COLLEGES OF SECULAR CANONS
35. THE COLLEGE OF ST. CHAD, SHREWSBURY
The church of St. Chad appears in Domesday Book
as a well-endowed and already ancient institution,
closely linked with the bishopric of Lichfield. In the
late Anglo-Saxon period the church held 1½ hide in
Shrewsbury and 5½ hides in the neighbouring townships of Bicton, Onslow, Little Rossall, and Shelton. (fn. 1)
It also possessed more distant estates, comprising
8 hides, at Broughton and Yorton to the north of
Shrewsbury, Little Eton in Pitchford, Marton in
Chirbury, and Wrentnall in Pulverbatch. (fn. 2) Domesday records that the bishop was its overlord at
Shelton. (fn. 3) In the 13th century the college's estate at
Broughton was also said to be of the bishop's fee (fn. 4)
and, despite the silence of Domesday, it is likely that
most of the other St. Chad's manors had at one time
been the bishop's demesne manors. Other indications of close ties between church and bishop are not
lacking in Domesday. An obscure reference to the
16 canons whom the bishop 'used to have' in
Shrewsbury (fn. 5) was plausibly interpreted by Eyton (fn. 6) as
a reference to the canons of St. Chad. They were
said to be exempt from geld and the extent of their
obligations to the bishop was not known in 1086. (fn. 7)
Among the manors near Shrewsbury, which the
bishop held in demesne in 1086, Betton was shortly
afterwards granted to Shrewsbury Abbey, Crowmeole formed part of the original endowment of
Buildwas Abbey, and Longner-on-Severn passed into
lay ownership. (fn. 8) Tithes from these manors, however,
continued to be paid to St. Chad's. (fn. 9) In addition the
church received tithes from Welbatch and Woodcote, manors which were already in lay hands by
1086 (fn. 10) but may once have formed part of the
bishop's estate, and from Horton. (fn. 11)
All the manors in or near Shrewsbury held at
Domesday by the bishop or by the church of St.
Chad were later accounted part of St. Chad's
parish. Among the church's more distant manors
Little Eton was ceded to Pitchford when that
parish was created in the early 12th century, (fn. 12) but it
was a member of the Liberties of Shrewsbury until
the close of the Middle Ages. (fn. 13) Broughton (with
Yorton) remained a chapelry of St. Chad until the
Dissolution. (fn. 14) The ancient parish included the
greater part of Shrewsbury within the walls. To
the west it included a compact group of townships to
the south of the Severn, stretching from Frankwell to
the boundary of the manor of Ford and broken only
by detached portions of Shrewsbury St. Alkmund
and St. Julian. (fn. 15) Welbatch to the west of the town
and Betton to the east were detached portions of the
parish of St. Chad, but it is possible that Betton
became so detached only through the appropriation of the eastern suburbs of Shrewsbury by
Shrewsbury Abbey.
The size and structure of the parish suggests that
St. Chad's was the oldest of the Shrewsbury
churches, but its foundation date and the date at
which it became collegiate are alike unknown. It is
supposed to have been founded not more than a
century after the death of St. Chad, first bishop of
Lichfield. (fn. 16) Archaeological evidence seems to
confirm this, (fn. 17) and medieval Welsh literary evidence
suggests that the bishops of Lichfield may have
obtained possession of the endowments of a Celtic
church at Shrewsbury. (fn. 18)
There are indications in Domesday Book that the
college of canons which had served St. Chad's in
Anglo-Saxon times had ceased to exist. Canons,
presumably of St. Chad's, are mentioned only once
and then in the past tense; (fn. 19) elsewhere the institution is referred to either as 'St. Chad' or as a
'church'. The 16 canons may once have lived in the
16 houses which the bishop held in Shrewsbury in
1086, but at that time these houses were occupied by
burgesses. (fn. 20) Such circumstances would make it
easier to explain the evident shrinkage of the college
estates in the generation before Domesday, when
Wrentnall had been lost by means which the jurors
could not or would not specify (fn. 21) and at least three
other manors had passed into the possession of lay
under-tenants. (fn. 22)
The college was reorganized, if not refounded, by
an early-12th-century bishop of Chester and thereafter consisted of a dean and ten canons, all in the
bishop's collation. Although the church was said to
have been dedicated during the episcopate of Walter
Durdent (1149-59), (fn. 23) who in 1152 obtained a papal
bull confirming his rights as patron, (fn. 24) the change is
more likely to have been made in the time of
Durdent's predecessor, Roger de Clinton (112948). Clinton was described as founder of St. Chad's
in 1546. (fn. 25) He may well have seen fit to adjust the
endowments of the college when he granted other
parts of his mid-Shropshire estate to Buildwas
Abbey c. 1135, (fn. 26) for by 1278 the college was in
possession of 21 burgages in Shrewsbury which had
formerly belonged to the bishop, including his
dominicum hospicium. (fn. 27) Clinton may also have
assigned to the college tithes from the former
episcopal estates at Alkmere, Betton Strange, and
Longner-on-Severn. At about the same time the
chapel at Little Eton was converted into the church
of the newly-created parish of Pitchford, but the
great tithes of this portion of the Anglo-Saxon
endowments of St. Chad's were reserved to the
college. (fn. 28)
The endowments of the reconstituted college were
more modest than those of the pre-Conquest foundation. They were valued at only £19 in 1291 (fn. 29) and
there is little reason to suppose that any serious
inroad had been made into the estate between the
early 12th century and 1326, when it included the
great tithes of Broughton and Yorton, Little Eton,
and twelve townships within the ancient parish of
St. Chad. Rents of 53s. 2d. a year were derived from
property in Shrewsbury, Broughton and Yorton,
Little Eton, Onslow, Little Rossall, and Shelton, but
many of these were merely quit-rents and the only
considerable landed property belonging to the college
was a carucate and 37 a. at Shelton.
