INTRODUCTION
This book is concerned with a register of wills, register Palmer (fn. 1) containing
wills made between 1492 and 1520, and a number of separate wills for the
period 1507 to 1547, (fn. 2) all of which are now in the London section of the
Greater London Record Office. These were transferred from Somerset
House to County Hall with the probate records of the Consistory Court of
London in 1956. They form a convenient group for publication, but, as
will be shown, they do not include all known surviving wills of the consistory court prior to 1547 (fn. 3) and they undoubtedly include some which
were not proved in that court. The surviving separate wills of the four main
ecclesiastical courts of London have suffered so much confusion and
rearrangement in the past that it would now in many cases be impossible
to say with certainty to which court they belonged, and external evidence
is lacking because of the gap in the series of registers of wills and of vicargenerals' books during the later part of the reign of Henry VIII. Irrespective of their provenance, these wills are of interest for the light they throw
on the ways of thought, environment and possessions of ordinary middleclass men and women of the early Tudor period.
The archival history of the wills
All the evidence suggests that when the probate records of the diocese
of London were transferred to Somerset House, under the Court of
Probate Acts, 1857 and 1858, they were in a state of considerable disarray
and had suffered heavy losses. Most of these losses appear to have occurred
before the removal of the records to St. Paul's Cathedral in the eighteenth
century. (fn. 4)
The only mention of testamentary records in the First General Report
from the Commissioners on the Public Records, 1800–12 (1812) is in Appendix (E4), where the bald statement is made that 'wills . . . should everywhere be placed in perfect safety'. In the Appendix (L5) to the Report of
the Commissioners on the Public Records (1837) there is a report by John
Shephard, who had been deputy registrar to the Bishop of London since
1823, on the condition of the records in his care. They were then lodged
in a room on the north side of St. Paul's Cathedral, (fn. 5) which he had
improved by the erection of additional shelving. He had moved the original
wills, which had previously been tied up in paper, into wooden boxes and
had had most of the bishop's books rebound. He had also 'caused to be
transcribed and consolidated alphabetically in one volume the calendars
or indexes of wills and recorded copies of wills . . . from the earliest
period, 1381, to the year 1670'. (fn. 6)
The list supplied by John Shephard of the probate records in his custody
is as follows:
Original wills in good preservation, and made up in bundles and preserved
in deal boxes . . . forming a series (interrupted occasionally by chasms)
commencing with the year 1507 and continued to the present time.
Recorded copies of wills and acts on the grant of letters of administration
(contained in books, and in good preservation, having a regular index, which
also has reference to the original wills); forming a series (interrupted occasionally by chasms) commencing with the year 1361 and continued to the
present time.
Inventories (in eight bags) from 1634 to 1669 . . .
Administration bonds. These are in good preservation and are kept with
the original wills and have the same index.
This list is obviously a composite one covering all the four main London
courts of probate. Since it corresponds in most respects with the records
which are still extant, it shows that most of the losses occurred before
1834.
The removal to Somerset House took place between January 1861 and
August 1863. Officers attached to the Principal Probate Registry visited
the cathedral and 'roughly arranged' the records before bringing them
away, 'but found it impossible to do more in a place so dark and dirty'.
All the records of a purely ecclesiastical nature, 'such as Visitation,
Ordination and Subscription books, were left upon the shelves, all of a
mixed character, except the "Bishop's books", [were] brought away'. (fn. 7) The
disorder among the records was at this time attributed, at least in part, to
the fact that although the same registry had served all four courts the
records were in 1858 in the custody of three different persons.
In January 1882, George Hook Rodman, who had for four years been
assistant to the Record Keeper of the Probate Registry, was appointed to
be 'Assistant to the Record Keeper more particularly for superintending
the indexing and arranging of the ancient Records'. (fn. 8) He seems to have
spent more than twenty years on this task and to have brought to it a fund
of industry and patience. He did his best to sort the records into groups
according to the courts which had produced them, to repair, bundle or
box them so far as his resources allowed and to separate out the old
indexes and make new ones where necessary, so that these could be easily
available to searchers, and could serve as finding aids to the wills. He took
particular pains to note down everything he did either in investigating the
provenance of the wills or in repairs or other alteration to their format.
It seems that when the wills were first being transferred to the Probate
Registry it was planned to print a series of calendars or indexes to them.
