Fr. Richard Copsey,
O.Carm.
Institutum Carmelitanum,
Via Sforza Pallavicini, 10
ROMA, 00193
September, 1995
CONTENTS
Part I: INTRODUCTION
Part II: A: CHRONOLOGY OF THE CARMELITE HOUSE, YORK
B: NOTES ON THE HOUSE AND BUILDINGS
C. ORDINATIONS HELD IN THE CARMELITE CHURCH
D: LIST OF KNOWN PRIORS
E: POST-DISSOLUTION HISTORY OF THE SITE
Part III: INDEX AND BIOGRAPHICAL DETAILS ON THE IMPORTANT
CARMELITES ASSOCIATED WITH YORK
Part IV: BIBLIOGRAPHY
Introduction:
This booklet contains references and information derived from a number of sources about the Carmelite friary of York which have been collected together in chronological order (Part II A). This is followed by a listing of the occasions that the priory chapel is known to have been used for ordinations, the names of the known priors and the post-dissolution history of the site. An index giving the names of the individual Carmelites associated with this house is given in Part III together with any further biographical details which are available concerning their careers (not yet entered). Finally, Part IV contains a bibliography of the main sources used.
Fr. Richard Copsey, O.Carm.
PART II A: CHRONOLOGY
(Unless otherwise indicated, all Carmelites mentioned in this chronology were, at the time, members of the community of the Carmelite Priory, York).
In the founders’ list: “Eboraci conventus fundatoris domini de Vescy et Percye predicti superius memorati 1255” [De Vescy & Percy were also the founders of Hulne priory. The first founder in each case was de Vescy and then the Percy’s as their descendants].
Note: Following the division of the province into four distinctions (regional groups) in the early 1300’s, York became the senior house of the York distinction. It seems fairly clear that it also functioned as a regional study centre, offering theology courses for the brighter students from the other houses in the distinction.
First site in York
1253, 23 June The earliest known reference to the Carmelites in York is a
grant by the king of:
“... fratribus Beate Marie de Monte
Karmeli commorantibus apud Eboracum sex quercus ... ad operaciones ecclesie sue
faciendas...” [C.C.R. 1251-53, 337: Egan, K., “Medieval English Carmelite
Houses: England and Wales”, Carmelus, xvi (1969), 224]. The friars were
clearly in residence by this date but for how long is unknown. The
previous house in the foundation lists is Cambridge which was founded 1247.
1255 The king made a further grant of five oaks. [Close, 39 Hen III, m. 5: C.C.R. 1253-6, ...: VCH, 291]
1258, 18 Oct "Grant to the Carmelite Friars of York of an area of land,
6 perches in length by 4 perches in breadth, without the wall of their court
towards the stone cross at York, for the enlarging of their court; as it appears
by inquisition ad quod damnum, made by the mayor and bailiffs of York, that this
is not to the king's prejudice except that he will lose 12d. a year."
[Cal. Patent Rolls, 1247-1258, (London: HMSO, 1908), 653].
1261 "To the sheriff of York. Contrabreve to let the brethren of St. Mary of Mount Carmel dwelling at York have 2 marks without delay of the king's gift out of the issues of the county to hold their chapter. [Cal. Liberate Rolls, 1260-1267, (London: HMSO, 1961), v, 27]. Note: VCH has 1260.
1269 The archbishop of York, Giffard, sent the prior 30s. [Reg. Giffard, York (Surtees Society, ) 113].
1274, 20 Sept Ralph de Bretton was examined for priesthood in Blida church. (first recorded ordination from this house). [Reg. Giffard, York (Surtees Society, ) 197].
1275 The archbishop of York, Giffard, sent the prior 30s. and two quarters of wheat for the convent. [Reg. Giffard, York (Surtees Society, ) 298]
1289, 27 April John le Romeyn, archbishop of York, requested the Provincial, Henry of Hanna (Carm.), to receive Richard Manlovel, a canon of Thurgarton, of the Order of St. Augustine, into the Carmelite Order. [Reg. Romeyn, York, (Surtees Soc., 1913), 123].
1289 The Dean of York, Robert of Scarborough, desired to give a messuage and land in Wike-upon-Hull to the Carmelites to found a new priory. [Inq. ad quod dam. file 12, no. 7: VCH, 291] Note: This gift led to the founding of the Carmelite house in Hull.
1295, 14 July "Order to the sheriff of York to enquire whether it will be to the damage of the king or others to grant that John Overton, chaplain, may grant a messuage in York to the Friars of the order of St. Mary of Mount Carmel." [Cal. Chancery Warrants, 1244-1326, (London: HMSO, 1927), 64].
Carmelites move to a new site
1295, 16 Oct "[Licence for the alienation in mortmain by William
de Vescy who is going to Gascony on the king's service, for the saving of his
soul and the souls of his ancestors,] to the prior and Carmelite Friars at York,
of a messuage in Staynbogh in that city."
[Cal. Patent Rolls,
1292-1301, (London: HMSO, 1895), 154].
Benson has that the Carmelites
moved to land which adjoined the Foss and Hungergate, given by William de Vescy
in 1255. [G. Benson, Later Medieval York, (York, 1919), 22]. Note:
This is an error by Benson and should be 1295.
1300, 5 Feb Pope Boniface VIII wrote that he had been informed that the Carmelites had attempted to build a church in the parish of St. Saviour. [The Register of Thomas Corbridge, Lord Archbishop of York 1300-1304, (Surtees Society, vol. 138, 1925), i, 61-2].
1300, 1 April Pope Boniface VIII appointed delegates to settle the dispute over the move of the Carmelites to the parish of St. Saviour. The letter notes that the Carmelites had already settled in the new site. [The Register of Thomas Corbridge, Lord Archbishop of York 1300-1304, (Surtees Society, vol. 138, 1925), i, 61].
1300, 13 June The king gave 8 oaks “... in order to build their church”. [C.C.R. 1298-1302, 355].
1301, 17 Oct Agreement was reached between the rector of St. Saviour's parish (and the church’s patron, the Abbey of St. Mary, York) and the Carmelites concerning tithes, burials, compensation, etc. A subscript states that the archbishop would permit the Carmelites to erect their church, have burials for their own brethren and for others who choose burial with them. The agreement states that the Carmelites had already begun to live at their new place. The Carmelites were to pay 30s. a year for tithes and other dues in return for the right to have the recently built church and its graveyard in the parish. [Reg. Thomas Corbridge, (Surtees Soc., vol. 138, 1925), i, 60-2].
1304, 30 March Archbishop Corbridge gave a licence to the prior and brethren of the Order of the Blessed Mary of Mount Carmel staying in York to have their cemetery dedicated by any catholic bishop "illius, videlicet, loci, quem infra limites parochialis ecclesie sancti Salvatoris Ebor. jam inhabitare cepistis." [Reg. Thomas Corbridge, (Surtees Soc., vol. 138, 1925), i, 111].
1304, 5 Oct An indulgence granted to those whose should visit the church on this day and make their offerings on the high altar of St. Mary for the sustentation of lights and ornaments. [Drake, Ebor., 310: Audin, Handbook to York, 170: Fasti Ebor. 360: all in VCH, 292].
1304 Royal alms to the house at this time indicated a community of 24-25. [Exch. Accts. (PRO) bdle. 356, no. 7: Liber Quotid. 28 Edw. 1 (ed. Topham), 38: VCH, 292]
1311, 18 March Sir William Vavasour left the following bequest in his
will:
"Item Fratribus de Monte Carmeli XL solidos."
[Wills
and Inventories, (Surtees Society, No. 2: 1835), Part i, 14].
1312 Royal alms to the house indicated a community of 26. [Exch. Accts. (PRO) bdle. 387, no. 9: VCH, 292]
1313 The archbishop of York, Greenfield, granted them alms on account of the excessive dearness of the times. [Fasti Ebor., i, 392: VCH, 292].
1314 "-Inquisition taken at York, Sunday after the Decollation of St.
John Baptist, 8 Edward II. It is not to the damage, etc., if the Prior and
Brethren of Mount Carmel [of York, in writ] have license to assign their 'place'
in Buthum near York [where the Brethren of that Order formerly dwelt in writ] to
Master Robert de Pykeryng, Dean of the Church of St. Peter, York, and his heirs,
so that he may assign it to a chaplain to celebrate daily for the souls of the
King's progenitors, formerly Kings of England, and of the King and his heirs,
and of the said Robert, his ancestors and his heirs, and all faithful
departed. The 'place' is held of the King in frankalmoigne, without any
service, but is charged with 12d. yearly rent to the Prebendary of Stranssale
for a portion thereof, 6 perches long and 4 perches wide, outside the wall of
the Court of the Brethren, towards the stone cross, for enlarging the said
Court. The place contains 2 acres, and is worth yearly ½ mark in all
issues.
Inq. ad. q. d., file 105, No. 9"
[Baildon,
William Paley, Notes on the Religious and Secular Houses of Yorkshire: Part II,
(Yorkshire Archaeological Society, 1931), Record Series, lxxxi, 90].
1314 "Inquisition taken at York, Sunday, the feast of St. Thomas the
Martyr, 8 Edward II. It is not to the damage, etc., if Master Robert de
Pikering, Dean of the Church of Blessed Peter, York, have license to assign 3
messuages, 3 bovates and 36 acres of land and 4 acres of meadow in Knapton near
Acum, to a chaplain to celebrate every day for the souls of the King's
progenitors, sometimes Kings of England, and of the now King, and their heirs,
and for the souls of Robert and his ancestors and their heirs, and for all
faithful departed in a certain chapel of Blessed Mary at Buthum near York, where
the Prior and Brethren of the Order of Blessed Mary of Mount Carmel at York
formerly dwelt, which Robert intends to construct, for the expenses of the
chaplain and of two other chaplains also celebrating there, and of the poor
persons dwelling there. The property (except the 3 bovates) is held of the
Abbot of Blessed Mary at York, by the service of 1d. yearly, and is worth nearly
23s. in all issues. No other lands in the Abbot's fee will remian to
Robert. The 3 bovates are held of Geoffrey Luterel, knight, by the 40th
part of the service of one knight, where 15 carucates make a fee, and are worth
yearly in all issues 15s. No other land in the said town will remain to
Robert of the said fee. The is no one between the King and Robert except
the said Abbot and Geoffrey.
Inq. ad q. d., file 108, No. 8"
[Baildon, William Paley, Notes on the Religious and Secular Houses of
Yorkshire: Part II, (Yorkshire Archaeological Society, 1931), Record Series,
lxxxi, 90-1].
1314 "Inquisition taken at Styvelingflete, Sunday, the feast of St.
Michael, 8 Edward II. It is not to the damage, etc., if Master Robert de
Pykering, Dean of the Church of Blessed Peter, York, have license to assign the
advowson of the Church of Styvelingflete to a chaplain celebrating daily for the
souls of the King's progenitors, Kings of England, and of the King, and their
heirs, and of Robert and his ancestors and their heirs, and of all faithful
departed, in a Chapel of Blessed Mary which Robert intends to build at Bouthum
near York, where the Prior and Brethren of the Order of Blessed Mary of Mount
Carmel at York were wont to dwell, in order that the chaplain may appropriate
the Church and so hold it, for the sustentation of himself and two other
chaplains and of the poor persons living there. If Master Robert should
die leaving an infant heir, Thomas de Wake, as chief lord of the fee, would have
the wardship, and he is in ward to the King; the advowson is held of Thomas (who
holds of the King in chief), with certain lands and tenements there, by the
service of the fourth part of a fee; the Church is worth yearly in all issues
£40.
Inq. ad q. d., file 107, No. 18"
[Baildon, William Paley, Notes on the Religious and Secular Houses of Yorkshire:
Part II, (Yorkshire Archaeological Society, 1931), Record Series, lxxxi,
91].
1314 The archbishop of York, Greenfield, granted them alms on account of the excessive dearness of the times. [Fasti Ebor., i, 393: VCH, 292].
1314, 20 Sept "Licence, after inquisition ad quod damnum made by
the sheriff of York, for the alienation in mortmain by the Carmelite prior and
friars of York of a plot of land in Bouthum-by-York, held in frank almoin, upon
which they at one time were accustomed to dwell, to Master Robert de Pikeryng,
king's clerk, dean of the church of St. Peter, York, so that he may assign it to
a chaplain to celebrate divine service daily for the souls of the king's
progenitors, kings of England, for the soul of the king and the souls of his
heirs, and also for the souls of the said Master Robert de Pikeryng and of his
ancestors and heirs and of all Christians.
The grace was
granted for two hundred masses to be celebrated in consideration thereof.
[Cal. Patent Rolls, 1313-1317, (London: HMSO, 1898), 177].
1314, 2 Oct "Grant to the Carmelite prior and friars at York of
those messuages and plots of land in York in the street called 'Mersk', adjacent
to their dwelling, which the king held of the gift of Geoffrey de Sancto
Quintino, to hold in frank almoin for the enlargement of their said dwelling."
[Cal. Patent Rolls, 1313-1317, (London: HMSO, 1898), 182].
The Carmelites were also granted permission to build a quay on their own ground
on the bank of the king’s stew of the Foss, and to have one boat in the stew to
carry stones, brushwood and other necessities to their house. [printed in
Drake, Ebor., app.: in VCH, 292: Cal. Pat. Rolls 1313-7, 185: G. Benson, Later
Medieval York, (York, 1919), 41].
1315 The archbishop of York, Greenfield, granted them alms on account of the excessive dearness of the times. [Fasti Ebor., i, 396: VCH, 292].
1315, 28 Jan Licence to Master Robert de Pikeryng to allocate
land to his chaplain. The licence contains the phrase:
"... in
a chapel of St. Mary, which the said Master Robert de Pikeryng intends to build
for divine worship at Bouthum by York, where the Carmelite prior and friars of
York formerly dwelt."
[Cal. Patent Rolls, 1313-1317, (London: HMSO,
1898), 213].
1315, 1 Sept "Grant in frank almoin to the prior and Carmelite
friars of York in frank almoin, for the enlargement of their dwelling-place, of
the land in the city of York, which the king had of the grant of Thomas son of
William le Aguiller of York and Cicely his wife, the bounds of which are
specified in the said grant."
[Cal. Patent Rolls, 1313-1317, (London:
HMSO, 1898), 348].
1316, 24 Sept "Grant in frank almoin to the Carmelite prior and
friars of York, for the enlargement of their dwelling-place, of the land with
the building thereon in Fossegate in the city of York, which Thomas son of
William le Aguiler of York and Cicely his wife granted to the king; grant also
to them of the land in the same city which Abel de Rikhale of York had granted
to the king."
[Cal. Patent Rolls, 1313-1317, (London: HMSO, 1898),
548].
1317, 8 Sept "Licence for the alienation in mortmain by Master
Robert de Pikering, dean of the church of St. Peter, York, of the advowson of
the church of Styvelingflet to a chaplain to celebrate divine service daily for
the souls of the king, his progenitors and heirs, and also for the souls of the
said Robert and his heirs and of all Christians, in a chapel of St. Mary, which
he intends to found at Bouthum by York, where the prior and friars of the
Carmelite Order of York had been accustomed to dwell...."
[Cal.
Patent Rolls, 1317-1321, (London: HMSO, 1903), 22].
