6. THE PRIORY OF REPTON, WITH THE CELL OF CALKE
It has been already mentioned (fn. 1) that a monastery was founded—tradition says by St. David—
at Repton about the year 600. Little is known
of it except that it was under the rule of an
abbess, Alfthritha, (fn. 2) holding that post in 697,
when St. Guthlac, repenting of his youthful
wildness, 'came to the then famous monastery
of Repton, and receiving the tonsure and religious
dress determined to do penance for his sins,' (fn. 3) a
determination which resulted in his leaving the
abbey for the solitary life of a hermit. It is
noteworthy that the monastery of Repton is
almost invariably spoken of as 'famous,' for instance, when Cynehard, King Sigebert's brother,
was killed in battle with Cynewulf, king of Wessex, in 786, it is recorded that he was buried at
Repton, 'quod tunc nobile coenobium erat et
famosum.' (fn. 4) And again, when St. Wystan had
been killed, we are told that his body was laid in
the sepulchre of his grandfather, King Wiglaf, in
the monastery of Repton, tunc temporis famosissimum. (fn. 5) And a charter of 874 is said to have
been written in venerabili monasterio at Repton; (fn. 6)
this charter is a grant to the Worcestershire
abbey of Bredon, by Berhtuulf king of Mercia,
at the instance of a certain 'Humberht princeps,'
in whom we may probably see the 'Hunbert
dux' to whom Cynewara, abbess of Repton,
leased the lead mines of Wirksworth in 835. (fn. 7)
With this Saxon Benedictine abbey, which
perished by the hands of the Danes, the later
Austin priory of Repton had no connexion, this
latter originating from the grant of the parish
church of Repton, dedicated in honour of
St. Wystan, to the Austin Canons of Calke,
about the year 1153, by Maud widow of Ranulph fourth earl of Chester, who was lady of
the manor of Repton, with the assent of her son
Hugh fifth earl of Chester. By this charter it
was expressly stipulated that the gift was made
on condition that the head quarters of the canons
should be transferred to Repton at the first fit
opportunity — 'cum opportunitas idonea hoc
expetierit.' (fn. 8)
As to the small priory of canons regular of
St. Augustine, dedicated to the honour of St. Giles,
and founded at Calke, its precise date and origin
are not known. But the earliest charter relative
to it is about the year 1100. By that charter,
Gregory de Diva gave to the church of St. Giles
of Calke and to the religious men there serving
God, the church of St. Anne, Sutton-on-Soar, on
condition that they found a canon who was a priest
or a secular priest, and a clerk to celebrate daily
for him in the church of Calke. (fn. 9) This fiat was
confirmed by his son Leger de Diva in the reign
of Henry II, and subsequently by William de Marteigni. (fn. 10) Another charter, assigned to 2 Henry I,
is a grant from one William Patricius to the
priory of Calke, of 6s. rent from the mill at
Sutton. (fn. 11) Not long after their establishment the
canons would seem to have had trouble with
their powerful neighbour, the abbey of Chester,
as about 1125, William archbishop of Canterbury puts on record that the abbot of Chester,
while in the council at London, promised to
restore to the canons of Calke their church of
Calke and all their property, which had been
taken away from them by him or by his men. (fn. 12)
Robert de Ferrers, circa 1150, confirmed to the
canons of Calke certain land and a chapel at Leca,
which had been granted them by one Harold for
the benefit of the soul of his brother Reinolde, a
late canon of the house. Agnes daughter of
Richard FitzNigel of Malpas was another early
benefactor, granting the canons 32 acres of land
at Kegworth. (fn. 13) Hugh fifth earl of Chester confirmed to Calke the gifts of his father of lands,
woods, and a mill at Repton, and lands at Ticknall, the gift of lands at Ticknall and the chapel
of Smisby by Nicholas the priest, and land at
Tamworth by Geva Ridell. (fn. 14)
The opportunity for transferring the main body
of the canons to Repton occurred in 1172, when
Maud—who, with the consent of her son Hugh,
had begun the building of the priory of Repton
and dedicated it to the Holy Trinity at an earlier
date—effected the transference, but stipulated
that Calke should be continued as a cell (membrum) of Repton. For a century or more after
the subjection of the older priory to its daughter
at Repton, the dignity of the parent establishment was usually consulted in the drafting of
deeds and charters, which for the most part ran
in the names of the 'Prior and Canonry of Holy
Trinity of Repton and the Canonry of St. Giles
of Calke'; (fn. 15) but even this acknowledgement
afterwards fell into abeyance.
