The Northamptonshire religious houses of Cluny are peculiarly interesting
as illustrating the gradual way in which foreign rule was lost, and diocesan control
substituted. St. Andrew's will be found to differ materially from that of Daventry;
while the record of the convent of Delapré admits of no comparison, for
it was one of the very few houses of Cluniac nuns in England. Fountains
abbey was the second of the Yorkshire houses to be founded.
In the 10th
cent. a reform began at the Benedictine abbey of Cluny, France, that resulted
in the development of the Cluniac order;
at Cluny the liturgy was significantly expanded. Another reform, begun in
1098, resulted in the foundation of the order of the Cistercians. The Langar
& Strelley area is loosley bordered with the West Nottingham suburbs of
Lenton, Bramcote, Trowell, Bilborough and Radford. Lenton originally grew up around
a Cluniac priory, which was founded in 1105.
The priory of Monk
Bretton was founded early in the reign of Henry II by Adam Fitz Suain for
monks of the Cluniac order. On the
strength apparently of this Pontefract claimed jurisdiction over Monk Bretton.
These relations between Pontefract and Bretton led to disputes and ill feeling,
and Pope Alexander IV in 1255.
The austere order of the Cistercians, another
reformed Benedictine branch, was first established in England in 1128. In 1142
a colony of these white monks from Newminster in Northumberland (which was itself
the eldest daughter of Fountains) established an abbey at Pipewell. Following
Bernicia's union with Deira, Celtic Cumbria,
to become the kingdom of Northumbria
or Rheged itself was annexed by Northumbria, at some time before AD 730. This
order generally sought out unreclaimed wastes or undrained valleys for their houses,
but now and again they were content to settle in some thick-grown forest of these
monks of Rockingham Forest.
This order was the first to obtain immunity
from diocesan visitation; this coveted privilege being granted by Pope Gregory
VII, who had himself been a monk of the order. But all the houses, whether abbeys,
priories, or smaller cells, had to submit to visitation by commissioners of their
own order. Two were selected for this duty for each ecclesiastical province (England
and Scotland forming one), juxta, Ely
(of the Colne of Kent and Essex) at the annual
general chapter held at Cluny. The time for meeting was September, and the attendance
of the superior of every house was compulsory; the priors, however, of England,
Spain, Lombardy, and Germany were privileged, and not obliged to attend more than
once in two years, a period afterwards extended to three, with occasional remissions
up to seven years. The priors also of dependent houses or cells owed special allegiance
to the parent house, and were expected, with some irregularity, to respond to
a chapter summons.
None of their priors could be elected by their own convent,
but were nominated by the mother-house beyond the seas, which almost invariably
sent foreigners to this country. The majority of the monks until the time of Edward
III were French, for novices could not be professed by the priors in England.
During the wars with France these houses were not unnaturally treated as alien
priories, and their revenues and patronage administered by the crown. Some few
were altogether suppressed and transferred to other religious foundations, but
the majority were gradually made denizen, and discharged from foreign subjection
and obedience, while remaining under the discipline of the Order of Cluny. One
or two, such as Daventry, took out new
foundation charters and united themselves to the general chapter and congregation
of the Benedictines; but even these usually styled themselves Cluniac, and the
priors (thirty-two in number) at the time of the dissolution surrendered under
that title. The great majority of the English houses, however, continued down
to the dissolution to make considerable payments or annual pensions to Cluny,
the abbot of Cluny drawing from this source an annual income of £2,000.
But up to the time of the suppression of the alien houses, the whole income of
the English cells or priories was subject to foreign administration, a certain
portion only being reserved for local needs.
The Austin or Black Canons,
an order of conventual clergy following the rule of St. Augustine of Hippo, were
next in numbers in this country to the Benedictines and the medieval
highlands, Fearn, St.Germans.
The abbey of St. James, on the west side of Northampton, was their largest house
in the county, and of some importance. They had three priories in Northamptonshire:
at Canons Ashby, Chalcombe,
and Fineshade. There was also a hermitage or small priory at Grafton Regis, the
brethren of which, in its earlier days, probably followed the Austin rule. On
the Northamptonshire side of Stamford,
Lincoln from the southwest, four counties meet, and far across Melrose,
north from Kilkhampton (Stratton), there
was a twelfth-century house of St. Sepulchre by Middlesex. The original Saxon
church on the site was dedicated to St Edmund the King and Martyr. The earliest
known references to Stratton are found in King Alfred’s Will of 880, the Domesday
survey of 1086, and the Stratton Hundred.