1318, 10 Nov "Licence for the alienation in mortmain by Master
Robert de Pikeryng, dean of the church of St. Peter, York, of the advowson of
the church of Styvelyngflet, in the diocese of York, to Richard de Grymeston,
master of the hospital of St. Mary, Bouthum by York, chaplain, celebrating
divine service daily for the souls of the king and his progenitors and heirs,
and also for the souls of the said Robert, his ancestors and heirs, and of all
Christians in the said hospital, which the said Robert founded in the place in
which the Carmelite Friars were formerly accustomed to dwell; ...."
[Cal. Patent Rolls, 1317-1321, (London: HMSO, 1903), 259].
1320 Archbishop Melton of York ordered the friars to pay yearly to the
rector of St. Crux a sum to pay compensation for the fact that part of the new
Carmelite site lay within the parish. [Drake, Ebor, 310: VCH, 292]
1320 Royal alms to the house indicated a community of
26. [Brit. Libr., Add. Ms. 17362, fo. 3: VCH, 292]
1322, Aug William de Paul was prior of the York house. [P.R.O., Exch. Issue Roll, E 403/198: in Emden, op. cit., 1437].
1327 May King Edward III came to York where he collected an army to fight the Scots. Knights and soldiers arrived from Hainault in June under the command of Sir John Hainault and the king assigned the house of the White Friars as the abode of Sir John and his household. On Trinity Sunday, the king held a banquet and a dance. During the revels, the guests were disturbed by an affray in the streets between the Hainaulters and the Linconshire archers. The Hainaulters were driven back to their quarters by the archers but subsequently the foreigners repulsed them. There was much bloodshed and eighty archers were buried under one stone in St. Clement's churchyard, Fossgate. Fearing another outbreak, the king sent the Hainaulters home. [G. Benson, Later Medieval York, (York, 1919), 34-5].
1328, 23 Feb A licence was granted to the Carmelites of York to have their high altar and some portable altars consecrated by any bishop. [Reg. Melton, York, (C.Y.S., 1977), i, 88].
1328, 5 Oct Archbishop Melton of York dedicated an altar at the friary. [W. H. Dixon, Fasti Eboracenses, Lives of the Archbishops of York, i, 419: Fabric Rolls of York Minster (Surtees Soc.), 236: VCH, 292].
1328, 11 Oct An indulgence relating the altar consecrated on 5 Oct was granted by archbishop Melton of York. [W. H. Dixon, Fasti Eboracenses, Lives of the Archbishops of York, i, 419: Fabric Rolls of York Minster (Surtees Soc.), 236: VCH, 292].
1331, 6 July "Licence for the alienation in mortmain to the prior and Carmelite Friars at York by John de Hathelsay of York and William de Thouthorp of Flaxton, respectively, of a messuage for the enlargement of their dwelling-place in that city. The said messuages are held of the king in burgage by yearly service of 2d. as appears by the inquisition." [Cal. Patent Rolls, 1330-1334, (London: HMSO, 1893), 156].
1335 Royal alms to the house indicated a community of 38. [Brit. Libr., Ms. Cotton Nero C. viii, fo. 52, 202: VCH, 292]
1337 Royal alms to the house indicated a community of 42. [Brit. Libr., Ms. Cotton Nero C. viii, fo. 52, 206v: VCH, 292]
1338, 30 June "Licence for the alienation in mortmain by Master
William la Zouche, king's clerk, to the prior and Carmelite Friars of York of 3
acres of land and certain houses built thereon for the enlargement of their
dwelling-place."
[Cal. Patent Rolls, 1338-1340, (London: HMSO, 1898),
106].
1341, 12 Oct John Polestead, Carmelite provincial, died in York on 12 Oct 1341 and he was buried there "sub splendido marmore tumulatus". [Bodl. Libr. Bodley Ms. 73, fos. 80, 133v: Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fos. 43v, 67v-68].
1342, 16 March In the will of Christiana Rous, wife (relict) of John
Rous occurs:
"Item. do lego quatuor ordinibus Fratrum Mendicantium in
Ebor. xijs. argenti equali porcione." [Testamenta Eboracensis I, (Surtees
Soc., vol. 4, 1855), 5].
1342, 4 Sept In the will of Magister Thomas de Yarom occurs:
"Item. fratribus Carmelitis civitatis memoratae xld."
[Testamenta Eboracensis I, (Surtees Soc., vol. 4, 1855), 4].
1344 Ralph O’Kelly, bishop of Leichlin, acted as assistant in York. [C. Eubel, Hierarch. Medii et Recent. Aevi, (Regensburg, 1913, repr. 1960), i, 550].
1345, 4 Dec In the will of Robert de Playce occurs:
"Item fratribus predicationibus, minoribus, Carmelitis et ordinis Sancti
Augustini Ebor. xls. per equales porciones dividendos inter eos
percipiendos." [Testamenta Eboracensis I, (Surtees Soc., vol. 4, 1855),
10].
1345, 14 Feb In the will of Peter del Hay de Spaldynton:
"Item cuilibet ordini fratrum Ebor. dimidiam quarteriam bladi."
[Testamenta Eboracensis I, (Surtees Soc., vol. 4, 1855), 12].
1345, 30 April In the will of Magister John de Wodhous:
"Item fratribus predicatoribus, minoribus, Augustinis et de Monte
Carmeli Ebor. xxvjs. inter ipsos equaliter dividendos." [Testamenta
Eboracensis I, (Surtees Soc., vol. 4, 1855), 15].
1348 The friars asked permission to extend their quay into the Foss in order to avoid an accumulation of mud. [Inq. ad quod dam., file 291, no. 8: VCH, 292].
1349 There was a bequest to the house. [Brit. Libr., Lansdowne Ms. 312: Index to the Charters & Rolls of the Department of Manuscripts: British Museum, ed. H. Ellis, (British Museum, 1912), ii, 836].
1350 The Carmelites had erected a chapel above the gateway to the Fossgate in which there was an image of Our Lady. As this caused injury to the rector of St. Crux, they were ordered to remove the image and agree that no service would be celebrated there, no bell tolled and no oblation received. [Drake, Ebor., ...: York Archiepis. Reg. Zouch, fo. 49: in VCH, 292].
1350, 22 July "Licence, for 6s. 8d. which Roger de Fournays,
'barbour,' citizen of York, will pay to the king, for the alienation in mortmain
by the same Roger to the dean and chapter of the church of St. Peter, York, of
three shops in St. Andrew's Street, in the said city, held of the king in free
burgage by the service of 1d. yearly to the housegabel, as appears by
inquisition taken by Gerard Salvayn, escheator in the county of York, in
exchange for a messuage in Hundegate, held of the king in frank almoin, as by
the inquisition likewise appears, adjoining the dwelling-place of the prior and
Carmelite Friars in the same city, to be given to the said prior and Friars and
their successors by the dean and chapter for the enlargement of the said
dwelling-place.
And the 6s. 8d. have been paid in the hanaper."
[Cal. Patent Rolls, 1348-1350, (London: HMSO, 1905), 553].
1358, March An order of protection from king Edward III was issued:
"On behalf of Richard, son of John de Thornton, citizen and spicer of
York, it has been shown that he when within the years of puberty was lately
ensnared and seduced by some friars of the house of Carmelite Friars in York
insomuch that by their persuasion he took the habit of the same friars in their
house, and they fraudulently induced him so that they made him profess the order
within the years of puberty de facto, although of right they could not, and
although he within the time of his puberty and before the completion of the
fourteenth year of his age laid aside the habit and went forth from the house
and order, as lawful was for him to do in this case, as is asserted, as by
process before the commissary general of the court of York, had thereof by the
contumacy of the said friars and exhibited before the king, fully appears,
nevertheless the prior and friars try to take him as an apostate; and the king
has taken the said Richard into his protection and special defence, not willing
that by colour of any licence to the friars of the said order of taking
apostates of the order granted by the king or any mandate thereof directed to
others, the said Richard be taken or disturbed until the matter betweeen them
have been more fully discussed."
[Cal. Patent Rolls, 1358-1361,
(London: HMSO, 1911), 19].
Later John Thornton was released from his
vows. [Pat. 32 Edw III, pt ii, m. 28; in A. Little, Hist. of Yorks.,
(V.C.H., 1913), iii, 292].
1362 "John de Calby, Prior of the Brethren of the Order of Blessed Mary
of Mount Carmel at York, v. Roger de Shestre, mason, for breaking his contract
to serve the Prior as mason [latomus] at Tadcastre. Verdict for the
plaintiff; damages, 40s.
Coram Rege, Mich. 36 Edw. III, m. 36."
[Baildon, William Paley, Notes on the Religious and Secular Houses of
Yorkshire: Part II, (Yorkshire Archaeological Society, 1931), Record Series,
lxxxi, 91].
1368 A provincial chapter was held in York. [Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 79v-].
1370-99 Bale records a Carmelite 'Richard Coventre' whom he describes as 'lector, nacione Anglius episcopus Cerviensis Carmelita.' [Bodl. Libr. Bodley Ms. 73 (S.C. 27635), fo. 137v: Lambeth Palace Libr., Ms. 192, fo. 43v]. A 'Richard' bishop of Serviensis was acting as suffragan in York from 1370-1399. [Handbook Brit. Chron., (Royal Hist. Soc., 1986), 285]. Bale describes him as 'vir venerabilis et devotus' and records that he died in York. [Bale, J., Bodl. Libr., Ms. Selden supra 41, fo. 169].
1371 "A.D. 1371 - William, Prior of the Brethren of the Order of
Blessed Mary of Mount Carmel at York, v. John de Taddecastre and Thomas, son of
Henry de Grymeston of Taddecastre, for accounts as the Prior's receivers.
De Banco, Trin 45 Edw III m. 184
Mich 45 Edw III m. 204"
[Baildon, William Paley, Notes on the
Religious and Secular Houses of Yorkshire: Part I, (Yorkshire Archaeological
Society, 1894), Record Series, xvii, 242].
Note: A 'Thomas, son of Henry de Grymeston, near Tadcastre' was one of the defendants of an action for a debt of 6 marks brought by the prior of the Carmelites at Scarborough, Mauger de Baildon, in 1369. [Baildon, op. cit., 194].
1374 Brother John Harold was killed in the Carmelite house by brother John Wy. [Pat. 10 Richard II, pt. ii, m. 37; in A. Little, Hist. of Yorks., (V.C.H., 1913), iii, 292]. John Wy was pardoned on 19 July 1386 for causing the death of fr. John Harald (Carm.) in 1374 in the York convent and his consequent outlawry. [Pat. 10 Richard II, pt. ii, m. 37; A. Little, Hist. of Yorks., (V.C.H., 1913), iii, 292].
1378 "A.D. 1378 - William, Prior of the Order of Blessed Mary of Mount
Carmel at York, v. Elen, widow of Thomas de Duffeld, William Barker of
Tadcaster, Margaret, widow of John Calays and others; debt.
De
Banco, Hil 1 Ric II m. 228 d."
[Baildon, William Paley, Notes
on the Religious and Secular Houses of Yorkshire: Part I, (Yorkshire
Archaeological Society, 1894), Record Series, xvii, 242].
Note: A 'Maude, widow of John Caleys of Tadcastre' was one of the defendants of an action for a debt of 10 marks brought by the prior of the Carmelites at Scarborough, Mauger de Baildon, 1369. [Baildon, op. cit., 194].
1378 "A.D. 1378 - The Prior of the Order of Blessed Mary of Mount
Carmel, York, v. John de Housom, potter, for breaking the Prior's close at York,
and digging in his soil, and taking earth to the value of 10 marks.
De Banco, Hil 1 Ric II m. 242 d."
[Baildon,
William Paley, Notes on the Religious and Secular Houses of Yorkshire: Part I,
(Yorkshire Archaeological Society, 1894), Record Series, xvii, 242].
1385 "A.D. 1385 - The Prior and Brethren of the Order of Blessed Mary
of Mount Carmel at York, v. John de Driffeld, 'plastrer' for building an oven so
badly that it utterly collapsed. The Prior claims 20 marks damages.
De Banco, Hil 9 Ric II m. 64."
[Baildon,
William Paley, Notes on the Religious and Secular Houses of Yorkshire: Part I,
(Yorkshire Archaeological Society, 1894), Record Series, xvii, 242].
1387 "A.D. 1387 - John Hardy, executor of the will of William Hardy,
late parson of Lekyngfeld, and Mauger de Baildon, Prior of the Brethren of the
Order of S. Mary of Mount Carmel, York, and Brother John de Pontfreyt, of the
same Priory, co-executors of the said John, claim against Thomas de Shirburn,
Prior of the Monastery or Priory of Drax, of the Order of S. Augustine, of the
diocese of York, £100 which he unjustly detains.
De Banco, Mich
11 Ric II m. 150 d."
[Baildon, William Paley, Notes on the Religious
and Secular Houses of Yorkshire: Part I, (Yorkshire Archaeological Society,
1894), Record Series, xvii, 43].
1387 Maugerus (Clark-Maxwell has 'Mangerus'), the prior, issued a letter of confraternity to Roger Low. [Bodl. Libr. Ms. Hearne's Diary 131, p. 1: in Rev. Clark-Maxwell, "Some further letters of confraternity" Archaeologia, lxxix, (1929), 212].
1389, 9 March In the will of John, Lord Neville of Raby occurs
the following bequest:
"Item lego cuilibet Domui Fratrum quattuor
Ordinum in Eboraco, et deinde usque Berwyke super Twede, et usque Karliolum et
ibidem, xl s., ad distribuendam inter omnes Fratres Capellanos tantum cujuslibet
conventus, sicut porcio dictae summae de xl s. possit extendere per aequales
porciones, et quod quilibet dictorum Capellanorum sit seisitus de porcione sua."
[Wills and Inventories, (Surtees Society, No. 2: 1835), Part i,
41].
1392 The reversion of two plots of land at the east and the west of the
church was secured to the Carmelites by Henry de Percy, lord of Spofforth, and
John de Acom, late parson of Catton, and by John Berden and John Braythwayte,
after the death of Maud late wife of Henry de Rybstone. [Pat. 16 Ric. II,
pt. ii, m. 28, 21: VCH, 293: Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1391-6, 191].
Note: It
seems likely that after acquiring this property the Carmelite began to rebuild
or enlarge their church. See grant by bishop of Durham in 1404.
1396 A provincial chapter was held in York. [Ms. Bodley 73, fo.
79v-].
1398, 2 May William Calverton, listed as magister, was
granted permission to preach and hear confessions in the diocese of York on 2
May 1398. [Reg. Scrope, York, (Borthwick Inst., 1981), ii, 12].
Note: He was a Carmelite of Nottingham when he was ordained deacon on 22 May
1372 at Sallowe. [Reg. Stretton, Coventry & Lichfield, (William Salt
Arch. Soc., 1905), viii, 259].
1399, 12 May John Kynyngham, Carmelite provincial, died in York and was buried there. [Bodl. Libr. Bodley Ms. 73, fo. 42v].
1400 "A.D. 1400 - The Prior of the Brethren of the Order of S. Mary of
Mount Carmel, York, and Brother Mauger de Baildon, of the same Priory, executors
of the will of Dionis, widow of Walter Ferrour, claimed against William de
Roweston of Beverley 20 marks debt, and against William de Cawode of
Barton-on-Humber, 'littester', 4 marks debt.
De Banco, East 1
Hen IV m. 365"
[Baildon, William Paley, Notes on the Religious and
Secular Houses of Yorkshire: Part I, (Yorkshire Archaeological Society, 1894),
Record Series, xvii, 243].