By 1326 the greater part of these endowments
had been apportioned to the dean. He received all
the tithes from seven townships, portions of tithes in
four others, and 37s. 10d. in rents. The greater part
of the Shelton estate also lay in his portion and he
held a court twice yearly both for his tenants and for
the canons'. Most of the canons drew their income
from a single township — four of them from Yorton
and three from Shelton. In addition each canon,
with the dean, shared in a common fund, which
included income from the great tithes of Horton
and Little Eton, and each was entitled to oblations in
the parish church on every eleventh week. (fn. 30)
No significant change was made in sources of
income between 1326 and the Dissolution. The rise
in the gross value of the college estate in this period
was due to the endowment of obits and chantries, (fn. 31)
which benefited the vicars choral and parish clergy
rather than the canons. The total income of the dean
and canons was said to be only £14 14s. 4d. in 1535,
when the dean's portion was £8 and only one of the
canons received more than £1 a year. (fn. 32) In 1546,
when the gross income of the college was put at
£38 6s. 8d., the share of the dean and canons had
apparently risen to over £21. (fn. 33) Two valuations of
1548 conflict. In the earlier and more detailed the
dean was said to receive £21 3s. 4d. and seven of the
canons a total of £10 2s. 2d., while a further £18
12s. 10d. appears to have formed a common fund for
the three remaining canons, the vicars choral, and
other parish clergy. (fn. 34) The later valuation, like the
earlier, gave a gross valuation of nearly £50 but put
the dean's portion at only £10 and that of the ten
canons at a total of £9 6s. 2d. (fn. 35)
Presumably one of the bishop's motives in reorganizing the college was to provide endowments
for his diocesan officials, and, although positive
evidence is largely lacking, many appointments to
prebends at St. Chad's seem to have been so used
until the end of the 13th century. Papal provisions
were rare (fn. 36) and, although king's clerks were sometimes collated to prebends, such appointments were
made only during vacancies of the see. (fn. 37)
The appointment of king's clerks reached notable
proportions during the episcopates of Walter
Langton (1296-1321) and Roger de Northburgh
(1322-58), both of whom had begun their careers in
the royal household. One of the first was Robert
Peet, who was collated dean in the year of Langton's consecration. (fn. 38) Richard Abel, who secured a
prebend at the age often in 1302 and became dean in
1323, was the son of a baron of the exchequer. (fn. 39)
Three other deans and seven canons, collated
between 1309 and 1334, are known to have been
king's clerks. (fn. 40) Most of them, however, held their
prebends for very short periods and at an early
stage in their careers. Such appointments may well
have been made on episcopal initiative, rather than
through Crown pressure. They apparently ceased
after 1334, for Northburgh preferred to use the
prebends in his gift to provide for relatives, friends,
and diocesan officials. In 1329 he had secured the
deanery for his nephew Michael de Northburgh (fn. 41)
and five other close relatives later obtained prebends. (fn. 42) Some half-dozen canons collated by the
bishop between 1331 and 1350 came, like himself,
from East Anglia (fn. 43) and two others were connected
with the Northburghs of Northborough (Northants.). (fn. 44) At least seven other canons collated
between 1334 and 1350 were or soon afterwards
became prebendaries of Lichfield. (fn. 45)
A writ of prohibition of 1344 alleged that the
college had been founded by former kings of England and that it was thus a royal free chapel. (fn. 46) This
cannot, however, be accepted as evidence for a
serious attempt by the Crown to obtain control of
patronage. In issuing it the Crown seems to have
aimed at revoking a papal provision to a prebend
from which the alien canon William Vacce had been
removed in 1337. (fn. 47) Claims of royal patronage were
revived in 1375, when the king was alleged to have
recovered the right to present to the deanery. (fn. 48) The
bishop was summoned to answer for his contempt in
refusing to appoint a Crown nominee but his kinsman, Robert of Stretton, who had already been
collated to the deanery, was not in fact replaced. (fn. 49)
In 1382 the Crown appointed two canons under
papal dispensation (fn. 50) and in the following two
decades was able to establish some control over the
appointment of deans. The king's clerk, Nicholas
Mocking, was nominated dean sede vacante in 1387. (fn. 51)
Although this appointment did not take immediate
effect, Mocking had become dean by 1392. (fn. 52) His
successor, the king's clerk Ralph Repington, was
nominated by the Crown in 1396. (fn. 53)
There is no indication of Crown interference in
the appointment of deans or canons between 1399
and 1460. Repington was followed, possibly at his
death in 1416, by the bishop's nephew Robert
Catterick, (fn. 54) whose successor, Thomas Salisbury, was
dean from 1436 to 1460 and Archdeacon of Salop
for most of that period. (fn. 55) At least ten of the canons
collated between 1405 and 1460 were prebendaries
of Lichfield or held other office in the diocese. (fn. 56)
Clergy of the latter type continued to preponderate
at St. Chad's until the 1530s, after which date most
vacancies seem to have been filled by local men without connexions with either the bishop or the Crown.