At the time of this transference (1163-89) or
soon after, Earl Hugh wrote to Gilbert Foliot,
bishop of London, sending him a copy of his
grant to Nicholas, prior, and the canons of Repton,
of the advowson of the church of Great Baddow,
Essex. (fn. 16) But Prior Aldred and the canons, in the
days of William bishop of London, 1199-1218,
granted this Essex advowson to Ranulph de
Bisacia, prebendary of St. Paul's. (fn. 16a)
In 1220 a grant was made of the advowson of
the church of Willington, by Nicholas de Willington, to John, prior of Repton, and his successors, in consideration of which, Nicholas and his
heirs were to be sharers in all the benefits and
prayers of the convent church. (fn. 17)
In November, 1254, Pope Innocent IV granted
an indult to the prior and convent of Repton, to
take possession of and apply to the use of their
table, the church of Croxall of their patronage,
the value not exceeding 20 marks per annum;
the appropriation was to take effect on the death
or resignation of the rector, and a fit portion was
to be reserved for a vicar. (fn. 18)
Pope Urban IV, in January, 1263, granted
an indult to Master John de Ebulo, papal subdeacon and chaplain, to hold a pension of forty
silver marks from the priory of Repton, and this
in addition to three English rectories and two
continental canonries. (fn. 19)
A confirmation charter of Henry III, dated
1272, and a like document of Roger Longespée,
bishop of Coventry and Lichfield, a year earlier
in date, assured the priory in their possession
of the church of Repton, with its eight chapelries
of Newton, Bretby, Milton, Foremark, Ingleby,
Ticknall, Smisby, and Measham; the churches
of Willington and Croxall; and the Essex church
of Baddow. (fn. 20) The priory obtained most exceptional control over their church (parish church
of Repton) and its widespread chapelries. The
canons drew the whole of the ecclesiastical
revenues of this large area, serving the parochial
church and its dependencies for the most part
with those of their own order, so that we look in
vain for any institution to the church of St. Wystan in the episcopal registers, as the parish church
did not possess even a vicar. The priory kept
the chancels of both church and chapels in repair, but for the remainder of the buildings the
parishioners were responsible. (fn. 21)
In 1283 Adam Raven, of Repton, obtained
licence to alienate to the priory 10 acres of land
and 1½ acres of meadow at Repton. (fn. 22) Two
years later the priory acquired land at Repton to
the yearly value of 100s. from Bernard de Brus,
and 125 acres of land and wood at Hartshorn
from William and Roger de Hertishorne. (fn. 23) In
1290 they obtained a further endowment, from
Robert de Sumervill, of 3 virgates and a bovate
of land, 8 acres of meadow, 5 acres of wood, and
rent to the annual value of 66s. 10d., all in
Ingleby. (fn. 24) The Taxation Roll of 1291 testifies to
the considerable possessions of this priory. The
annual value of the temporalities in Derbyshire
amounted to £29 9s. 0½d.; their temporalities
in Nottinghamshire, in the parishes of East and
West Leake, brought in an annual income of
£8 2s. 3d., whilst they had a further sum of 9s.
from Leicestershire. The church at Repton was
at that time valued at £28 per annum, and the
churches of Croxall and Willington (which were
not, however, at that date appropriated to the
priory) were of the respective value of £10 13s. 4d.