1400, 30 Jan A Carmelite, Thomas Forsett, described as 'sacre theologie
lector' was granted permission to preach and hear confessions in the diocese of
York. [Reg. Scrope, York, (Borthwick Inst., 1981), ii, 12].
1400, 8 Aug Thomas Esk was granted permission to preach and hear confessions
in the diocese of York. [Reg. Scrope, York, (Borthwick Inst., 1981), ii,
12].
1402, 18 Aug Thomas Esington, listed as sacre pagine
professor, i.e. D.Th., was granted permission to preach, hear confessions and
impose penance on the confessed in the diocese of York. [Reg. Scrope,
York, (Borthwick Inst. 1986), ii, 13].
1404 Walter Skirlaw, bishop of Durham, left £40 in his will for the rebuilding of the church if it had not been finished by the time of his death. [Test. Ebor., i, 308: VCH, 293].
1408 Sir Thomas Bardolf was attainted as a rebel and executed. His heart was buried in the Carmelite church. [VCH, 293]. See also Part II B.
1411, 18 April In the will of Master Alan de Newerk, occurs:
"Item lego quatuor conventibus fratrum mendicancium Ebor' iiij libras
inter eos equaliter dividendas." [Reg. Thomas Langley, Durham, 1406-37,
ed. R. Storey, (Surtees Soc., 1956), i, 158].
1415 Lady Margaret Vavasour, widow of Sir Henry Vavasour of Hazlewood
Castle, died and was buried in the chapel at Hazlewood. In her will, she
left 40s to the Carmelite friars of York. [K. Longley, A Short History and
Guide to Hazlewood Chapel, (Hazlewood, undated c. 1980), 5]
1426-7 Magister John Bate was prior of York when Thomas Netter, the
provincial, wrote him a letter concerning the preaching of brother John Leysing
who had asserted in a sermon at Doncaster on the Feast of the Purification that
the offerings for the feast might be offered in churches other than the parish
church. [Mon. Hist. Carm., i, 474-5: Carmel in Britain, ii, ...].
This letter must be dated 1426-7 as it mentions the recent provincial chapter
held in Oxford. [Bodl. Libr. Bodley 73, fo. 81v].
1429, 26
Jan John Bate was still prior of York on 26 Jan 1429 when he died and was buried
in the choir. [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 94-94v]. The
epitaph over his tomb was: 'Bati doctoris haec condit petra cadaver'.
[Mon. Hist. Carm., i, 474]
1430-1 William Houedan,
Carmelite of York, was admitted to the Corpus Christi guild in York in
1430-1. [Reg. Guild of Corpus Christi in the city of York, (Surtees Soc.,
1872), 31].
1435, 21 June In the will of Master Thomas Hebbeden, dean of
Auckland, occurs:
"Item lego iiij ordinibus fratrum infra civitatem
Ebor' iiij marcas equaliter dividendas." [Reg. Thomas Langley, Durham,
1406-37, ed. R. Storey, (Surtees Soc., 1959), iv, 160].
1438, 19 June The name of 'Brother Carlele', occurs in the will of John Staynhum, draper, dated 19 June 1438 when he was left a bequest of 6s. 8d. [Borthwick Institute, P.R.3 525V: noted by Mrs. Tessa Frank].
1440 A provincial chapter was held in York. [Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 79v-].
1442-3 Richard Huntplese and Robert Whixlay, Carmelites of York, was admitted to the Corpus Christi guild. [Reg. Guild of Corpus Christi in the city of York, (Surtees Soc., 1872), 42].
1443, 13 July Sir John Clervaux, of Croft left in his will: "the
friars of York, 20s."
[Saywell, Rev. J. L., The History and
Annals of Northallerton, Yorkshire, (Northallerton: J. Vasey, 1885), rev. ed.,
38].
Note: He was possibly the son of the Sir John Clervaux who died
in 1390 and left a bequest to the Carmelites of Northallerton.
1445 Thomas Carlyle, Carmelite of York, was admitted to the Corpus Christi Guild. [Reg. Guild of Corpus Christi, (Surtees Soc., 1872), ].
1446, 7 Oct A Carmelite, William Pary, lector in theology, was licensed to
hear confessions in the diocese of York. [Reg. Kempe, York, fo. 105v].
1448 Pope Nicholas V confirmed the grant made to Thomas
Carlyle, "a friar of York, by John, master general of the Order (with the
unanimous consent of the chapter of the order then held in Asti) and the prior
and friars of the said house, of certain privileges, etc. contained more
fully in letters bearing the seals of the said John and prior and convent which
letters the pope has caused to be inspected". This was not dated but some
time between 19 March 1448 and 18 March 1449. [C.P.L., x, 1447-1455,
page?].
1453 Richard Waretyr, a Carmelite of York, joined the Corpus Christi guild. [Reg. Guild of Corpus Christi in the city of York, (Surtees Soc., 1872), 52].
1461-2 George Hewod, a Carmelite of York, joined the Corpus Christi guild. [Reg. Guild of Corpus Christi in the city of York, (Surtees Soc., 1872), 62].
1460 & 1462 John Green, Carmelite bishop of Kilfenora, acted as assistant to William Booth, archbishop of York, in 1460 and 1462. [Memorials of the Church of SS. Peter & Wilfrid, Ripon, ed. J. Fowler, (Surtees Society, 1882), ii, 11: where Emden claims he is inaccurately designated 'bp. of the Isles' but see above].
1466 15 Jan A feast was held to celebrate the installation of George Neville as archbishop of York at Cawood castle. 2,000 people were present at a magnificent banquet, among whom were 18 priors and possibly included the prior of the Carmelite house, York. (For a full description, see Benson). [G. Benson, Later Medieval York, (York, 1919), 88-9].
1469 Robert Miklow & Thomas Stanes, Carmelites of York, was admitted to the Corpus Christi guild. [Reg. Guild of Corpus Christi in city of York, (Surtees Soc., 1872), 73].
1470 A Carmelite, Thomas Davell, was admitted as a member of the Corpus Christi Guild in York. [Reg. of Corpus Christi Guild of city of York, (Surtees Soc., 1872), 78].
1475, 18 Feb The ordination of Thomas Smyth was held in the Carmelite church, by William, the bishop of Dromore. Thomas Smyth was later instituted to a chantry in St. Saviour's, York, on 1 March, 1483. [Reg. Rotherham, York, (C.Y.S., 1976), i, 26].
1478, 19 Sept An ordination was held in the Carmelite church of Edmund Kyrey by William, bishop of Dromore. [Reg. Rotherham, York, (C.Y.S., 1976), i, 213].
1479, 18 Sept An ordination was held in the Carmelite church. [Reg. Bothe, York, ( ), ]
1481, 7 Sept There was a grant of forty day's indulgence to those who contribute to the sustenance of paupers of either sex in the house called Masyndew in Whitefrerelayn, York. [Reg. Rotherham, York, (C.Y.S., 1976), i, 191].
1490, 12 May "Memorandum the xij day of May the fit yere of the
reign of King Henry [the seventh] tofore the right wirshupful sir John Gillyot
maier of the cite of [York], (William Tayte), Robert Johnson grocer, Peris Coke
and John Stokesley arbitrours betwix (H. Thwayet) prior of the White Freris of
the cite of York of the one partie, and the ({Sir Thomas Davell}) parson of
Saynt Saveour within the same cite {of that othre partie}, awardes that for such
receiting of freris of the same and certan gudes by the same freris to hym (brg)
broght, the said parson to content and pay to the {said} prior (of the said
prior) and behufe of the co[n]vent of the said white freris xl s. be
[incomplete]."
[The York House Books 1461-1490, ed. Lorraine C.
Attred (Stroud, Glos.: Alan Sutton, for the Richard III & Yorkist History
Trust, 1991), 679].
c.1500 There is a manuscript in the College of Arms, marked L8, which
belonged to John Wrythe, alias Wriothesley, Garter, who died in died. The
document is partly in his writing and partly in that of his son, who succeeded
him as Garter, and died in 1534. In it, there is an entry on the
Carmelites at York:
"Memorandum quod quinto Idus Januarij ceperunt
fratres Carmeliste inhabitare civitatem Eboracum, Anno domini Mo cco.
lxxxxvo, Et anno domini Mo cco xijo in Angliam intraverunt.
Anno Milleno cco duodeno
Rolum carmeliste
capiunt ad termina vite
Carmis concessi primus in boria loca
Vessy
Persy firmavit deus huic sibj nos sociabit.
Cy enfuit les noms des nobles qui sont enterres en
leglise des 'diz' freres.
Et primo Johannes Vavasor armiger
Item Radulphus Lasselles
Item dominus
Wilielmus Mylles miles
Item dominus Thomas Malbys miles
Item domina Isabella uxor ejus
Item Johannes
Nesby armiger
Item Rybsten armiger
Item cor
domini de Bardolf."
[Collectanea Topographica & Genealogica,
(London: John Bowyer Nichols, 1837), iv, 128].
1500 In the will of Lady Jane Strangweys, there occurs the bequest:
"... I bequeath 40s to the four orders of friars within the
said city of York, for four trentals of masses to be said, with Placebo and
Dirige, for my soul and for all Christian souls within seven days immediately
after the day of my burial, the aforesaid 40s. to be divided equally between
them. I wish the prior and the convent of each house of the four orders
shall be present around my body on the day of my burial; and that each prior
shall have 10s. towards the repair of his house; each priest who is present on
the day of my burial shall have 4d.; each parish clerk 2d. and each child with a
surplice, 1d. ..." [York, Borthwick Institute, Prob. Reg. 6, fos.
16v-18r: in Catholic England, trans. R. N. Swanson, (Manchester Univ. Press,
1993), 250].
1503 15 July Queen Margaret came to York on her way to Scotland. She was met outside the town by the two Sheriffs of York and 100 citizens on horseback. Many of the nobility joined the retinue including Lord and Lady Latimer, Lord Scrope and the Duke of Northumberland and there were also friars from the four mendicant orders in York. [G. Benson, Later Medieval York, (York, 1919), 110].
1522 A provincial chapter was held in York. [Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 79v-]. It was presided over by the prior general, Bernadine Landucci ans John Bird was elected provincial.
1527, Monday 20 July In the Earl of Northumberland's accounts occurs
the following item:
"...for repairs of the White Friars at York,
£8."
1527-8 In the accounts of the Earl of Northumberland, there occurs the
following:
(From Michaelmas 13 Henry VIII to Michaelmas 14 Henry
VIII) "To John Carter, prior of the White Friars, York, annuity of 40s."
(From Michaelmas 14 Henry VIII) "To friar John Cartier, prior of the
White Friars, York, 40s."
[L. & P. Henry VIII, ed. J.
Brewer, (London: Longmans, 1872), iv, (2), 1533].
1534, April Oath of Obedience:
"All friars of every
monastery must be assembled in their chapter house, and examined separately
concerning their faith and obedience to Henry VIII, and bound by an oath of
allegiance to him, Queen Anne and her present and future issue. They must
be bound by oath to preach and persuade the people of the above at every
opportunity. They must acknowledge the king as the supreme head of the
Church, as Convocation and Parliament have decreed. They must confess that
the bishop of Rome has no more authority than other bishops. They shall
not call the bishop of Rome pope either privately or publicly, or pray for him
as such. They shall not presume to wrest the Scriptures, but preach the
words and deeds of Christ sincerely and simply, according to the meaning of the
Holy Scripture and Catholic doctors. The sermons of each preacher must be
carefully examined and burnt if not Catholic, orthodox and worthy of a Christian
preacher.
"Preachers must be warned to commend to God and the prayers of the people, first the King as head of the Church of England, then queen Anne with her child, and lastly the archbishop of Canterbury, with the other orders of the clergy. Each house must be obliged to show their gold, silver and other moveable goods, and deliver an inventory of them. Each house must take an oath under their convent seal to observe the above orders." [Letters and Papers of Henry VIII, (London, 1883), vii, 590].
1536, 24 Jan On 24 Jan 1536, archbishop Lee of York reported to Thomas Cromwell that a 'light fryer' had been engaged in an ongoing argument with the vicar of Donacaster. [Borthwick Institute, York, R.I.28, fo. 91: discussed in Fairfield, op. cit., 37-8]. The friar had been preaching on matters forbidden by the King and Lee had warned both him and the vicar to cease. In the meantime, however, the vicar and certain parishioners had laid articles against the Carmelite, listing the objectionable points made in his preaching. In response to a letter from Lee summoning him, the friar had replied that he was going to London for counsel. Upon his return, he had been cited to appear before the archbishop but there was no response and Lee had appointed a commission to examine the articles and he intended to revoke the friar's licence to preach. The name of the friar is not mentioned in Lee's records but Fairfield concludes that it was probably John Bale, then prior of Doncaster. [Fairfield, op. cit., 37].
Bale himself, in one of his books published in 1543, recalled that Lee had examined him on one occasion "upon the artycle of honourynge and prayenge to the sayntes, devyded into xvii artycles." This examination, which may have been in 1536 or earlier after his previous problem, took place at York before archbishop Lee and in the presence of Geoffrey Downes, prebendary of Holme Archiepiscopi in the church of York. (Downes was Bale's own tutor at Jesus College, Cambridge). [Bale, J., Yet a course at the Romyshe foxe (Zurich, 1543), fos. 86a, 86b].
1536, 20 March James Higgs, Carmelite of the York diocese, was granted a dispensation to wear the habit of his order beneath that of a secular priest for a fee of £4. [D. Chambers, Reg. Fac. Off., (Oxford, 1966), 48]. Bale lists him as one of those who: "...sua Babilone cum suis papisticis decretis relinquerunt.." [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Selden supra 41, fo. 195v]. Note: From York or one of the other Carmelite houses in the diocese.
1538 "John Shaw, mayor and merchant of Fossgate, wished six aldermen preceded by the four orders of friars to bear his body to its resting place in the high choir of his parish church, St. Crux, in York." [Reformation: Principle and Practice, essays in honour of A. G. Dickens, ed. Peter Newman Brooks, (London: Scolar Press, 1980), p. 210].
1538, 20 July The prior of York was present at the trial of the heretic, William Cowbridge, for heresy at Aylesbury, and attempted to persuade him of his errors. [Letters and Papers of Henry VIII, (London, 1893), xiii, (1), 1434, p. 429-30].
1538, 27th Nov The surrender document was signed by the prior, ten
friars (one signature obliterated) and three novices.
The surrender
document is preserved in P.R.O.:
"Prioratus Fratrum Carmelitarum infra muros civitatis Ebor. 27th Nov 30 Hen. VIII.
Signatures:
Simon Clarkesum, prior Robertus
Towerson, presbiter
Wylliam Gramswyke, presbiter Roger
Ratclyff, presbiter
John Whytt, presbiter
Christoforus Wanton, presbiter
Thomas Mettyngam, presbiter
Gylbrte Wode, presbiter
Wilhelmus Relatson, presbiter John
Wylson }
...... John Body } novicij
Jacobus Jonson, presbiter Peter Langstrope }
The impression of the seal obliterated."
[Eighth Report of
the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records, (London, 1842), appendix ii, 51:
Letters & Papers, Henry VIII, (1893), xiii, (2), 919 (p. 382)].
