pluralists, thus being dependent on their pensions at dissolution. Everywhere
among these small and decayed endowments, pluralism had become a necessity. It was
not grossly abused, since, of all the chantry priests in the minster and the city, only
four enjoyed very large total incomes of the £20 order. (fn. 92) The commissioners had few
charges to bring against these priests and, with one exception, (fn. 93) described them by some
such phrase as 'of honest qualities and conditions'. The minster priests are shown to
have been markedly better educated than the rest, (fn. 94) though none has been identified as
a graduate.
In addition to saying mass for their founders, the minster incumbents had specified
duties at the cathedral services, while the foundation masses themselves were in some
cases attended by strangers, casual visitors, and artisans. (fn. 95) The city priests mostly
helped their parsons to administer the sacraments. Some foundations exercised a popular
function. The mass of the chantry in Foss Bridge Chapel had formerly been timed from
11 o'clock to noon, but had now been altered 'by the advice of the parishioners there, as
well as for their commodity as travelling people'. (fn. 96) The new time affords an interesting
reflection on contemporary habits; it was 4 to 5 a.m.
Though the chantries were much the most numerous of the institutions dissolved
by Edward VI, certain others demand brief notice. Three collegiate bodies came
within the statutes. The college of vicars choral, a somewhat poorly disciplined body in
1545, (fn. 97) was noted by the chantry commissioners to be depleted in numbers and sorely
ruined in endowment. (fn. 98) A royal grant of its site and buildings in 1545 speaks of the
'late college'. Nevertheless, the chapter obtained in 1552 a decree from the Court of
Augmentations regranting the site and buildings to the subchanter and vicars choral.
For the time being, the membership of the college fell to five. (fn. 99) Even this bare survival
was not vouchsafed the others. With the dismissal of the minster chantry priests, the
necessity for their college of St. William disappeared: the site was granted to Sir
Michael Stanhope and John Bellow in April 1549. (fn. 1) Much more wealthy, and slightly
more important in the outside world, was St. Sepulchre's College. (fn. 2) Its aged master, the
distinguished diplomatist and civil servant, Thomas Magnus, had accumulated by an
astonishing feat of pluralism an income approaching the enormous figure of £600. (fn. 3)
Several of his prebendaries, though mostly of mediocre learning, enjoyed extremely
handsome pluralities. (fn. 4) It should be recorded favourably of this plutocratic foundation
that it distributed £26 annually to the poor of those parishes upon the endowments of
which it battened. (fn. 5) Otherwise its dissolution cannot have been widely regarded as a
calamity. It is noted as 'the late chapel' in a grant of 1 August 1550. (fn. 6)
In the lives of York people a far greater influence had been exerted by the religious
guilds. That of Corpus Christi had enrolled 16,850 members in its history of a century
and a half. (fn. 7) Up to its dissolution in 1547 it had also satisfactorily managed the hospital
of St. Thomas, (fn. 8) but this hospital was still maintaining poor people in 1556 (fn. 9) and its continuance in the Elizabethan period has already been noticed. (fn. 10) The guild's own social
work was modest but useful, for besides paying 6s. 8d. a year to ten poor people, it daily
provided eight beds for poor strangers. (fn. 11) On dissolution the priests sold the goods
and bestowed the proceeds at their own discretion. (fn. 12) Its real treasure was the magnificent shrine carried in the Corpus Christi procession and this naturally fell to the
Crown. Presented in 1449 by Thomas Spofford, Bishop of Hereford, (fn. 13) and valued at
£210, it must be numbered with the major artistic losses of the Reformation period in
York. (fn. 14)
The important guilds of St. Christopher and St. George had long been functioning
as one. Their affairs had occasioned one of the bitterest internal quarrels within the
York oligarchy. About 1533 numerous witnesses testified in the Star Chamber that their
former masters, Aldermen Ralph Pulleyn and Ralph Sympson, who had been unconstitutionally elected, had embezzled substantial amounts of the guild funds and had
been abetted in this by the then master Thomas Thornton. Pulleyn and Sympson
counter-charged the mayor, John Hodgson, with wrongful imprisonment, expulsion
from their aldermanships, and other acts of oppression. This cause célèbre raged also
before the Council in the North and in Chancery; it was complicated by proceedings
brought in the ecclesiastical court against Sympson by his supplanter, Alderman Dogeson, an adherent of the mayor. Sympson, it appeared, had called Dogeson a cuckold and
had defamed Mrs. Dogeson with the chaplain, Robert Johnson. (fn. 15) Despite this surrounding morass of feud and corruption, the guilds of St. Christopher and St. George
continued until their dissolution to maintain the Guildhall and various bridges and
highways, besides relieving certain poor people. (fn. 16) In December 1548 the city council
sent the guild clerk to London to discover whether its properties came within the compass of the statute, and, if so, to sue for them to the king. (fn. 17) The following January
Alderman North and the common clerk were ordered to sue in London for the preservation of the guilds, (fn. 18) but Sir Michael Stanhope nevertheless managed to purchase
the properties before 31 May 1549. (fn. 19) By the following month the city agreed with Stanhope's solicitor, John Bellow, upon a further sale, and ultimately the Crown granted the
city all the possessions of the guilds for the sum of £212. (fn. 20) To recoup a part of this sum
the new owners then stripped the guild chapel of its lead and re-covered it with stone. (fn. 21)
They had struck a very satisfactory bargain. The other religious guilds were apparently
small parochial affairs. In the parish of St. Lawrence, for example, there was 11s. 6½d.
