HOUSES OF CISTERCIAN MONKS
9. THE ABBEY OF COGGESHALL (fn. 1)
Coggeshall, founded by King Stephen and
Queen Maud, was one of the thirteen English
houses of the order of Savigny, the whole of
which joined the Cistercians in 1147. Savigny
itself was situated within the county of Mortain,
and to this connexion with Stephen, as count of
Mortain, the selection of the order of the new
abbey was no doubt due. The choice of the site,
on the other hand, came from the queen,
Coggeshall being one of the manors held by her
father, Count Eustace of Boulogne. In her
foundation charter (fn. 2) she granted the manor to
the monks to hold as fully as she and her father
had held it, and the grant was confirmed by
charters of Stephen and their son William, count
of Boulogne.
The date of the foundation is given in
different annals in years varying from 1137 to
1142; but the most probable seems to be
1140, as given by the historian Ralph, the sixth
abbot, who states that the convent assembled on
3 August. (fn. 3) He is certain to have had good
evidence, and moreover correctly records an
eclipse in the same year. This date is consistent (fn. 4)
with the evidence of the queen's foundation
charter. Ralph tells us that the high altar was
dedicated to St. Mary and St. John the Baptist
on 15 August, 1167, by Gilbert Foliot, bishop
of London, who on the same day solemnly
celebrated mass at that altar, Simon de Toni
being the abbot. (fn. 5) Later, we learn from him that
on the day of the Circumcision, 1216, while
tierce was being said, some of King John's
army violently entered the abbey and carried
off twenty-two horses of the bishop of London
and others. (fn. 6) But he gives no further information towards the history of the abbey beyond
mentioning the succession of the early abbots and
a mysterious occurrence, that was never cleared
up, in the time of Peter, the fourth abbot. A
lay brother, Robert, who had the care of the
guests, entered the guest hall as usual before
the hour of refection and there found several
persons dressed as Templars. He conversed
with them and reported their arrival to the
abbot, but on his return found no one, and the
porters said that no such persons had passed the
gates. (fn. 7)
Henry II, by a charter dated at Rouen early
in his reign, granted protection and liberties to
the abbey, and confirmed several grants made to
it; and this charter was confirmed by Edward I
in 1290. (fn. 8) Richard I on 15 September, 1189,
granted a charter of liberties; John on 1 January,
1204, granted licence for the abbot and convent
to enclose their wood in their manor of Coggeshall (fn. 9) ; and Henry III on 2 April, 1257,
granted licence for them to enclose woods in
Tolleshunt Major, Tolleshunt Tregoz, Inworth,
Childerditch and Little Warley, with various
detailed provisions. (fn. 10) The same king also on
26 May, 1247, granted to them free warren in
their demesne lands at Coggeshall; on 10 October,
1250, a fair at Coggeshall on the vigil and
day of St. Peter ad Vincula and the six days
following; and on 6 April, 1256, a market
there on Saturdays. All these charters, as well
as Queen Maud's foundation charter, were confirmed by Edward II in 1325, (fn. 11) and by Richard II
in 1389. (fn. 12)
The Taxation of 1291 mentions temporalities
of the abbey amounting to £131 11s. 6d. yearly,
of which £67 11s. 10d.—or more than half—
came from Coggeshall itself. The next largest
sums were £14 3s. 2d. from Tolleshunt Major,
£9 9s. 1d. from Childerditch, £8 from Barkway
in Hertfordshire, and £6 13s. 4d. from Inworth.
Goldhanger, Warley, Feering, Tolleshunt Tregoz,
Springfield, Easthorpe, Horndon, Colchester and
Marks Hall each contributed over £1, and
fourteen other places smaller amounts.
Not long after its foundation the abbey had a
dispute about the church of Coggeshall with the
Cluniac priory of Rumilly, near Boulogne, which
Count Eustace of Boulogne had founded in
1105, (fn. 13) and to which he had probably granted
the church. The matter is referred to in two
letters (fn. 14) from John of Salisbury to Pope Adrian IV
(1154-9). The abbot and convent said that
they had the church canonically by agreement
with Prior Theobald and the convent of Rumilly,
for a pension to be paid to Rumilly, and that
certain monks of Rumilly would bear witness to
this. These were not to be found, and the
Coggeshall party alleged that they had been sent
away by the prior lest they should testify to the
truth. The abbey retained the church, and the
tithes were appropriated to it by Eustace,
bishop of London, on 8 January, 1223; (fn. 15) but
a yearly rent of 10 marks was paid to Rumilly. (fn. 16)
The abbot and convent were pardoned in 1385
for having obtained a release of this without
licence. (fn. 17)
The manor of Childerditch belonged to the
abbey, and a complete inventory (fn. 18) is preserved of
the farm utensils, goods, stock, grain, etc., there
on the Nativity of St. Mary, 1295, with the
amounts of wages paid to the farm labourers.