King's clerks reappeared at St. Chad's in 1460, when
Richard Shirburn, formerly almoner to Richard,
Duke of York, was collated to a prebend, (fn. 57) and the
king's chaplain, Thomas St. Just, was appointed
dean. (fn. 58) The latter, who had been a fellow of
King's Hall, Cambridge, was presumably responsible
for the appointment of two other fellows of that
college to vacant prebends in 1466. (fn. 59) His successor,
another Cambridge man, was the king's secretary
Oliver King. (fn. 60) King was followed by two prominent
scholars, William Wrexham (first Principal of Brasenose College) (fn. 61) and Henry Hornby (Master of Peterhouse). (fn. 62) George Lee, the last dean of St. Chad's,
represented a reversion to an earlier form of patronage, for he was the bishop's brother. (fn. 63)
It is unlikely that more than one or two of the
canons ever resided in the college at any time in or
after the 13th century. A dean, c. 1200, and two 13thcentury canons were closely enough connected with
the church to endow obits there, but this custom
seems to have lapsed after 1293. (fn. 64) Prebendal houses
appear commonly to have been leased to laymen or
to clergy unconnected with the college; at least four
of them were occupied by laymen in 1278. (fn. 65) One
house was occupied, c. 1350, by the married clerk,
Richard de Watington. (fn. 66) In the early 15th century at
least one canon seems usually to have resided. John
Hopton (canon 1394-1425) (fn. 67) was apparently resident in the 1390s (fn. 68) and in 1417. (fn. 69) His chamber was
assigned in 1425 to his successor John Pecton, (fn. 70) who
was dispensed from residence in 1432. (fn. 71) Mandates
to induct to a vacant prebend were addressed to two
other canons in the 1430s (fn. 72) and to another in 1466, (fn. 73)
but this function was normally performed in the
15th century, as in the 14th, by the sacristan. Three
canons attended the bishop's visitation in 1524. (fn. 74)
Routine service of the church was the responsibility of minor clergy styled indifferently sacristans,
vicars, or curates. (fn. 75) It was implied in 1546 that the
original foundation had provided for two parish
priests to celebrate daily in the church (fn. 76) and this is
known to have been the case in the mid 14th
century, when John Beget and Ralph de Kington
were the sacristans. (fn. 77) At the Dissolution, when the
two sacristans received stipends of £6 13s. 4d. and
£4 6s. 8d. respectively, a Welsh priest was also
employed during Lent. (fn. 78)
Rather more is known about the vicars choral.
They are first recorded in 1326 (fn. 79) but, if developments at St. Chad's followed the pattern of those at
Lichfield, it may be concluded that vicars choral had
existed there since the later 12th century. (fn. 80) St.
Chad's had eight vicars choral in 1417 (fn. 81) and the
same number in 1524, (fn. 82) but there were only four by
1548. (fn. 83) In 1326 their only formal income appears to
have been that derived from the tithes of 14 a. of
demesne at Betton Strange (fn. 84) and their share in the
college's resources was still considered inadequate in
1498. (fn. 85) Bishop Arundel, who then commended the
vicars choral for their assiduous performance of
daily services in the church, directed that in future
each canon should pay the vicars choral half his first
year's income. (fn. 86) Their endowments were further
increased by Arundel's successor Geoffrey Blythe,
who presented them with a gilt chalice and obtained
for them a 99-year lease of Meole Brace rectory from
Wigmore Abbey, and in 1529 the vicars choral
established an annual obit in his honour. (fn. 87) By the
1540s, when the canons' portions had apparently
been adjusted to produce a larger common fund in
which both canons and vicars choral had a share,
the latter were also entitled exclusively to the tithes
of Whitley and Welbatch. (fn. 88)
A more profitable source of income for the vicars
choral was that provided by the endowments of
numerous chantries and obits in the parish church,
which it was their principal duty to serve. The
earliest of the chantries was probably Baldwin's
chantry, in existence by 1406 but not recorded at the
Dissolution, which may have been founded by one
John Baldwin (d. 1324). (fn. 89) The chantry of Our Lady,
management of which was transferred to the Weavers'
Guild in 1469, (fn. 90) received its original endowment in
1339 from John of Prees, who had undertaken to
provide statuary in 1330. (fn. 91) The Mercers' Guild
chantry similarly began as a private chantry; (fn. 92)
those of the Tailors and Skinners and of the Shoemakers probably did so also. (fn. 93) By 1548, when the
four guild chantries had a net income of £11 13s. 9d.