1538, 15 Dec Letter from Sir George Lawson and others to Thomas
Cromwell:
"Have received his letters with the King's order concerning
the lead and bells of the houses of religion contained in their
commission. Have already committed the custody of them to substantial
persons and have sold none. Have quietly taken the surrenders and
dissolved the monasteries of ... and the friars at ... Doncaster, ...
York, 15 Dec." [Letters & Papers, Henry VIII, (1893), xiii, (2), 1064
(p. 454)].
1538, Dec. "A brief certificate made upon the dissolution of
divers monasteries and priories there surrendered in the months of November and
December in the 30th year of the reign of our Sovereign Lord Henry the Eighth.
The contents are set forth in columns under the heads: 1
Names of the houses with names of the keepers. 2. Clear annual
value. 3. Number of abbots and brethren with their pensions.
4. Clear money remaining of the lands. 5. 'The stock, store, and
domestical stuff there sold, with debts received.' 6. 'Rewards with the
portions laid unto the abbots.' 7. Remains of the price of goods and
chattels. 8. Lead and bells remaining. 9. Woods and
underwoods. 10. Plate and jewels.
The houses are
... White Friars, York (Sir George Lawson); ...
ii. 'The
particularities off plaite' in each house.
2. A first draft of §1, with two additional columns, showing the amount of debts owing to and by the different houses." [Letters & Papers, Henry VIII, (1893), xiii, (2), 1172 (p. 486-7)].
The vestments and other goods in the house consisting of kitchen and brewing utensils, four poor feather beds, coverlets, bolsters, etc. were bought by Sir George Lawson for £7 4s. 4d. Out of this, £1 was given to the prior and £2 18s. 4d. distributed among the friars. There were no debts. The lead on the roof of the church, estimated at 20 fother, and two bells weighing 2,300 lb. were reserved. The plate and jewels, sent to the king’s house, consisted of three chalices, one cross gilt, one flat piece, three masers, one salt, twelves spoons, and one pyx of ivory with silver foot, weighing in all 98 oz. [Mins. Accts. 29-30 Hen. VIII (Yorks), no. 187: Suppression P. (P.R.O.), iii, fos. 5, 92, 93: in VCH, 293].
The property consisted of the site, valued at 20s. per year, and seven tenements adjacent to it, which were soon let to tenants for £3 19s. per year. [Mins. Accts. 30-1 Hen. VIII (Yorks), no. 166].
1539, 10 March Letter of Richard Ingworth, bishop of Dover, to
Thomas Cromwell:
"Further my good Lord, in those parts within the
diocese of York, the poor men that make surrender of their houses, be hardly
ordered by the Bishop's officers at the Bishop's commandment, so that they
cannot be suffered to sing [mass], nor say in any parish church, without they
show the Letters of their Orders; my letters or their capacities
notwithstanding; and the charges of these Letters of their Orders be so great
that the poor men be not able to bear it; some must go an hundred miles to seek
them, and when they come there, the charges of searching the register is so
great that they be not able to pay it, and so they come home again confounded.
"I have been with my Lord of York, and showed him your Lordship's
letter, that your commandment is that they which so have surrendered their
houses, should be suffered without interruption to sing and say in any
church. The Bishop made many objections, and said that it must be known
whether they were priests or no, and I certified him that we that received the
houses made due search which were priests and which were none, and so made
certificate to your Lordship, and your Lordship to the King's Grace, so that by
the means their capacities were granted, wherefore I desired him to accept their
capacities from the King's Grace with so much favour as the Bishop of Rome's
capacities before had been received; for the which there was never search made,
but straight obeyed. He at the last granted that so many as showed my hand
should be allowed till that their capacities might come, but there be many that
be put out by other commissions that have not my hand, wherefore your Lordship
should do a charitable deed to write your letters to the Bishop, that he
straight at the sight of your letters might send through his diocese, that all
curates might have warning to suffer such poor men that have given up their
houses, to sing in their churches, for they all have [had] before, commandment
of the Bishop that they shall not suffer them to sing without they show their
Letters of the Orders, the which is not possible for them to do..." [G.
Cook, Letters to Cromwell..., (London: Black, 1965), 235].
1557, 19 Feb Thomas Bretton, was a Carmelite of York before the dissolution
of the house. Afterwards, he was appointed rector of Boltby. He
married Ellen Cuthberte and had a number of children. On 19 Feb 1557,
after the accession of Queen Mary, he and his wife were brought before the
archbishop of York where Ellen Cuthberte denied that she knew about Bretton's
religious vows. They were divorced. Ellen was pardoned while Bretton
was ordered to do penance in York. [A. Dickens, Marian Reaction in the
Diocese of York, (York: St. Anthony's Hall, 1957), 23].
PART II B:
NOTES ON THE HOUSE AND BUILDINGS
First site: This was in Bootham, near the Horsefair. [VCH, 291]
Second site: Boundaries were Stonebow Lane on the north, the Foss on the
south, Mersk Lane on the west, and Fossgate on the east. [Pat. 23 Edw. I,
m. 3 (sched.); Chart R. 28 Edw. I, m. 4 (printed in Drake, Ebor. App. p. li);
Coll. Topog. et Gentile. iv, 128: all in VCH, 292].
Some details of
the site are given in Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 6970, fos. 97-8. [VCH, 292].
Note: Mersk Lane is now lost and not to be identified with Hungate:
P.N. Yorks E.R. (E.P.N.S.), 294; in the 14th century the site did extend to
Hungate on the west. [VCH II, 361].
c. 1535-43: Leland recorded about the house that:
"The
White Freres not very far from Laythorpe gate."
[The Itinerary of
John Leland in or about the years 1535-1543, ed. Lucy Toulmin Smith (London:
Centaur, 1964), vol. i, p. 55].
Church: The friary church stood in the northern part of the precinct, within St. Saviour’s parish.
Gatehouse The entrance to the Carmelite priory was adorned with the shields
of Neville and Skirlaw, etc. [G. Benson, Later Medieval York, (York,
1919), 59].
The gateway was in Fossgate near its junction with
Pavement, and within the parish of St. Crux. [VCH II, 361].
Seals: 1. common seal M979
A defaced fragment
apparently as Brit. Mus. 4411 E 322/277 1538
[CAT PRO. I. page
103].
2. common seal
The Virgin with crown seated on a throne,
the Child on the left knee, between two saints standing; on the left, an
archbishop with mitre, lifting the right hand in benediction, in the left hand a
key. In base, a shield of the arms of England, slung by a strap, upon a
bifurcated tree, between two kneeling friars. Field diapered lozengy, with a
small leaf in each space. All within a carved rosette of sixteen points.
"*SIGILLU COMMUNE . FRATRU ORDIS BEATE . MA[RI]E . MONTE . CARMELI .
DON . EBORACV."
Round Fourteenth
century
[Brit. Mus. Seals, lxxv, 54. (Rough reproduction in Drake
Ebor. (no. xv) referred to in Little, VCH, York, p. 293].
c.1500 There is a manuscript in the College of Arms, marked L8, which
belonged to John Wrythe, alias Wriothesley, Garter, who died in died. The
document is partly in his writing and partly in that of his son, who succeeded
him as Garter, and died in 1534. In it, there is an entry on the
Carmelites at York:
"Memorandum quod quinto Idus Januarij ceperunt
fratres Carmeliste inhabitare civitatem Eboracum, Anno domini Mo cco.
lxxxxvo, Et anno domini Mo cco xijo in Angliam intraverunt.
Anno Milleno cco duodeno
Rolum carmeliste
capiunt ad termina vite
Carmis concessi primus in boria loca
Vessy
Persy firmavit deus huic sibj nos sociabit.
Cy enfuit les noms des nobles qui sont enterres en
leglise des 'diz' freres.
Et primo Johannes Vavasor armiger
Item Radulphus Lasselles
Item dominus
Wilielmus Mylles miles
Item dominus Thomas Malbys miles
Item domina Isabella uxor ejus
Item Johannes
Nesby armiger
Item Rybsten armiger
Item cor
domini de Bardolf."
[Collectanea Topographica & Genealogica,
(London: John Bowyer Nichols, 1837), iv, 128].
With regard the burials in the church:
“The heart of
Sir Bardolf” probably refers to Thomas Bardolf, rebel who was attainted in
1408.
A Latin translation of mag. Walter Hilton's Scale of Perfection, owned by William Pole (Carm.) and made by Thomas Fishlake (Carm..) still survives in York Minster, Dean & Chapter Library, Ms. xvi, K.5. [H. L. Gardner, in Medium Aevi, v, (1936), 22].
PART II C: ORDINATIONS IN THE CARMELITE CHURCH, YORK
Ordinations were held in the house on the following dates:
[These are
taken from the published registers: there will be many other occasions when
ordinations were held there which are listed in the other surviving registers
which have not yet been published]
20 Sept 1343 [Reg. le Zouche, York, fo. 4v]
18 Dec 1344 [
" fo. 8v]
12 March 1345 [ " fo. 10]
17 Dec
1345 [ " fo. 13v]
11 March 1346 [ " fo. 14]
10
June 1346 [ " fo. 15v]
18 Sept 1350 [ " fo. 49]
21 Dec 1370 [Reg. Thoresby, York ]
1 March 1371 [
" ]
18 Dec 1372 [ " ]
11 June 1373 [ " ]
22 Sept 1375 [Reg. Neville, York, fo. 120v]
21 Feb 1377 [
" , fo. 127]
28 March 1422 [Sede Vacante Reg.,
York, i, fo. 412]
14 March 1427 [Reg. Kempe, York, fo. 228v]
27 Feb 1428 [ " fo. 231]
24 Sept 1429 [ " fo.
235]
10 June 1430 [ " fo. 237v]
17 March 1431
[ " fo. 239v]
8 March 1438 [ " fo. 256]
28 Feb 1439 [ " fo. 258v]
11 march 1441 [ " fo. 264]
6 April 1443 [ " fo. 268v]
12 March 1446
[ " fo. 283v]
17 Dec 1446 [ " fo. 285v]
17 Feb
1448 [ " fo. 288]
21 Sept 1448 [ " fo. 290v]
26 May 1453 [Reg. W. Bothe, York]
24 Sept 1457 [ " ]
23 Sept 1458 [ " ]
22 Sept 1459 [
" ]
7 June 1460 [ " ]
30 May
1461 [ " ]
12 June 1462 [ " ]
25
Feb 1464 [ " ]
11 March 1468 [Reg. Neville, York, fo.
190]
24 Sept 1468 [ " fo. 196]
23 Dec
1469 [ " fo. 202v]
21 Sept 1471 [Sede Vacante Reg.,
York, fo. 212]
18 Feb 1475 [Reg. Rotherham, York,
(C.Y.S., 1976), i, 26].
21 Sept 1476 [Reg. L. Bothe, York, fo. 362]
19 Sept 1478 [Reg. Rotherham, York, (C.Y.S., 1976), i,
213].
18 Sept 1479 [Sede Vacante Reg., York, fo. 380]
23
Sept 1480 [Reg. Rotherham, York ]
22 Sept 1481 [ " ]
21 Sept 1482 [ " ]
20 Sept 1483 [ " ]
18 Sept
1484 [ " ]
23 Sept 1486 [ " ]
22 Sept 1487
[ " ]
20 Sept 1488 [ " ]
19 Sept 1489 [
" ]
7 April 1492 [ " ]
22 Sept 1492 [ "
]
21 Sept 1493 [ " ]
22 Feb 1494 [ " ]
19 Sept 1495 [ " ]
19 March 1496 [ " ]
17 Dec 1496 [ " ]
23 Sept 1497 [ " ]
21 Sept 1499 [ " ]
19 Sept 1500 [Sede Vacante Reg.,
York, fo. 507]
18 Dec 1501 [Reg. Savage, York, fo. 110v]
11 March 1503 [ " fo. 116]
2 March 1504
[ " fo. 122]
7 March 1506 [ " fo. 131v]
27 Feb 1507 [ " fo. 137]
23 Sept 1508 [Sede Vacante Reg. York,
fo. 581]
2 June 1509 [Reg. Bainbridge, York, fo. 102v]
22 Feb 1510 [ " fo. 105v]
15 March 1511 [ "
fo. 111]
12 March 1513 [ " fo. 123]
20 Dec 1516
[Reg. Wolsey, York, fo. 174v]
19 Sept 1517 [ " fo. 178]
28 Feb 1523 [ " fo. 198v]
1 April 1536 [Reg.
Lee, York, fo. 196]
Note: The pattern seemed to be that, normally, ordinations were held in
March in the Holy Trinity Priory
April in the Grey Friars chapel
June in the Blackfriars chapel
Sept in the Whitefriars chapel
Dec in the Austin Friars chapel.
PART II D: KNOWN PRIORS OF THE CARMELITE HOUSE, YORK
George 1269
William Thorpe 1304
William Paul Aug 1322
William Penterel Feb 1349
John de Calby 1362
William 1371-1378
Mauger de Baildon 1387-before 1400
John Bate 1426-9
Thomas Carlyle 1446-before 1448
Robert 1473
H. Thwayet 1490
John Carter 1527-8
Simon Clarkson 1535(?)-8
PART II E: POST-REFORMATION HISTORY OF THE SITE
1538 After the surrender of the friary, it was held by John Thorpe. [Cal. Pat. 1550-3, 239: VCH II, 361].
1540 A 21-year lease of the property was made to Ralph Beckwith. The site remained in the hands of this family, at least until the death of Leonard Beckwith in 1614. [Letters & Papers of Henry VIII, xv, p. 565: VCH II, 361].
Nothing further is known of the site. In 1958, it was completely built over.
Few traces remain. In 1850 sections of the precinct wall existed opposite St. Saviour’s Church in Hungate and in Black Horse Passage (off Stonebow Lane). Fragments of this wall were said to be visible behind the houses in Fossgate and in Stonebow Lane in 1952, but in 1958 the only remaining section was that in Black Horse Passage. [VCH II, 362].
PART III: BIOGRAPHICAL DETAILS OF THE IMPORTANT CARMELITES ASSOCIATED WITH
YORK
[This list is limited to those Carmelites associated with York who were
of some significance in the province or where there are further details known
about their lives. It excludes the names of those known only from the
ordination registers or similar sources, or whose links with York are tenuous]
BEVERLEY (Beverlac, de Beverlaco, Beverlaius, Beverlay),
John He was born in Beverley, near York and joined the Carmelites in
York. [J. Bale, Script. Illustr. Bryt., (Basle, 1557-9), ii,
84]. He was ordained deacon on 23 Dec 1374. [Reg. Neville, York, fo.
118v].
He was a batchelor of theology at Oxford by 1392
when he attended the council convened by archbishop Courtenay at Stamford for
the trial of fr. Henry Crumpe, O.Cist. [Fasc. Zizan. ed. W. Shirley,
(Rolls Series, 1858), 358].
Emden says that there is no evidence
whatever for linking him, as in the D.N.B. article, with John Beverley, canon of
Beverley, nor with John Beverley, priest, condemned for lollardy and hanged,
drawn and quartered at St. Gile's Field, London in 1414. [Emden, A., Biog.
Reg. Univ. Oxford, (Oxford, 1957-9), 183].
Bale lists his writings as:
1. Questiones Sententiarum, Lib. 4: "Utrum
anima separata possit pati."; [Brit. Libr., Ms. Selden supra 41, fo. 174v].
Bale claims that this work was at one time in the library of Queen’s
College, Oxford. [J. Bale, Index Brit. Script., 182].
