HOUSES OF BENEDICTINE MONKS
1. THE ABBEY OF PETERBOROUGH (fn. 1)
The monastery of Peterborough was originally
known as that of Medeshamstede, a name derived from the meadows which lie on each side
of the River Nen—'the home in the meadows.'
Here, on slightly rising ground, Saxulf, a monk
of noble birth, in high favour with Penda, the
idolatrous king of Mercia, and with his Christian
son and successor Peada, erected the first church
with the accompanying buildings for a mission
station. The king in granting this great stretch
of unreclaimed and swampy land for such a purpose did a great service to the district; for its
Christian tenants deemed it an essential part of
their duty to wage a relentless war with adverse
nature in gradually redeeming the marshes by
assiduous drainage and cultivation. In another
respect the site was advantageous, for the quarries
of that admirable building stone, the Barnack rag,
were not far distant. Hugh White or Candidus,
the early chronicler of Peterborough, tells us that
some of the stones laid in the foundation were so
huge (immanissimi lapides) that eight yoke of
oxen could scarcely draw one of them. (fn. 2) Bede,
as well as the Saxon Chronicle under the years
655-6, is emphatic as to Saxulf being the builder
of the monastery. (fn. 3) At Peada's death, his brother
Wulfere, who had at one time professed himself
a Christian and married Ermenild, daughter of
the Christian king of Kent, succeeded to the
throne. The story of his two sons Wulfade and
Rufine being slain by their father, after their
conversion to Christianity by St. Chad (whose
acquaintance they made when stag-hunting), and
of Wulfere's subsequent attempt at expiation of
the crime, was not only accepted in all its details
by the monks of Peterborough, but they persuaded themselves that their monastery stood on
the scene of part of the tragedy. In the midst of
the cloister stood a well 'which common tradition would have to be that wherein St. Chad
concealed Prince Wulfade's heart.' (fn. 4) The nine
windows of the west walk of the cloister, each
of four compartments, were filled with glass
illustrative of this story, and carried the narrative
down to the revival of the abbey after its destruction by the Danes. Beneath each light of
these windows was a rhymed couplet descriptive
of the picture. These windows were destroyed
in the Great Rebellion, but Gunton was able
to give an account of the subjects and inscriptions. (fn. 5)
Saxulf presided over the monastery for twenty
years; in 675 he was consecrated bishop of
Mercia. During his rule the progress of the
church was greatly aided by Ethelred, brother of
Wulfere, and by Kyneburg and Kyneswyth their
sisters. (fn. 6) Cuthbald, a monk of Medeshamstede,
succeeded Saxulf as abbot. He is described as
being so singularly pious and prudent that the
monks of monastic cells that had already sprung
from Medeshamstede, such as Thorney, Lincolnshire, and Brixworth, Northamptonshire, desired
that he would appoint their superiors. (fn. 7) The date
of Cuthbald's death and of his successor Egbald's
appointment is not known; but it was before
716, for in that year Egbald was one of the
witnesses to a royal charter granted to Crowland,
if Ingulf in this instance may be trusted. (fn. 8) Of
the three next abbots, Pusa, Beonna, and Ceolver,
nothing is known save the order of their succession. (fn. 9) The date of Hedda's succession to Ceolver
is also uncertain, Ingulf's charters of this period
being far too doubtful in authenticity. The one
certain fact about him is that he was abbot in
870 when the Danes so ruthlessly destroyed this
great centre of Christianity, which had been for
two centuries one of the chief, if not the most
important, evangelizing agency of Southern
Mercia. After sacking and firing the abbey of
Crowland, the Danes marched on Medeshamstede. Abbot Hedda was slain with all his monks
save one, the altars were broken down, monuments demolished, the library and charters destroyed, and the church and buildings fired. The
fire, which lasted for fifteen days, completely
blotted out the monastery. Ingulf's story of
Abbot Godric of Crowland collecting the bodies
of eighty-four monks and burying them in a
common grave, which he visited year by year,
saying mass in a tent erected on the site, is probably unreliable. (fn. 10)
The monastery lay absolutely desolate for
nearly a century, but in the time of King Edgar,
circa 966, its restoration was undertaken by
Æthelwold, bishop of Winchester. The story
of his dream, of his first seeking to establish a
house at Oundle, and of the queen overhearing
his prayers and becoming a great supporter of his
scheme, is told with picturesque fullness by Hugh
the chronicler. Eventually a church and conventual buildings were completed on the old site,
and handed over to Adulf as abbot, by King
Edgar, in the year 972. It may be well to cite
Gunton's quaint version of Hugh's account of
the events that led Adulf to become a monk:
'He being Chancellor to King Edgar, changed
his Court life for a Monastical in this place; the
reason of which change was this: He had one
only son, whom he and his wife dearly loved,
and they used to have him lie in bed betwixt
them, but the parents having over-night drunk
more wine than was convenient, their son
betwixt them was smothered to death. Adulphus
the father being sadly affected with this horrid
mischance was resolved to visit St. Peter at
Rome, after the manner of a penitent for
absolution, imparting his intent to Bishop Athelwoldus, who dissuaded him from it, telling him
it would be better if he would labour in the
restoration of St. Peter's church in this place,
and here visit him. Adulphus, approving this
advice, came with King Edgar to Burgh, where
in the presence of the King and the rest of that
Convention, he offered all his wealth, put off his
Courtly Robes, and put on the habit of a monk,
and ascended to the degree of Abbot in the year
972.' (fn. 11)
Adulf ruled here until 992, when he was consecrated archbishop of York. The whole soke
of Peterborough in his days was a mere woody
solitary swamp, but by degrees the abbot cleared
it, built manor-houses and granges, and let the
lands for certain rents. As yet there were no
churches, and the people came to Peterborough
for the sacraments and to pay their church dues.
Gunton says that in the days of Abbot Thorold
churches and chapels began to be built, but that
it was not until the time of Abbot Ernulf,
1107-1114, that certain revenues were set aside
for these parochial minsters. (fn. 12)
Kenulf, the ninth abbot, ruled for thirteen
years, being consecrated bishop of Winchester in
1005. (fn. 13) In his time the monastic precinct was
surrounded by a wall, and as a result the name
of the abbey was changed from Medeshamstede
to Burgh, (fn. 14) the walled or fortified place: afterwards to Goldenburgh, and finally Peterburgh.