a year, three of them were served by vicars choral
and the fourth by one of the canons. (fn. 94) A further
£4 1s. 2d. was then derived from obits. (fn. 95)
The college was dissolved in June 1548, when
pensions totalling £16 11s. 6d. were assigned to the
dean and canons and £8 6s. 8d. to the vicars choral. (fn. 96)
The whole estate was then leased to George Beeston. (fn. 97) The site of the college and the tithes of a
farm at Crowmeole were sold to John Southcote and
Henry Chiverton in June 1549. (fn. 98) In the following
month the endowments of the Mercers', Tailors', and
Weavers' chantries were granted to Robert Wood, (fn. 99)
and in January 1550 those of the Shoemakers'
chantry to William Fountayne and Richard Mayne. (fn. 100)
By the latter date the college estate in Shrewsbury
and the lease of Meole Brace rectory had been
acquired by Hugh Edwards and William Knight. (fn. 101)
Tithes in Bicton, Frankwell, Shelton, Woodcote
and Horton, and Whitley and Welbatch were
granted to Shrewsbury corporation as part of the
endowment of Shrewsbury School in 1552. (fn. 102) The
remainder of the college estate, including the advowson of St. Chad's and its chapelries, was granted to
Sir Christopher Hatton in 1579. (fn. 103)
The site of the college lies to the west of the
former St. Chad's church and includes College
Court, a complex of buildings set round a quadrangle, the east range forming the western boundary of the churchyard. Of the church itself, which
was cruciform and 168 feet long, (fn. 104) only the ruins of
the crossing, dating from c. 1200, and a later chancel
chapel survive. The remainder disappeared after
much of the building had collapsed in the late 18th
century and a new parish church had been built on a
different site. (fn. 105)
As in other early medieval colleges of secular
priests a separate house and garden were originally
attached to each of the prebends of St. Chad's. The
houses were said to stand next to the church in 1326 (fn. 106)
and several prebends still included pieces of garden
ground at the Dissolution. (fn. 107) The exact disposition of
the canons' houses is uncertain. A few courses of red
sandstone in a wall facing the west side of the
churchyard are unlikely to be later than the 13th
century and may mark the eastern extremity of the
domestic buildings. A covered passage formerly led
from this part of the college to the church, and there
was some indication of a cloister on the south side of
the church itself before destruction. (fn. 108) One of the
canons, c. 1425, lived in a chamber over the college
gateway, (fn. 109) which is known to have stood north of
College Court, on the site of its present entrance
from College Hill. (fn. 110)
It is not improbable that the precinct originally
extended as far west as Swan Hill. (fn. 111) By the Dissolution, however, the area seems to have been restricted
to the present College Court, together with the
gardens belonging to the houses on its south side,
which still extend nearly to the town wall. Priests'
Lane, of which only a short section remains in use,
seems to have led southwards from College Hill to
Chad Lode (later Crescent Lane), (fn. 112) thus marking the
western boundary of the more restricted site. The
principal buildings in this area were probably the
communal quarters of the vicars choral who were
said to be living in a common house in 1498. (fn. 113)
Shortly after the Dissolution the site of the
college was acquired by Hugh Edwards. (fn. 114) His son
Thomas, who was living there c. 1600, (fn. 115) may have
been responsible for building a timber-framed range
(later the north wing of Clive House) in Priests
Lane. No radical alterations, however, appear to
have taken place until after 1752 when the property
was bought by John Oliver. He remodelled the
south range of College Court as three substantial
Georgian houses, cased in red brick; (fn. 116) as St. Winefride's Convent, No. 3 College Court, and Clive
House, they survived in 1969. Other buildings in
the court were added in the 19th century. A description of the site before the alterations of c. 1752,
based on the memories of a lady who had lived there,
was published about 70 years later. An ancient
structure of red sandstone was said to have enclosed a small court which was separated from the
street (College Hill) by a high wall with a gateway
of which the superstructure had disappeared. A long
range on the south side had a porch and lobby
leading to a great chamber containing a raised dais
and an oriel window with roundels of stained glass;
other chambers adjoined it. (fn. 117) Some part of these
structures may be represented by the surviving
remains of a timber-framed range which is incorporated in the 18th-century buildings. It runs north
and south at right angles to and at the junction of
Clive House and No. 3 College Court. A partition
near the south end of the range has moulded studs
and two finely carved door-heads. The roof truss
above is intact as are two more trusses to the north
of it. In the corridor and kitchen of No. 3 are angle
posts marking the site of two further timber-framed
bays. The surviving trusses have slightly-cambered
tie-and collar-beams, through purlins, and no trace
of cusping, suggesting that the range was built in
the very late 15th or early 16th century. It is possible
that the south partition, where the carved doorheads are of similar date, represents the service end
of a communal hall of the vicars choral newly built
following efforts made after 1498 to increase their
endowments. The upper end of the hall, with its
dais and oriel, may well have survived until the
rebuilding scheme of c. 1752 during which the
south end of the timber-framed range appears to
have been demolished.