As a pilot scheme an index was made of the wills proved in the court of
the Dean and Chapter of Westminster and this was printed but not
published. (fn. 9) The enterprise proved too laborious and no more calendars
were printed. A paragraph at the end of the introduction to the Westminster calendar summarises the difficulties:
Experience proves that every paper amongst a set of Records should be
first examined and arranged before a Calendar can safely be commenced.
Indeed we have recently proved that before other calendars can be completed
it will be necessary to have the records of several of the Courts, the papers
of which we are to receive here, sorted and arranged. We have frequently
found that where different Courts have had a Registry in common, the Records
have been more or less mixed or misfiled. (fn. 10)
The calendars or indexes which were ultimately produced of the wills
proved in the various probate courts were handwritten on parchment,
probably under the supervision of George Rodman. Most of them survived nearly a century of constant handling in the Literary Search Room
and have been distributed with the corresponding records to various local
repositories.
A summary list of the testamentary records of the London courts at
the Principal Probate Registry in Somerset House was submitted to the
Royal Commission on Public Records in 1914, but it was admitted to be
incomplete. Some criticisms were made in this report of the accommodation provided for these records and of the facilities afforded to persons
wishing to use them for research, and suggestions were made for eliminating risks of fire from neighbouring premises or from electric wiring.
Some of the testamentary records suffered loss or damage during the
war of 1939–45. In particular the majority of the inventories which had
never been sorted or methodised were at the end of the war piled in large
heaps on the floor of one of the sub-basement storerooms at Somerset
House, many of them looking like half-smoked cigars. In 1955, because of
the congestion at Somerset House, it was decided that the probate records
of all the smaller courts should be sent back to the localities whence they
had come nearly a century before. This decision was not, however, easily
implemented, since ecclesiastical areas had changed considerably in the
interim and many bishops had appointed one or more local record offices
as diocesan repositories for their records. In London, after some discussion
among the archivists concerned, it was decided to send the probate records
of the Commissary Court of London and of the Archdeaconry of London
to the Guildhall Library and of the Consistory Court of London to the
London County Record Office (now the Greater London Record Office). (fn. 11)
The first distribution of these records took place in 1956, but it was
somewhat hastily carried out and it was soon obvious that some of the
documents listed in 1914 had not been found. Subsequently Dr. Conway
Davies undertook the task of transferring the records of the Prerogative
Court of Canterbury to the Public Record Office and of searching out and
distributing the remaining probate records of local courts. At the time of
writing this work is still proceeding, but it seems unlikely that any more
records of the Consistory Court of London of a date earlier than 1547
will be found. (fn. 11)
The records of the consistory court were listed within a few months of
their receipt in the London County Record Office, but many of the volumes
had to be marked 'unfit for production', and because of the size of the
repair programme that is unfortunately still the case. Most of the separate
wills in the first two bundles were flattened and repaired before they were
transcribed for this volume, since they were in a fragile state. They have
now been guarded and filed. The rest of the separate wills remain in the
bundles and boxes in which they were placed by George Rodman.
Several consistory court volumes which had been sent in error to the
Guildhall Library with records of the commissary court have since, by
the good offices of Dr. Albert Hollaender, been sent to County Hall.
These included two Act Books, temp. Henry VIII.
With the coming into being of the Greater London Record Office in
April 1965 as one result of the London Government Act, 1963, the probate
records of two of the probate courts of the diocese of London, those of
the Middlesex Archdeaconry and of the Consistory Court of London, are
again in one holding.
Register Palmer
Register Palmer consists of forty-six paper leaves, the last three of
which are blank. The paper throughout has a dolphin as watermark.
Each leaf measures approximately 12¼ × 8¼ inches. On the dorse of the
last leaf is a pencil note by George Rodman that the 'leaves of this book
were repaired, Feb. 1877'. On the first page in a contemporary hand is
the name and date 'John Buckland 1528', and under it, in a later hand,
'vide Calendarium in fine Libri'. There is, however, no calendar at the
end of the book. It has been abstracted and bound up in a separate volume
with indexes to other London Consistory Court registers of wills. The
calendar consists of two leaves of which only the first is used. The names of
testators are listed in alphabetical order of the Christian names, unlike
the later indexes, where the surnames have been placed first and alphabetised.
Register Palmer is bound in vellum with the title on the front: 'Regestrum
Testamentorum Presbiterorum et quorundam Laicorum deceden', ab anno
Domini 1514 ad annum 1520 probat', per Vicarium Genralem [sic] Domini
Episcopi London.' There is no doubt that the will of Thomas Palmer
dated 1492 which since 1877 has given its name to the volume was written
into the register after the compilation of the rest of the book, perhaps
because some query had arisen concerning it.