His successor, Elsin, was a most diligent
collector of the relics of the saints, the most
celebrated of which, the arm of St. Oswald, was
brought to the monastery by one Wynegot from
Bamburgh, Yorkshire. Hugh gives a most
elaborate list of the various relics then obtained,
as well as many details concerning the incorruptible arm of St. Oswald and its healing properties. (fn. 15) In 1013 there was another Danish
irruption under Sweyn, when the monastery and
many of its manors suffered severely. (fn. 16)
Elsin ruled for longer than any other abbot of
the house; he died in 1055, having been superior
for half a century. (fn. 17) He was succeeded by
Ernwin, a monk of Peterborough, who resigned
in the second year of his rule. (fn. 18) Leofric at once
succeeded, and held office until the Norman invasion, dying on 30 October, 1066. Leofric
had been with the English army, but sickening
he returned to Peterborough, and there died
amid the greatest regret of both monks and laity,
for he was much beloved. (fn. 19) Brand, a monk of Peterborough, was thereupon elected abbot. According to the Saxon Chronicle he applied to Edgar
Clito to confirm the election, which greatly
incensed King William. The Conqueror was
not reconciled until a payment had been made of
forty marks of gold. (fn. 20) Eventually William confirmed by charter the election of Brand, and
granted the monastery all the privileges it held in
the days of the Confessor. (fn. 21) Abbot Brand died
on 30 November, 1069, and was succeeded by
Thorold, a Norman, appointed by the Conqueror. (fn. 22)
This appointment was the cause of much disaster
to the monastery. Gunton says, 'He, being a
stranger, neither loved his monastery, nor his
convent him.' (fn. 23) He conferred sixty-two hides of
church land on certain stipendiary knights that
they might defend him against Hereward the
Wake. At this time Osbern, a Danish chief or
earl, had taken possession of the Isle of Ely.
Hereward, indignant that the abbey had been
bestowed upon a Norman, stirred up Osbern's
forces to attack the monastery. Thorold was
then absent at Stamford, but the monks made a
strong resistance, and Hereward, to gain access,
set fire to houses adjoining the gateway, with the
result that the conventual buildings and all the
town save one house were destroyed by fire. The
abbey church escaped. The riches and relics,
together with Prior Athelwold and some of the
older monks, were carried off by the raiders to
Ely. Athelwold, however, during a carouse of
the Danes, managed to secure some of the principal relics, including the arm of St. Oswald,
secreting them in the straw of his bed. A treaty
being made between the Conqueror and Sweyn,
the Danes left Ely, carrying with them many Peterborough relics. Some of them were lost at sea,
but others were eventually recovered by one of
the Peterborough monks who visited Denmark
for the purpose. (fn. 24)
Thorold returned to his monastery with 140
Normans, and strongly fortified it; nevertheless,
he was subsequently taken prisoner by Hereward,
and only released on payment of a great ransom. (fn. 25)
During his thirty-eight years' government of the
abbey, Thorold greatly impoverished its resources;
he died in 1098. Hugh tells us that, on the
death of Thorold, the monks gave the king 300
marks to recover their right of election, and appointed Godric, the brother of Brand, Thorold's
predecessor, in 1099. (fn. 26) The accounts of the brief
rule of this abbot are most conflicting. He was
certainly deposed, the chronicle of Abbot John
says 'in the same year,' (fn. 27) while Hugh says that
he was abbot 'only one year.' (fn. 28) Both authorities
agree that he was deposed by Anselm with
several abbots who had been convicted of simony;
that this was also his offence seems improbable
from Hugh's reference to him as probum virum,
and his statement that he was elected quamvis
invitum; there is the further difficulty that all
these depositions, including Godric's, are assigned
by the best authorities to the year 1102. (fn. 29)
During this unsettled period robbers broke
through a window of the church, over the altar
of SS. Philip and James, and stole a great cross of
gold studded with gems as well as two chalices
with patens and two candlesticks of the same
precious metal, the gift of Archbishop Elfric. (fn. 30)
At last, on 21 October, 1103, Henry I
filled up the vacancy by appointing Matthias,
brother to Geoffrey, the king's justiciary, abbot
of Peterborough. Exactly a year from that date
he died, and was buried at Gloucester. (fn. 31) After
another long vacancy Ernulf, prior of Canterbury, was recommended to the monks as their
superior by a council held at London in 1107.
He ruled strenuously and happily, and in 1114
was consecrated bishop of Rochester. (fn. 32) John de
Séez, originally a monk of Séez in Normandy—
erroneously called by Gunton 'John of Salisbury'
—was the next abbot. The second disastrous
fire, which consumed almost the whole monastery,
as well as the town, occurred in August, 1116.
Hugh gives a vivid account of the disaster. He
attributes its origin to Satanic agency, for Abbot
John, in his impatience at a servant failing to
kindle a fire, exclaimed, 'The Devil take it' (Veni
Diabole et insuffla ignem), whereupon the flames
instantly shot up to the very roof. During the remainder of his abbacy John prosecuted the rebuilding of the church and conventual buildings with
much diligence. He died of dropsy in 1125. (fn. 33)
At the time of Abbot John's death the number
of monks in the abbey was 60. There was, in
addition, a considerable household. In the bakehouse there were two bakers who had the board
allotted to one knight; also a winnower (vannator), who had the same; two other bakers, who
had daily two white loaves and two brown loaves
(bisos) with beer; two carriers (caratores) who
had four brown loaves and beer; and two grinders (servantes molantes), who had also the daily
supply of four brown loaves and beer. The other
food (mixtum) allotted to these nine servants of
the bakehouse amounted to 24s. 4d. a year. In
the brewhouse there were six servants, whose
food, in addition to bread and beer, cost 16s. 4d.
a year. In the kitchen there was a master and an
under cook, with five other servants, two of whom
were wood carriers; their allowance amounted
also to 16s. 4d. There were two servants of the
church. In the tailory (sartrinium) there were
two tailors, two washermen, a wood carrier, and
a shoemaker. There were also servants attached
to the infirmary, to the lazar house (13 lepers
with 3 servants), two carriers of stone for the
workers of the abbey, a mason, a curtiler, a swineherd, and a refectorian, making a total of forty
servants. (fn. 34) The money rents of the abbey at this
date, exclusive of payments in kind, amounted to
£284 13s. 4d.