Deans of St. Chad's College, Shrewsbury
Adam, perhaps dean 1198 × 1208. (fn. 118)
William of Coleham, died or resigned 1245. (fn. 119)
Wibert of Kent, collated 1245. (fn. 120)
William de Seukeworthe, resigned 1296. (fn. 121)
Robert Peet, collated 1296, resigned 1310. (fn. 122)
Owen of Montgomery, collated 1310. (fn. 123)
William Vaughan, resigned 1323. (fn. 124)
Richard Abel, collated Mar. 1324, resigned 1325. (fn. 125)
Laurence Fastolf, collated 1325, resigned 1328. (fn. 126)
John de Oo, collated 1328, resigned 1329. (fn. 127)
Michael de Northburgh, collated 1329, resigned
1330. (fn. 128)
Richard of Swinnerton, collated 1330, resigned
1338. (fn. 129)
John of Weston, collated 1338, resigned 1342. (fn. 130)
Thomas of Madeley, collated July 1342, died or
resigned later in the same year. (fn. 131)
Richard of Swinnerton, collated Aug. 1342, dead
by 1375. (fn. 132)
Robert of Stretton, collated 1375, (fn. 133) resigned by
1392. (fn. 134)
Nicholas Mocking, collated before 1392, resigned
1396. (fn. 135)
Ralph Repington, collated 1396, (fn. 136) probably held
deanery until death, 1416. (fn. 137)
Robert Catterick, probably collated 1416, (fn. 138)
resigned 1436. (fn. 139)
Thomas Salisbury, collated 1436, died 1460. (fn. 140)
Thomas St. Just, collated 1460, died 1467. (fn. 141)
George Dawne, collated 1467. (fn. 142)
Oliver King, resigned 1492. (fn. 143)
William Wrexham, collated 1493, resigned 1494. (fn. 144)
Henry Hornby, collated 1494, probably held
deanery until death, 1518. (fn. 145)
John Constable, occurs 1519. (fn. 146)
Richard Strete, occurs 1524, (fn. 147) died 1542 or 1543. (fn. 148)
George Lee, collated 1543, pensioned 1548. (fn. 149)
An impression of the pointed oval conventual seal
was formerly attached to a deed of 1330. (fn. 150) It
showed a standing figure of the patron saint, holding
a crozier in his left hand and his right raised in
benediction. Legend, lombardic:
SIGILLUM . . . CED[DE] DE SALOP[ES]BERIA
36. THE COLLEGE OF ST. MARY, SHREWSBURY
The tradition current in the early 16th century that
St. Mary's was founded, like some other West
Midland royal free chapels, by King Edgar (957-75)
may embody truth, although it is incapable of proof. (fn. 151)
The ancient parish was large and compact, comprising the northern part of the town and a score of
townships in the country to the north. Though the
oldest parts of the existing fabric date from a major
rebuilding of the mid 12th century, foundations
discovered in 1864 are thought to represent earlier
churches of two dates: a small apsidal church, the
nave of which was later rebuilt on a somewhat more
ample scale. (fn. 152) Regarded as the principal church in
the town in the 1070s, (fn. 153) St. Mary's seems to have
been even less successful then St. Chad's in preserving its original estate. (fn. 154) The single virgate which
the church held in Shrewsbury in 1086 (fn. 155) was a
smaller town estate than those of the three other
town churches. To the north of Shrewsbury it held
10 hides in Mytton, Astley, and Clive, but the first
was already held at farm by Picot de Say, whose
descendants soon afterwards secured full possession. (fn. 156)
There is no evidence for the status of the other two
manors before the 13th century, when they were
held by free tenants at nominal rents. (fn. 157) By the mid
13th century the college estate also included a
virgate at Charlton in Wrockwardine. (fn. 158)
The rebuilding of the church on a comparatively
large scale in the mid 12th century (fn. 159) suggests that the
college may have been reorganized at about the
same time as the neighbouring college of St. Chad (fn. 160)
but, if so, this involved no known change in its
endowments. The college seems to have put up
little resistance to the new threat to its estate posed
by the growth of Haughmond Abbey, being normally content to forgo its rights in return for small
annual pensions. Common rights in Astley wood
were granted to the abbey's Uffington tenants for a
pension of 12d. a year before 1162, (fn. 161) the tithes of
Albright Hussey were released to the lord of that
manor in 1173 for a pension of 4s. a year, (fn. 162) and
those of Little Berwick to Lilleshall Abbey for 18s. a
year some time after 1214. (fn. 163)
Further extensive additions were made to the
church, c. 1190-1210, (fn. 164) in the time of deans Robert
of Shrewsbury and Henry of London. (fn. 165) The first
was appointed Bishop of Bangor in 1197, and the
second Archbishop of Dublin in 1213, and one of