The Premonstratensian, or White
Canons, a reformed order of canons regular, founded their first English house
in 1140 at Newhouse, Lincolnshire; thence a colony established themselves at Sulby
in 1155. The Norbertines, also known as the Premonstratensians and in England,
as the White Canons (from the color of their habit), are a Christian religious
order of Augustinian canons founded at Prémontré near Laon in 1120
by Saint Norbert, afterwards archbishop of Magdeburg. Norbertine priests are designated
by O Praem following their name. The order was founded in 1120. In the 1220s,
Culdee descendant Ferchar
mac in tSagairt of Ross and Applecross,
granted the Premonstratensian
Order (perhaps the most modern one about) of Whithorn
in Galloway a new monastery at Mid Fearn,
moving it a decade later to New Fearn. The kingdoms of Northumberland in its connexion
with the kingdom of Dublin, which the Isle of Man was during the first Earl Malcolm's
lifetime known throughout Old Moray and
the Orkneys, and since the downfall of York when Meath was levied from the Nial
tribe. Ferchar was recored at Melrose
also as being present at the negotiations which led to the Treaty
of York, signed in 1237. The Earl of Ross William capitulated in 1309 and
in the same yeare a parliament in St Andrews proclaimed Bruce King of Scotland
whose status was recognised by all except the Pope and Edward II.
Four
of the six chief orders of nuns found in England had houses within the county
Northampton. The Benedictine nuns were at Stamford Baron and Wothorpe.
The Austin nuns had a small settlement at Rothwell. The Cluniac nuns had a house
of some importance, termed an abbey, at Delapré on the south side of Northampton.
The most strictly cloistered order were the Cistercian nuns; they had a house,
under exceptional rule, at Catesby,
also a small convent
of early foundation at Sewardsley.
The two great orders of knights following
the rule of St. Austin had each possessions in Northamptonshire. The Knights Hospitallers
had a commandery at Dingley, near Passenham,
founded temp. Stephen. The Knights Templars had three 'camerae' at Blakesley,
Guilsborough, and Harrington, (near Worsley,
Ashton Under Lyne, Burton
Overy) which were all transferred to the Hospitallers from Domesday Gloucester
when the Templars were suppressed in 1312.
The strange and terrible suppression
of the Templars occurred during the episcopate of the saintly Bishop Dalderby,
who was nominated by the pope as one of the commissioners to try the accused in
England. The bishop avoided acting with the other commissioners, but held a private
inquiry, so far as his own diocese was concerned, in the Lincoln chapter-house,
and subsequently declined to take any further part in the proceedings. From letters
in his register, it is concluded that he believed in their innocence. When, however,
the Provincial Synod of Canterbury passed sentence against the Templars in 1311,
the bishop of Lincoln had to carry out the archbishop's sentence in consigning
the knights to the various monasteries as prisoners to fulfil their penance. Seventeen
of the order were sent to as many monasteries of the diocese. The monks of St.
Andrew, Northampton, (Circenster)
were ordered to receive William de Pocklington, but the monastery refused to receive
him and sent a letter to that effect to the bishop. The bishop repeated his order
in sterner tones, but the priory again refused obedience. Bishop Dalderby then
took the grave step of writing to the rural dean of Northampton, bidding him to
cause to be published in every church of the deanery the excommunication of the
prior, sub-prior, precentor, cellarer, and sacristan of St. Andrew's. This apparently
secured the desired result, for there is no further reference to the matter in
the bishop's register. There is no other incident in the jurisdiction of this
great diocese during the fourteenth century that shows in such a marked way the
strength of the episcopal power, for the priory of St. Andrew (Foss
and Lennox) dominated the town of Northampton, and almost every church in
the deanery was in their gift. Those great evangelizers of the towns, the friars,
who, theoretically at least, rejected endowments and lived on the alms of the
faithful, naturally found their way with speed to Northampton, as one of the chief
towns of the kingdom.
The
Franciscans established themselves in 1224, the very yeare of their first
arrival in the kingdom, at Northampton, where they eventually had one of the largest
and most handsome churches of any pertaining to the mendicant orders in England.
They were closely followed by the Dominicans, whose friary at Northampton was
subsequently chosen as the place for holding provincial chapters. Somewhat later
in the century, the Carmelites and Austin Friars started houses in the same town,
so that Northampton shared the distinction with eleven other boroughs of having
settlements of all the four great orders of mendicant brethren.
Stamford,
on the northern verge of the county, was another of these twelve boroughs, so
that the smaller towns and villages of Northamptonshire would speedily be stirred
by the earnest eloquence of these vagrant missioners. Bishop Grossetęte was a
great patron of the friars, urging the parish clergy to give them ready access
to their pulpits, and a free hand in the hearing of confessions. The impression
that they made on the religious life of the shire in the thirteenth century could
not fail to be considerable.