Although the register is obviously the work of several hands, the writing
throughout is small and neat. In most cases the initial 'I' of the will and
'P' of the probatum clause are decorated. The volume as a whole is in
fairly good condition, though there are water stains on the leaves.
Under the heading of register Palmer is a note (see p. 1 below) that
previous testaments of the period of Bishop FitzJames had been registered
in a parchment book. This parchment book was not among the consistory
court records transferred in 1956 and it was never sent to Somerset House.
It consists of thirteen parchment leaves sewn into the back of the
register of Bishop FitzJames and now deposited in the Guildhall Library. (fn. 13)
It contains copies of wills proved between 1508 and 1514, (fn. 14) which are
followed by a reference to a paper book of wills, i.e. to register Palmer.
On folio 13 of the parchment register is a copy of the 'wyll of the londes'
of James Breton and William Browne (fn. 15) referred to in their separate wills
in register Palmer (58 and 75). This 'wyll of the londes' is dated 1517 and
it seems likely that its entry there is largely fortuitous in that there happened to be a blank membrane of parchment which was convenient for
that purpose. Because this will is so closely connected with the two wills
in register Palmer, and because of its intrinsic interest in its meticulous
setting out of instructions for the founding of a chantry at this late date,
a shortened version of it has been given in Appendix 6. One is tempted
to think that the testators had some foresight of what lay ahead when one
reads their detailed provisions for the disposal of their bequests should
'the lawe of this londe in tyme to come . . . not permitt that the said londes
and tenementes continew aftir the maner of this our last will'.
No Consistory Court of London register of wills later than register
Palmer has survived for the reign of Henry VIII. The next in sequence,
register Wymesley, (fn. 16) begins in 1548. Perhaps with some idea of filling the
gap, George Rodman filed the one register of wills of the Bishop of
Westminster covering the period 1540–7 and known as Thirlby (fn. 17) after
register Palmer and had its index bound with those of registers Palmer
and later registers (fn. 18) as though it were part of the Consistory Court of
London records.
The separate wills
The separate wills when received in the London County Record Office
from Somerset House were still in the bundles made up by George Rodman.
All the wills in the first two bundles, and three from bundle 7, which were
dated before or in the early months of 1547 have been included in the
present text. A note on the outside of bundle 1 written by George Rodman
describes his method of sorting and classifying the wills. It is headed
'Consistory of London Wills 1507–46 therein left in the order in which
they are entered in the Consistory Calendar', and it continues:
They comprise none actually indentified with the Consistory Court, but—
(a) Wills of Jur. Commissary 1507–45 not found registered in the Commissary Court.
(b) Wills of Jur. Archdeaconry, 1538–45. There is no Archdeaconry Register
for this period, nor any Consistory Vicar General's Book from c. Feb. 1538/9
to prove to which of the Courts they belong.
(c) Wills of London, —, etc, 1526–46, not found in any of the Courts
searched.
Memorandum. A considerable number of other wills out of this bundle have
been transferred to the Commissary and Archdeaconry Courts. See the names
in the Consistory Calendar now struck through in red ink.
These notes are initialled 'G.R.' and dated 1 August 1883. A further
note dated 1885 is added below:
Several wills out of a miscellaneous bundle of Consistory and Commissary
London Wills, inventories, etc. have been placed herein. Each one of these
is in a white cover and marked 'Ex. Cons. Miscell'.
Some of the inventories mentioned have also been placed herein. See, for
example, Messenger and Pendreth, 1542. (158 and 160.)
Rodman obviously took infinite pains to try to restore some order in
the chaos of early London wills. Each will is carefully annotated in pencil
to show that he had searched the books, where these existed, of the various
courts to see if he could trace it therein. His usual 'not found' is occasionally varied by the more colourful 'not spotted in . . .' or 'chasm at
this date'. Not surprisingly even his industrious researches sometimes
failed to go far enough, e.g. four wills filed in the Consistory Court of
London bundles, those of Robert Redman (137), John Sannys (217), John
Shelle (216) and Wm. Smyth (111) were, in fact, registered and proved in
the Prerogative Court of Canterbury. There is even a note in a contemporary hand to this effect on that of Redman, but Rodman's pencil note
merely says 'Probably in P.C.C.' and he obviously did not check to make
sure. The majority of the wills are original and bear the testator's seal,
signature or mark, but a few appear to be office copies (e.g. 207 and 234),
while in two cases the original will and a copy have been filed together
(131 and 227). At an early date, probably at some time during the seventeenth century, all these wills were endorsed with the name of the testator
and the date of probate. These particulars, in so far as they can be checked,
were not always correct. They were, however, used as the basis of the
old index.