them is presumably commemorated by the head of a
bishop, carved alongside that of a king on a capital
in the arcade of the north aisle. (fn. 166) At about the same
time, however, there seems to have been an attempt
to transfer the endowments of the college to Lilleshall Abbey; Henry III was later asked to confirm a
grant to this effect made by King John. (fn. 167)
Between 1248 and 1256 the college made an
energetic if unsuccessful attempt to recover some
part of its lost rights. Most of the resulting lawsuits
involved properties acquired by Haughmond
Abbey and the college was most nearly successful in
its efforts to recover the advowson of Fitz, which
seems to have passed with Mytton manor to the Say
family in the course of the 12th century. (fn. 168) An
attempt had been made to recover the advowson in
1200 (fn. 169) and a pension of 22s. was reserved to the
college when the chapel was granted to Haughmond
Abbey, c. 1240. (fn. 170) A lawsuit with Robert de Girros,
lord of Fitz, was in progress in 1250. (fn. 171) In 1253 a
chaplain intruded by the college was ejected by the
representative of the existing incumbent but the
latter afterwards acknowledged the college's right
of patronage and surrendered the chapel to the
Crown. (fn. 172) Fitz was accounted part of the possessions
of St. Mary's in 1255 (fn. 173) but in the following year the
latter released its interest in the advowson to
Haughmond Abbey, whose rights had been established by the dubious expedient of trial by battle. (fn. 174)
Less effective claims were made at this time in
Mytton, where Haughmond's title to the mill was
questioned in 1253, (fn. 175) and in 1256 the heirs of
Robert de Girros were able to establish their title
to what remained of the manorial estate. (fn. 176) Care was
also taken at this time to protect the college's rights
elsewhere: a perambulation of the boundary between Astley and Shawbury was made in 1248 (fn. 177)
and lawsuits were instituted in 1256 against Robert
Corbet and the tenants of Haughmond Abbey for
offences in the commons in Clive. (fn. 178)
Within the town the property of St. Mary's
remained insignificant. In 1278, 18 of its 20 burgage
properties lay within the old 'church fee', presumably representing the original residences of the
canons, and nearly half were then waste. (fn. 179) Apart
from a small property at Coton Hill, devised to the
canons before 1311, (fn. 180) the college seems to have
acquired no new sources of income during the later
Middle Ages. Although lower valuations were
sometimes given (fn. 181) its gross income amounted to
some £40 a year between the later 13th century and
the Dissolution. (fn. 182) The dean received £13 6s. 8d. in
1291, when the canons' incomes ranged from 15s. to
£8 apiece, (fn. 183) but the dean's share had fallen to £8 by
1548. (fn. 184) By the latter date it was the custom to
assign the rents of particular properties to each
prebend, while tithes, Easter dues, and the profits of
spiritual jurisdiction, which together made up nearly
nine-tenths of the total, were divided among them
after collection; (fn. 185) it is likely that some such method
was in use by the 13th century. (fn. 186)
In the 13th and 14th centuries the college comprised a dean and nine prebendaries, (fn. 187) the latter
being named after the following saints: St. Paul, St.
Gabriel, St. John the Evangelist, St. Peter, St.
James, St. Michael, All Saints, St. Nicholas, and
St. Stephen. (fn. 188) Since feast days of these saints fall at
regular intervals of a month or somewhat longer
throughout the year it seems probable that they date
from an early period in the history of the college,
when each canon was responsible for serving the
church in rotation. (fn. 189) The prebends of St. Nicholas
and All Saints were reported to be ill-endowed in
1413 (fn. 190) and may have been suppressed at about this
time, for there were only seven prebends in and
after 1535. (fn. 191)
In 1251 the king gave St. Mary's a cope and
chasuble of samite (fn. 192) and in 1266 the canons were
given 15 oaks, possibly at the instance of the
notorious pluralist Bevis de Clare, then one of their
number. (fn. 193) There is no other evidence that the
Crown concerned itself with the welfare of the church
in the later Middle Ages, except as a convenient
means of providing for its servants. Until the mid
15th century there seems to have been little serious
interference with the Crown's right of patronage.