Henry de Angeli, who abandoned the bishopric
of Soissons to become a monk and afterwards
prior of Cluny, subsequently prior of Savigni and
abbot of St. John Angeli, procured the abbey of
Peterborough in 1128, through his kinship with
the king, after another period of vacancy. He
continued to hold at the same time his French
abbey, but on an endeavour to unite Peterborough to Cluny in 1133 he was banished the
realm. (fn. 35) Martin de Bec, prior of St. Neots, was
joyfully received as abbot by the monks and
people on St. Peter's Day, 1133. Hugh gives a
particular account of the entry into the new presbytery ten years later, and of the miracles then
wrought in connexion with the enshrined arm
of St. Oswald. Abbot Martin materially increased the prosperity of the abbey, the chief
benefaction being the town of Pilsgate. He died
2 January, 1155. On the very day of his
death, the monks, fearing to have a stranger
thrust on them, met to select one of their own
body as abbot. They deputed the choice to
twelve senior and discreet brethren, who were
sworn on the gospels and on the relics of the
monastery not to be swayed in their choice by
any personal affection or hatred. Hugh, the
chronicler, was the first to take the oath, and
went with the eleven others into the abbot's
lodging, whilst the rest of the monks continued
in prayer in the chapter-house. Each of the
delegates communicated privately to Hugh the
name God had put into their hearts, and their
choice fell unanimously on William of Waterville.
The king confirmed the election, the bishop gave
his benediction, and on Sexagesima Sunday the
new abbot was installed. (fn. 36)
William of Waterville added much to the abbey's
possessions. He was the founder of the tributary
nunnery of St. Michael's, Stamford. He settled
a yearly maintenance on the church of St. John
Baptist, Peterborough, ordering that the chaplain
of that church should yearly at Michaelmas
bring the church key to the sacrist of the
monastery, as an acknowledgement of its dependency. After ruling the abbey with remarkable
success for twenty years he incurred the displeasure of the king and was deposed in 1175. (fn. 37)
There is much confusion and contradiction
among annalists as to the cause of his deposition;
at all events he appealed to Pope Alexander, who
confirmed the deposition, a judgement afterwards
repeated by his successor Pope Urban. (fn. 38)
For two years after the deposition of Waterville, Henry II retained the abbey and its
revenues in his own hands; but in 1177 Benedict, prior of Canterbury, was appointed abbot.
'Blessed in deed and name' (re benedictus et
nomine) is the verdict pronounced on him by
Swapham the chronicler, a verdict obviously
based on personal knowledge. The manner
in which he stamped his name on the fabric of
the great church committed to his care will be
dealt with elsewhere; but perhaps the chief
claim to renown of Benedict rests on his connexion with St. Thomas of Canterbury, of
whom he is the most distinguished biographer.
He succeeded in liberating the monastery from
the considerable debt of 1,500 marks with which
he found it burdened on entering upon office.
Benedict assisted at the coronation of Richard I.,
and from 1191 to the time of his death in 1193
was keeper of the great seal. He was genuinely
attached to Richard, and was the first to suggest
and carry out the sale of church plate to secure
his ransom. (fn. 39) Andrew, prior of Peterborough,
and Acharius, prior of St. Albans, were the next
two promotions to the abbacy; they ruled from
1194 to 1210. For about four years after the
death of Abbot Acharius, King John kept the
revenues of the monastery in his own hands;
but at length, in 1214, Robert of Lindsey, then
sacrist of the monastery, was elected to the
vacant post. Swapham tells us that he paved the
way for his preferment by the zealous discharge
of his duty as sacrist. During that time he
caused more than thirty windows of the church
to be glazed, which had previously been stuffed
up with reeds and straw. He also supplied a
glazed window to the parlour, another to the
chapter-house, nine to the dormitory, and three
to the chapel of St. Nicholas. Full details
of his vigorous administration of the abbey property, and of the improvements he made in the
conventual and other buildings, are set forth by
the same chronicler. He attended the fourth
Lateran Council at Rome, 1215. His death
occurred on 25 October, 1222. (fn. 40) About the
most precious MS. possessed by the Society of
Antiquaries is the psalter of Robert of Lindsey. (fn. 41)
It consists of 256 vellum leaves, small folio, is
exquisitely written, and contains several superb
illuminations, the gold backgrounds of which
retain their original brightness. In the margin
of the calendar are the obits of the abbots of
Peterborough, the latest insertion being that of
William of Woodford, who died in 1299. Of
Robert's successor, Alexander of Holderness, who
ruled for four years, there is nothing of particular
importance to chronicle. In 1227 Henry III.
granted the abbey a weekly Friday market at
Kettering, and a yearly fair at Peterborough on the
second Sunday in Lent and seven following days. (fn. 42)
In 1231, during the rule of Martin of Ramsey,
the monastery was visited by the bishop of Lincoln,
when various ordinations were laid down and
accepted. The abbot was not henceforth to borrow money on usury from either Jews or Christians
without the consent of the chapter, nor in that
case ever to pledge the monastery or its goods of
any kind. Another injunction was to the effect
that the sacrist should have the horses and arms
with the bodies of deceased knights (on the abbey
estates); but if the horse of a deceased knight
was worth more than four marks, the abbot should
have it; the arms, or the price of them, were to
be laid up in some safe place for the defence of
the country and the peace of the church, and
their money equivalent used for the repair and
provision of arms. (fn. 43) Pope Gregory IX., during
Martin's abbacy, granted to the abbey the
privilege of holding divine service during any
general interdict, but without bell-ringing and
with closed doors. (fn. 44)
Swapham leaves it on record that when
Walter of Bury St. Edmunds was installed as
abbot, in 1233, he offered a pall covered with
peacocks, and a splendid cope of red samite embroidered with representations of the apostles and
their martyrdoms. The same chronicler gives an
extended account of his various benefactions to
the abbey, and of his boldness in giving the
church of Castor in accordance with the king's
order and in defiance of the pope. In 1237
the church of Peterborough was solemnly dedicated by Bishop Grossetête and his suffragan. (fn. 45)
The next abbot, William of Hotoft, after holding
office for about three years, resigned in 1249, on
the complaint of the monks to the bishop of
Lincoln that he was enriching his kindred at the
expense of the monastery. (fn. 46) John de Caux,
prior of St. Swithin's, Winchester, was elected
abbot in 1251, and ruled the monastery with
success for twelve years. In the year of his appointment, Pope Innocent IV. granted leave to
the monks to have their heads hooded at the
quire offices during the winter months, a not uncommon favour in English monasteries. (fn. 47) He
was appointed papal chaplain in 1260 by
Alexander IV. (fn. 48)
In the diminutive thirteenth-century chartulary is an interesting and detailed entry of the
payments in kind due to the monastery about the
middle of the thirteenth century from the various
manors at certain feasts, such as Easter, Christmas, All Saints, and SS. Peter and Paul. The
manors making such customary payments are
entered in the following order:—Peterborough,
Eye, Thorpe, Walton, Wittering, Glinton,
Castor, Cottingham, Kettering, Irthlingborough,
Stanwick, Oundle, Ashton, Warmington, Alwalton, Etton, Tinwell, and Pilsgate. Some
manors only yielded eggs, and egg payments
were always made at Easter; others only two or
three sheep; but several supplied specified numbers of each of the six sorts of payments in kind.