The manor of Tillingham Hall in Childerditch
was acquired in 1377, for the maintenance of a
taper burning daily before the high altar at high
mass. (fn. 19) The church of Childerditch was appropriated (fn. 20) to the abbey on 13 June, 1380, by
Simon, archbishop of Canterbury, in accordance
with a bull of Pope Urban VI dated 17 Kal.
September, 1379; and on Thursday after Easter
week, 1382, the abbot and convent granted to
Sir John Thornbery, knight, Master William
Bryon and John Myte, for expenses incurred in
this matter at the Roman court and elsewhere, a
yearly pension of 10 marks until the death of
John de Haverhulle, a monk of the monastery,
and also to John de Haverhulle for life the whole
solar at the old hall in the monastery, the
grantees agreeing to defend the right of the
abbey to the rectory. This grant was confirmed
by the abbot of Warden at his visitation at
Coggeshall on the same day, and by the king
on 16 October, 1384; (fn. 21) but the royal licence
for the appropriation of the church had not been
obtained, and for this the abbot and convent had
to pay a fine of 100s. in 1406. (fn. 22)
The manor of Tolleshunt Major was granted
by charter by Philip son of Nicholas de Boville
to Abbot Thomas Quintyn and the convent
in 40 Henry III. These held the manor and
had view of frankpledge there as Nicholas and
Philip had done; and on the death of Thomas
his successor William de Tolleshunt, abbot, and
the convent had the same for twenty-six years
and more, until in 20 Edward I the king's
bailiff in Dengie hundred prevented their having
the view. But the abbot and convent never
released their claim, and their right was eventually upheld by inquisition in 1327, when
Richard de Pantfeld was abbot. (fn. 23) It was not,
however, until 12 February, 1341, that they got
a formal grant of the view of frankpledge at the
manor, for a fine of 60s. made by Abbot William
Joldayn. (fn. 24)
In 1260 the abbot is mentioned as going
beyond seas as the king's envoy; (fn. 25) and in
1308 (fn. 26) and in 1311 (fn. 27) as going to the chapter
general at Citeaux, being allowed to take £20
with him for expenses on the latter occasion.
The crown claimed corrodies in the abbey.
Richard de Ry was sent there by the king on
23 May, 1299. (fn. 28) The abbot and convent
granted that he should eat in their house, and
though nothing was said of robes and shoeleather, they afterwards gave him this at the
king's request. He was still not satisfied, however, and used threats; and they wrote to the
king for compassion, declaring that they were in
debt to the amount of £540. (fn. 29) Walter le Ewer
was sent there in 1312 for maintenance in the
place of John de Totehill. (fn. 30)
In 1308 the abbot was charged with the
repair of the bridge of Stratford between Braintree and Coggeshall, but proved that neither
he nor his predecessors had ever repaired it, and
no rents or tenements had ever been given to
the abbey for its repair. (fn. 31)
Pope Clement VI on 18 June, 1352, granted
to Abbot Roger an indult to eat out of his
monastery and give licence to two monks
his companions to eat flesh on lawful days,
there being few fish in these parts; (fn. 32) and Pope
Boniface IX on 12 May, 1402, granted that as
often as any of the monks left the monastery for
a reasonable cause they might eat flesh on lawful
days. (fn. 33)
Pope Martin V on 17 April, 1427, granted
an indult to the Abbot John to wear the mitre,
ring and other pontifical insignia; and to give
solemn benediction after mass, vespers and
matins in the monastery and the churches
belonging to it, provided no bishop or papal
legate be present. (fn. 34) There is no mention of his
successors, so probably the grant was only for
life.