St. Mary's was among the royal free chapels
claimed in 1245 to be exempt from the jurisdiction of the bishop (fn. 194) and its exemption from
ordinary jurisdiction was confirmed by agreement
with Bishop Meuland in 1281. (fn. 195) During this
period nearly all deans of St. Mary's were king's
clerks. Robert of Shrewsbury and Henry of London
had been royal justices (fn. 196) but, if there was a close
connexion with any one department in the century
following the latter's resignation in 1226, it was with
the wardrobe. Of 15 deans appointed between 1226
and 1341 at least 7 can be identified as wardrobe
clerks or diplomats. (fn. 197) The dean seems to have been
successful in 1310 in thwarting an attempt by the
dowager countess of Cornwall to intrude one of her
clerks in a vacant prebend. (fn. 198) Lay influence from
another quarter may have been involved when title
to the deanery was in dispute, 1327-41. Nicholas of
Ludlow, who obtained a crown grant of the deanery
only three days after Edward III's accession in
1327, (fn. 199) and Walter of Wetwang, nominally dean
between 1337 and 1341, (fn. 200) were both king's clerks,
but Thomas de Baddeby, who secured Ludlow's
ejection in 1341, (fn. 201) was installed with the help of the
Earl of Arundel. (fn. 202) He may have been one of
Arundel's clerks, for two canons of St. Mary's were
members of the earl's household in 1355. (fn. 203) Whatever Baddeby's origins his four successors were again
king's clerks. Although Richard Bromley (dean
1381-c. 1402) and Thomas Standon (from 1402)
were also canons of St. Chad's (fn. 204) the latter college
was at that time under some measure of royal
control (fn. 205) and the connexion cannot thus be taken as
evidence of interference by that college's patron,
the Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield. Hugh
Holbache (1407-17) was a diplomat and canon
lawyer, (fn. 206) and Thomas Rodbourne (1418-24) a royal
chaplain. (fn. 207)
The patronage of the prebends had been granted
to Henry of London on his appointment as dean in
1203 (fn. 208) and this privilege was normally enjoyed by
his successors, although canons were occasionally
appointed by the Crown between 1327 and 1341 (fn. 209)
and during Baddeby's deanery. (fn. 210) It is thus not
possible to recover the names of more than a small
proportion of the canons, most of them of the 13th
century. (fn. 211) No valid deductions on their origins can
be based on so small a sample but it may be noted
that, of 61 canons known to have been appointed
before 1424, 11 were king's clerks (at least four of
whom were employed in the wardrobe) and a further
11 bore the same surname as the contemporary dean
and were presumably his kinsmen.
The Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield secured a
measure of control over the college for a short
period in the mid 15th century. John Burdett (dean
1444-9) was Archdeacon of Chester (fn. 212) and his
successor John Launcell was the only dean to be
instituted by the bishop. (fn. 213) John Crecy, however, who
was appointed dean by the Crown in 1457, was a
king's clerk who held prebends in other royal free
chapels, (fn. 214) and in 1462 the bishop was forbidden to
exercise jurisdiction over the college. (fn. 215) The king's
under-almoner John Blackwin was dean from 1471
to 1472. (fn. 216) The next presentation was granted in 1486
to Sir William Tyler, (fn. 217) and it appears that the Crown
occasionally exercised its patronage in an indirect
manner. Robert Reyfield (dean from 1498) was
Abbot of Boxley (fn. 218) and Thomas Lloyd (dean from
1540) was appointed at the suit of Mr. Knyvett. (fn. 219)
Adam Grafton (dean c. 1509-13) was a notable royal
chaplain (fn. 220) and, like the last dean, William Cureton,
and three other 16th-century canons, was also a
canon of St. Chad's. (fn. 221)
Although some early deans and canons had local
connexions, (fn. 222) residence had ceased to be normal by
the early 13th century. Until the 14th century,
however, it seems to have been the custom for one
of the canons to live at the college and to act as
proctor for the rest. Herbert of Attingham, who was
described as 'official of Shrewsbury' c. 1217, (fn. 223) may
have been such a canon, and Richard de Houton,
proctor in the mid 13th century, displayed great
energy in protecting the college's interests. (fn. 224) The
proctor John de Colushull was apparently resident
in 1304, when a burglar took sanctuary in the
church, (fn. 225) and the canon John de Watenhall was
assigned a house in the churchyard in 1335. (fn. 226)
In 1415 John Hopton, a resident canon of St.
Chad's, was acting as Dean Holbache's commissary. (fn. 227)
Routine service of the church was performed by
parochial chaplains, usually styled curates, and vicars
choral. Although there may have been two curates in
1371, (fn. 228) there was only one at the Dissolution, when
he lived in a house rented from the vicars choral and
was paid £6 6s. 8d. a year. (fn. 229) Little is known of the
vicars choral, who were less numerous and less well
endowed than those of St. Chad's. (fn. 230) By 1371 they
held property in Coleham (fn. 231) but their only income at
the Dissolution was 34s. 6d. derived from the endowments of obits. (fn. 232) There were three vicars choral at
this time but one of these was in fact a lay corrodian. (fn. 233) One of them received an additional £4 a year
as priest of St. Mary's chantry (fn. 234) but this service,
founded before 1278, (fn. 235) was not being served by the
vicars choral in the later 14th century. (fn. 236) In 1548
one of the canons was priest of the Drapers' chantry
but Sturry's chantry, the only other such service at
St. Mary's, was served by its own priests. (fn. 237)
The college was dissolved in January 1548, when
the dean was appointed Vicar of St. Mary's and
was assigned the deanery as a parsonage. (fn. 238) In June
pensions totalling £18 10s. were granted to the dean
and five canons and £3 13s. 4d. to the vicars choral. (fn. 239)
Arthur Kelton, to whom the deanery, great tithes in
Astley, Clive, and St. Mary's parish, and small
tithes within the borough had been leased in 1543, (fn. 240)
obtained a renewal of his lease in March 1549. (fn. 241)
Other portions of tithes in St. Mary's parish were
sold by the Crown later in that year, (fn. 242) and in 1552 the
great tithes of Astley, Clive, Sansaw, Leaton, and
Alkmond Park were granted to the corporation to
endow Shrewsbury School. (fn. 243) The site of the college
and deanery were sold in 1554 to Thomas Reeve and
George Cotton, (fn. 244) who sold them in the following
year to the tenant, Thomas Kelton. (fn. 245) In 1569 the
latter obtained a lease of the profits of the college's
spiritual jurisdiction and such tithes as still remained in the hands of the Crown. (fn. 246) Officials of St.