The totals amounted to 62½ sheep (multones),
117 ells of cloths; 85 disci, (fn. 49) 6,360 eggs, 53 hens,
and 600 loaves of bread. (fn. 50)
Abbot Robert of Sutton, elected in March,
1262, joined with the barons two years later in
holding the town of Northampton against the
king. Whittlesey says that when the king and
his son saw the abbey's banner on the walls,
they vowed the destruction of the monastery.
On gaining the victory, however, over the
barons, Henry was content to forgive the
abbot on payment of a fine of 300 marks
to the king, £20 to the queen, £60 to Prince
Edward, and £6 13s. 4d. to Lord Zouch. The
abbey also gave pledges to take the part of the
king; but the battle of Lewes, when the king
and Prince Edward were taken prisoner, brought
about renewed heavy fining of the abbey by the
barons. Simon de Montfort and his colleagues
received from the monks the sum of £186 14s. 8d.
During the whole period of the struggle, the
abbey gates remained open, and the partisans of
either the king or the barons found the tables
of the refectory well provided for their needs.
This wise policy, as Whittlesey remarks, had
the result of saving their manors in many places
from fire and other evils. (fn. 51) After the battle of
Evesham in 1265, when the crown gained so
complete a victory, the unfortunate abbey was
again heavily mulcted in fines that considerably
exceeded £1,000. Indeed, Whittlesey in enumerating the various sums paid by the abbot to
Henry, over a term of several years, ere he
recovered the king's favour, totals them up to
£4,324 18s. 3d. In 1273 Abbot Robert was
summoned by Gregory X. to the Council of
Lyons. He died on the return journey; his
body was buried in a monastery near Bologna,
but his heart was brought back to Peterborough
in a silver cup and interred before the altar of
St. Oswald. (fn. 52) Owing to the alternate heavy
fining of the abbey by king and barons, Abbot
Robert left the temporal affairs of his monastery
in dire confusion. On his death becoming
known at Peterborough, brother William of
Woodford, a monk of much shrewdness, was
dispatched to court, to try to secure the custody
of their temporalities during the vacancy. The
king was abroad, but an arrangement was made
with the council by which the temporalities
were secured on payment of a fine of 300 marks.
On the return of Edward I. from the Holy Land
in 1274, Richard of London, the prior of the
monastery, was elected abbot by his brethren.
By his prudence and economy he considerably
retrieved the fortunes of the abbey, which he
found in debt to the amount of 3,000 marks. He
retired for some time, after doing homage on his
appointment, to the Isle of Wight, in order to
avoid the extravagance of an inaugural feast.
The chronicle, which may safely be assigned to
his successor, William of Woodford, gives full
details of the various law-suits in which Abbot
Richard was engaged for nearly the whole of
the twenty years of his rule—suits in which the
monastery was almost invariably successful. (fn. 53)
Among other numerous legal triumphs, he
established his right to the tithe of all venison
killed within the royal forests of Northamptonshire, and succeeded in putting down the handmills used by the townsfolk of Oundle as
constituting an injury to the lord's mill. The
king himself was defeated when trying to resist
the abbey's claims to have a prison at Peterborough, and to hold various hundred courts
involving the right to the chattels of felons and
fugitives. In those days, when capital punishment was frequent, and when those who obtained
sanctuary had eventually to submit to perpetual
banishment, the right to the chattels of felons,
outlaws, and fugitives was one of considerable
importance and value. In this way the large
sum for those days of £37 15s. 1d. was received
by the monastery. (fn. 54)
Woodford chronicles three visitations of the
abbey during the rule of Richard of London,
and we may perhaps assume from the brevity
of the entries that the visitors found nothing material to redress. On 17 June, 1283, the monastery
was formally visited by Bishop Oliver Sutton;
and on 5 September of the same year the bishop
made a second surprise visitation (nulla premunicione facta). Archbishop Peckham visited
the abbey on 6 October, 1284, and it is merely
recorded that he received 4 marks as procuration
fees. (fn. 55) Abbot Richard died in 1295, having
liquidated the debt of his predecessor by 2,000
marks. The convent elected William of Woodford, the late abbot's legal adviser, who was then
sacrist. For two years William had acted as
coadjutor abbot, on the appointment of the
bishop of Lincoln, owing to Richard's infirmities. After four years of careful rule, Abbot
William died on 2 September, 1299. (fn. 56) Godfrey
of Crowland, who was cellarer at the time of his
appointment, was abbot from 1299 to 1321.