and £8. And in 1297 the prior of Repton was
summoned to attend the muster at Nottingham
and do military service, as holding land worth
upwards of £20. (fn. 25)
On 16 March, 1337, pardon was granted, on
payment of a fine of 40s., to the priory for having
acquired in mortmain from Roger de Chaundos
and Millicent his wife a virgate of land in Milton and other lands in Packington and Ticknall, without licence, and permission was granted
to retain them. (fn. 26) Henry de Bakewell, vicar of
Croxall, and William de Bretby, chaplain, obtained licence in June, 1380, to alienate to the
priory land in Derby, Ticknall, Ingleby, and
Willington; and Robert Colley a messuage in
Derby of the yearly value of 13s. 7½d., in part
satisfaction of lands to the value of 10 marks
which the convent had licence to acquire in
mortmain from the late king. (fn. 27)
At an inquisition held at Newark on 26 October, 1503, it was returned, inter alia, that a
parcel of meadow land lying between Swarkeston
Bridge and Ingleby had been given in ancient
times to the prior of Repton and his successors,
upon condition of the priory providing a priest to
say mass in the bridge chapel. The meadows
were declared to be of the annual value of
6 marks, but there was then no priest provided
by the prior, nor had there been for twenty years
past. (fn. 28)
A commission was appointed 13 July, 1302,
on behalf of the prior of Repton and William de
Repton, lay brother of that house, touching the
persons who assaulted the latter at Measham, and
carried him, together with the prior's goods, to
places unknown and imprisoned him. (fn. 29) On
30 July the commission was amended, when it
was further stated that William de Repton was
still detained in unknown places and that he
could not be reprieved. (fn. 30) It would seem, however, that William was subsequently released and
peace made, as although the prior actually
brought a suit against John de Walkingham and
others for this assault and abduction, he afterwards sought leave of the court to withdraw
from the suit. (fn. 31)
Bishop Langton visited the priory on 13 June,
1316, and four days later issued the following
orders:—That the prior should change his chaplain every year; that an account of the manors
and obedientiaries should be yearly rendered before the prior and convent, or senior canons;
that Brother John de Coventry was to be removed from the office of cellarer on account of
age; that Brother Ralph de Schepeye was to
remain in quire and cloister for a whole year;
that those in the infirmary should receive food
and drink according to their state and requirements, and that no liveries should be granted
from the house. (fn. 32)
At the beginning of the reign of Edward III
the prior of Repton discharged for several years
an important county duty. On 4 December,
1327, he was made surveyor of the tolls taken on
goods passing over Swarkeston Bridge; this pontage had been granted to the men of Sturston and
Swarkeston for four years and collectors appointed,
the money to be used towards the repair of the
bridge over the Trent. (fn. 33)
In October of the same year, Robert de Driffeld, yeoman of the king's kitchen, who had long
served the king and his father, was sent to Repton Priory to receive the same allowance as
Robert de Say, deceased, had in that house at
the late king's request. (fn. 34)
Letters of licence to the sub-prior and canons
of Repton were granted by the crown for a new
election, on the death of Prior Ralph, on 5 October, 1336. It was therein stated that the advowson of Repton was then in the king's gift by
reason of the lordship, &c., of John de Baliol,
being in the king's hands. The royal assent was
given on 16 October to the election of John de
Lich, one of the canons. (fn. 35) The interference of
Edward III with the temporalities during voidance, was, however, due to the too great officiousness of his servants, and proved to be illegal. On
25 October the king ordered William Russel,
escheator beyond Trent, not to intermeddle
further with the priory of Repton and its temporalities, but to restore the issues during the
voidance to the sub-prior and canons, and merely