Edward III on 11 January, 1345, granted
a tun of red wine yearly to the abbot and
convent, they having undertaken to find a monk
to celebrate divine service daily in their church
for him and his queen Philippa and his children; (fn. 35)
and this grant was confirmed in 1379, (fn. 36) 1400, (fn. 37)
and 1463. (fn. 38) On 27 January, 1408, they had
licence to acquire rent in Springfield and Sandon
for the maintenance of a monk to celebrate likewise for the souls of Sir Hugh de Badewe and
Margaret his wife and Thomas Coggeshale. (fn. 39)
In 1370 the abbey was reported to be greatly
impoverished by grants of corrodies, excessive
expenditure and improvident alienations of lands,
and the king on 26 October directed the
escheator to inquire into the matter. Inquisitions
were taken accordingly at Chelmsford, Brentwood and Rayleigh, and several facts were
brought to light. Rents in Leighs and Chelmsford were considerably in arrear. Abbot Roger and
the convent had granted a parcel of the manor of
Kewton Hall in Springfield, which manor the
Earl Mandeville had given to the convent, to
Roger Sawene for ever at a rent below its value
for a payment of 10 marks. Abbot Roger Porte
in 26 Edward III without the king's licence
had granted 40 acres of land in Chadwell and
Thurrock to William Horneby for 100 years at
a rent of 12d., though worth 40s., and for this
William had paid him £18. Abbot Thomas
and the convent in 1257 had granted a marsh in
Little Wakering, formerly in the possession
of the abbey of the gift of Peter de Hebreg and
Walter de Barkyng, to Robert de Bohun and
his heirs and assigns at a certain rent, and Abbot
William and the convent had released this rent
to Giles de Stanbregg, into whose possession the
marsh had come. (fn. 40)
During the peasants' revolt in 1381 some of
the insurgents entered the abbey and carried
away goods and charters, writings and other
muniments; (fn. 41) a fact which appears to indicate
its unpopularity at the time.
The rents from the possessions of the abbey in
Coggeshall are given in great detail in the
account (fn. 42) of the bailiff for the year ending
Michaelmas, 1531. We have only a part (fn. 43) of
the complete return to the Valor Ecclesiasticus
in 1535. In this the gross income of the
abbey amounts to £298 0s. 8d.; and deductions
of £12 6s. for rents, £8 0s. 8d. for pensions,
£20 13s. 4d. for fees, including those to John,
earl of Oxford, and Henry, earl of Essex, as
chief stewards, and £5 18s. 8d. for alms on three
anniversaries, reduce the net income to £251 2s.
The abbey was thus rich enough to escape the
first dissolution in 1536.
Thomas, abbot of Ford, was commissioned (fn. 44)
to visit Coggeshall and other Cistercian houses in
1535, but nothing is known of his visitation.
The abbey was visited at the end of 1535
by Doctor Thomas Legh. The report of the
visitation has not been preserved; but it appears
that there were serious dissensions between some
of the monks and the abbot. Definite articles (fn. 45)
of accusation were brought against him:—
1. Knowing that he should be visited, he
counselled the brethren not to be known
of certain plate that was in the house,
that the king might not have it.
2. Expecting that the king would have the
lands of the house, he let many under
their value.
3. He neglected to say a collect at high
mass for the king and queen Anne,
though the king is our founder.
4. He read a book of a certain prophecy
amongst us, his brethren, containing
words such as Novus papa erit a Deo
electus.
5. He practised immorality.
6. He has used divination.
Richard Clerke, alias Brayntre, monk, aged
31, was examined on 23 January, 1536, and
gave details, quoting the late abbot in support.
John Bokkyng, monk, also examined, corroborated his evidence. Another document (fn. 46) gives
depositions of certain of the convent against the
abbot, supplementing the above:—
1. For maintaining the power of the pope
contrary to our oath and the statutes.
2. For secreting jewels and evidences belonging to the place, in anticipation of the
king's visitation.
3. For using unlawful means to know of
things to come, by means of a key and a
book and a man's name.
4. For having obtained his office by simony.
He says himself it cost him 300 marks,
which is a great charge to the house.
5. He pretends that the house owes him 300
marks, though hospitality was never so
ill kept.
6. He is an ill husband for our commonwealth, having sold all the corn and
cattle we had on our farms and much
more than we know of, while divers of
the brethren have been like to perish for
lack of keeping. He has been heard to
say he cares not to go to the devil for
money. He has often betrayed confession. Of late, when there was conversation about heretics, in which Luther,
Barnes and others were mentioned, the
abbot said the maintainers of all heretics
were Master Cromwell and Friar George
Browne. 'Wherefore help good Master
Doctor for a charitable reformation' and
get us a head who will be true to
the king's succession.
It is difficult to say how much truth there was
in these charges. The earl of Essex writes (fn. 47) to
Cromwell on 13 January that the abbot is
accused of misdemeanour by a simple person,
supported by one who was formerly abbot there,
as Doctor Lye, the visitor, will certify. He
himself and the earl of Oxford have examined
the abbot, and find him a true subject. The
two earls can hardly be regarded as impartial
judges, for they were both connected with the
abbey, having held the stewardship (fn. 48) of it successively. But that the dissensions originated with
Abbot Sampford is highly probable. The charge
of simony probably refers to nothing more than
the usual bribery and payments in connexion
with the election, that of immorality was very
likely exaggerated or even groundless, and that
of divination simply raises the question whether
the credulity of the abbot or the monks was greater.