Of him Gunton writes that he was 'so famous
for worthy actions that there was scarce his like,
either before him or after.' (fn. 57) In the first year of
his rule certain persons fled for sanctuary into
the chapel of St. Thomas the Martyr at the gate
of the monastery, whither they were pursued
and illegally dragged out, blood being shed
during the struggle. Bishop Dalderby put the
chapel under an interdict, until the fugitives had
been restored to the liberty of the place. Eventually the fugitives were brought back, and the
bishop authorized the abbot to cleanse the chapel
with holy water, and to restore it to divine use. (fn. 58)
In 1313, the same bishop, in connexion with
the purgation of a charge brought against Godfrey
of Crowland, of incontinence, licensed that abbot
to go on a pilgrimage to the shrines of the
Blessed Edmund of Pontigny, and of St. Thomas
of Hereford. (fn. 59) In the same year the bishop
issued an inhibition of the veneration of the
place of burial, in the hospital of St. Thomas
the Martyr for the sick at Peterborough, of
the body of Lawrence of Oxford, who had
been hung on account of his evil crimes,
and where miracles were supposed to take
place. A further inhibition was issued later in
the year, accompanied by a prohibition to the
monks of accepting the offerings of those flocking
there. (fn. 60) A visitation of the abbey made by the
bishop whilst this strange veneration of a criminal's
remains was in progress, caused much dissension
among the monks, some of them encouraging
folk to visit the grave. Those who took this
course were, however, excommunicated, and the
bishop issued a third stern inhibition. (fn. 61)
The church of Warmington was appropriated
to Peterborough Abbey in 1316. In their petition to the bishop for sanction, the monks stated
that they had become impoverished and in debt,
(1) by reason of their nearness to an important
highway, which necessitated much hospitality,
(2) by the wars in those parts, and (3) by divers
oppressions, exactions, and expenses. (fn. 62) The second
of these reasons referred to the resistance of
the barons to the evil favourites of Edward II.,
notably Piers Gaveston. When Piers visited
Peterborough at an earlier date with Edward II.,
then Prince of Wales, the abbot sent the prince
a present of an embroidered robe, but he declined
to receive it unless a like one was sent to Piers.
A single entertainment of Edward II. and his
courtiers is said to have cost the abbey
£1,543 13s. 4d. in provisions and presents.
Bishop Burghersh, in 1321, granted an indulgence to all penitents hearing mass at the Lady
altar, the high altar, and the altar of All Saints
in the guest-house chapel of Peterborough
monastery. (fn. 63)
On Godfrey's death there was an extent of
the lands of the abbey. Whittlesey sets out the
full particulars of each manor. The annual sum
produced by the Northamptonshire manors
amounted to £409 10s. 2¾d., and that from
their manors in Lincoln, Nottingham, Leicester,
and Rutland to £212 6s. 0½d., making a total of
£621 16s. 3¼d. (fn. 64) But this did not by any means
represent the total of the abbey's income at that
date, for the return took no account of the
spiritualities in appropriated churches and pensions,
or of the tithes of venison, or of the rents from
certain tenements and detached plots of land, or
of the average return of forfeited chattels, or of
the very considerable offerings of the faithful.
Adam de Boothby's rule, 1321-1330, was
chiefly remarkable for his frequent and costly
entertainment of the king and royal family. In
1332 Edward III., with the queen-mother, the
king's sisters, three bishops, and the whole court,
kept Easter at the monastery, making a stay of
ten days. The consequent expenditure of the
abbot, including presents, was £487 6s. 5d. On
six subsequent occasions during this abbacy there
were prolonged royal visits to Peterborough. (fn. 65) The
rule of the next four abbots was not marked by
any particularly noteworthy incidents. Only a
few points need be here noticed. A curious
example of a mixed rental in money and kind
accruing to the abbey occurs at this period. In
1342 licence was granted to John Edgar to
alienate to Peterborough monastery 2 messuages,
20½ acres of land, 4½ acres of meadow, 9s. 10d.
of rent, and a rent of two cloths, four geese, three
cocks, fourteen hens, and sixty eggs in Glinton
and Peterborough, of the united yearly value of
40s. 2½d. (fn. 66)
The loss of half the monks during the Black
Death of 1349-50 has been already mentioned,
the total being reduced from 64 to 32. (fn. 67) In 1353
Bishop Gynwell absolved Hugh de Spalding from
the excommunication he had incurred for breaking locks and gates on the monastic property, for
hunting in the woods, for felling trees, and for
fishing in the waters of the Nen without the
abbot's licence. (fn. 68) The prior of Peterborough was
empowered by Bishop Gynwell in 1360 to
absolve some of his brother monks who had been
excommunicated for laying violent hands on certain secular clerks. (fn. 69)
William Genge, the fortieth abbot of Peterborough, succeeded in 1396 and became the
first mitred abbot. In November, 1402, he
obtained licence from Pope Boniface IX. for
himself and his successors to wear anywhere
the mitre, ring, pastoral staff, and other pontifical
insignia; to give in the monastery and subject
priories, and in their parish and other churches,
solemn benediction after mass, vespers, and
matins, and at their table, provided that no bishop
nor legate were present; to consecrate churches,
such as the churches, oratories, and chapels of
their monasteries and priories, together with the
altars, vestments, and chalices therein; and to
reconcile the same and the cemeteries of such
churches. (fn. 70)
A detailed schedule of the taxation of the
abbey drawn up in 1401–2 shows that the total
value of the temporalities and spiritualities at that
time amounted to £1,218 15s. 5¾d. Out of
this the sum of £60 1s. 2d. was definitely assigned
for alms. In the same register where the taxation
return is entered, many folios are devoted to the
full receipts of the abbey for the same year. (fn. 71) The
register or act book of William Genge and of his
successor, John Deeping (1410-38), gives evidence
of the energetic administration of both these
abbots. One of its more interesting features is
the record of three gaol deliveries, for the prison
of Peterborough belonged to the great abbey.
At Michaelmas, 1400, the gaol delivery of
Peterborough before William Thirnyng, John
Coraunt, and their fellow justices, is entered in
the abbey register. The prisoners included four
who were notorii latrones, nine horse stealers,
one sheep stealer, two stealers of goods, one
utterer of forged money, nine suspected of robbery,
one case of serious wounding, four guilty of
murder or manslaughter, and one case of sheltering a murderer. (fn. 72) The gaol delivery of Michaelmas, 1425, is entered in the same register.
There were twenty-seven prisoners, of whom
several were acquitted and five hung. The
capital sentences were for horse and cattle stealing. The gaol delivery of 1434 also finds a
place in the abbot's register; on that occasion
there was only one capital sentence. (fn. 73)
Bishop Repingdon, by mandate dated 10 March,
1413, gave notice to the abbot of his intention to
visit Peterborough Abbey on 14 April, tam in
capite quam in membris. The abbot acknowledged
the letter, and forwarded the required schedule
of the names of the monks on 26 March. (fn. 74)
In January, 1418-19, Henry V., having
brought the siege of Rouen to a successful issue,
found time to write as follows, asking a favour of
Abbot Deeping:—
'Trusty and wellbeloved yn God. We grete
you wel and we wol and prey you as we have
praide you by oure other lettres afore thys tyme
that ye wol have atte reverence of us our welbeloved servant and clerk of our chapelle, Alayse
Kyrketon, specialy recommended unto the next
benefice yat shal voide longyng to youre gifte.