to take a simple seisin in the priory in the name
of the king's lordship; for the king had learnt by
inquisition that Ranulph, earl of Chester and lord
of the manor of Repton, had founded the priory
in free alms, and that the manor with the advowson of the priory descended after the earl's death
to his four daughters as to one heir, and that the
advowson of the priory was assigned to Matilda,
one of the daughters, and that that right after
Matilda's death, descended from heir to heir to
John de Balliol, who afterwards forfeited to
Edward I; and that John and his ancestor, whenever the priory was void, sent a bailiff to the
priory to take a simple seisin without taking any
issue or profit; that when the priory became void in
John's time, before his forfeiture, by the death of
Prior Stanton, the sub-prior and convent sought
from John licence to elect, and chose Prior Ralph
of Ticknall, their fellow canon; and that on
Ralph's death the convent recognized that licence
to elect belonged to the king owing to John's
forfeiture, but that there was no precedent for
seizing the temporalities. (fn. 36)
In November, 1336, Bishop Northburgh annulled the election by the chapter of John de Lichfield as prior, in consequence of informality in
the process; but he then proceeded to collate the
same John as superior on his own authority. (fn. 37)
On 2 November, 1364, Bishop Stretton, who
was then at Alfreton, took the grave step of interdicting the community, town, and parish church
of Repton in consequence of a serious disturbance.
In the course of his episcopal visitation of Derbyshire, the bishop had recently arrived at Repton
Priory. Whilst he was in the act of holding his
visitation in the chapter-house, certain satellites
of Satan—the whole community of the town—
bearing swords and staves, and bows and arrows,
came with much noise and tumult, and villainously hindered and alarmed the bishop and his
clerks. They rushed up to the gates of the
priory, and causelessly attacked one of the episcopal retinue who was there; then, having broken
down the gates, they besieged the priory, and
overran it from the eleventh hour of that day till
the first hour of the day following, shooting
through the windows of the chambers where the
bishop and his clerks were, with utter inhumanity,
so that they could none of them go out without
fear of death or at least of grievous bodily harm.
But at last two of the neighbouring gentlemen,
Sir Aluric de Solney and Robert Fraunceys, arrived,
and by their power and counsel obtained peace.
The bishop then proceeded to state that in consequence of this violation of the king's peace and
that of the church, which had become notorious
throughout the diocese, he pronounced sentence
of greater excommunication on all members of
the community who were in any way to blame
and did not utterly abhor this detestable conduct;
and in order to punish further so detestable a
crime, the whole place and parish church were
placed under an interdict, and all persons were
warned against having any communication with
it, whilst absolution was to be withheld from the
inhabitants save at the point of death. This
sentence was to be published in all churches of
the diocese on the following Sunday, and publication was to be continued until they merited
the grace of reconciliation. (fn. 38)
It is difficult to account for this sudden outbreak of violence against the monastery and the
bishop, but it is just possible that we have the
key to it in an undated petition (fn. 39) of Edward III's
reign, in which the prior and convent of Repton
set forth that
Brother Robert Tebbe one of our canons of Repton
of the order of Saint Austin was accused in our chapter
of many crimes which it would be too shameful to
relate, for which crimes penance, lighter than he deserved, was enjoined on him, but he broke out of our
house passed our walls and became apostate, changing
his garment and going into the world in worldly
raiment, with a bow or other arms, threatening with
his companions to ill-treat our persons and to set fire
to our barns and goods, to the great dishonour of our
order and our own disquieting.