in stock for the maintenance of a guild of St. Agnes, sums ranging from 2d. to 2s. being
in the hands of certain parishioners listed in the chantry surveys. (fn. 22) Like so many
medieval institutions, some had vanished by this date and therefore do not appear in the
chantry surveys. (fn. 23)
Unlike many places, York entered upon Elizabeth's reign better equipped with
schools than it had been during that of Henry VIII, a fact due both to Protestant and to
Catholic zeal. The three schools established at York, Hemsworth (W.R.), and Malton
(N.R.) by Archbishop Holgate in 1546 constitute a monument of the former, (fn. 24) while the
Marian refoundation of St. Peter's after its eclipse in the early part of the century was
specifically intended to 'ward off and put to flight the ravening wolves, the devilish men
with ill understanding of the Catholic faith, from the sheepfolds committed to them'. (fn. 25)
While in this sphere both the Protestant New Learning and the incipient CounterReformation thus find expression, one may doubt whether either movement made any
significant impact upon the stolid citizenry of mid-Tudor York.
Within the minster close, matters proved very different. Archbishop Holgate's 30
injunctions for the minster, issued in 1552, exemplify the evangelical, scriptural, and
educational approach of the moderate reformers. (fn. 26) Not all the minster clergy welcomed
these changes. Amongst Holgate's local opponents was a deacon named John Houseman, who in 1553 claimed that the archbishop had refused to admit him to priesthood,
since he was one of those in the minster who denounced clerical marriage. (fn. 27) In October
1553 the Marian government committed Holgate to the Tower: he was deprived for
marriage in the subsequent March. (fn. 28) In York and throughout the diocese the Marian
reaction nevertheless lacked the drama which it developed in those areas where Protestants proved numerous and their persecutors resolute. The new archbishop, Nicholas
Heath, was a moderate and an absentee, while the chief ecclesiastical judges at York,
Drs. Rokeby and Dakyn, seem in general to have exercised their powers with restraint. (fn. 29)
Six of the cathedral prebendaries, William Clayborough, Thomas Cottesford, Robert
Watson, Henry Williams, and Miles and Thomas Wilson, had married and were deprived between 1554 and 1555. Apart from Williams, all these men had been instituted
under Edward VI, and were presumably known adherents of the new ways. Cottesford
was a distinguished Protestant writer and a Marian exile. (fn. 30) Along with these six went
at least two of the vicars choral, Walter Lancaster and Peter Walker. On the other
hand, the clergy of the city parishes appear to have been deterred from marriage by
conviction, poverty, or the pressure of conservative local opinion: among the recorded
deprivations appear only those of Robert Cragges, Rector of All Saints', Pavement,
and Ralph Whitling, Rector of St. Michael's, Spurriergate. The latter admitted to
marrying, but finally agreed to live apart from his wife in order to obtain restitution
to sacerdotal functions. (fn. 31) For the York laity the Marian proceedings also provided
little excitement. An exception was the case of Christopher Kelke, a gentleman of York,
who in November 1555 replied in the ecclesiastical court to certain articles 'touching
the safety of his soul and the crime of Lollardy'. Three women of the parish of Holy
Trinity, Goodramgate, gave evidence on his case, while Kelke called the York physician,
Dr. Stephen Tubley, and a priest, John Clayby. Unfortunately, the court book omits
the evidence and the sentence. (fn. 32) The term 'Lollardy' cannot, however, be dismissed as
a mere anachronism since cases of pre-Lutheran heresy closely similar to these continue
to appear in other parts of the diocese up to the Marian period.
