15. THE PRIORY OF MAXSTOKE
Sir William de Clinton, afterwards earl of
Huntingdon, in the year 1330 purchased the
advowson of the parish church of Maxstoke,
valued at 8 marks in 1291, proposing to found
therein a large chantry or college of priests. In
pursuance of his intention he made John Lynie,
the recently-appointed rector, warden, and associated with him five other secular priests. On
12 October, 1331, Sir William obtained licence
to alienate in free alms £20 yearly in lands and
rents in Maxstoke, together with the advowson
of the church, to a warden and chaplains to
celebrate divine service daily for the soul of the
king, the bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, and
for William and Juliana his wife and their kinsfolk and ancestors. (fn. 1)
In the following year the founder added five
acres of land to this endowment for the six
chaplains. (fn. 2) But in 1336 Sir William de Clinton
changed his mind and decided to turn the college
of chantry priests into a priory of Austin Canons.
Licence was granted by the crown on 24 September, 1336, for the alienation of the lands and
rents in Maxstoke already bestowed on the college
to the new prior and canons, together with the
appropriation of the churches of Maxstoke and
Long Itchington. (fn. 3)
Bishop Northburgh also gave his sanction in
1336 to the appropriation of the churches of
Long Itchington and Maxstoke to the newly
founded priory. The consent of the two chapters
of Lichfield and Coventry had been previously
obtained and pensions assigned to the chapters as
well as to the bishop. In each case a vicarage
was reserved. (fn. 4)
In 1343 the church of Shustoke was appropriated on the petition of the patron, William
de Clinton, the founder of Maxstoke, to augment
his priory. The consent of the chapter of
Coventry was appended to the episcopal licence. (fn. 5)
In 1345 the church of Fillongley was also
appropriated to Maxstoke Priory by the gift of
William de Clinton. (fn. 6)
The actual charter of foundation of the new
priory was dated 10 March, 1337. This charter,
and the confirmations of the bishop, the prior
and convent of Coventry, and the dean and
canons of Lichfield were all formally enrolled
and confirmed by Edward III, on 4 March,
1338. (fn. 7) This charter gave the fullest particulars of the intentions of the founder and the
rule of the priory. The house was dedicated to
the honour of the Holy Trinity, the Blessed
Virgin, St. Michael, and All Saints, and was to
consist of an elected prior and twelve Austin
Canons, who were day and night to glorify God
in their round of worship. They were to wear
as their outer garb, both in winter and summer,
a black cloak (cappa) and cowl, and under the
cloak a linen garment and other vesture such as
were worn by regular canons. The prior was
not to have any portion of goods distinct from
the rest of the convent, but all were to fare alike,
in order that by thus possessing everything in common they might be the more united. When the
office of prior was vacant the sub-prior and convent,
within five or six days of such vacancy, after
celebrating the mass of the Holy Spirit in quire,
were to proceed to a free election without seeking any licence from the founder or his successor.
During the vacancy the sub-prior and convent
were to have custody of the temporalities. No
one was to be admitted canon unless free-born or
free at the time of his admission, of good and
honest life, sufficiently learned for the condition
of a canon regular, and possessed of a competent
voice for singing the divine service, of at least
eighteen years of age, and having no impediment
to entering on the priesthood when of canonical
age. At the end of the first year the novice,
before being professed, was to declare openly
and publicly his intention of abiding honourably
in all the observances of the rule and of the
house.
The founder desired that so soon as £200 of
yearly income had been provided by churches,
lands, or rents, the number of twelve canons and
a prior should be filled; and that afterwards,
when ten more marks of annual income had
been bestowed, another canon should be at once
added to their number; this was to be done
within a month if a fit colleague could be found.
Of the thirteen canons and prior, nine, so far as
was possible, were always to be priests. If it
should happen that there should be any further
augmentation of their income, then another canon
was to be added for each additional ten marks.
No corrody nor pension was to be granted, save
under pressing circumstances and with the consent
of the diocesan. All officials were to make an
annual return of their accounts. The anniversary
of the founder was to be specially observed. On
the day of his obit distribution was to be made
to 100 poor of the parish of Maxstoke and
neighbourhood of a loaf weighing fifty shillings.
Every day, in addition to the customary distribution of bread, there was to be given a dinner to
some one poor person at the discretion of the
prior or almoner, consisting of a white conventual
loaf, a mess of meat from the kitchen, and a
flagon of beer.