2. Ordinariae
disputationes, Lib. 1. [J. Bale, Script. Illustr. Bryt., ii, 84].
Bibliography
1. Bale, J., Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 57v (extract from Fasc. Zizan.);
2. Bale, J., Bodl. Libr., Ms. Selden supra 41, fo. 174v:
3. Bale, J.,
Illustrium Maioris Britanniae ... Summarium, (Wesels, 1548), fo. 47:
4.
Bale, J., Script. Illustr. Bryt., (Basle, 1557-9), ii, 84;
5. Emden, A.,
Biog. Reg. Univ. Oxford, (Oxford, 1957-9), 183:
6. Fasciculi Zizaniorum, ed.
W. Shirley, (Rolls Series, 1858), 358:
7. Pits, John, De Rebus Anglicis,
(Paris, 1619), 555:
8. Tanner, Tho., Bibliotheca Britannico-Hibernica
(London, 1748), 99:
9. Villers, C., Bib. Carm., (Orléans, 1752. repr. Rome,
1927), i, 797;
10. Westby-Gibson, J., Dict. Nat. Biog., (London, 1885-), iv,
449-50:
BEVERLEY, (de Anglia) Richard At the General
Chapter held in Verona in 1381, he was given 5 ducats for his baccalareus.
[Acta Capitul. Gen. Ord. Carm., ed. G. Wessels, (Rome, 1912), i, 91].
Zimmerman notes that, in 1385, he was sent to study in Vienna. In 1393, he
was lector and prior in Brussels. [Acta Capitul. Gen. Ord. Carm., i,
106n].
At the General Chapter held in Frankfurt from 25 May
1393, he was appointed provincial of the Gascony province. [Acta Capitul.
Gen. Ord. Carm., i, 106].
CARLISLE, (Carlele) Thomas
His name, 'Brother Carlele', occurs in the will of John Staynhum, draper, dated
19 June 1438 when he was left a bequest of 6s. 8d. [Borthwick Institute,
P.R.3 525V: noted by Mrs. Tessa Frank].
He joined the
Corpus Christi Guild in York in 1445. [Reg. Guild of Corpus Christi,
(Surtees Soc., 1872), ]. In 1446, he was prior of York when he represented the
York distinction at discussions on the reform of the order. [Brit. Libr.,
Ms. Harley 1819, fo. 200v]. He had vacated the office of prior by 1448
when Pope Nicholas V confirmed the grant made to him, "a friar of York, by John,
master general of the Order (with the unanimous consent of the chapter of the
order then held in Asti) and the prior and friars of the said house, of certain
privileges, etc. contained more fully in letters bearing the seals of the
said John and prior and convent which letters the pope has caused to be
inspected". This was not dated but some time between 19 March 1448 and 18
March 1449. [C.P.L., x, 1447-1455, page?].
CARTER, (Cartier) John He was prior of York in 1527-8 when he was
listed in the accounts of the Earl of Northumberland as receiving an annuity
from the king.
(From Michaelmas 13 Henry VIII to Michaelmas 14 Henry
VIII) "To John Carter, prior of the White Friars, York, annuity of 40s."
(From Michaelmas 14 Henry VIII) "To friar John Cartier, prior of the
White Friars, York, 40s."
[L. & P. Henry VIII, ed. J.
Brewer, (London: Longmans, 1872), iv, (2), 1533].
CLERKSON
(Clarkesun, Clarkson, Claxon), Simon Carmelite of Oxford who was ordained
subdeacon on 11 March 1525. [Reg. Longland, Lincoln, xxvi, fo. 17: Emden,
A., Biog. Reg. Univ. Oxford, 1501-1540 A.D., (Oxford, 1974), 120].
He evidently commenced his studies at Oxford university in 1524
because, on 2 Jan 1533, after 9 years of study in logic, philosophy and
theology, he supplicated for a B.Th. [Reg. Univ. Oxford, ed. C. Boase
& A. Clark, (Oxford Hist. Soc., 1885), i, 173: O.U. Arch., Reg. H., fo. 279
(where he is entered as a Franciscan)].
He was prior of
York by 1537-8. [P.R.O., Conventual Leases, Yorks., no. 909; in A. Little,
Hist. of Yorks., (V.C.H., 1913), iii, 293]. It is possible that he was the
prior who was commissioned by the Corporation of York to give a sermon on Corpus
Christi morrow, 1535. [Palliser, D.M., The Reformation in York 1534-1553,
(York: St. Anthony's Press, 1971), 2]. In July 1537, together with the
Carmelite prior of London, probably John Gybbes (Carm.), he assisted Bishop
Longland in the examination of the heretic, William Cowbridge, at Wycombe.
[Letters & Papers, Henry VIII, xiii, i, 1434].
He was
prior of York at the dissolution on 27 Nov 1538 and signed the surrender.
He was given £1 from the sale of the property. [Eighth Report of the
Deputy Keeper of the Public Records, (London, 1842), appendix ii, 51; Letters
& Papers, Henry VIII, xiv (2), 3380 (1), (9)].
On 17
July 1539, he was presented to the vicarage of Rotherham by Francis, Earl of
Shrewsbury, a benefice which he held for fifteen years. On 3 Oct 1541,
Henry VIII, during a royal visit to Hull, gave him a special licence for the
sake of his preaching, because he was a B.D. and excellent in sacred learning,
to absent himself from the vicarage of Rotherham for the next ten years.
This licence was issued formally under the Privy Seal on 27 Oct 1541.
During this absence, he was allowed to draw the profits from the vicarage,
provided that funerals are held, the cure of souls is not neglected and that he
preaches in Rotherham once a quarter. [T. Rymer, Foedera, ( ), xiv,
736: J. Guest, Hist. Notices of Rotherham, ( ), 73-4: Letters & Papers
Henry VIII, xvi, 1308, 38: Fasti Paroch., (Yorks. Archaeol. Soc. Rec. Series),
ii, 42-3].
Vicar of Crowle, Lincs. compounded 4 Nov
1541. [P.R.O., E334/2, fo. 64]. On 10 March 1548, he was presented
to the benefice of Stainby, South Lincolnshire. [Lincoln Diocesan Records,
P.D. 1548/16]. Three years later, he exhibited a plurality licence at the
Lincoln episcopal visitation. [ibid., Vj. 13, fo. 65]. He was vicar
of Hatfield, Yorks. but had vacated this parish by June 1549. Fasti
Paroch., i, 134]. He was presented as vicar of Doncaster, Yorks., on 12
Sept 1554 but was not instituted. [C.P.R. 1554-5, 202: J. Hunter, South
Yorkshire, i, 36].
He was married by the end of the reign
of Edward VI. In Queen Mary's reign, he was summoned to appear at York on
16 April and again on 29 Oct 1554. He proved completely contumacious and
was deprived of the vicarage of Rotherham. On this occasion, letters
testimonial under the seal of the archdeacon were produced in court; these
probably reported that he had been deprived of Stainby. (On 5 Oct, another
cleric had been admitted to Stainby which lay vacant by deprivation).
[ibid., Reg. 28, fo. 110]. Possibly, he emigrated.
Bibliography
1. Dickens, A., Lollards and Protestants in the diocese of York, (O.U.P.,
1959), 145-7:
2. Dickens, A., The Marian Reaction in the Diocese of York,
(York: St. Anthony's Hall, 1957), 23:
3. Emden, A., Biog. Reg. Univ. Oxford,
1501-1540 A.D., (Oxford, 1974), 123.
ESINGTON, (Esyngton)
Richard Ordained accolyte on 20 Sept 1376 in St. Leonard's hospital,
York. [Reg. Neville, York, fo. 125v].
Listed as sacre
pagine professor, i.e. D.Th., when, on 18 Aug 1402, he was granted permission to
preach, hear confessions and impose penance on the confessed in the diocese of
York. [Reg. Scrope, York, (Borthwick Inst. 1986), ii, 13]. Emden
suggests that it is likely that he studied for a period at Oxford. [Emden,
A., Biog. Reg. Univ. Oxford, (Oxford, 1957-9), 2173].
ESK, Thomas Ordained accolyte on 20 Sept 1376 and subdeacon on 19
Dec 1377, both occasions in St. Leonard's hospital, York. [Reg. Neville,
York, fos. 125, 130v].
On 8 Aug 1400, he was granted
permission to preach and hear confessions in the diocese of York. [Reg.
Scrope, York, (Borthwick Inst., 1981), ii, 12].
GREEN,
(Grene, Grone, Groue, Grove, Groye) John Carmelite of the diocese of
Exeter, probably from the Plymouth house. He was of gentle birth.
[Cal. Papal Letters, (London, ), x, 139].
He studied at the
London house and was ordained accolyte on 21 Dec. 1415, subdeacon on 18 April
1416, deacon on 6 March 1417 and priest on 21 May 1417, all occasions in St.
Paul's cathedral, London. [Reg. Clifford, London, fos. 75, (76v): Reg.
Chichele, Canterbury, (C.Y.S., 1943), iv, 324: Reg. Clifford, London, fo.
82v]. Green attended Oxford university and was a D.Th. by 1446 when he
attended the meeting called to reform the province. [Brit. Libr., Ms.
Harley 1819, fo. 200v].
On 29 March 1447, he was appointed
bishop of Kilfenora (Insulensis) by papal provision and remained bishop until
his death. [C. Eubel, Hierarchia Cath. Medii et Recent. Aevi, (Regensburg,
19 ), ii, 170]. Other authorities do not list this appointment and
it is more likely that he was one of the English bishops appointed to the Isles
but not recognised in Scotland. [Handbook Brit. Chron., (Royal Hist. Soc.,
1986), 358].
On 31 Jan 1452 he was allowed to hold a
benefice for life by Pope Nicholas V because he was of gentle birth and "has
laboured for 20 years in preaching and other works for the salvation of souls at
his own petition and of John, earl of Shrewsbury." [Cal. Papal Letters, (London,
19 ), x, 1447-1455, 139].
Vicar of Rattery, Devon, admitted
27 Nov. 1455. [Reg. Bourgchier, Canterbury, (C.Y.S., 1957), 228].; vicar of
Godmanchester, Hunts, admitted 20 March 1457 but had vacated this cure by March
1460. [Reg. Chedworth, Lincoln, xx, fos. 300v, 305v]. On 30 June 1458, he
was granted a papal dispensation, on account of his inability to obtain peaceful
possession of his see, to hold an additional incompatible benefice. [Cal.
Papal Letters, xi, 181]. Rector of Stowe-Nine-Churches, Northants,
admitted 21 March 1460 but had vacated this cure by March 1464. [Reg.
Chedworth, Lincoln, fo. 181; Bridges, i, 90]. Vicar of Blyth, Notts., a
parish which he had vacated by April 1462. [Reg. Booth, York, (Borthwick
Inst., ), , xx, fo. 96v]. Admitted as Master of St. John the Baptist
Hospital, Ripon, Yorks. on 26 Feb 1463. [Reg. Booth, York, , xx, fo.
55v]. Vicar of Birstall, Yorks., collated 1463. [Reg. Booth, York,
xx, fo. 22]. Rector of Mersham, Kent, collated 13 Dec 1464. [Reg.
Bourgchier, Canterbury, 276]. Rector of Clifton, Notts., till his
death. [Reg. Neville, York, xxii, fo. 95].
Assistant
bishop to William Booth, archbishop of York, in 1460 and 1462. [Memorials
of the Church of SS. Peter & Wilfrid, Ripon, ed. J. Fowler, (Surtees
Society, 1882), ii, 11: where Emden claims he is inaccurately designated 'bp. of
the Isles' but see above]. He had died by August 1467.
Note: Emden separates the above into two individuals, John Grene and
John Grove but it is clear that the references relate to one person.
[Emden, A., Biog. Reg. Univ. Oxford, (Oxford, 1957-9), 2178, 2179]. Also,
see note under Gaber (Carm.) and possible identification.
HAROLD, (Harald) John Carmelite of York who was killed in the
York house in 1374 by fr. John Wy (Carm.). [Pat. 10 Richard II, pt. ii, m.
37; in A. Little, Hist. of Yorks., (V.C.H., 1913), iii, 292].
HESHAM (Heseham, Heselam) William A Carmelite, who probably joined the
Order at York and later studied at Oxford university where he was awarded a
doctorate. There exist the title and incipits of two sermons preached by
Thomas Netter at the vesperies of “William Hesham and John Upton”
1.
Collacionem benediccionis in vesperijs magistrorum Wilhelmi Hesham et Johannis
Upton Carmelitarum: "Benediccionem perhibere non valeo, Numeri .23o.
Domini mei beatus Ambrosius .lio. primo. Abraham senset eum ter
benediccionis frugem a Domino Deo precepisse de celis.":
2. Collacionem
commendacionis in vesperijs eorumdem: "Date gloriam laudi primo 65o. Nostis
domini mei quum intemerata consuetudo universitatis matris nostre."
These must have taken place at Oxford University sometime before
1430. [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 204v].
In the
will of William Barton, fishmonger, dated 22 Aug 1438, there occurs a bequest of
3s.4d. to 'Doctor William Heseham of the Carmelite house in York'.
[Borthwick Inst. Hist. Research, Prob. Reg., 536V: information from Ms. Tessa
Frank].
A second bequest occurs in the will of Thomas
Clynt, merchant, dated 9 April 1439 of 6s.8d. to 'Master Heselam,
Carmelite'. [Borthwick Inst. Hist. Research, Prob. Reg. 3, 567V:
information from Ms. Tessa Frank].
HIGGS, (Hixus) James He was listed as of the York diocese when, on 20 March 1536, he was granted a dispensation to wear the habit of his order beneath that of a secular priest for a fee of £4. [D. Chambers, Reg. Fac. Off., (Oxford, 1966), 48].
Bale lists him as one of those who: "...sua Babilone cum suis papisticis
decretis relinquerunt.." [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Selden supra 41, fo. 195v].
HOUEDAN, William Carmelite of York when he
joined the Corpus Christi guild in York in 1430-1. [Reg. Guild of Corpus
Christi in the city of York, (Surtees Soc., 1872), 31].
HUNTPLESE(?), Richard Carmelite of York when he joined the Corpus Christi guild 1442-3. [Reg. Guild of Corpus Christi in the city of York, (Surtees Soc., 1872), 42].
JOHNSON, (Jonson) James Carmelite of York when he signed the surrender document for the house on 27 Nov 1538. [Eighth Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records, (London, 1842), appendix ii, 51]. Possibly the same as the person who became vicar of St. Lawrence, York, from before 1558 until 1582. [Reformation: Principle and Practice, essays in honour of A. G. Dickens, ed. Peter Newman Brooks, (London: Scolar Press, 1980), p. 212]
KELLAWE (Chellavus, Kelhowe, Kellaue, Kellauus, Kellaw, Kellawensis, Kello), Walter Bale’s earliest notes record simply that he was a member of the York distinction. [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Selden supra 41, fo. 168]. Later, Bale, basing himself on Leland, claims that Kellawe was born in Northallerton, Yorkshire. [Bale, J., Scriptorum Illustr. Brytan., ii, 59]. He probably joined the Carmelites in York, not Northallerton as claimed by some (the house was only founded in 1356).