And yat ye thenke hereupon yat hit be doon as
we trust to you. Notwythstandyng any instance
or prayere made or to be made to you to ye
contrarye. So yat we may have cause to give
you thanks therefore. And yat ye certifie us by
youre lettres of youre wille and entent in yis
mater in al goodely haste. And God have you
in his keepyng. Geven under oure signet in oure
hoose afore Roan ye first day of Janner.'
To this request the abbot and chapter returned
a favourable answer also in English, stating in
grandiloquent terms their readiness to do their
sovereign's will, and thus concluding their letter,
which was dated 16 February: 'And furthermore we devoutly pray almighty God for his
endeles mercy to sende you the victory of al your
enemyes and to bryng you and al your trewe
lieges in saufte hom to us ageyne into Ingelond.' (fn. 75)
Bishop Gray, 1431-6, visited the abbey, and
issued subsequent injunctions which were for the
most part of the usual form, enforcing silence,
prohibiting entrance of women, etc. They were
ordered not to cut down the wood nor pawn the
jewels. Within the cloister there were only to
be two places for refection, namely, the refectory
and 'ley miserycord alias vocat ley Seyny.' Before
Michaelmas they were to obtain an instructor
who was to instruct the monks in grammar, and
this under the penalty of £10 to be applied to the
alms of the lord abbot. (fn. 76)
In September, 1454, Abbot Richard executed
a deed, entered in the diocesan register, binding
himself to give the administration of temporalities
and spiritualities for six years into the hands of
Richard Harleston and William Ufford, saving
the government of the quire and of regular observances; sums in arrears for pensions of scholars
to be paid to the abbot, also £10 annually coming
from the sacristan for the wine of the convent,
and the money called 'jalez silver,' (fn. 77) and the rent
of one mark yearly of the chamber of each brother
and priest, and the rent of 10s. yearly for the
chamber of each brother not being a priest. The
abbot is to dine with the monks. Separate places
to be provided for inmates of the infirmary, and
for strangers coming to the abbey. (fn. 78)
Richard Ashton, the third of the mitred abbots,
ruled from 1438 to 1471. Many small points of
interest in connexion with the inner life of the
monastery can be gleaned from the rough memoranda and account book of William Morton, the
almoner of the abbey, which extends from
1448 to 1466. Among minor expenses of the
first of these years is 15s. 4d. for wax for making
two torches, 6d. given to strolling players, 4d.
for washing towels, 6d. for carpenter's work on
the rood loft (of the hospital church), 5s. for
mending the church windows, and 1d. for thread
for mending vestments. (fn. 79) There are many entries relative to repairs on the manors of Maxey,
Warmington, and Sutton. In 1459, 3s. 9d. was
spent for 3½ gallons of wine given to the convent
at Pentecost, and 3s. 6½d. for 4¼ gallons of wine
for the convent at the feast of the Assumption. (fn. 80)
In 1462 Edward IV. granted to Abbot Richard
and the convent, goods of felons, fugitives, and
outlaws within their hundreds of Nassaburg,
Polebrook, Huxloe, and Navisford, and all other
their hundreds, manors, and possessions in Northampton, Huntingdon, Lincoln, Leicester, Nottingham, and Rutland, deodands, wreck of sea,
treasure trove, evasions and escapes, fines, forfeitures, and amercements, and all other liberties granted by former kings. They were also
to have the delivery of the king's gaol at Peterborough, provided one of the justices of the
peace for the county of Northampton, or a person skilled in the law, be one of the commissioners appointed by them. (fn. 81) In the following
year the king granted to the abbey the custody
of all its temporalities during voidance, on their
rendering to the Exchequer £40 for each
voidance. (fn. 82)
William Ramsey was abbot from 1471 to
1496. During his rule in 1477 licence was
obtained for the appropriating of the church of
Oundle to the monastery, provided a vicarage
was sufficiently endowed, and a competent sum
of money distributed yearly among the poor.
The royal assent was given to this in consideration of the abbey having granted to the king
84 acres of land and wood in Cottingham parish. (fn. 83)
The appropriation was not completed till 1481.
Another appropriation was made to the monastery in 1486, when a long-standing contention
with the neighbouring abbey of Crowland was
compromised by the yielding to Peterborough of
the church of Bringhurst, Leicestershire. (fn. 84)
Robert Kirton, a monk of Peterborough, was
elected abbot in 1496. Three years later the
church of North Collingham was appropriated
to the monastery. On 8 July, 1515, the
Bishop of Lincoln visited the abbey, when
various irregularities were brought to light and
punished. The most serious offender was brother
John Walpole, who had stolen certain jewels
from the shrine containing St. Oswald's arm, and
given them to women in the town. Some of
the monks haunted a tavern near the abbey,
and sang and danced in the dormitory till ten or
eleven o'clock at night, to the disturbance of the
rest. (fn. 85)
While Wolsey was busy about his new
college at Oxford in 1526, he deputed the
Bishop of Lincoln to obtain the fulfilment of
an alleged promise of a contribution from this
abbey. The abbot was visited by his diocesan
on 30 July, and the bishop forwarded a long
account of their interview. From this letter it
would seem that Kirton had rashly promised a
contribution of 2,000 marks, which he did not
see his way to fulfil. The bishop wrote that if
he thus 'swerve and warble' in his words, he
should be made to resign before Michaelmas on
a reasonable pension. Writing again a few
days later, the bishop said that no dependence
could be placed on the abbot, that his poor offer
of £400 was now reduced to one of 400 or
500 marks. (fn. 86) At last, in March, 1528, Kirton
yielded to the strong pressure brought on him to
resign, on the understanding that either brother
Francis or one Boston, monks of the abbey,
would succeed him. He wrote to Wolsey to
that effect, saying that if the election were left
to the convent they would undoubtedly choose
brother Francis, who was a good religious man,
and of gentle birth. (fn. 87) The imperious Wolsey
had, however, succeeded in enforcing his will on
the convent, who granted him the right of nominating the next abbot; whereupon he withdrew
from the promises made by his agents, and immediately nominated John Browne (alias
Chambers) as superior of the monastery. The
royal assent to this decision was given on 23
March, 1528. (fn. 88)
On 27 July, 1534, Abbot John Chambers,
Prior John Walpole, and forty of the monks
signed the declaration as to Henry VIII.'s
supremacy. (fn. 89)
The Valor of 1535 gives the clear annual value
of this wealthy monastery as £1,679 15s. 8¾d. (fn. 90)
Certain rents and estates pertained, as in
all large monasteries, to particular officials or
obedientaries. Among them, the cellarer, sacrist,
sub-sacrist, almoner, treasurer, chamberlain,
pittancer, guestmaster, master of the works,
refectorian, precentor, as well as the warden of
the cell of Oxney are particularized. The
various wind, water, and horse mills brought in
an income of £40 16s. 8d.; tolls and market dues
at Peterborough, Thorpe, and Oundle, £5 19s.;
certain fines, with le pype silver et virida cera, in
different lordships and manors, £7 2s. 7¾d.; (fn. 91) and
manorial court fees, £19 19s. 3¾d. A considerable share of the income came from the
appropriated rectories of Oundle, Warmington,
Gunthorpe, and Peterborough, Northamptonshire;
Eston, Leicestershire; and North Collingham,
Nottinghamshire. The amount that was bound
to be spent in alms yearly, apart from all general
distribution and hospitality, was £57 16s.