With one or two exceptions the wills are on paper, often on small
pieces torn from larger sheets. Where more than one sheet of paper has
been used the sheets have usually been sewn together either end to end or
bookwise. The majority of the watermarks are versions of the pot or of
the hand-and-star mark. The handwriting varies greatly from almost
indecipherable forms of the free hands typical of the early sixteenth
century to formal legal hands with decorated capitals. Many such as 165
were written by the parish priest, but several of the later wills appear to
have been written by a notary public (e.g. 191), or by a scrivener, who
may be one of the witnesses (e.g. 126). Some (e.g. 200) are nuncupative
wills. Many of the wills have filing holes, some neatly cut in a diamond
shape, some round and jagged, showing that the documents have been
pushed on to a nail or spike. Their incidence is, however, too spasmodic
to give much clue as to the original arrangement of the wills.
Probate procedure
Brief though they are, the notes concerning probate in register Palmer
enable us to glean a few facts concerning the procedure in probate cases.
In the majority of cases probate was granted only a few weeks after the
making of the will. The court was generally held in St. Paul's Cathedral
in what was known as the consistory. Other parts of the cathedral were,
however, occasionally used for the purpose, e.g. the long chapel (22) and
the crypt (42). The vicar-general normally presided; in his absence, as,
for example, when William Horsey found it politic to absent himself
during the period after the death of Richard Hunne, a special commissary
was appointed. (fn. 19) The executors or their proctors were not always obliged
to journey to London; on occasion the business could be conducted in a
convenient parish church; for example, the will of Thomas Ower or Howr,
vicar of Wethersfield (24), was proved in the church of Wethersfield on
18 October 1515 by the 'commissary in the parts of Essex'. The will of
Agnes Reede of Colchester (93) was proved in July 1518 in the presence of
the official of the Archdeacon of Colchester, but there is a note that it
was exhibited in the consistory. In August and September 1517 the vicargeneral, Thomas Hedde, was with the bishop at his manor of Wickham.
He proved a will there on 7 September (45), and in his absence Richard
Wulman, the commissary, presided in the consistory at St. Paul's (43 and
44).
Thomas Gotson, a registrar to Bishop FitzJames, usually officiated in
person in probate cases, but if unable to do so he annotated the register
entry to this effect and collated the entry with the filed will. He seems to
have been a careful and conscientious official and he should not be blamed
for the fact that none of these filed wills have survived. We know from some
of his annotations that wills were sometimes registered even if they were
not proved. Only a few of the separate wills bear an indication that they
were proved and/or registered. George Rodman assumed that some at
least of those he assigned to the consistory court were not proved. No
separate register or file of administrations granted before 1547 in this
court has survived. (fn. 20)
The question of inventories of the goods of testators is a little puzzling.
The only references to inventories in register Palmer are in the probate
notes to the wills of William Atkynnys (18), Richard Drabulles (21) and of
Thomas Lowe, priest (34). In the case of Drabulles the will was proved on
30 October and an inventory was ordered to be exhibited before the Feast
of the Conception of the Virgin Mary (8 December). In the case of Lowe
the will was proved on 9 January 1517; the executors were ordered to produce an inventory on the third day after the feast of St. Matthias the
Apostle (27 February). Among the separate wills sixteen inventories are
filed (excluding the occasional list of goods or debts forming part of the
will). George Rodman noted that he had sorted certain inventories into
the bundles of wills (see p. x above), and it would seem that they were
originally filed separately, since the file holes of connected wills and inventories do not correspond. If in the early sixteenth century inventories were
required in every case in which wills were proved or administration was
granted, as was usual later, many must have perished at an early date. (fn. 21)
For convenience the term 'will' is used throughout this introduction
and in the notes, but, in fact, almost all the wills are wills and testaments,
and bequests and legacies, of goods and of real property are intermingled.
Occasionally, as in 27, the two parts are separately expressed, though
within the same document.