Whatever the aspirations of the queen and a few other enthusiasts, the material results
of the Reformation could seldom be undone. The corporation petitioned Cardinal Pole
in vain for the restoration of St. Leonard's Hospital (fn. 33) and continued its efforts to gain
a grant of the chantry lands in the city. (fn. 34) One of the few Marian 'restorations' in York
affected the Corpus Christi plays. In May 1548 the pageants depicting the death,
assumption, and coronation of the Virgin had been omitted by order of the corporation. (fn. 35) In February 1554, however, they were restored. (fn. 36) At the same time, there are
small grounds for any supposition that York opinion ardently ranged itself behind the
policy of Queen Mary. Her lengthy and enthusiastic order to celebrate with bonfires
the reconciliation with Rome is dutifully copied into the House Book, but the note
added by the corporation omits any mention of the queen's purpose and merely states
that the celebration should be regarded as 'thanksgiving to God for his mercifulnesses
now and at all times'. (fn. 37) Few of the York aldermen are likely to have been active Protestants; their lack of enthusiasm may more reasonably be attributed to the fact that papal
jurisdiction had effectively disappeared as long ago as Wolsey's legateship. Now, over
30 years later, its revival can scarcely have seemed in non-speculative York a vital
necessity.
While the Elizabethan Settlement entailed numerous changes amongst the upper
clergy, it touched very few parish priests: whatever their real beliefs, the vast majority
of them continued in their benefices, observing the new Prayer Book and Articles of
Religion. (fn. 38) York provides an admirable miniature of this national picture. The royal
Visitors for the northern province began proceedings there on 6 September 1559 and
continued for four days. Most of the chapter, headed by Dr. Rokeby, appeared and took
the required oath. (fn. 39) Ten prebendaries failed to attend. After repeated examinations
two, Drs. Palmes and Marshall, suffered deprivation, while two others, Geoffrey Downes
and Robert Pursglove, Bishop of Hull, had their benefices sequestered. At dates subsequent to this visitation at least four, and probably six, of the rest were also deprived.
All these unfortunates were clearly Marians and recently instituted after the displacement of married prebendaries. They amounted to less than half the chapter. (fn. 40)
The parish clergy remained almost untouched. Henry More, Rector of St. Martin's,
Micklegate, had his cure sequestered by the Visitors on 9 September, but may later
have conformed. (fn. 41) No exceptional number of resignations occurred during the subsequent years. Doubtless some of the city clergy were less than enthusiastic about the new
order and at least one elderly unbeneficed priest was suspected of anti-Elizabethan
activities. He was Edward Sandall, a pensioned ex-monk of Kirkstall, who had formerly
held three chantries and had been transferred by the corporation in 1545 from Foss
Bridge Chapel to do service in that of Ouse Bridge. (fn. 42) In February 1568, while resident
in the parish of St. Martin, Micklegate, he was presented at the archbishop's visitation
as a misliker of the established religion and as a sower of seditious rumours who said that
he trusted to see the day when he should have 'twenty of the heretics' heads that now be
in authority under his girdle'. He had also, it was alleged, openly maintained the doctrine
of praying to the saints. As a 'corrupter of youth', he had been forbidden to teach, yet
defiantly continued to do so. Instead of exercising himself in the scriptures, he commonly
read the vain book of 'The Four Sons of Amon', 'Reynard the Fox', and other romances.
This otherwise attractive survival of the old school was also reputed to be a great usurer.
Sandall vigorously denied the charges, except for his addiction to romances, which he
admitted. Since being barred from teaching he had taught 'but one boy which waiteth
upon him'. He was finally allowed to purge himself by the oaths of twelve men, but incurred punishment on a charge of contempt, since it was found that he had served the
cure at Tadcaster without admission by the diocesan authorities. (fn. 43) Such cases were
rare throughout the diocese and show no ostensible connexion with the Catholicism of
the later Elizabethan period, which derived its inspiration from the Continent.