In March, 1400-1, William Tutbury, prior of
Repton, and Alured de Lathbury were charged,
on the complaint of Sir Walter Blount, with
breaking a weir lately erected by him in his
fishery in the Trent at Willington, and with
cutting up into small pieces the pales and instruments and engines fixed therein, and fishing in
it. This was doubtless done by the priory
servants to assert alleged fishing rights. A strong
commission of oyer and terminer was appointed
to adjudicate in the matter, consisting of John
Markham, Sir Hugh Shirley, Sir Nicholas Longford, Sir Nicholas Mountgomery, Peter de la
Pole, and Thomas Foljambe. (fn. 40)
On 17 January, 1436, Prior Wystan Porter,
owing to old age and infirmity, was permitted to
resign his office, and was assigned a pension for
food and clothing. On the 29th of the same
month the chapter's choice fell on John Overton as
his successor. Overton at first resolutely declined
the honour, and retired into the chapel to pray
that he might be relieved from the responsibility,
but eventually his scruples were overcome, (fn. 41) and
he held the office till his death, two years later,
when John Wylne, who received a general
pardon on 19 December, 1461, (fn. 42) succeeded to
the priory, which he retained till 1471. His
successor, Thomas Sutton, resigned in September,
1486, and was succeeded by Henry Prest. In
the following January a dispute arose as to a
pension claimed by Sutton, who had retired to
the cell of Calke. Prior Henry and the convent
declined to grant the ex-prior any pension, or to
permit his residence at Calke, save by the decree
of the bishop. A suit was entered before the
chancellor, with the result that Sutton was ordered
to retire from and relinquish the cell of Calke,
and to give up to Prior Prest all evidences, muniments, and jewels of the house of Repton and
Calke, besides a covered mazer cup (murram
coopertam), and a cup called 'le nutt'; but a
yearly pension of £13 6s. 8d. was assigned to the
ex-prior. (fn. 43)
The Valor Ecclesiasticus of 1535 returned the
annual value of Repton rectory as £72 8s. 3d.,
and of three other rectories (Willington, Croxall,
and Baddow) appropriated to the priory as £22;
but the temporalities were inconsiderable, and
there were a large number of outgoings and
pensions, so that the total clear income was only
£118 8s. This brought the house well within
the limit of the smaller monasteries (£200 and
under) whose doom was settled in the following
year. Moreover, in 1536, the house had to submit to the visitation of two of the crown visitors,
Thomas Legh and Richard Layton. Their private report was that the sub-prior and three other
canons were guilty of foul offences; but fortunately every student of those times admits that
the accusations of Messrs. Legh and Layton are
usually worthless. The visitors further reported
that Nicholas Page, another of the canons, desired to be released from his vows, and that the
(gross) annual value of the priory was £180.
Under the heading of superstitio they made the interesting entry that pilgrims came to the priory to
visit (a shrine of) St. Guthlac, and his bell, which
they were wont to place on their heads for the
cure of headache. (fn. 44) It will be remembered that
St. Guthlac was received into the old monastery
of Repton by the Abbess Alfritha about 696,
whence a few years later he passed down the
Trent in a boat to Croyland, where he died in 714.
Repton was one of those peculiar cases in which
Henry VIII was content to receive a large fine or
bribe to renew the doomed life of the house, and
yet almost immediately afterwards was ready
to resort again to suppression. On 12 June,
1537, John Young was re-appointed prior by the
crown, and letters patent were granted exempting
the priory from dissolution. For this privilege
the very heavy fine of £266 13s. 4d. was paid
to the king. (fn. 45) In January, 1537-8, John Young,
the prior, and his convent obtained licence to
alienate the manor Great Gransden and its
appurtenances in Huntingdonshire, and messuages
in Sutton Bonington and East Leake and West
Leake, Nottinghamshire, together with the advowsons of the churches of East and West
Leake, and of Great Baddow, Essex, to Sir
Francis Bryan, Sir John Post, Sir George Gresley,
and Henry Audeley. (fn. 46)
The priory was finally surrendered on 25 October, 1538, to Dr. Legh on the king's behalf.