The testators and their possessions
The medieval diocese of London comprised the City of London, the
counties of Middlesex and Essex and the greater part of Hertfordshire
and, apart from the short period (1540–50) when the diocese of Westminster
was taken out of it, it remained unchanged in extent until the nineteenth
century. The testators of wills proved in the Consistory Court of London
came therefore from a wide area and were not necessarily Londoners in
the ordinary sense of the term. The great majority of the testators of the
wills in register Palmer were priests, (fn. 22) and from their bequests it is clear
that many of them had been born and brought up in places far away from
London, and that some who held livings or chaplaincies in the City also
held benefices in the provinces. Richard Stokley, (fn. 23) chantry priest in the
church of St. Swithin in Candlewick Street (7), bequeathed 10 marks and
an antiphoner to the parish church of Yoxsall in Staffordshire where he
was christened. Robert Steyll, chaplain of St. Mary Woolchurch (12), left
£8 for a chaplain to pray in the church of All Saints, Northallerton, Yorks.,
for his soul and those of his parents. Thomas Alen described himself as
chantry priest of St. Dunstan and a parson of Gunthorpe in Norfolk (95).
It was understandable that priests should be more concerned than layfolk
in trying to ensure the safety of their souls in the next world and to preserve their memory in the churches which benefited from their bequests,
but John Barnaby (77), who took such great pains to secure that prayers
should be said for him somewhere within the University of Oxford as
well as elsewhere and who provided that his name should appear both on
the foot of the chalice and on the back of the vestment which he bequeathed
to the church of Sherburn in Elmet, Yorks., seems to have been overanxious in these respects. On the other hand, he seems to have had more
money at his disposal than any of the other priests. The total of his
bequests amounted to about £150; few of the others had more than £20
to dispose of. In several cases (e.g. 33 and 54) the executors refused to act,
probably because there was not enough money to cover the bequests.
Some of the priests held houses or free or copyhold land apart from the
glebe, for example Thomas Ower (24) in Shalford, Essex, and Henry
Deculon (27) in Crowland, Lincs., Winkfield, Berks., and Chickney in
Essex. Thomas Everade (83) is the only one to specify the exact amount
(21 acres 3 roods in 'the towne and fildys of Lyveryngton', near Wisbech).
Probably many of the priests farmed their own land, since they left farm
stocks as legacies. Thomas Chapman, curate of Pattiswick (14) with ten
cows, six bullocks and more than forty-six sheep, as well as barley, meslin
and malt, was the wealthiest in this respect. In six cases cows were left to
establish obits or to keep a lamp burning. Few of the priests had much in
the way of household goods to dispose of. Thomas Nelson, who bequeathed
the painted hangings in his hall, his cupboards, pots, etc., to his successor
in the living, seems to have been one of the most comfortable. The lattice
window which Roger Hattcliff left to a fellow priest in 1519 (88) was not
presumably considered to be a fixture. Several priests left bows and arrows
and one or two left musical instruments. Twenty-one of the eighty-six priests
of register Palmer left books. Most of these were breviaries or books of
sermons. Few of the priests seem to have been actively concerned with
education, but Christofer Marshall (32) left a small chest of books to be
used 'for the instruction of those willing to learn at the discretion of the
vicar and of other discreet parishioners'. Robert Pacok (47) bequeathed
seven books to the library of the church of St. Nicholas in Newcastle and
40s. for an exhibition for a poor scholar to go to Cambridge. John Barnaby
(77) left his books for the use of poor scholars from the diocese of York
who were students at the University of Oxford. Henry Lucas (53) who
left £20 in trust for the schooling of Leonard Swetyng, and Thomas Cartar
(62), who wished Robert Clerke, 'his child' to be found 'to scole', are
the only priests to mention school as such. It may be noted that Leonard
Swetyng was to attend school for seven years and afterwards to have
another year at writing school so that he should learn to write well.
Thomas Nelson (40) bequeathed a head of St. John in alabaster, but
no priest of register Palmer mentioned pictures. Thomas Abbott, priest
of All Hallows the Less in Thames Street (118), in 1539 left two pictures,
one of Our Lady to 'goode wyffe Eton' and the other of Christ 'hagyng
att my bedes sede' to 'goodewyffe Greyne'.
While many priests asked for the distribution of a dole in money or in
kind at their funerals, a few left grain or cloth to all the poor householders
of their parishes, or money for the repair of highways or other practical
works of charity. The poorest of the priests was Geffray Warburton,
curate of St. Mary Abchurch (64), who through sickness and 'untrue
peple' had got himself 'gretly in dett and daunger', but in none of the
wills of these priests is there any sign of excessive wealth or luxury.