Kellawe studied at Oxford university where he had incepted as D.Th. by 19 Feb 1348 for he was described as magister when he was licensed to hear confessions in the York diocese. He was licensed again on 16 Feb 1353. [Reg. la Zouche, York, x, fo. 278: Reg. Thoresby, York, xi, fo. 3v]. He was the confessor of Richard Neville, earl of Salisbury, (d.1460) and his wife Alice, (m. 1421: d.1462) daughter of Thomas Montague, the previous earl. [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 76].
Kellawe was appointed provincial at the General Chapter held in Metz in June 1348. [Acta Capitul. Gen. Ord. Carm., (Rome, 1912), i, 40]. His appointment was confirmed at the provincial chapter held in Nottingham later the same year. [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 80]. He was re-appointed at the General Chapter held in Toulouse in June 1351. [Acta Capitul. Gen. Ord. Carm., (Rome, 1912), i, 42]. During his term of office, Kellawe held provincial chapters at Lynne in 1349, London in 1350, Cambridge in 1351 and Lincoln in 1352. [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 80v].
On 8 Aug 1352, he was summoned to attend a consultation with the king:
"To the provincial prior of the Carmelites in England to be before the
council on Thursday after the octaves of the Assumption next." [Cal. Close
Rolls, 1349-1354, (London: HMSO, 1906), 499].
kellawe resigned at the chapter in Norwich in 1353. [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 80v]. But, due to the illness of his successor, William Lubbenham (Carm.), Kellawe was re-elected provincial at the chapter held in Maldon in 1354 and he vacated the office for the second time in 1359. [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 80v]. His appointment as provincial was confirmed at the General Chapters held in Perpignan in June 1354 and in Ferrara in 1357. [Acta Capitul. Gen. Ord. Carm., ed. G. Wessels, (Rome, 1912), i, 44, 46]. In his second term, he held provincial chapters at Maldon in 1354, Stamford in 1355, Lynne in 1356, Nottingham in 1357 and Ipswich in 1358. [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fos. 80-80v].
On 8 Nov 1356, he is mentioned in a document by which the king gave the Carmelites a croft called Tentour Croft, with an adjacent meadow, containing in all 3 acres and one rod at Northallerton for the foundation of a Carmelite house. [Pat. 30 Edw. I, pt. i, m. 11; pt. iii, m. 19; in A. Little, Hist. of Yorks., (V.C.H., 1913), iii, 270]. The Neville family, to which Kellawe was confessor, were noted benefactors to Northallerton and often chose to be buried there. Kellawe’s name as provincial occurs also on 18 Oct 1358 when the bishop of Hereford granted permission for four Carmelites from Ludlow to hear confessions. [Reg. Charlton, Hereford, 62].
After handing over his office as provincial in 1359, Kellaw appears to have retired to the new Carmelite foundation at Northallerton. Ingledew suggests that he may have been the first prior of Northallerton which is unlikely as he was provincial when Northallerton was founded (1356-7). [Cole's Ms.; quoted in C. Ingledew, Hist. & Antiq. of Northallerton (1858), 245]. It is quite possible he was the second prior (from 1359). He died and was buried in Northallerton in Aug 1367. [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Selden supra 41, fo. 168].
His name ‘Kellaw’ occurs in a book recorded in the catalogue of the Carmelite library at Hulne. [K. Humphreys, The Friars’ Libraries, (British Library, 1990), 175].
Note: Some authors have attempted to identify Walter Kellaw with other Carmelites. Villiers confuses him with Walter Heston (Carm.) and hence makes Heston provincial in the 1350’s. Staring attempts to correct the situation by reversing the process and identifying Heston with Kellaw. Both are clearly mistaken as Heston is a separate individual in the contemporary records (see entry for Walter Heston). [Bib. Carm., i, 579: "Walter Heston", Dictionnaire d'Histoire et de Géographique Ecclesiastique, (Paris: Letouzey et Ané, 1991), xxiv, 293 (unsigned by inserted by Staring)]. Another confusion is between Walter Kellaw and an earlier Carmelite,Walter Kesso (Carm), who occurs in the Bruges necrology. However, chronologically, they must be separate individuals, (See entry for Walter Kesso). [Norbert a St. Julian, O.Carm., De scriptoribus Belgicis et viris illustribus ex ordine Carmelitarum, Brussels, Royal Library, Ms. 16492, p. xxii-xxv].
Bale ascribes the following works to him:
1. Determinaciones quasdam
theologicas, Lib. 1; [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 118v].
2. Quodlibeta
quoque, Lib. 1; [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 76].
Bale adds:
3. "Atque sermones aliquot." [J. Bale, Script. Illustr. Bryt., ii,
59].
Which Villiers completes into a further work: Sermonum variorum, Lib
1. [Bib. Carm., i, 581].
Bibliography
1. Bale, J., Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, (S.C. 27635), fos. 80-80v, 118v,
133v:
2. Bale, J., Bodl. Libr., Ms. Selden supra 41, fo. 168:
3. Bale,
J., Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fos. 31v, 43v, 76-76v, 180:
4. Bale, J.,
Script. Illustr. Bryt., (Basle, 1557-9), ii, 59;
5. Emden, A., Biog. Reg.
Univ. Oxford, (Oxford, 1957-9), 1029:
6. "Kellawe ou Kello, Walter"
Dictionnaire de Théologie Catholique, (Paris, 1903-50), viii, 2333:
7.
Leland, John, Commentarii de Scriptoribus Britannicis, ed. Anthony Hall,
(Oxford: Sheldonian, 1709), 368:
8. Norbert a St. Julian, O.Carm., De
scriptoribus Belgicis et viris illustribus ex ordine Carmelitarum, Brussels,
Royal Library, Ms. 16492, p. xxii-xxv:
9. Pits, John, De Rebus Anglicis,
(Paris, 1619), 501:
10. [Staring, Adrian, O.Carm.], "Walter Heston",
Dictionnaire d'Histoire et de Géographique Ecclesiastique, (Paris: Letouzey et
Ané, 1991), xxiv, 293: (for confusion with Kellaw)
11. Tanner, Tho.,
Bibliotheca Britannico-Hibernica (London, 1748), 451:
12. Villers, Bib.
Carm. (Orléans, 1752. repr. Rome, 1927), i, 579 (Heston), i, 581 (Kellaw);
KYNYNGHAM (Chinigum, Chiningam, Chuningam, Cuningamus,
Cuningham, Cunningham, Hinnigera, Hinnighera, Keningham, Kenningham, Kenyngham,
Kilinghamus, Killingham, Kiningham, Kinningham, Kyningham, Kinyngamus,
Kylingham, Kylinguam, Kyllyngham, Kylynghal, Kylyngham -us, Kyningam, Kyningham,
Kynnyngham, Kynynghamus, Kynyngton, Quinimguam), John Born in Suffolk, he
joined the Carmelites in Ipswich. In one of his surviving works, it is
mentioned that his father died while he was a boy. [A. Hudson, New
DNB]. He undertook his studies at Oxford university. [Bodl. Libr.,
Ms. Selden supra 41, fo. 175v: Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 85].
Kynyngham was one of the first to argue against Wyclif and was
involved in disputes with the Lollards from 1363. [Robson, J. A., Wyclif
and the Oxford School, (Cambridge, 1961), 162-170]. He wrote an Ingressus
and three Determinationes against Wyclif’s ideas, sometime after Wyclif had
become a doctor, c. 1363. These works have survived and have been edited,
see Fasciculi Zizaniorum, ed. W. Shirley, (Rolls Series, 1858), 3-103]. As
the Ingessus entitles Kynyngham as frater and the Determinationes as magister,
it would seem likely that Kynyngham received his doctorate while he was engaged
in this controversy, i.e. between 1365-1372. Crompton dates the Determinationes,
c.1370 and Huson to c. 1372-3. [James Crompton, “Fasciculi Zizaniorum”
Journal of Ecclesiastical History, 12 (1961), 163: A. Hudson, New DNB].
He had certainly achieved his doctorate by 1375, for he was
described as “magister Johanne Quinimguam”, when he was present as a definitor
for the English province at the General Chapter held in Le-Puy-en-Velay in that
year. [Acta Capitul. Gen. Ord. Carm., i, 71].
He was
present at the council held at Blackfriars in London on 17 May, 18 June & 20
June 1382 which condemned 24 propositions of Wyclif and Kynyngham preached the
concluding sermon afterwards, probably at St. Paul's Cross. [Fasc. Zizan.,
ed. W. Shirley, (Rolls Series, 1858), 286: Wilkins, D., Concilia, (London, 1737)
iii, 158, 160, 164-5: Chronicon Henrici Knighton vel Cnitthow monachi
Leycestrensis, ed. J. R. Lumby (London: Rolls Series, 1895), ii, 163].
Kynyngham was present at the trial of Henry Crumpe,
O.Cist., at Stamford on 28 May 1392. [Fasc. Zizan., ed. W. Shirley, (Rolls
Series, 1858), 347]. He preached before the king on All Saints Day, 1 Nov.
1392. [Brit. Libr., Ms. Add. 35115, fo. 33].
Bale
notes that he was confessor and secretary to John of Gaunt, duke of
Lancaster. Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 119] Certainly, his name
occurs in Gaunt’s accounts as confessor in 1392-3. [P.R.O. (Duchy of
Lancaster Various Accounts) DL 28/3/2: in Goodman, Anthony, John of Gaunt,
(Longman, 1992), 247]. At various times in 1392 and probably at other
occasions in the early 1390's, Kynyngham was resident in the ducal
household. [East Sussex Record Office, Waleys cartulary A1, A2, A6, A9,
B4, B9: in Goodman op. cit., 266 n32].
He was elected
provincial at the provincial chapter held at Yarmouth in 1393. [Brit.
Lib., Ms. Harley 3838, 32v]. This appointment was confirmed at the General
Chapter held in Frankfurt from the 25 May the same year where he was listed as
provincial of England and as definitor representing the province of Upper
Germany due to the absence of any representative from this province (due to the
papal schism). [Acta Capitul. Gen. Ord. Carm., i, 106]. Kynyngham's
appointment was confirmed once more at the General Chapter held in Piacenza in
1396. [Acta Capitul. Gen. Ord. Carm., i, 116].
He was
still acting as confessor to John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster, in 1397-8.
[P.R.O. (Duchy of Lancaster Various Accounts) DL 28/3/5: in Goodman, Anthony,
John of Gaunt, (Longman, 1992), 247]. His name occurs as one of the
witnesses to the will of John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster, on 3 Feb. 1398:
"...fratre Johanne Kyningham in theologi professore..." [Sydney
Armitage-Smith, John of Gaunt, (Westminster: Cape, 1904), 432].
He was summoned by Richard II to attend a council convened to meet at
Oxford on 27 Jan 1399 to advise the king concerning the papal schism.
[Cal. Close Rolls, 1396-1399, (London: HMSO, 1927), 367-8].
His appointment as provincial was again confirmed on 18 May 1399, at
the General Chapter held in Le Selve, Tuscany: however, he had already died at
York a few days earlier on the 12th May. [Acta Capitul. Gen. Ord. Carm.,
i, 122: Bodl. Libr. Bodley Ms. 73, fo. 42v:]. At the same General Chapter
in Le Selve, Tuscany, it was decreed that he should be vicar provincial of
Ireland. He was to provide for the election of a provincial for Ireland by
the members of the province or by other means if he deemed it wise. [Acta
Capit. Gen. Ord. Carm., i, 122]. O’Dwyer, quoting an unpublished Irish
source, states that Bale claimed that Kynyngham was about 76 years old when he
died. [O’Dwyer, Irish Carmelites, 54 n. 242]. So far, this reference
is untraced in Bale’s writings.
Bale describes him as:
"This venerable father was greatly respected for his learning,
exemplary conduct, gentleness, as well as for his friendly nature and humility"
[Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fos. 32v].
The following works by Kynyngham date from his confrontation with Wyclef :
1. Ingressus fr. Johannis Kynyngham Carmelitae contra Wicclyff, Lib. 1: "In
isto actu, intendo duo facere: primo persuadebo quedam superius dicta.";
[Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 196v]
This works exists in two
copies:
a. Bodl. Libr., Ms. E Mus. 86, fos. ...
b. Camb.
Univ., Corpus Christi College Ms. CIII, fos. ...
The work has been
printed in Fasciculus Zizaniorum, (ed.) W. W. Shirley, (London: Rolls Series,
1858), 4-13;
2. Acta magistri fratris Johannis Kenyngham Carmelitae contra
ideas magistri Johannis Wycliff, Lib. 1: "Reverendus magister Johannes Wycleff
in responsione sua ad quaedam exilia argumenta quae feceram, dicit se.";
[Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 196v].
This works exists in two
copies:
a. Bodl. Libr., Ms. E Mus. 86, fos. .....
b. Camb.
Univ., Corpus Christi College Ms. CIII, fos......
The work has been
printed in Fasciculus Zizaniorum, (ed.) W. W. Shirley, (London: Rolls Series,
1858), 14-42.
It was written in response to Wycliff's Determinacio,
edited by Shirley in the same work, pp. 453-476. Wycliff's subsequent
reply is given also 477-480.
3. Determinacione magistri fratris Johannis
Kynyngham de ampliacione temporis, Lib. 1: "In materia sepe tacta de ampliacione
temporis inter reverendum magistrum."; [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo.
196v].
This works exists in two copies:
a. Bodl. Libr.,
Ms. E Mus. 86, fos. .....
b. Camb. Univ., Corpus Christi College Ms.
CIII, fos......
The work has been printed in Fasciculus Zizaniorum,
(ed.) W. W. Shirley, (London: Rolls Series, 1858), 43-72;
4. Tertia
determinatio Kynyngham contra Wycclyff. De esse intelligibili creaturae,
Lib. 1: "Habito frequenter multiplici tractatu de esse creaturae inter
reverendummagistrum meum."; [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 196v].
This works exists in two copies:
a. Bodl. Libr., Ms. E
Mus. 86, fos.
b. Camb. Univ., Corpus Christi College Ms. CIII, fos.
The work has been printed in Fasciculus Zizaniorum, (ed.) W. W.
Shirley, (London: Rolls Series, 1858), 73-104:
Bale adds a further
title: Ad auctoritates responsio contra eundem, Lib. 1: "Iam restat dicere ad
auctoritates que pro istis tribus argumentis adducte sunt."; [Bodl. Libr.,
Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 196v]. But this work is actually the latter part of the
above Determinacio. [Fasc. Zizan., 80]
5. In nugas Wyckleffi, Lib. 1:
"Ut ait Cassiodorus in libro de ra.";
It is difficult to know whether
this is a lost work written against Wyclif or a confusion with Kynyngham’s
Ingressu (1 above). From its place in some of Bale’s lists, it seems more
likely to be a duplication - possibly from the second part of Kynyngham
Ingressu, which lacks its opening part in the ms. and this would explain the
different incipit. Elsewhere it is entitled Contra propositiones
Wiclevi. [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 85v].
Bale adds the following works by Kynyngham:
6. Lecturam
Sententiarum, Lib. 4: "Mirabilis facta est scientia tua."; [Bodl. Libr., Ms.
Selden supra 41, fo. 175v: Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 85v].
7.
Commentarios Metaphysices, Lib. 12; [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 85v].
8. In libros Threnos Hieremie, Lib. 1: "Vide Domine afflictionem meam.
Capitulo primo. Refert Seneca in declarationibus suis, libro 8o...";
[Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 40v].