Mary's continued to exercise a peculiar jurisdiction,
including probate of wills, until the 19th century. (fn. 247)
As was the normal practice in such colleges, the
deans and each of the canons of St. Mary's were
originally assigned separate houses. (fn. 248) Since there
were so few vicars choral it is improbable that the
precinct ever included any communal buildings. No
structural remains of these houses are known to
survive and their sites can be identified only in
general terms. The deanery stood near the Dominican friary at the north-east end of St. Mary's
Square (fn. 249) and other canons' houses stood near the
junction of Castle Street and St. Mary's Street. (fn. 250) It is
possible, though direct evidence is lacking, that the
precinct also included the south-east side of St.
Mary's Square and some part of the south-west
side of St. Mary's Street. (fn. 251) A description of the church
itself is reserved for a later volume.
Deans of St. Mary's College,
Shrewsbury
Richard, perhaps dean in the 1180s. (fn. 252)
Robert of Shrewsbury, occurs between 1186-7
and 1200. (fn. 253)
William Lestrange, occurs at an unknown date. (fn. 254)
Henry of London, appointed 1203, resigned 1226. (fn. 255)
Walter of Kirkham, appointed 1226. (fn. 256)
Stephen de Lucy, appointed 1229. (fn. 257)
William de Houton, appointed 1232, (fn. 258) occurs
between 1235 and 1250. (fn. 259)
William of London, resigned 1262. (fn. 260)
Simon of Wycombe, appointed 1262, died 1272. (fn. 261)
John le Faukener, appointed 1272. (fn. 262)
William of Dover, resigned 1282. (fn. 263)
Nicholas of Arras, appointed 1282, occurs until
1286. (fn. 264)
John de Witham, occurs from 1291, (fn. 265) resigned
1300. (fn. 266)
John of Kenley, appointed 1300, dead by 1305. (fn. 267)
Peter de Shendon, appointed 1305, resigned
1321. (fn. 268)
Robert of Hampton, appointed 1321, (fn. 269) ejected
1327. (fn. 270)
Nicholas of Ludlow, appointed Jan. 1327 and
apparently in possession by October of that
year, (fn. 271) ejected 1341. (fn. 272)
Thomas de Baddeby, appointed 1341, (fn. 273) resigned
1381. (fn. 274)
Richard Bromley, appointed 1381, dead by 1402. (fn. 275)
Thomas Standon, appointed 1402. (fn. 276)
Hugh Holbache, appointed 1407, (fn. 277) occurs until
1416. (fn. 278)
Thomas Rodbourne, appointed 1418, resigned
1424. (fn. 279)
John Shipton, appointed 1424, resigned 1444. (fn. 280)
John Burdett, appointed 1444, dead by 1449. (fn. 281)
John Launcell, instituted 1449. (fn. 282)
John Crecy, appointed 1457, dead by 1471. (fn. 283)
John Blackwin, appointed 1471, resigned 1472. (fn. 284)
John Whitmore, appointed 1472. (fn. 285)
Robert Reyfield, appointed 1498. (fn. 286)
Adam Grafton, appointed before 1509, (fn. 287) resigned
1513. (fn. 288)
Edward Higgins, appointed 1513. (fn. 289)
Richard Twyford, dead by 1523. (fn. 290)
William Vaughan, appointed 1523, resigned
1540. (fn. 291)
Thomas Lloyd, appointed 1540. (fn. 292)
William Cureton, occurs 1548, surrendered
1549. (fn. 293)
A damaged impression of the college's large oval
common seal, attached to a lease of 1311, (fn. 294) shows
the seated figure of the Virgin, with Child, holding a
lily in her right hand. Legend missing. A smaller
version of the same device was used in a round seal,
1 in. diameter, known from an impression of 1444. (fn. 295)
This was supposed by Owen and Blakeway to be
the deanery seal but is more likely to be that of the
churchwardens. (fn. 296) An oval seal, known from impressions of 1444, (fn. 297) and measuring 2 × 1¼ in., is probably
that of dean John Burdett. It shows two seated
figures beneath canopies; the Virgin in prayer on
the left and a crowned figure with right hand raised
in benediction on the right. The letters 'IHC' are
blazoned on a shield at their feet. Legend, black
letter:
SIGILLUM [JOHANNIS BURDE]T DECA[NI CAPE]LLE
REGIE BEATE MARIE SALOPIE (fn. 298)