The surrender was signed by Ralph Clerke, the
sub-prior, and eight other canons. (fn. 47) Prior Young
died three days before the surrender. (fn. 48) Legh,
writing to Cromwell from Grace Dieu three
days after the surrender, stated that at their
coming to Repton they found the house greatly
spoiled and many things purloined away, part of
which they recovered. After a certain surrender
had been taken, Thomas Thacker was put in
possession, but owing to the death of the prior
'an escheator must sit thereupon, or else it must
be confirmed by Act of Parliament.' (fn. 49)
An exceptionally full and interesting inventory
of the goods of the monastery sold to Thacker,
taken by Thomas Legh as commissioner and
William Cavendish as auditor, is extant at the
Public Record Office, of which a full transcript
has been printed. (fn. 50) The inventory is dated the
day following the surrender. Thomas Thacker
made an exceedingly good sacrilegious bargain
over the fittings of the priory church. For the
books, quire stalls, six tables or reredoses of
alabaster, sanctus bells, lamps, candlesticks, a
variety of images, with many partitions and much
screen work, he only paid 50s.; the contents of
the vestry, vestments, linen, chests, and ornaments realized £4; for the canons' seats in the
cloister, with the glass, iron, pavement, and a
laver of lead 20s. was paid, and another 20s. for
the cubicles, or 'chanonssells,' with a bell in the
dormitory. Three cows, ten horses, and two
old carts produced £4.
The commissioners paid out 40s. each to Ralph
Clerke, the sub-prior, and eight other canons, as
'rewards' or sums for maintenance until pensions were paid. Twenty-one of the priory
servants received gratuities, varying from 15s. to
the shepherd to 4s. between 'ij boyes plowdryvers.' A further sum of £5 7s. 8d. was
entered for 'Cates bought and spent at the tyme
of the commissioners being ther for to dyssolve
the seid priory,' and for the safe keeping of goods
and cattle during that time.
The pensions allotted to the religious were £6
to the sub-prior, £5 6s. 8d. each to four canons,
£5 each to three canons, and £4 to two canons.
Thomas Thacker was put in possession the
day after the surrender; the buildings remained
fairly intact for several years. Thomas died in
1548, and was succeeded by his son Gilbert
Thacker. It is of this Gilbert that Fuller says:
Being alarmed with the news that Queen Mary had
set up the abbey again (and fearing how large a reach
such a precedent might have), upon a Sunday (belike
the better day, the better deed) called together the
carpenters and masons of that county, and plucked
down in one day (church work is a cripple in going
up, but rides post in coming down) a most beautiful
church belonging thereto, saying 'he would destroy
the nest, for fear the birds should build therein again.' (fn. 51)
Priors of Repton
Robert, between 1153 and 1160 (fn. 52)
Nicholas, between 1172 and 1181 (fn. 53)
Albred, c. 1200 (fn. 54)
Richard, occurs 1208 (fn. 55)
Nicholas, c. 1215 (fn. 56)
John, occurs 1220 (fn. 57)
Reginald, c. 1230 (fn. 58)
Peter, occurs 1252 (fn. 59)
Robert, occurs 1289 (fn. 60)
Ralph, 1316-36 (fn. 61)
John de Lichfield, 1336-46 (fn. 62)
Simon de Sutton, 1346-56 (fn. 63)
Ralph of Derby, 1356-99 (fn. 64)
William of Tutbury, 1399 (fn. 65)
William Maynesin, c. 1411 (fn. 66)
Wystan Porter, resigned 1436 (fn. 67)
John Overton, appointed 1436, died 1438 (fn. 68)
John Wylne, 1438-71 (fn. 69)
Thomas Sutton, 1471-86 (fn. 70)
Henry Prest, 1486-1503 (fn. 71)
William Derby, 1503-8 (fn. 72)
John Young, 1508 (fn. 73)
The thirteenth-century pointed oval seal represents the Deity seated on a throne, right hand
raised in blessing and left hand holding an orb.
Legend:—
. . ILL' : SANTE : T. . . IS : DE : RAPENDON. (fn. 74)
A counterseal of the fourteenth century represents a prior full length, in a niche, holding a
book; overhead in a cusped panel a crowned
head. (fn. 75)