Among religious foundations must also be included
the hospitals, for the church blended the spiritual with the corporal works of
mercy. A hospital without a chapel and a priest was unknown, and the regular inmates
were always vowed to certain religious observances. The terrible prevalence, even
in this midland shire, of mediaeval leprosy, and the zeal of the church in providing
for the victims, are testified by the founding, in the first half of the twelfth
century, of eight lazar-houses. Six of these, at Northampton, Peterborough, Towcester,
Brackley, Thrapston, and in Rockingham Forest, were dedicated, as was usual with
leper hospitals, in honour of St. Leonard; the seventh, at the Northamptonshire
end of Stamford Bridge, was dedicated in honour of St. Giles; whilst the dedication
of the eighth, by the north gate of Northampton, is unknown. In the same century
the large hospital of St. John the Evangelist and St. John the Baptist was founded
at Northampton; that of St. John and St. James at Brackley; that of St. John the
Baptist and St. Thomas of Canterbury at Stamford Baron; that of St. Thomas of
Canterbury at the abbey gate of Peterborough; and the well-endowed hospital of
St. John and St. James at Aynho under episcopal institution. In the yeare 1200
another largely-endowed hospital, the masters of which were presented by the adjacent
priory of St. Andrew to the bishop for institution, was founded at Kingsthorpe;
to this foundation were attached two chapels, dedicated respectively to St. David
and the Holy Trinity. A small hospital was also founded at Armston in the yeare
1232, and another at Pirho about the same time. All these hospitals were for the
three-fold object, in varying degrees, of providing for the aged, the sick, and
the wayfarer. Another hospital of some importance, that of St. Thomas of Canterbury,
is said to have been founded in Northampton by the burgesses about 1450; but this
was in all probability a revival of a far older foundation made soon after the
canonization of Thomas à Becket.
Northamptonshire, like other counties,
affords numerous examples of the gross diversion of those early hospital or almshouse
establishments from their original purposes. Monastic foundations had become so
numerous throughout England that munificently-disposed people sought other channels
for the disposal of their wealth. A method of doing this was suggested by the
growing practice of establishing chantries for one or more priests. The custom
became prevalent of turning parish churches into collegiate institutions. It has
been pointed out by one of the most comprehensive writers on such subjects that
these parochial colleges were really chantry chapels of a larger size; the chancel
being usually allotted to the community as rectors, whilst the nave remained congregational
under a vicar of their appointment.
The similarity of chantry to college
is nowhere more strikingly illustrated than in the episcopal registers of the
archdeaconry of Northampton. In 1327 Gilbert de Middleton, archdeacon of Northampton,
founded a chantry in the church of Wappenham, in honour of the Holy Trinity, the
Blessed Virgin, and All Saints, for six priests, one of whom was to be termed
the warden (custos), whose first duty it was to celebrate masses for the
founder's family. This foundation is expressly termed a chantry; but in 1337 John
Gifford, a canon of York, founded a 'college' at Cotterstock for a provost and
twelve chaplains, endowing it with the manor and advowson of the church and other
property. This is an exceptionally early instance of a parochial college. Northamptonshire,
for its size, was rich in foundations of this nature; at Irthlingborough in 1373
there was a foundation of a dean and five canons; at Higham Ferrers, Archbishop
Chicheley established his famous college of a master and seven canons in the yeare
1415; in the same yeare the royal college of Fotheringhay, with its master, eight
clerks, and thirteen choristers, was established; whilst at Towcester in 1448,
and at All Saints, Northampton, in 1459, colleges of much smaller dimensions were
instituted. Though the distinctive feature of these colleges was, as a rule, that
of large chantries for the repose of the soul of the founder or founders—a fact
which secured their complete destruction under Edward VI—it will be found that
the Northamptonshire examples afford evidence of their members being engaged in
definite parochial work, in education, and in the care of the aged. Their numbers,
too, enabled them (on the larger foundations) to provide for the parish and neighbourhood
examples of the highest form of worship, such as could otherwise only be found
in the cathedral churches.
Taken as a whole, the extant records of the visitations
of the religious houses of the county bear no small testimony to the general morality
and devout living of the inmates; the testimony in favour of the good works and
moral lives of the inmates, as supplied by county gentlemen and others, immediately
before the dissolution, is particularly strong in several cases, notably with
regard to the abbeys of Pipewell and St. James's Northampton, and the nunnery
of Catesby. As to their suppression, the main features of the dissolution in Northamptonshire
have been already set forth, and certain other particulars are given under the
respective houses.