Of normal disciplinary processes affecting the Elizabethan clergy in York, one may
read much in the diocesan visitation books. By 16th-century or earlier standards the
record is a good one, yet here and there the usual offences appear: omission of parts of
the service, (fn. 44) failure to teach children, (fn. 45) or to catechise, (fn. 46) administering communion to
excommunicated persons, (fn. 47) and keeping an ale-house in the vicarage. (fn. 48) Rectors, and
more especially lay farmers of rectories, often proved at this period grossly negligent of
their obligations to preserve the fabric of chancels. York churchwardens are sometimes
presented for omitting to report the resultant decay. At St. Mary's, Bishophill, Senior
in 1571 the wardens had failed not only to do this, but also to deface the stone altar and
the images and to provide a communion table, a pulpit, and books sufficient for divine
service. They proceeded to make good these defects; probably their slackness had no
doctrinal implications. (fn. 49) Pluralism and non-residence occasionally appear, though their
extent and purpose were soon to be misrepresented by the Puritans. Robert Mell, Vicar
of Hollym (E.R.), carried the practice too far when in 1567 he held also the vicarages of
Withernsea (E.R.) and All Saints', Peaseholme, in York. (fn. 50) Anthony Hartforthe, Rector
of St. Martin's, Micklegate, was non-resident in 1596 and made no distribution to the
poor. (fn. 51) Yet in general pluralism seems less extensive than might be anticipated in the
face of the poverty of many York benefices. And while the acquisition of a wife and sturdy
sons must have helped many a farming rural priest, (fn. 52) the same cannot be supposed in
the case of a man holding an urban cure. Amongst the Elizabethan clergy the grosser
offences prove rare, though one minor cleric was accused of giving 6s. to people who
saw him resorting to a certain house in Bootham. (fn. 53)
The jurisdiction of the church courts over the sins and negligences of the laity was
very little relaxed by the changes of the Reformation: York citizens continued to appear
before Elizabethan commissaries on a luxuriant variety of charges. Non-payment of the
parish clerk's wages and the church dues, (fn. 54) failure to attend church or take communion,
remaining excommunicate: (fn. 55) such offences did not necessarily indicate unorthodox religious belief. In 1578 Leonard Dente of Holy Trinity, Goodramgate, 'lieth in his bed
on Sundays till twelve of the clock and doth also brag and say he thanked God he never
came at Sermon in his life'. (fn. 56) At the same time William Hewet of Holy Trinity, King's
Court, protested that his non-attendance showed no malice, but simply his fear of being
arrested for debt. (fn. 57) Archbishop Grindal found in 1575 that 'the people on the Pavement do commonly open their shops on Sundays and holy days if fairs and markets fall
on such days'. (fn. 58) Robert Sedgewicke of St. Mary's, Castlegate, 'cometh not to the church,
and keepeth evil company in his house tippling in service time'. (fn. 59) Even in York a scene
of violence might occasionally happen in church. John Stock was presented by the
churchwardens of St. Martin's, Coney Street, because he laid violent hands upon one
William Owthwayte during the reading of the Epistle: (fn. 60) Stock claimed to be 'an officer
or serjeant' making a legitimate arrest; his punishment is not recorded. Superstition of
various types continued rife and cases of necromancy occasionally came before the
diocesan courts. (fn. 61) Usury, seldom presented before 1580, attracted more attention thereafter. (fn. 62) In York, as elsewhere, the sins of the flesh led considerable numbers of lay men
and women before the ecclesiastical judges and thence to public penance.