Katherine of Arragon, Henry's first wife, was
buried in the quire of the church, with much
pomp, in January, 1535. (fn. 92)
An accusation of papistry was made against
one of the monks in June, 1538, and the particulars forwarded to the council. Ambrose
Caster was charged with saying Domine salvum
(sic) fac ecclesiam, instead of Domine salvum
fac Regem, and for saying in the canon of high
mass pro Papa nostro, although erased from
the book. The charge was made by brother
Richard Deeping to Prior Walpole, and the
parties were examined by the abbot in the
presence of three servants of the king and seven
officials of the convent. Caster denied the
charge, saying it was pure malice. Deeping
could produce no witnesses, but the abbot committed Caster to ward until the king's pleasure
was known. (fn. 93) The accused monk must eventually have been discharged, for he is found among
the pensioners of the following year.
In March, 1538, William Parre, one of the
monastic visitors under Cromwell, was at Peterborough, and set forth at length the conversation
he had with Abbot Chambers in a letter to his
master. The abbot offered, if his house might
stand, to give the king a whole year's rent of
all their lands, amounting to about 2,500 marks,
and beyond that 'to gratifie your lordship
(Cromwell) to bee good lorde to hym with the
some as I suppose of three hundred pounds.' (fn. 94)
Eventually this ancient monastery was surrendered
to the crown agents on 29 November, 1539.
The inmates were divided into two lists, those
appointed to remain, to form part of the staff of
the projected cathedral staff, and those who were
at once to depart. The first list was headed by
the abbot, to whom was assigned the large
pension of £266 13s. 4d., in addition to a yearly
allowance of a hundred loads of wood; £14 a
year was assigned to Prior Walpole; a pension
of £12 each to two monks who were bachelors
of divinity; and pensions of £8 to two other
monks; of £7 to one; and of £6 to ten.
Among those pensioned and ordered to depart
was Edward Berney, warden of the cell of
Oxney, and another, at £10; another at £8;
William Thornton, sub-prior, at £7; three at
£6 13s. 4d.; and fourteen at £6 each. (fn. 95)
On the day after the surrender an inventory
of the considerable treasure of the church and
of the furniture, stores, and stock of the abbey
was drafted. (fn. 96) A return made in December,
1539, of the plate out of certain abbeys, names
70 oz. of gold and 5,081 oz. of silver as taken
from Peterborough. (fn. 97)
On the dissolution of the abbey, the king
made a tripartite division of its revenues (valued
at £1,979 7s. 5¾d. a year), assigning a third to
himself, a third to the newly appointed bishop,
and the remaining third to the dean and chapter. (fn. 98)
The new see of Peterborough was founded on
4 September, 1541, to consist of a bishop, dean,
and six prebendaries; the diocese to consist of
the counties of Northampton and Rutland; the
abbey church to be changed into a cathedral;
and the abbot's lodging into the bishop's palace. (fn. 99)
John Chambers, the last abbot, was rewarded
for his complacency over the surrender by being
appointed the first bishop.
Abbots of Peterborough (fn. 100)
Saxulf, 654
Cuthbald, 675
Egbald, before 716
Pusa
Beonna
Ceolver
Hedda, 870
Adulf (archbishop of York, 992), 972-992
Kenulf (bishop of Winchester, 1005),
992-1005
Elsin, 1006-1055
Ernwin, 1055-1057
Leofric, 1057-1066
Brand, 1066-1069
Thorold de Fécamp, 1069-1098
Godric, 4 days abbot, 1099
Matthias, 1103-1104
Ernulf (bishop of Rochester, 1115), 11071114
John de Séez, 1114-1125
Henry de Angeli (banished 1133), 11281133
Martin de Bec, 1133-1155
William of Waterville, 1155-1175
Benedict, 1177-1194
Andrew, 1194-1199
Acharius, 1200-1210
Robert of Lindsey, 1214-1222
Alexander of Holderness, 1222-1226
Martin of Ramsey, 1226-1233
Walter of Bury St. Edmunds, 1233-1245
William of Hotoft, 1246-1249
John de Caux, 1250-1262
Robert of Sutton, 1262-1273
Richard of London, 1274-1295
William of Woodford, 1295-1299
Godfrey of Crowland, 1299-1321
Adam of Boothby, 1321-1338
Henry of Morcot, 1338-1353
Robert of Ramsey, 1353-1361
Henry of Overton, 1361-1391
Nicholas of Elmstow, 1391-1396
William Genge, 1397-1408
John Deeping, 1409-1439
Richard Ashton, 1439-1471
William Ramsey, 1471-1496
Robert Kirton, 1496-1528
John Chambers, 1528-1539
Francis Alree or Abree alias Leycester, last
prior of St. Andrew's, Northampton, 1541
Gerard Carleton occurs 1543, died 1549
James Coorthopp or Curthopp 1549, died
1557
John Boxall 1557, deprived 1559-60
William Latymer 1560, died 1583
Richard Fletcher 1583, bishop of Bristol
1589
Thomas Nevil 1590-1, dean of Canterbury
1597
John Palmer 1597, died 1607
Richard Clayton 1607, died 1612
George Meriton 1612, dean of York 1617
Henry Beaumont 1616-7, dean of Windsor
1622
William Pierse 1622, raised to the see 1630
John Towers 1630, raised to the see 1639
Thomas Jackson 1638-9, died 1640
John Cosin 1640, bishop of Durham 1660
Edward Rainbow 1660-1, bishop of Carlisle
1664
James Duport 1664, died 1679
Simon Patrick 1679, bishop of Chichester
1689
Richard Kidder 1689, bishop of Bangor 1721
Samuel Freeman 1691, died 1707
White Kennet 1707-8, raised to the see
1718
Richard Reynolds 1718, bishop of Bath and
Wells 1691
Edward Gee 1721, dean of Lincoln 1722
John Mandeville 1722, died 1724-5
Francis Lockier 1724-5, died 1740
John Thomas 1740, bishop of St. Asaph 1743
Robert Lambe 1744, raised to the see 1764
Charles Tarrant 1764, died 1791
Charles Manners Sutton 1791, bishop of
Norwich 1792
Peter Peckard 1792, died 1798
Thomas Kipling 1798, died 1822
James Henry Monk 1822, bishop of Gloucester
1830
Thomas Turton 1830, resigned 1842
George Butler 1842
A. P. Sanders 1853
John James Stewart Perowne 1878, bishop
of Worcester 1890
M. Argles 1890
William Clavell Ingram 1892
William Hagger Barlow 1901
Of the first known seal, twelfth century, there
is a cast at the British Museum. (fn. 102) The obverse
represents the abbey church, under the squareheaded arch of the central tower, St. Peter
with nimbus is seated, holding in his right hand
two keys, in his left hand a book, a hand of
blessing is issuing in the upper left-hand corner.