The wills of the lay testators show greater variety in form and content
than those of the priests. Eight of the nine laymen and women whose wills
are contained in register Palmer came from the outer areas of the diocese.
The wealthiest of them, John Yardley, of St. Laurence, Essex (41), whose
will was made and proved in 1504, left several tenements in St. Laurence
and Laindon to his wife and children, together with 310 sheep and twenty
cows and about £25 in money.
The testators of the separate wills lived for the most part in or near
the City of London. Presumably none of them had the bona notabilia (fn. 24)
which would have required resort to the Court of Husting, since no mention of them has been traced in the records of that court. (fn. 25)
It seems that few of these citizens owned their houses or indeed any
real property. The lease of the house is mentioned in a number of cases.
The wills and inventories give little information as to the size of their
houses. The rooms most frequently mentioned are the hall (nine times)
and the chamber (thirteen times). Usually both contained beds. The hall
often had cooking utensils among its furnishings. It was sometimes hung
with painted cloths and it usually contained a table, forms, stools or chairs,
and cupboards or chests. The largest house of which details are given is
that of Katheryn Bracye (178). Her husband, Thomas Brase, or Bracye,
citizen and haberdasher of London (153), who died in 1542, a year before
his wife, left all he possessed to her. His house, which was leasehold,
comprised an entry, a hall, a buttery, a drinking house, the wife's own
chamber and a chamber over it, a back garret, a kitchen and kitchen
chamber, the chamber over the well house, a brushing chamber and a
cony chamber. It was very well furnished. In particular the wife's chamber
with its hangings, a joined bedstead with selar and tester, curtains, settles
embroidered in satin, cushions, carpets and coverlets, a wainscot chest
and a 'close chayer with a spruse coffer' (i.e. a commode) seems excep
tionally comfortable for a citizen's house in the early sixteenth century
The valuation set on the goods by the appraisers in this, as in other
inventories, seems to be very low, even though the words 'old' or 'broken
are attached to many items. In the Bracyes' kitchen, for example, the
pewter platters, dishes and saucers weighing 135 lb. in all are priced at 49s
While stools, forms and benches were obviously the commonest types
of seats, chairs of various kinds are frequently mentioned. A table usually
meant a table top, with the trestles, on which it stood when in use, mentioned separately, but standing tables also occur. Clothes, table linen, etc.
were usually stored in chests, though a press for clothes is listed in 190
'Cupboard' had still its literal signification, but an aumbry, or small
cupboard in the modern sense, occurs in 190. No mirrors or looking-glasses
are mentioned, but there are two clocks 'with plomettes' (178 and 224).
Where any description is given of any item of furniture this is indicated
in the index. (fn. 26)
Beds and bedsteads are always listed as separate items. A form or footpace often coupled with a bedstead was presumably a means of mounting
into bed. A trundle or truckle bed is often mentioned in conjunction with
a 'joined' bedstead under which it could be stowed when not in use. The
bedstead was often provided with a tester and curtains and sometimes a
valance. The bed was stuffed with flock or feathers and it is the most
common bequest occurring in the wills. In some cases mattresses are
mentioned. Coverings consisted of blankets, sheets of canvas, hemp or
linen, and coverlets which might be of white diaper or of coloured tapestry
work, though more often of plain coarse materials. Bolsters and pillows
are frequently mentioned, usually of flock or feathers, but sometimes of
down. Pillow beres or cases were in common use. The 'bedde panne'
bequeathed by Elizabeth Wescott (223) in 1544 was almost certainly a
warming pan. Table linen or napery occurs both as bequests and in
inventories. Katheren Bracye had a diaper tablecloth, 5 yards long and
two yards broad, and two more each 7 yards long, as well as eight plain
tablecloths. She also had fourteen fine diaper napkins and twelve coarse.
Towels are frequently mentioned, but the only specific references to washing facilities are the hand basin bequeathed by Ame Rian (194) and the
washing bowl, said to be in the yard of Katheren Bracye's house, unless
the 'wessinges stokes' in the inventory of Bartholomew Merry (190) can
be interpreted as 'washing troughs'. Pressing irons are mentioned twice.