Puritanism, a highly imprecise term as applied to Elizabethan society, covers an immense variety of beliefs and practices. In York its most violent manifestations are
scarcely represented before 1603. Of the Brownists, or of those clergy who refused certain Prayer Book rites as Romish, examples have not yet been found within the city. The
significant development of the reign might suitably be termed 'Anglo-Puritanism', that
is to say a Puritan emphasis in the interpretation of the Prayer Book and the Articles of
Religion. Archbishop Grindal (1570-6), later notorious for his sympathy with Prophesyings, imported something of the new scriptural and sermonizing spirit, (fn. 63) while his
successor Edwin Sandys (1577-88) has been understandably described as 'an obstinate
and conscientious Puritan'. (fn. 64) Matthew Hutton, Dean (1567-89) and Archbishop (15951606), however hostile to Presbyterianism, certainly leaned more toward Puritanism
than most of the Elizabethan prelates. (fn. 65) A more sustained influence was that of Lord
President Huntingdon, as much a Puritan as a cousin and trusted official of the queen
could be, and to whose entourage so many early Puritan influences in the north may be
traced. Even before his time the corporation had shown itself in harmony with the increased emphasis upon sermons. In 1570 it ordered parish constables to warn householders
that they must cause at least two members of every household to attend the sermon in
the minster on Sundays and holy days. (fn. 66) Opposition to the new spirit seems indicated
in the case of Robert Cripling, the anti-clerical mayor who in 1579 quarrelled so violently
with Huntingdon's council and was slack in prosecuting Romanists. (fn. 67) In the following
year the campaign to bring people to sermons and lectures in the minster continued', (fn. 68)
while in June 1580 the corporation agreed that 'a well-learned man' should be engaged
as city preacher at a handsome wage of £40 to be paid by the common chamber. (fn. 69)
The first city preacher, 'Mr. Cole', was appointed at this salary in May 1581; (fn. 70) his successor 'Mr. Middop' had at first to be content with £20, but in 1583 this was raised to
£30 together with £10 'given him of benevolence'. (fn. 71) The appointment continued to be
held only for short terms. 'Mr. Holden', who had succeeded in 1584, left early in
1585, when the corporation applied to Henry Cheke, Secretary to the Council in the
North, to procure a suitable man. (fn. 72) In addition to this provision, the corporation made
special arrangements in 1583 for the archbishop and his chaplains to preach in four of
the city churches. (fn. 73)
The mid-Elizabethan period also saw a tightening of municipal control over morals.
Members of the council were forbidden in 1578 to take part in weddings marked by the
old boisterous ceremony of blessing the bridal bed: even the city cooks were forbidden
to dress wild fowl for such weddings. (fn. 74) In 1584 the tipstaves were ordered to serve as
'common informers against all such as use any unlawful games, and such as are common
drinkers in service time'. (fn. 75) Imprisonment was in 1588 agreed upon as punishment for
those found by the wardens tippling in service-time. (fn. 76) As early as 1569 the corporation
forbade the midsummer festivity of rush-bearing, notorious everywhere for its tendency
to go beyond legitimate dancing and flirting. (fn. 77) Notoriety also attached to the local
ceremony of Yule Riding on St. Thomas's Day, when, according to a letter of 1572
signed by the archbishop and other ecclesiastical commissioners, 'two disguised persons
called Yule and Yule's wife should ride through the city very undecently and uncomely,
drawing great concourses of people after them to gaze, often times committing other
enormities'. (fn. 78) The corporation complied and banned the ceremony henceforth.
A more regretted casualty of the new age was the medieval drama. Naturally enough,
the pageants on the life of the Virgin were again omitted from the Corpus Christi Play
in 1561, (fn. 79) though the rest was given in that year and in 1562 and 1563. (fn. 80) The play was
not given during the next three years, perhaps because of the collapse of Ouse Bridge;
in 1567 certain pageants were ordered to be examined and 'reformed'. (fn. 81) The following
year the corporation proposed to substitute the Creed Play, but Dean Hutton refused
his approval. 'I find many things that I cannot allow because they be disagreeing from
the sincerity of the gospel.' Were these undesirable passages to be omitted, 'the whole
drift of the play should be altered and therefore I dare not put my pen unto it, because
I want both skill and leisure to amend it'. The corporation therefore dropped the project and returned the play-books to their keepers, the Master and brethren of St.
Thomas's Hospital. (fn. 82) When in 1572 the Paternoster Play was revived, Aldermen Beckwith and Herbert refused to accompany the mayor to the performance. Feeling ran
high and the two offenders, having first been put in ward for their contempt, were finally
disfranchised for their obstinacy. (fn. 83) Weightier influences then came to bear and Archbishop Grindal demanded, and was sent, a true copy of all the play-books, as they had
been performed that year. (fn. 84) Three years later he still had them and the corporation
asked for their return. (fn. 85) In April 1579 it was agreed that the Corpus Christi Play should
be revived, but that 'first the book shall be carried to my Lord Archbishop [Sandys] and
Mr. Dean [Hutton] to correct'. (fn. 86) The ecclesiastics again temporized and nothing further
happened until the next year, when, at the mayor's oath-taking, the commons earnestly
requested that the Corpus Christi Play should be performed that year, whereupon the
mayor answered that he and his brethren would consider their request. (fn. 87) This effectively marks the end of the medieval drama in York. Popular agitation certainly persisted as late as 1580, while the oligarchy, though divided, seems to have stood
predominantly in favour of continuance.