On the other hand, the charges of sedition, concealment of goods, and cheap letting of lands are
likely enough to have been true.
The decision went against the abbot; and on
31 August the abbot of Tower Hill was granted (fn. 49)
the abbey to hold in commendam when it should
be vacant. He appears to have taken charge
immediately, for two days later he tells (fn. 50) of
treasonable words spoken by the porter. After
this, with the exception of a significant note (fn. 51) in
Cromwell's remembrances—'to speak with the
abbot of Tower Hill for Coggeshall for Thomas
Seymer'—we hear little more of the abbey until
5 February, 1538, when it was finally surrendered, (fn. 52) heavily in debt.
Besides the manors already mentioned those of
Lyons (in Great Leighs), Chedingsell and Tutwyke (in Inworth), Holfield Grange (in Coggeshall), and Wiston Hall (in Suffolk) belonged to
it at the time of the dissolution. The abbey
itself and all its possessions were granted (fn. 53) in fee
to Sir Thomas Seymour on 23 March, 1538, at
a rent of £25 2s. 2½d. yearly. Part, including
the site, were sold (fn. 54) back by him to the crown on
12 May, 1541. In a survey (fn. 55) taken preparatory
to this in April it is noted that the church is
prostrate and defaced, but that the lodgings and
cloister yet remain untouched. The charges on
lands included pensions of £5 and upwards to
the three last abbots, John Sampford, William
Love and Henry More, and four other monks,
Thomas Brykelsey, John Roydon, George Cokenell and Thomas Bysshom.
Abbots Of Coggeshall
William, occurs 1148. (fn. 56)
Simon de Toni, the second abbot, occurs
1267, (fn. 57) resigned 1168. (fn. 58)
Odo, the third abbot, elected 1169, (fn. 59) died
1176. (fn. 60)
Peter, the fourth abbot, elected 1176, (fn. 61) died
1194. (fn. 62)
Thomas, the fifth abbot, elected 1194, (fn. 63)
died 1207. (fn. 64)
Ralph, the sixth abbot, elected 1207, (fn. 65) resigned 1218. (fn. 66)
Benedict, the seventh abbot, elected 1218, (fn. 67)
died 1223. (fn. 68)
Geoffrey, the eighth abbot, elected 1223. (fn. 69)
Richard, occurs 1236, 1248. (fn. 70)
Thomas Quintyn, occurs 1256, (fn. 71) died circa
1262. (fn. 72)
William de Tolleshunt, elected circa 1262, (fn. 73)
occurs 1292. (fn. 74)
John, occurs circa 1300. (fn. 75)
William, occurs 1310. (fn. 76)
Richard de Pantfeld, occurs 1327. (fn. 77)
William Joldan, occurs 1341. (fn. 78)
Roger Porte, occurs 1352. (fn. 79)
Robert, occurs 1364, (fn. 80) 1380. (fn. 81)
John, occurs 1392, (fn. 82) 1406, (fn. 83) 1417, (fn. 84) 1445. (fn. 85)
John Taseler, occurs 1437. (fn. 86)
Simon Pakenham, occurs 1448. (fn. 87)
William [Draper], occurs 1457, (fn. 88) 1469. (fn. 89)
John, occurs 1469, (fn. 90) 1472. (fn. 91)
Laurence, occurs 1475, (fn. 92) 1480. (fn. 93)
John, occurs 1480. (fn. 94)
William, occurs 1482. (fn. 95)
John, (fn. 96) occurs 1492.
William Cowpere, occurs 1506. (fn. 97)
John, occurs 1507. (fn. 98)
William, (fn. 99) occurs 1508, 1510.
John Sampford. (fn. 100)
William Love, elected 1527, (fn. 101) deprived
1536. (fn. 102)
Henry More, appointed 1536, (fn. 103) the last
abbot.
The seal (fn. 104) of the abbey (about 1235) is a
pointed oval of green wax, 1¾ in. by 1 in., representing an abbot standing with a crozier.
Legend:
SIGILL' ABBATIS DE COGGESHALE.
The seal attached to the deed of surrender (fn. 105) is
of white wax, measuring about 21/8 in. The
Virgin crowned is seated in a canopied niche, with
the infant Jesus on her knee; and in a smaller
canopied niche on each side is a group of six
kneeling monks. In the base, under an arch, is
a shield of arms, France and England quartered.
The other side is now broken, but according to
the Monasticon there was there a shield of arms
of the abbey—three cocks. Legend:
SIGIL . . . . DE CO . . . .