In a niche or chapel on the left a saint, with a
cross on the tympanum of the arch; on the right
a porch with door thrown open.
The legend has been destroyed.
The reverse, a smaller round counterseal,
represents a boat on waves with St. Paul holding
a sword, standing between St. Oswald on the left
and St. Peter with key on the right, each under
a dome-shaped canopy with round-headed arch.
The centre canopy has two pinnacles; in the
field two estoiles.
Legend: [— SI]GNVM BVRGENSE CRVCE LAVE
REFVLGET ET ENSE.
A fine fragment, creamy white in colour,
similar in design to above is attached to a charter
of about 1200. (fn. 103) Attached to it also is the seal
of Abbot A. (Abbot Andrew 1194-1199 or
Abbot Acharius 1200-1210), very imperfect
and indistinct, representing the abbot full length,
in his right hand a pastoral staff curved outwards,
in his left hand a book.
The second seal of the abbey, thirteenth century, is round, light brown in colour, and fine. (fn. 104)
The obverse represents a boat on waves, the
figure head of an animal at each end, St. Paul
standing, in his right hand a sword erect by the
point, in his left hand a book; on the left
St. Andrew with a cross saltire, on the right
St. Peter with keys and book. Each saint under
a canopy with trefoiled arch pinnacled and
crocheted. In the field on the left and over the
roof the letter R twice repeated, on the right the
letter F twice repeated.
Legend: + SIGNVM : BVRGENS : CRVC : CLAVE :
FVLGET : ET : ENSE
The reverse represents St. Peter with tiara,
seated on a carved throne in a canopied niche with
ogee arch pinnacled and crocheted, holding in his
right hand a key, in his left hand a long cross, an
animal under his feet, close by on the left a king's
head. On the left, in a similar but smaller niche,
an altar with a chalice covered with a corporale,
and a triangular lamp or bell suspended over it;
on the right an abbot, full length, in his right
hand a pastoral staff, in his left hand a book, overhead the initial letter O. Outside on each side
a masonry buttress. Over the roof on each side
a shield of arms, two keys in saltire for Peterborough Abbey. The base ornamented with a
cusped corbel table and below it a row of small
quatrefoils.
Legend: TV : PRO : ME : NAVEM : LIQUISTI :
SVSCIPE : CLAVEM :
A dark bronze-green, very fine and sharp, but
imperfect example of the above thirteenth-century
seal is applied by plaited cords of red and green
silk to a charter of 1304. (fn. 105) The dark bronzegreen pointed oval seal of Abbot Godfrey of
Crowland, 1299-1321, is attached to the same
deed; it represents the abbot with embroidered
vestments standing on a carved corbel under a
canopy with trefoiled arch pinnacled and
crocheted, supported on two slender shafts; in
his right hand he holds a pastoral staff, in his left
hand a book. Background diapered lozengy,
with a small rose in each space.
Legend: S GODEFRIDI DEI GRA . . . DE
BVRGO . . . RI . .
Another example of the thirteenth-century
seal, light-brown in colour, much injured at
bottom by pressure, is attached to a charter
bearing date 1538. (fn. 106)
There is a cast at the British Museum of the
pointed oval seal of Abbot Robert of Sutton
1262-1274, (fn. 107) representing the abbot full length,
in his right hand a book, in his left hand a
pastoral staff.
Legend: SIGILL' ROBER . . . . . . I PETRI
A cast of the seal of Abbot Richard Ashton (?)
is also at the museum; (fn. 108) it is very small, and the
impression, which is indistinct, represents a shield
of arms with two keys in saltire for Peterborough
Abbey. Over the shield is a crowned head as in
the second seal of the abbey reverse.
All that remains of the legend are the letters
AB . . . . . LLVES . . . . ES.
The seal of perhaps Robert Kirton is taken
from another cast (fn. 109) with very imperfect impression representing a saint, perhaps St. Peter,
turned to the right, holding a book and keys, an
ecclesiastic kneeling before him. The legend is
destroyed.
The pointed oval seal of Abbot John Deeping
is taken from another cast representing St. Peter
with tiara and nimbus seated in a carved and
canopied niche, lifting up the right hand in benediction, in his left hand a book and two keys,
between St. Paul with sword on the left and
St. Andrew with nimbus on the right in two
smaller niches. In base, which is much chipped,
under a round-headed arch the abbot mitred
between two shields of arms, both very indistinct
and one almost entirely broken away.
Legend : S' : DÑI : IOH'IS : ABBATIS DE : BVRGO :
SCI : PETRI