By this date a far more tragic episode of the Reformation-conflict had developed: that
resulting from the Bull of Excommunication, the Seminarist missions, and the increase
of Romanist recusancy. Though the archiepiscopal visitation of 1575 showed recusancy
as yet negligible, (fn. 88) it flared up between 1576 and 1577, both in York and in Ripon, only
to be checked temporarily by ecclesiastical and municipal action. The House Book contains a list, dated 20 November 1576, of 59 recusants, no fewer than 51 of whom were
women, and nearly all poor people of the small tradesman or artisan class. (fn. 89) It includes
the future martyr, Margaret Clitheroe, whose husband, with goods valued at £6, is
the most substantial on the list. Along with three other well-known Roman Catholic
sufferers, Alice Awdcorne and Anne and Edward Tesshe, she was either then or very
shortly afterwards in prison. All these recusants must have been under the guidance of
seminary priests, since they gave clear and almost uniform answers when asked the
reason for their recusancy: either 'because there is neither altar nor sacrifice', or else
'because her conscience will not serve her'.
A year later, on 28 October 1577, Archbishop Sandys and the Ecclesiastical Commission sent to the Privy Council a diocesan list of recusants which included some 45 of the
names in the House Book list. (fn. 90) Of these, six or seven were now prisoners in York castle,
while in addition, the schoolmaster, John Fletcher, (fn. 91) and the physician, Dr. Thomas
Vavasour, (fn. 92) and two or three other York men were imprisoned at Hull. The Sandys
list includes fifteen York names not on the earlier list and among these are Elizabeth
Dineley, wife of the then mayor, Lady Pacocke, widow of a former mayor, and Edward
Beseley, gentleman, and his wife. Otherwise it agrees with its predecessor regarding the
small properties and humble status of the majority. The personal adventures and sufferings of this unfortunate community might be compiled at great length from the printed
Roman Catholic martyrological collections (fn. 93) and from voluminous manuscript sources
such as the act books of the Northern Ecclesiastical Commission. (fn. 94) The story of Margaret Clitheroe has been told by one of her confessors, John Mush, in a life too often
rhetorical, inevitably unjust to some of the protagonists, yet nevertheless moving and
valuable. (fn. 95) Daughter of Thomas Middleton, sheriff of York, and wife of a butcher and
chamberlain, she intermittently harboured seminary priests and suffered imprisonments
over several years before her condemnation and her execution on 25 March 1586.
Like the rest of her generation, Margaret Clitheroe had little direct connexion with
pre-Reformation Catholicism: she had been brought up in the Anglican faith and then
instructed by the Seminarists. In making his return of recusants in 1577, Archbishop
Sandys blamed its recent rise in York and Ripon upon the ministrations of Fr. Henry
Cumberford (fn. 96) and other missionaries. These men, mostly the sons of gentle English
families and educated in the seminaries of Rheims and Rome, had certainly by this date
become active in the city. Between 1582 and 1589 no fewer than fifteen of them, together with four Roman Catholic laymen, were executed on Knavesmire. (fn. 97)
Having undergone a check between 1577 and 1578, recusancy again increased and
presented many problems to the city authorities during the last two decades of the reign.
In 1580 the common clerk is found preparing indictments at the assizes against recusants. (fn. 98) Orders to apprehend Seminarists appear in the House Books, (fn. 99) and subsequently
a receipt by the keeper of the castle at Hull for the delivery of eleven of the missionaries. (fn. 1)
The corporation itself incurred responsibility for many recusant prisoners kept in the
kidcotes on Ouse Bridge. When in February 1584 the sheriffs viewed these prisons they
found amongst the committed recusants 'certain mass books, pictures, holy water, with
"trendles", beads, pieces of vestments, wax candles, one girdle and a great canvas bag,
belonging to some man, having in it some unlawful books; wherefore it is supposed that
some seminary priest did resort to the said gaol and there did say mass, persuading the
said prisoners to remain in their disobedience'. In addition, the children of the draper,
William Hutton, himself incarcerated, were freely carrying messages in and out of the
gaols. The sheriffs proceeded to concentrate all the recusants in the mayor's kidcotes
and the prisoners for debt in their own, access to the former being rigorously controlled
and the recusants forbidden to come up to the 'grate or holes of the said kidcotes', but
to be kept below. As for the Hutton children, they had to stay in prison with their
mother unless their father could provide satisfactorily for them. (fn. 2) Despite his own religious convictions, Lord President Huntingdon had realized the unwisdom of excessive persecution, (fn. 3) but during the last years of the century, under the presidency of the
2nd Lord Burghley, Romanists were indicted in larger numbers. (fn. 4) In 1600 Burghley
forcibly compelled the recusant prisoners in the castle to hear weekly sermons for
several months in his presence. (fn. 5) Archbishop Hutton, much against his will, was
prevailed upon to participate by his colleague Whitgift, 'lest they say that zeal is
quenched in you, and that you dote in your old age'. (fn. 6) But the final advantage lay with
the victims, who were so obstreperous at his last sermon that they had to be gagged.