The mass of our Lady and the chapter mass
were to be celebrated daily at the wonted hours
and places that are customary in other priories of
the order; so that in all masses, besides those
solemnly celebrated in quire on the greater festivals, the founder and Juliana his wife, &c., were
held in memory. The Hail Mary was always
to be recited by the officiant after mattins of
our Lady, after Lady mass, and after all hours,
the rest responding Amen. If the prior transgressed his duty, each canon was to consider
himself bound to report the delinquency to the
bishop. The prior had power to prevent any
delinquent canon from holding any office for
the space of five years. The prior, previous
to his installation, was to openly and publicly
promise to honourably observe all the statutes.
Those of his heirs or successors who might
attempt to advantage themselves out of the
possessions of the priory were to be held
accursed.
Licence was granted to William de Clinton in
1340 to alienate in mortmain to the new priory
the advowson and appropriation of the church of
Tanworth; the priory of Kenilworth granted
this advowson to William de Clinton, saving to
themselves an annual pension of two marks and
a stone of wax. (fn. 8)
The grand and stately buildings of this house
were not finished sufficiently for dedication until
8 July, 1342, which the register gives as the
date of the consecration. (fn. 9)
Pope Clement VI, in April 1344, at the
request of the founder, confirmed the foundation
of Maxstoke, with exemplifications of letters
dated 1336 and 1340. (fn. 10) In the following year
the pope sent his mandate to the bishop of
Lichfield, at the request of William de Clinton,
for the appropriation to Maxstoke of the church
of Fillongley already in their patronage. In
1347 there was a further papal confirmation of
this appropriation, as though some difficulty had
arisen. (fn. 11)
The founder in his first petition stated that
Maxstoke Priory was for the accommodation of
a prior and thirteen canons; in his second
petition he informed the pope that if the appropriation of Fillongley was granted it was
proposed to increase the canons to nineteen
(? fourteen).
In 1349 confirmation was granted by the
same pope of the appropriation to this priory of
the church of Yardley, which had been assigned
to them in 1307. (fn. 12) The advowson of Aston
Cantlow, followed by the appropriation of the
church, was among the further endowments,
the prior and convent of Studley releasing all
their right to the same. (fn. 13)
In 1343 the manor of Shustoke, with the
advowson of the church and of the chapel at
Bentley, were purchased by the priory from John
Lord Mowbray. (fn. 14) In exchange for this manor
they soon afterwards obtained from Sir John de
Clinton, son and heir of the elder brother of the
founder, the ancient moated manor-house of
Maxstoke, with the adjacent park. The canons
turned the house into barns, and kept up the
moat to turn a water-mill. (fn. 15)
The prior of Maxstoke was commissioned by
Bishop Stretton in January, 1360, to inclose an
anchorite, Brother Roger de Henorebarwe, who
desired to retire from the world, at the chapel of
Maryhall by Torworth, in the building assigned
for the purpose. (fn. 16)
William, earl of Huntingdon, the founder,
resided a considerable distance from the priory
and from the small adjacent parish church; the
manor-house, or castle, that he built, being on
the edge of the parish. In 1350 he petitioned
Pope Clement that he might there build a chapel
and have chaplains who should baptize the children of the lords of the manor and administer
the sacraments to him, his wife, the lords and
ladies of the manor, their households and guests,
without prejudice of the parish church. In his
petition the earl stated that he and his wife and
family spent much of their time on the manor,
and that they could not, without much danger,
in the winter when the road was flooded, get to
the church, the road to which lay through more
than a league of wood. (fn. 17)
In February, 1400, complaint was made by
Sir William Beauchamp that John, friar of
Maxstoke, and others had broken into his close
and house at Aston Cantlow, assaulted his men
and carried off goods to the value of 200 marks
and £90 in money. On payment of 2 marks
he obtained a legal commission of inquiry. This
was probably a rough-and-ready way of claiming
some overdue rents. (fn. 18) A more serious act of
violence, however, occurred within the priory in
the previous year, when one of the canons was
attacked by another and compelled to kill him
in self defence. (fn. 19)
In 1408 William, Lord Clinton, granted the
priory £10 yearly rents issuing out of lands in
Dunton Bassett, Leicestershire. (fn. 20) In 1459
Humphrey, duke of Buckingham, bequeathed
the canons £100 to purchase lands to the end
they might be augmented by one canon more
(thirteen in all, in addition to the prior), and
that one of the number should daily celebrate
for his soul and those of his wife, children, and
ancestors at the altar in the north aisle of their
conventual church. (fn. 21)
There is an interesting register of this priory
among the MSS. of Trinity College, Oxford.
The more salient points have been given in a
paper by Mr. J. R. Halliday on Maxstoke
Priory. (fn. 22) The book includes copies of the
charters of foundation and deeds certifying to
subsequent benefactions; but it is much more
diversified than a regular chartulary, as it contains rough copies of the annual account rolls for
many years, as well as other memoranda. These
accounts begin with the year 1432; they are in
five or six different hand-writings; the latest are
of the year 1493. There are also at the Public
Record Office a variety of documents pertaining to Maxstoke, from the foundation down
to 1504. These also were made good use
of by Mr. Halliday in the same paper. They
chiefly consist of various accounts of the prior,
treasurer, cellarer, sacrist, and other officers of
the house.