9. In Ezechielem, Lib. 1: "Iste
liber, sicut et alij scriptu."; [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Selden supra 41, fo. 175v:
Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 85v]
10. Lecturam super epistolas Jacobi,
Lib. 2: "Jacobus Dei et domini nostri Jesu Christi suus. Circa hanc
epistolam sicut et in aliis libris..."; [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo.
40v].
11. Scripture praeconia, Lib. 1: "In medio annorum notum
facies."; [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 85v]
12. De natura
Angelica, Lib. 1: "Secundum quod superius tactum est."; [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Selden
supra 41, fo. 175v: Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 85v]
13. De nativitate
Christi, Lib. 1: "Veritas de terra orta est, &c."; [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley
3838, fo. 85v]
14. De passione Christi, Lib. 1: "In pace morieris,
Hieremiae 34."; [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 85v]
15. De Spiritu
Sancto, Lib. 1: "Spiritus Sanctus dabat eloqui illis."; [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley
3838, fo. 85v]
16. Sermones de tempore, Lib. 1: "Dabo tibi coronam vite,
Apoc. 2.";
17. Sermones de sanctis, Lib. 1: "Hoc est corpus meum, Matth.
26." Karissimi sicut dicit Rabanus si quis non vescitur Dei verbo ille non
vivit quia sicut corporis.”; [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 205].
These two works begin in Bale’s notes as one single composition but
then he separates them into two with individual incipits. Bale comments
that he had read three of these sermons. [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 205].
18. Questiones varie disputatas, Lib. 1. [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73,
fo. 119]
Elsewhere, Determinaciones varias. [Bodl. Libr., Ms.
Selden supra 41, fo. 175v].
“Varia insuper in biblie libros glossemata
edidisse perhibetur, que michi cognita non sunt.”
[Brit. Libr., Ms.
Harley 3838, fo. 85v].
In the British Library, there is a
commentary on Ecclesiasticus, ascribed at the start to “Kyngisham”. [Brit.
Libr., Ms. Royal 2 D.iv] However, Hudson asserts that there is no
reason for linking this with Kynyngham. [Hudson, A., New DNB].
Bibliography
1. Acta Capitul. Gen. Ord. Carm., ed. G. Wessels, (Rome, 1912), i, 71n, 106,
116, 122:
2. Armitage-Smith, S., John of Gaunt, ( ), 172, 182
3.
Bale, J., Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 40v, 42v, 56, 56v-57, 57v, 81, 119,
133v, 196v, 205:
4. Bale, J., Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 1819, fo. 197v:
5.
Bale, J., Bodl. Libr., Ms. Selden supra 41, fo. 175v:
6. Bale, J., Brit.
Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fos. 32v-33, 43v, 85-85v, 183v, 192:
7. Bale, J.,
Illustrium Maioris Britanniae ... Summarium, (Wesel, 1548), 158-158v:
8.
Bale, J., Script. Illustr. Bryt... Catalogus, (Basle, 1557-9), i, 457-8:
9.
Emden, A., Biog. Reg. Univ. Oxford, (Oxford, 1957-9), 1077:
10. Fasciculi
Zizaniorum, ed. W.W. Shirley, (Rolls Series, 1858), 286, 347:
11. Goodman,
Anthony, John of Gaunt: the exercise of princely power in fourteenth-century
Europe, (Harlow: Longman, 1992), 247-8, 266 n32:
12. Kingsford, C., Dict.
Nat. Biog., (London, 1885-), xxxi, 361-2:
13. Leland, John, Commentarii de
Scriptoribus Britannicis, ed. Anthony Hall, (Oxford: Sheldonian, 1709), 386:
14. Lohr, Charles, S.J., "Medieval Latin Aristotle commentaries", Traditio,
(1971), xxvii, 254:
15. Matias del Niño Jesus, O.C.D., "El Carmelo Frente a
la Falsa Reforma", Revista de Espiritualidad, (Jan.-Jun. 1946), v, no. 18, 306:
16. McCaffrey, P., O.Carm., White Friars, (Dublin, 1926), 226, 238:
17.
Pits, John, De Rebus Anglicis, (Paris, 1619), 564-5:
18. Robson, J. A.,
Wyclif and the Oxford School, (Cambridge, 1961), 162-170:
19. Tanner, Tho.,
Bibliotheca Britannico-Hibernica (London, 1748), 213:
20. Villiers, Cosmas,
O.Carm., Bib. Carm. (Orléans, 1727. repr. Rome, 1927), ii, 21-3 (also ii, 9):
21. Wilkins, David, Concilia Magnae Britanniae et Hiberniae, (London, 1737.
repr. Brussels, 1964), iii, 158:
22. Zimmerman, Benedict, O.C.D., "The White
Friars at Ipswich", Proc. Suffolk Inst. of Archaeol. & Nat. Hist., (1899),
x, 202:
23. Zimmerman, Benedict, O.C.D., Mon. Hist. Carm., (Lérins, 1907),
i, 355.
LANDUCCI, (of Siena) Bernardine Born in Siena, he
studied theology at Paris university 1478-80 [Acta Capit. Gen. Ord. Carm.,
ed. G. Wessels, (Rome, 1912), i, 272]. By 1492, he had been awarded a
doctorate. [Acta Capit., i, 296].
He taught philosophy at Siena and was provincial of Tuscany by 1498. [Acta Capit., i, 305] In 1503, he was appointed Procurator General by the Prior General, Peter Terrasse. [Acta Capit., i, 317, 328, 342]. After the death of Terrasse in 1511, he was appointed Vicar General. [Bullarium Carmelitarum, (Rome, 1715), i, 446, 448]
In 1513, at the General Chapter held in Rome, after the election of Baptist of Mantua as Prior General, Landucci was appointed provincial of the Romam province and Procurator General. Finally, at the General Chapter held in Siena on 31 May 1517 he was elected Prior General. [Smet, J. The Carmelites, (Illinois, 1975. rev. 1988), i, 112].
In 1522, whilst Prior General, Landucci visited England and presided over the Provincial Chapter held in York at which John Bird was elected provincial. [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 41]
He died in Rome on 28 March 1523 and was buried in St. Maria Transpontina. [Mon. Hist. Carm., ed. B. Zimmerman, (Lérins, 1907), i, 262]
Landucci wrote:
1. De B.V. Mariae laudibus Tractatum;
2. De sensu
composito et diviso (published in Venice, 1500)
[C. Villiers,
Bib. Carm., i, 269: J. Smet, The Carmelites, (Illinois, 1975), i, 130]
Bibliography
1. Smet, J. The Carmelites, (Illinois, 1975. rev. 1988), i, 111-3]
2.
Villiers, C., Bib. Carm., (Orléans, 1752. repr. 1927), i, 267-9:
3.
Zimmerman, B., Mon. Hist. Carm., (Lérins, 1907), i, 262:
LASYNGE, (Leysyng) John Carmelite from Doncaster who studied at
Cambridge university where he was awarded D.Th. [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley
3838, fo. 200]. In one of his notebooks, Bale records that magister
Lasynge flourished c.1448. [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 1819, fo. 200v].
There is an episode in one of Thomas Netter’s (Carm.)
letters to John Bate (Carm.) the prior of York and the brethren there which
probably refers to Lasynge. The letter can be dated to c. March-April,
1427:
“An almost common complaint from the fathers reached me the
other day about the words which brother John Leysyng used in his sermon on the
Feast of the Purification in our house at Doncaster which were to the detriment
of the parish church. He said that the gifts for the feast might be
offered licitly in churches other than the parish church, just as votive
offerings are, according to the will of the person making the gift. I
regret that my son has sinned in this matter. I pass over in silence what
the laws of the church say against these words, what the holy customs lay down
with equal force, by virtue of their longevity. But I am surprised that
our son did not turn his attention to the gospel of the feast about which a
multitude of doctors write that the blessed Virgin passed by the synagogue at
Bethlehem by order of Him whom she had borne and went to the greater temple,
that the fame of the place might correspond to the magnitude of the vow of the
one offering......I refrain from quoting scripture in order not to be found
quarrelsome towards my son. And to settle the question I want our son to
make amends to the place which he harmed by speaking out clearly and
unambiguously, with the agreement of the venerable Lord Abbot and the prior of
our house at York. Our son should have foreseen and avoided this peril all
the more cautiously since he has recently heard of the statute passed at our
chapter, recently celebrated at Oxford against those who preach to the prejudice
of prelates.”
[Brit. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 101v-102].
Note: It is strange that the prior of Doncaster is not referred to and
it is possible was Lasynge was prior himself. This which would explain the
reason for Netter calling on the prior of York to intervene. Certainly
Lasynge was prior at some time in Doncaster. [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley
3838, fo. 200].
Bale describes him as:
"He was
outstanding learned in the holy scriptures and human literature, he stood out
for his ability and eloquence, and not the less for his honest conversation than
for his respected learning. He served the cardinal priest of Saint
Balbinus then archbishop of York and (as was said) was his confessor."
[Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 200]. Note: This reference
must be to cardinal John Kempe who was archbishop of York from 1425-1452 before
transferring to the see of Canterbury.
Bale claims that he
died in 1412 but this date is a mistake and Lasynge must have died some time
c.1450. [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 200].
Bale records that he wrote:
1. Determinaciones theologie, Lib. 1:
2.
Lecturas in scripturam plures, Lib. 1:
3. Collationes ad clerum et vulgum,
Lib. 1:
"Et alia quedam"
[Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo.
200]
Bibliography
1. Bale, J., Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 1819, fo. 200v:
2. Bale, J., Brit.
Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 200:
3. Emden, A., Biog. Reg. Univ. Camb.,
(Cambridge, 1963), 354.
LEONARD, (Leonarde) Jeremy He
studied at Oxford university. On 15 June 1514, after 9 years study
overseas and 3 years at Oxford, he supplicated for the B.Th. He was
admitted B.Th. c.1514. [Reg. Univ. Oxford, ed. C. Boase, (Oxford Hist.
Soc., 1885), i, 92: O.U. Arch., Reg. G, fo. 233v].
He was
incorporated B.Th. at Cambridge university in 1520-1. He incepted as D.Th.
in 1520-1. [C.U. Grace Book, B, ii, 91, 92, 95: ibid., (T), pp. 195, 409].
He was engaged with the provincial, John Bird (Carm.), in a
visitation of the English province in 1521-2. [Emden, A., Biog. Reg. Univ.
Oxford, 1501-1540 A.D., (Oxford, 1974), 352]. He was at the York house in
1534. [Emden, op. cit., 352].
Carmelite of Doncaster
at the suppression of the house and, on 30 Nov 1538, he was granted a
dispensation to hold a benefice with change of habit. [D. Chambers, Reg.
Fac. Off., (Oxford, 1966), 160].
MANLOVEL, Richard On 27 April 1289, John le Romeyn, archbishop of York, requested the Provincial, Henry of Hanna (Carm.), to receive Richard Manlovel, a canon of Thurgarton, of the Order of St. Augustine, into the Carmelite Order. [Reg. Romeyn, York, (Surtees Soc., 1913), 123].
MARRE, (Maregus, Marorus, Marr, Marraeis, Marraeus, Marrey, Marro, -ne,
Marrus, Marry) John (i) He was born in the village of Marr, near
Doncaster, Yorks, (3,000 paces away) and, by tradition, he entered the
Carmelites in Doncaster. [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 88].
However, as the house was not founded until late in 1351, he must have joined
the Order in York.
He probably commenced his studies at
York for he was ordained subdeacon on 18 Dec 1350 and priest on 17 Dec
1351. [Reg. la Zouche, York; in Emden, A., Biog. Reg. Univ. Oxford,
(Oxford, 1957-9), 1225].
He continued his studies at Oxford
where he was promoted D.Th. On 26 Feb 1377, he was one of the
commissioners appointed by the king to inquire into the opposition offered in
Congregation to the statute framed to settle a dispute between the faculty of
laws and the other faculties. [C.P.R., 1374-7, 491].
He was
prior of Doncaster for a number of years before his death there on 18 March
1408. He was buried in the choir with the following epitaph on his tomb:
Christe Iesu fratris Marri miserere Ioannis
Cuius sarcophago corpus sepelitur in isto.
[Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 88].
Among his writings, Bale attributes to him;
1. Lecturam Sententiarum,
Lib. 4; [John Grossi, in Brit. Libr., Cotton Titus D.X., fo. 130: Brit. Libr.,
Ms. Harley 3838, fo.88v].
2. Tabulam originalium, Lib. 1: "Abscondere. Nota
qualiter abscond."; [John Grossi, in Brit. Libr., Cotton Titus D.X., fo. 130:
Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo.88v].
3. Determinaciones contra hereticos
Wiclevitas, Lib. 1; [Trithemius, J. De Scriptoribus Ecclesiasticis, 901].
4. In epigrammata Martialis, Lib. 1: "Ethereas lascive cupidinis."; [Brit.
Libr. Ms. Harley 3838, fo. 185v]
Later, Bale entitles this work, In
Valerium Martialem. [J. Bale, Script. Illustr. Bryt.,i, 532].
5. Compendium
originalium, Lib. 1: "Supereminente Virginis Deipare."; [Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley
3838, fo. 88v].
Late additions to these writings and doubful are:
6. Sermones et questiones, Lib. 2; [J. Bale, Script. Illustr. Bryt.,i,
532].
7. In Cantica Canticorum, Lib. 1; [Villiers, C., Bib. Carm., ii, 54].
“Habentur alia adhuc eius scripta Oxoniis et alibi sed ad notitiam
nostram hec sola venerunt.”
[Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fo.
185v].
Bibliography
1. P. Alberto de la Virgen del Carmen, O.C.D., Historia de la Filosofia
Carmelitana, (Avila, 1947), 108-9:
2. Bale, J., Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73,
fo. 112v:
3. Bale, J., Bodl. Libr., Ms. Selden supra 41, fo. 171v:
4.
Bale, J., Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fos. 88-88v:
5. Bale, J., Illustrium
Maioris Britanniae ... Summarium, (Wesel, 1548), 179-179v:
6. Bale, J.,
Script. Illustr. Bryt... Catalogus, (Basle, 1557. repr. Gregg, 1972), i, 531-2:
7. Bostius, Arnold, Speculum Historiale (before 1491), in Milano Bibl. Brera
AE xii.22, p. 569:
8. Emden, A. B., Biog. Reg. Univ. Oxford, (Oxford,
1957-9), 1225:
9. Grossi, John, Viriduarium, in Brit. Libr., Ms. Cotton
Titus D.X., fo. 130;
10. Matias del Niño Jesus, O.C.D., "El Carmelo Frente a
la Falsa Reforma", Revista de Espiritualidad, (Jan.-Jun. 1946), v, no. 18, 307:
11. Pits, John, De Rebus Anglicis, (Paris, 1619), 585:
12. Tanner, Tho.,
Bibliotheca Britannico-Hibernica (London, 1748), 512:
13. T-t, J. Dict. Nat.
Biog., (London, 1885), ...
14. Trithemius, J. De Scriptoribus
Ecclesiasticis, (1492), in Daniel a Virgine Maria, Speculum Carmelitanum,
(Antwerp, 1680), 901:
15. Villiers, Cosmas, O.Carm., Bib. Carm. (Orléans,
1752. repr. Rome, 1927), ii, 53-4:
METTRINGHAM, (Mettyngam)
Thomas Carmelite of York who signed the surrender document for the house
on 27 Nov 1538. [Eighth Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records,
(London, 1842), appendix ii, 51]. Subsequently he became the curate of
Barwick, Yorkshire. [Dickens, A.G., Lollard and Protestants in the diocese of
York, (London, 1982), 44].