Cooking was for the most part done over an open fire. Andirons, cobirons, fire rakes, shovels and tongs, hanging irons for the chimney, pot
hooks, spits, gridirons, and trivets are frequently mentioned. Though wood
was the main fuel, coal was in use for domestic purposes in London and is
mentioned five times. (fn. 27) Cooking utensils included kettles, frying pans,
chaffers in brass or laten, brass pans and dripping pans, skillets and many
varieties of pots. Also for kitchen use were bowls and basins of wood or
pewter, bottles of tin, brass or stone, ewers, water tankards and tubs. A
toasting fork, a bread tin, a chopping board, a skimmer, a ladle, a mortar
and pestle and a spice mortar are each mentioned once. Silver spoons and
silver salts or sallets were often left as legacies, but for ordinary use spoons
could be of wood or laten and salts of laten or pewter. A knife served most
purposes at table. Platters and dishes are sometimes said to be of treen
(wood) or pewter. A 'garnish of pewter' and a 'nest of goblets' occur among
bequests.
The only mention of spinning wheels is in the inventory of Robert
Fosster in 1542 (156). The pair of scales also listed there may have been
for trade and not for domestic use. Though candlesticks are frequently
mentioned, there is no reference to any kind of lamp except for use in
churches.
Clothes figure largely among the bequests and in the inventories. They
had a long-term value which is appreciated only with difficulty by those
accustomed to the quickly changing fashions and less durable materials of
the present day. The gown, a garment common to both sexes, though sometimes specified as for a man or woman, was made in all sorts of materials
from satin to pewke and was often furred; it could be long or short,
single or double, lined or unlined, with or without a hood. It is variously
valued from 1s. to 20s. Though most often black, it could be blue, 'brown
blue', green, violet, 'medley' or tawny. A man's doublet, jacket, or jerkin
was often of leather, buckskin or chamlet, but the doublet could be of
satin or fine worsted, the jacket of cloth and the jerkin of fustian. References to cloaks occur less frequently; these, too, could be lined or unlined
and were sometimes provided with a hood. Coats could be of motley or
in plain colours; they are sometimes specified to be for riding. There is
only one reference to a man's waistcoat (12).
Hose, stockings and shirts are less often mentioned, probably because
they wore out faster than the heavier outer garments. There is only one
mention each of garters (and these were of silk), of a pair of boots, and of
shoes. Caps and nightcaps are often mentioned, but there are only four
references to hats, one trimmed with black silk and another said to be of
taffeta (187). Women's clothes comprised smocks, rails, petticoats, kirtles,
gowns, kerchiefs, aprons and caps. Sometimes pairs of foresleeves, frocks (fn. 28)
and partlets are also mentioned. Katheren Bracye had five gowns, Joan
Wharnebe (198), who lived in the house of her uncle, a clothworker, and
Elizabeth Barton, widow (176), servant to Lady Seymour, each had three.
The petticoats were often red and the kirtles black. Though the inventories
of women usually mention jewels, they were not of great value—silver
gilt or gold rings, sometimes with a stone, silver pins, jet or coral beads,
silver hooks or gold buttons, silk ribbons wrought with gold or girdles
with silver buckles, purses or taches of silver and a silver whistle.
When Katheren Bracye died she left seven children, of whom two were
quite young, and her inventory includes a broken cradle and old rails
and kerchiefs 'gevyn to the chylder'. There are also items among the
expenses charged on her executors for a coat, a pair of sleeves and a
petticoat 'for lytyll Nanne Bracye' and for two waistcoats and nightcaps.
A few of the wills and inventories list the tools and stock in trade of
the testators. Nicholas Grove, barber (183), left his grinding stones, case
of razors and basins. Robert Fosster, tailor (156), left his shop board,
shears and pressing irons. Bertilmewe Merry (190), who combined the
running of a farm at Standlake, Oxon., with being a woolpacker in
London, had in his inventory a number of utensils and tools, some of
which must have been in Standlake. Antony Copage, surgeon (108), had
wider interests and probably a higher standard of living than most of the
laymen represented here. He left his instruments of steel to his servant
provided he followed the same craft, and his books of surgery to be sold
to the Company of Surgeons. He is one of the very few laymen to mention
books. His other bequests show that he went riding and shooting, and
was interested in music, since he had a lute and a harp. His house contained
the latest conveniences, including a round table and a window with glass.
In contrast, Robard Goghe, soldier (185), had little to leave except his
half of the bed which went to his bedfellow.
Robert Jennynges (157) is the only one of the testators to be concerned
in foreign trade. He had over £78 worth of woollen, cotton and linen
cloth at risk in one ship and an unspecified amount in another; of these
£30 had been obtained on credit and he provided that this debt should be
the first charge on the profits if God should 'sende my goodes in savitie'.