Despite such dramatic episodes, the numerical increase of recusancy in York proved
far from sensational during the later years of the reign, and for a time many Romanists
compromised by merely refusing the Anglican communion, while avoiding fines by
formal attendance at matins. In 1582 the archiepiscopal visitation revealed 15 recusants
and only 4 non-communicants, but in 1586 the corresponding numbers were 20 and 32,
and in 1590, 14 and 40 respectively. (fn. 7) The fullest survey of Yorkshire recusancy was
made in 1604, when the recent accession of James I had encouraged waverers in many
parts of the country to absent themselves from church in the hope of finding the new
government more tolerant. (fn. 8) Here are listed for the city some 50 recusants and 8 noncommunicants. The role of women had by this stage become less preponderant, though
they still numbered 31 of the 58. Unlike that of the countryside, where the Seminarists
made so many of their converts in the entourage of the Roman Catholic gentry, York
recusancy remained 'democratic'. With only five exceptions, which included Christopher Herbert, the mayor's brother, the offenders of 1604 were small tradesmen, poor
widows, and people of similarly humble status. They were fairly evenly spread throughout the parishes; the largest concentration being only eight in St. Michael-le-Belfrey
and the same number in St. Cuthbert's. The survey notes a secret baptism and two
secret marriages by popish priests. (fn. 9) Unlike certain other parts of the shire, York shows
little evidence for a remarkable upsurge of the problem at the accession of James I. Of
the 27 recusants whose periods of recusancy are given, 19 had been offending for periods
between 2 and 16 years. Altogether, even allowing for concealed sympathizers, 'churchpapists', and waverers generally, the Romanist group must have been a very small and a
relatively stable proportion of the total population. Indeed, as known to officialdom, its
extent in 1604 proved almost exactly that of 1576. Without question, most York citizens
had moved alongside the Elizabethan régime and its Church settlement.
Most impalpable of all is the growth of 'Anglicanism'. The development of a specific
devotional atmosphere, a popular affection for the Anglican liturgy and doctrinal compromises—these things were not created in 1559 by Acts of Parliament, yet somehow
they spread extensively in most English communities during the reigns of Elizabeth and
James I. Of its very nature this process cannot be adequately documented in York, but
it remains among the significant imponderables of local history. And despite the
genuineness of its religious aspects, it became inextricably mixed with patriotism and
the struggle for national survival. The perils of civil war and foreign conquest grew
ever more manifest; most men came to hate and fear the seminary priests, since in practice they could not dissociate their mission from the disruptive and dangerous schemes
of Mary Stuart and Philip II. That even York, stolid and exclusivist, fully shared this
national trend cannot for a moment be doubted. Its complete steadiness in the crisis of
1569 has already been observed. Then, as the murder plots came to light, so loyalty
grew more intense and vocal. In 1584 the 'association' for the preservation of the
queen's person was signed by about 1,300 of the citizens. (fn. 10) This fervour owed nothing
to any manifestations of interest by the queen, who, despite some tentative preparations
in 1575, (fn. 11) never once visited the north during the 45 years of her reign. Yet good servants, sound sense, and the ineptitude of the opposition carried the day. One of the
pleasanter passages in the House Books describes how in August 1586 the people of
York celebrated the deliverance of their queen from assassination. The dean preached
a sermon in the minster, followed by a general communion.
And all the same day was observed as holy day. And in the afternoon the streets were strewed with
flowers and herbs, and green boughs set up in the said streets, and the houses sides towards the said
streets hanged with fine carpets and coverings; and every man supped in the said streets at his own
door, with all their plate set forth in the said streets, with great rejoicing and singing of psalms and
ringing of bells. And after supper bonfires did begin to be made, and did continue burning till nine
and ten of the clock in the evening of the same day. (fn. 12)