On 24 Sept 1540, he testified
that he had:
'...herd James Hardcastell say that there was no thing
in the church that cold do him good, and he wold beleve in none of them, and
even anone aftre, Hardcastell said that he belevid in the blissed sacrament of
thaltare and said that he said the foresaid wordes to prove what such a dronken
preist wold say.'
This had happened the last 8 October in John
Carter's house at Barwick in the presence of Miles Walker, chaplain there and
three other witnesses. Mettringham had also
'herd oon Benyson
of the same parish, which had his wief to be buried, say that James Hardcastell
sayd that it was agenst the Kinge's articles to have Dirige said for a dede
body, for it could not prevaile'.
Hardcastell, he continued, was
'named and suspected in the parish of Barwicke a man of yll
opinions'.
On 3 July last, Mettringham had heard Hardcastell say in
the house of one Gilson at Barwick,
'I wold that Cromwell had reigned
longer, that he myght have punysshed you priestes, for yf he had continued, than
I wold have trusted that a lay man shuld have said Masse as well as a priest.'
Two lay witnesses having failed to substantiate these
charges, William Lounde, cantarist at Howden but a native of Barwick and
acquainted with Hardcastell for twenty-six years, deposed that he had heard
Mettringham, then curate of Barwick, rebuke James Hardcastell, saying that
'such wordes wold putt him to payne'.
Lounde had asked
Hardcastell
'whie he wold have had [Cromwell] to a reigned longer?'
Hardcastell pertly replied,
'To have punisshed you
priestes.'
The case continued on 1 October, when Miles Walker,
chaplain to Sir Thomas Johnson, knight, testified that:
'about
Whitesonday last past he was present in oon John Carter housse in Barwick in
Elmett, where also were present William Ellys of Kiddall, Robert Rawson, Sir
Thomas Mettringham, then curat of Barwicke, and James Hardcastell and oder
mooe. This deponent [Walker] and William Ellys satt at the table, and Sir
Thomas Mettringham and James hardcastell satt by the chymney side, and he saith
that he and William Ellys hard Sir Thomas Mettringham and James Hardcastell at
woordes and herd Sir Thomas say unto James Hardcastell, "Yf thow use this, thow
wylt be brente", at whiche wordes this deponent asked Sir Thomas Mettringham
what the matter was, and Sir Thomas Mettringham said that James Hardcastell sayd
that there was no thing in the church that could do him good. And then
this deponent said to James, 'No James, the blessid sacrament is in the
church. How say ye by it?'
Thomas Jackson of Barwick,
labourer, produced the statement that
'on Sonday last was a forth
night, Sir Thomas Mettringham wold have gevin this deponent xl s. to have said
as he wold have had him to asaide'.
Further witnesses gave evidence
but, on 13 November, Hardcastell confessed and made a formal abjuration.
He was ordered 'una dies fustigationis circa ecclesiam de Barwick'. ('a day of
scourging'). [York Diocesan Records, VII A.B. 2, fos. 130, 130v, 131,
131v, 133v, 134, 134v, 135, 136, 147v: in A.G. Dickens, op. cit., 44-7].
NELAND, Adam Listed as a Carmelite of York and a
D.Th. when, on 2 April 1398, the administration was granted to him of the will
of fr. Ric., episcopus Serviensis. [Sede Vacante Reg. York, iii, fo.
224v]. Emden suggests that he probably studied for a period at
Oxford. [Emden, A., Biog. Reg. Univ. Oxford, (Oxford, 1957-9), 2199].
Note: This 'fr. Ric. episcopus Serviensis' was a suffragan
bishop of York between 1370-1399. [Handbook Brit. Chron. (London: Royal
Hist. Soc., 1986), 3rd. ed., 285]. It is probable that he was the
Carmelite, Richard Wye (Carm.).
On 19 Jan 1408, in the will
of William, son of John de Escryk, of Selby, there is a bequest: "Magistro Ade
de Ordine Fratrum Carmelensium Ebor., xiijs. iiijd." which probably also relates
to Neland. [North Country Wills, (Surtees Soc., 1908), 2-5].
PASTON, Richard Ordained accolyte on 23 Sept 1402 at the
Dominican church, York, subdeacon on 10 March 1403 in York minster, deacon on 9
June 1403 at St. Nicholas, Bawtry, and 24 May 1404 at Cawood. [Reg.
Scrope, York, (Borthwick Inst., 1981), ii, 97].
Possibly
the same as the “Richard Paston” whose name occurs at the end of a copy of De
Adventu Carmelitarum in Angliam suggesting he was the scribe. [K. Egan,
"Historiography of the origin of the Carmelite Province in England", Carmelus,
(Rome, 1972), xix, i, 74]. Note: However, the name was also common in East
Anglia.
PATRYNGTON, (Patredunus, Patrendunus, Patrigeton,
Patrington, -us, Patringonnensis) Stephen Fuller claims he was born at
Patryngton in Yorkshire. [Fuller, Worthies, ( ), ]. He was ordained
accolyte on 19 Dec 1366, subdeacon on 4 March 1368, deacon on 23 Sept 1368 and
priest on 8 June 1370. [Reg. Thoresby, York, xi, ; in Emden, A., Biog.
Reg. Univ. Oxford, (Oxford, 1957-9), 1436].
He studied at
Oxford university. He was listed as the prior on 24 Nov 1373 when he was
licensed to hear confessions in the diocese of Canterbury. [Reg.
Whittlesey, Canterbury, fo. 63v; in Emden, op. cit., 1436].
He was the author of a letter dated 1381 from the mendicant orders in
Oxford to John of Gaunt concerning the harmful activities of Wyclif's followers
in Oxford and he took a leading part in opposing them. [Fasciculi
Zizaniorum, ed. W. Shirley, (Rolls Series, 1858), 292-5: J. Bale, Index Brit.
Script., (Oxford, 1902), 418-9].
He was still prior of
Oxford and a B.Th. on 12 June 1382 when he attended the second session of the
council convened by archbishop Courtenay at Blackfriars, London for the
condemnation of Wyclif's erroneous conclusions and he signed the decrees made by
the council. [Fasc. Zizan., 289; D. Wilkins, Concilia, iii, 165]. He
was a D.Th. by 1389.
On 14 July 1382, the king issued an
instruction to the chancellor and proctors of the university not to trouble him
about Wycliffite doctrines or to censure him because of absence from the
university. [Cal. Close Rolls, 1381-1385, (London: HMSO, 1920), 140].
On 14 Jan 1390, he was licensed to lecture and preach in
Lincoln cathedral as the deputy for the chancellor. [Lincoln Cath. Acta
Capitul., A.2.27, fos. 35v-36; in Emden, op. cit., 1436]. He is said to
have been an influential preacher in London. [J. Leland, Comment. de
Script. Brit., 429-430].
In 1396, Patryngton wrote to
Thomas Arundel, archbishop of Canterbury, against the statute which had just
been passed by Parliament that no one less than twenty years of age could be
received into any of the mendicant orders. This letter began:
"Reverendissimo in Christo patri."
On 25 Sept 1397, he was
granted a dispensation to hold a benefice with or without cure, "Religionis
zelus, litterarum sciencia, necnon vite ac morum". [Cal. Papal Letters,
(London, 1904), v, 13].
On 26 April 1399, he was given
confirmation of:
"Inspeximus and confirmation to Stephen de
Patryngton, master in divinity, a Carmelite friar, of (1) letters patent
(French) of John, duke of Lancaster, dated at London, 26 January in the
twentieth year, granting to the said Stephen, for life, for good service to the
duke and his duchess, 10l. a year from the issues of his lands and lordships in
the county of Lincoln, and (2) letter patent (French) of Henry, duke of
Hereford, dated at leicester, 24 December in the twnety-first year, inspecting
and confirming the foregoing.
For 2½ marks
paid in the hanaper."
[Cal. Patent Rolls, 1396-9, (London: HMSO,
1909), 535].
He was elected provincial at the provincial
chapter held in Plymouth some time after the death of John Kynyngham (Carm.),
the previous provincial, on 12 May 1399. but had vacated the office by
1413. His appointment was confirmed at the General Chapters held in
Bologna in 1405 and in 1411. [Bodl. Libr. Bodley Ms. 73 (S.C. 27635), fos.
81, 133v; D.N.B., article by C. L. Kingsford; Acta Capitul. Gen. Ord. Carm., ed.
G. Wessels, (Rome, 1912), i, 129, 139; J.H. Wylie, Reign of Henry V, i, 237-8,
290, 311-2, 542].
In 1400, he issued a letter of
confraternity to John Horssyngton and Alice. [Peterhouse College,
Cambridge, Ms. 251, flyleaf: Rev. Clark-Maxwell, "Some further letters of
confraternity" Archaeologia, lxxix, (1929), 212].
On
Christmas Day 1401, he preached before Henry IV. [P.R.O., E 101/404/21,
fo. 35]. In 1405, he is mentioned as provincial when fr. Roger Aysthorpe
(Carm.) was licensed to hear confessions. [Reg. Repingdon, Lincoln,
(Lincoln Rec. Soc., 1963), iii, 44].
On 21 July 1405, he
was described as 'S.T.M.' when he was granted an indult to use a portable
altar. [Cal. Papal Letters, (London, 1904), vi, 19].
Three letters written by Patryngton to the king survive: they are
appeals for the arrest and return of some vagabond friars. Two were
written in London, the first on 24 Jan 1408 and the second on 12 Nov 1413.
The third was written in London but the date is indecipherable. [P.R.O.
C81/1793/21-23]. In 1409, he issued a letter of confraternity to Sir
William ..... [Bodl. Libr. Rawlinson Ms. C. 72, flyleaf at beginning: Rev.
Clark-Maxwell, "Some further letters of confraternity" Archaeologia, lxxix,
(1929), 212]. Note: The date has been corrected to correspond to
Patryngton's tenure of the provincialship.
On 1 May 1412,
his seal occurs on an agreement between the Carmelites of Winchester and
Winchester College. This document is still preserved in the muniment room
at the college. There was a feast held in the college to celebrate this
agreement. [Kirby, T. F., Annals of Winchester College, (London, Henry
Frowde, 1892), 159-160].
In 1413, he was appointed chaplain
to Henry V but later vacated this office on his consecration as bishop in
1415. [J. H. Wylie, op. cit., i, 237-8]. On 28 Aug 1413, he was
beqeathed 15 marks in the will of Robert Sutton, merchant of Lincoln and a
member of one of the most prominent families in the town. [Reg. Repingdon,
Lincoln, iii, 28]. On 4 Jan 1415, he was sent by king Henry V to
proceed against the Lollards in Oxford. [Yardley, E., Menevia Sacra, ed.
F. Green, (London, 1927), 66]. Patryngton was known as 'disputator
acutissimus'. [Mudroch, Wyclif Tradition, 5].
He was
appointed bishop of St. David's, by papal provision on 1 Feb 1415; the
temporalities were restored on 6 April, 1415; he was consecrated in All Saints,
Maidstone, by Henry Chichele, archbishop of Canterbury, assisted by the bishops
of London and Norwich on 19 June 1415. [Cal. Patent Rolls, 1413-1416,
(London: HMSO, 1910), 336: Cal. Papal Letters, (London, 1904), vi, 350, 458; Th.
Rymer, Foedera, ix, 217, 268; William Stubbs, Reg. Sacr. Anglic., 85; E.
Yardley, Menevia Sacra, (Cambrian Archaeol. Assoc., ), 66-7; H. Emmanuel,
"A Fragment of the Register of Stephen Patryngton, bishop of St. David's",
Journal Hist. Soc. of Church in Wales, ii, (1950), 31-45: C. Eubel, Hierarch.
Cath. Medii et Recent. Aevi, (Regensburg, 1913, repr. 1960), i, 336: Handbook
Brit. Chron., (Royal Hist. Soc., 1986), 298]. Thomas Netter, the Carmelite
provincial, was present at Patryngton's consecration in Maidstone. [see
Netter (Carm.)].
On 4 Sept 1416, Patryngton was present in
an outer chamber of the Carmelite house, Sandwich, in the presence of king Henry
V, the archbishop of Canterbury, the bishop of Durham and other nobles, when the
bishop of Winchester handed over the great seal before departing overseas with
the king. [Cal. Close Rolls, 1419-1422, (London: HMSO, 1932), 368].
It would seem likely that Patryngton himself accompanied the king overseas.
Patryngton had postulated for the see of Chichester in 1415
and on 27 July 1415, he appointed two proctors to further his suit. The
temporalities were restored on 25 Aug 1416. However, the bull of
translation was delayed owing to the vacancy of the papacy and was only issued
on 15 Dec 1417. Patryngton's death occurred before the bull could be put
into effect. [C. Eubel, op. cit., i, 187; Cal. Papal Letters, (London,
1906), vii, 45; C.P.R., 1416-22, 132; J. Wylie, op. cit., i, 311-2; H. D.
Emmanuel, op. cit., 40-1; Handbook Brit. Chron., 239].
On 8
Nov 1417, he was granted letters of protection before going overseas with the
king to the Council of Constance. [Th. Rymer, op. cit., ix, 509].
However, before he could leave, he died in London, probably on 22 Dec
1417. [Bodl. Libr. Bodley Ms. 73 (S.C. 27635), fo. 50v, 51]. He was
buried in the middle of the choir of the Carmelite church in London. [J.
Weever, Ancient Funerall Monuments, 437-8; Brit. Libr., Ms. Harley 3838, fos.
43v, 90v-91, 193v-194]. His will was dated on 16 Nov 1417 and proved on 29
Dec 1417. [Reg. Chichele, Canterbury, (C.Y.S., 1938), ii, 133-5, 137:
Yardley, E., Menevia Sacra, (London, 1927), 379-318].
Bale
preserves an epitaph to Patryngton:
"Hic frater Stephanus de
Patryngton requiesces,
Nomine reque fuit norma corona
pater.
Ens Carmelitis rector, doctor, prior Anglis,
Confessor celebris regis et ipse manens.
Henrici quinti Menevensis quoque presul
Christus in
aureolam pillea mutet ei.
Sit ut ei tene simul et mitre bonus usus
Premia doctoris, pontificisque ferat."
[Bodl.
Libr. Bodley Ms. 73 (S.C. 27635), fo. 50].
It was possibly
Patryngton who collected some of the early chapters for the history of the
conflict with Wyclifism to which was subsequently added extra material by Thomas
Netter (Carm.) and published under the title Fasciculi Zizaniorum; see
introduction by W.W. Shirley, (Rolls Series, 1858).
Only a
fragment, comprising 4 folios, of his episcopal register survives, preserved in
New College Ms. 360; these cover the period 4 July to Nov 1415; see H. Emmanuel,
"A Fragment of the Register of Stephen Patryngton, bishop of St. David's",
Journal Hist. Soc. of Church in Wales, ii, (1950), 31-45.
Bale ascribes to him;
1. Commentarios Sententiarum (or Lecturam super
summas), Lib. 4: "Patres in Christo reverendi, atque.";
Lectures
given whilst Patryngton was at Oxford. [Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo.
71v].
2. Repertorium argumentorum suorum, Lib. 1: "Quod viator non parte per
aliquem actum esse certus de aliqua existencia alicuius rei a se etc.";
[Bodl. Libr., Ms. Bodley 73, fo. 4,