From these documents it appears that at
Aston Cantlow, Fillongley, Itchington, and
Yardley, the rectory or glebe-land formed an
ecclesiastical manor, in respect of which the
prior held his court. In each of the outlying
estates there was a resident bailiff of the manor
who occupied the grange, received the rents,
accounted to the priory for the same, and presided at the courts.
Many of the entries in the accounts relate
to the repairs and alterations of the buildings.
During the time that John Grene was prior,
1432-50, the large sum of £314 6s. 8½d. was
spent on building. The payments were almost
entirely for labour, stone and wood being obtained
on the estates. A particularly interesting and
unusual class of entries in the accounts are those
that pertain to the visits of minstrels, jesters,
and players, who from time to time entertained
the large establishment of the priory, and doubtless the adjoining tenantry and labourers who
would be bidden for the purpose. Throughout
the rule of Prior Grene such entertainments
were fairly frequent; much no doubt would
depend upon the character and disposition of
the superior. (fn. 23)
The accounts show that the prolonged litigation which the priory had with the priory of
Studley with respect to the right of the church of
Aston Cantlow, at the beginning of the fifteenth
century, (fn. 24) was most burdensome. The money
necessary to carry on the suit was raised from
loans and by sale of certain of the treasures of
the house. In 1399 the prior received from
loans and from the sale of jewels £205 2s. 9d.
In 1400 three books and a silver basin were
sold for £7. In 1404 the prior pledged a cope
to Lady Elizabeth Clinton for the great sum of
£25, and sold jewels to the amount of £17 13s. 6d.
The Valor of 1535 (fn. 25) estimated the annual
worth of this house at £130 11s. 8½d; out of
this sum came the daily conventual loaf, dish of
meat, and flagon of beer to a poor person, valued
at 4d. a day, or £6 1s. 8d. a year. Money,
bread, and beer distributed to the poor on Maundy
Thursday at the priory gates cost £4 a year.
Other deductions brought down the clear annual
value to £81 13s. 7½d. William Dicons was
at this time prior.
The commissioners of 1536 reported of
'the Priorie of Maxstoke, Chanons of Seynt
austyns order and rule' that its annual value
was £112 9s. 4¾d. The religious were seven
with the prior, of whom six were priests: 'ii
suspect of incontynency and the others of good
and vertuous conversation.' Five desired capacities
to serve as secular priests if it was the king's
pleasure to dissolve the house. There were
twenty-six dependants, namely two priests to
serve the church of Maxstoke and sing mass in the
chapel of Bentley in the parish of Shustoke, nine
yeomen servants, twelve hinds, and three women
servants. The value of the bells and lead and
buildings was estimated at £352 4s. 10¼d., 'the
house beyng a very stately and goodly house in
most part buyleyd with hard stone and in good
repaire.' The stocks and stores and movable
goods were valued at £115 7s. 8d., and there
were 186 acres of wood. The debts were
£196 12s. 5½d., 'whereof a Cli. is debbt to
parson Lison by obligation as the prior affirmeth
for so muche money to hym lent.' (fn. 26)
George Gifford, one of the commissioners,
wrote to Cromwell on 3 August, 1536, telling
him of the completion of the survey of this
priory; it seems to have been speedily suppressed. (fn. 27)
William Dicons, the prior, received a pension
of 20 marks. (fn. 28)
In 1538 this priory was granted, with a multitude of other church lands, to Charles Brandon,
duke of Suffolk, who speedily sold it to a London
goldsmith. (fn. 29)
Priors of Maxstoke (fn. 30)
John Deyville, occurs 1336 (fn. 31)
Robert Walford, 1341 (?), (fn. 32) 1346
Reginald de Bn' (? Birmingham), 1370, (fn. 33)
occurs 1383 (fn. 33)
John Birmingham, 1389-1401 (fn. 33)
John Daventry, 1401-11 (fn. 33)
John Nasington, 1424-32 (fn. 33)
John Grene, 1432-50 (fn. 34)
Richard Evesham, 1451 (fn. 35) -59 (fn. 35)
John Freeman, 1472 (fn. 36) -93 (fn. 36)
William Dyson or Dicons (Symson), 1505 (fn. 37)
-38 (fn. 27)
The seal is a pointed oval: within a carved
and canopied niche, Michael the Archangel in
combat with the dragon. In base, an arch
containing a figure.
. . . . VS: DE . . . . . . . . KE (fn. 38)