Several of the testators cite the custom of the City of London that a
man's estate should be divided into three, one-third for his wife, one-third
for the children and the rest to be disposed at the will of the testator. Most
of them show complete trust in the ability and willingness of their wives to
administer their estate for the welfare of the children. Two exceptions are
Wylliam Walle (168), who seems to have suspected his wife of intending
to appropriate more than her share and instructed his overseers to keep
a careful eye on her, and Robert Herryson (130), who accused his wife of
having 'enbaseled' his goods. The will of Diego Sanchez (110) with its
provision for both his legal and his slave wives stands out in complete
contrast to the rest.
The diminution in the number of bequests to churches in the later wills
is partly due to the greatly increased proportion of laymen to priests
among the testators, but it also reflects a general change in religious
opinion and observance. A citizen of the 1540s who wished his memory to
be kept green was more likely to leave a bequest to his City company than
to his parish church, as his father would have done; compare, for example,
the will of John Hudson, citizen and ironmonger (85), made in 1513, with
that of George Symonde, citizen and vintner (219), made just over thirty
years later. One form of charitable bequest which recurs throughout the
wills is a gift to poor prisoners in London's gaols, Newgate, Kings Bench,
Marshalsea, etc.
A study of costs and prices given in these wills and inventories serves
to underline the difficulties of making any valid comparison of the value
of money in the first half of the sixteenth century and at the present
day. Up to 1519 the values given are those placed on their goods by the
testators. Cows are variously stated to be worth 6s. 8d., 8s. or 9s. a piece;
a vestment 20s., or 40s. for a vestment of white damask; a marble tombstone 20s.; a primer 1s. 4d.; a chain on which to hang a book 1s. Nowadays
an average-quality cow could reasonably be expected to sell for £60 to
£80, i.e. 200 times the price given above, but no one now would expect a
vestment of white damask to cost £400 or a small chain £10. The values
given in the inventories are even more difficult to compare with those of
the present day, especially as there is little clue to the condition of the
items listed or to the accuracy of the appraisers' valuations. Their arithmetic was highly inaccurate and one wonders how reliable were the lists
of debts appended to some of the wills. One point of interest emerges from
the will of John Saron, parson of St. Nicholas Olave (92), who provided
for the payment to a chaplain of £7 a year or £5 6s. 8d. a year if he served
outside London; it suggests that in 1519 as at the present day a 'London
weighting' was necessary to cover the higher cost of living in the capital.
Language, phraseology and spelling
Of the ninety-five wills in register Palmer, sixteen are entirely in Latin
and seventy-five in English, four being partly in English and partly in
Latin. All the separate wills are in English, apart from 121 and 242, which
are in Dutch, though 242 has a contemporary English translation filed with
it. No. 110 is a contemporary translation of the Spanish original. The
basic phraseology of the wills is much the same whether in Latin or in
English. The wills of Thomas Palmer and Henry Walton, given in extenso
in Appendices 1 and 3, are typical examples. The triple dedication of the
soul to Almighty God, to the Virgin Mary and to the holy company of
heaven is common to all the wills in register Palmer and to the earlier
separate wills, though in varying degrees of elaboration. (fn. 29) After 1536 the
dedicatory phrases begin to show traces of new religious ideas. The first to
be recognisably Lutheran is in the will of Henry Walton dated 1539 (120).
The original spelling of all personal and place names and of all the
texts in English has been reproduced in the hope that it may be of some
use to philologists. There is no doubt that variations in spelling to a
certain extent represent phonetically variations in pronunciation. An
obvious example is the use of 'v' for 'w' in some wills (e.g. 175). In the
will of Henry Lucas (53) the phonetic principle seems even to have affected
the spelling of Latin words, e.g. 'cereos' is spelt 'serios'.
On occasion the spelling of some words and phrases is so erratic as to
make their interpretation doubtful. In 230 it is the fact that the testator,
William Chambarlayn, was a skinner which makes it certain that '2 dosen
bogy or boby' meant two dozen skins of budge fur. 'Cape' or 'cappy'
may stand for either 'cap' or 'cape', though probably 'cap' is indicated in
most if not all cases. William Chambarlayn was one of the very few
testators who could boast that he had written the will with his own hand,
but the writing is execrable. There are about twenty cases in which the
names of testators or witnesses at the end of wills are stated to be or
appear to be signatures.
Except for the occasional use of arabic numerals in dates, roman
numerals occur throughout these wills and inventories.