Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Writing Techniques in Thirteenth- and Fourteenth-Century England: The Role of the Sicilian and Papal Letter Collections as Practical Models for the Shaping of Royal Propaganda
- The Great Bardney Abbey Scandal, 1303–18
- A Reassessment of the Loyalty of the Household Knights of Edward II
- Ramon Durand of Toulouse: A Lawyer Turned Knight in the Service of the Kings of England
- Urban Identity and Political Rebellion: London and Henry of Lancaster's Revolt, 1328–29
- ‘The Obscure Lives of Obscure Men’: The Parliamentary Knights of the Shires in the Early Fourteenth Century
- The Five Giants: Institutional Hierarchy and Social Provision in Later Medieval Leicestershire
- The Mariner in Fourteenth-Century England
- Dying beyond the Seas: Testamentary Preparation for Campaigning during the Hundred Years War
- Richard II and the Monasteries of London
- Index
- FOURTEENTH CENTURY ENGLAND
The Great Bardney Abbey Scandal, 1303–18
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Writing Techniques in Thirteenth- and Fourteenth-Century England: The Role of the Sicilian and Papal Letter Collections as Practical Models for the Shaping of Royal Propaganda
- The Great Bardney Abbey Scandal, 1303–18
- A Reassessment of the Loyalty of the Household Knights of Edward II
- Ramon Durand of Toulouse: A Lawyer Turned Knight in the Service of the Kings of England
- Urban Identity and Political Rebellion: London and Henry of Lancaster's Revolt, 1328–29
- ‘The Obscure Lives of Obscure Men’: The Parliamentary Knights of the Shires in the Early Fourteenth Century
- The Five Giants: Institutional Hierarchy and Social Provision in Later Medieval Leicestershire
- The Mariner in Fourteenth-Century England
- Dying beyond the Seas: Testamentary Preparation for Campaigning during the Hundred Years War
- Richard II and the Monasteries of London
- Index
- FOURTEENTH CENTURY ENGLAND
Summary
In the late 1270s Robert Kilwardby, archbishop of Canterbury, conducted a visitation of the diocese of Lincoln. When he reached Bardney, a Benedictine abbey in the Witham valley, east of the city of Lincoln, he found a house already in disarray. The abbot, Peter Barton, had recently been removed by the bishop of Lincoln, Richard Gravesend, but he appealed to Kilwardby who reinstated him. The pattern was already set for future conflict. Kilwardby identified four monks as troublemakers, and ordered their removal: Nicholas (de) Hagworthingham (Hagwinchingham), Henry Merle, Richard (de) Hayntone, and Robert (de) Wainfleet (Wainflete). It was Wainfleet who was to become the leading character in the subsequent drama. Kilwardby's visitation of Bardney was apparently incomplete when he was promoted to the rank of cardinal, and he resigned the see of Canterbury in June 1278. That same year the newly reinstated Abbot Barton proposed going overseas, though for what cause is unknown.
Kilwardby's successor, John Peckham, was archbishop of Canterbury from June 1279, and on 19 July of that year he wrote to the abbot of Bardney ordering him to receive those four rebellious monks back into the abbey, and to report back to him within fifteen days. A month later (12 August) Peckham ordered the rebel monks, now reduced to three in number, to return to Bardney without delay. It may not be coincidence that in spring of the following year, 1280, Peter Barton resigned the abbacy.
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- Information
- Fourteenth Century England VII , pp. 31 - 46Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2012