Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Changes in Monastic Historical Writing Throughout the Long Fifteenth Century
- ‘Such Great Merits’: The Pastoral Influence of a Learned Resident Vicar, John Hornley of Dartford
- Getting Connected: the Medieval Ordinand and his Search for Titulus
- The Political Career of William Ayscough, Bishop of Salisbury, 1438–50
- Edward IV's Charta de Libertatibus Clericorum
- A Playground of the Scots? Gaelic Ireland and the Stewart Monarchy in the Late Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries
- An English Gentry Abroad: the Gentry of English Ireland
- Identity Theft in Later Medieval London
- Dying on Duty: A French Ambassador's Funeral in London in 1512
- Index
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
‘Such Great Merits’: The Pastoral Influence of a Learned Resident Vicar, John Hornley of Dartford
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 August 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Changes in Monastic Historical Writing Throughout the Long Fifteenth Century
- ‘Such Great Merits’: The Pastoral Influence of a Learned Resident Vicar, John Hornley of Dartford
- Getting Connected: the Medieval Ordinand and his Search for Titulus
- The Political Career of William Ayscough, Bishop of Salisbury, 1438–50
- Edward IV's Charta de Libertatibus Clericorum
- A Playground of the Scots? Gaelic Ireland and the Stewart Monarchy in the Late Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries
- An English Gentry Abroad: the Gentry of English Ireland
- Identity Theft in Later Medieval London
- Dying on Duty: A French Ambassador's Funeral in London in 1512
- Index
- Miscellaneous Endmatter
Summary
Si flerent artes, Hornley tacuisse Johannem
Non possent ista, qui tumulatur humo.
In septem fuerat liberalibus ille magister.
Prudens et castus, maximus atque fide.
Doctrine Sacre tunc bacchalaureus ingens.
Oxonie cunctis semper amatus erat.
Consilio valuit, sermones pandere sacros
Noverat, et Doctos semper amare viros
Pauperibus largus fuerat, quos noverat aptos,
In studiis paciens, sobrius atque fuit,
Moribus insignis cuncta virtute refulgens,
Pro tantis meritis spiritus astra tenet.
If the arts could weep, they would not be silent/ About John Hornley who is buried in this grave./ In the seven liberal arts he had been a master;/ Wise and pious and very great in his faith;/ Then a distinguished bachelor of Theology./ At Oxford he was always beloved by all./ He was strong in counsel, knew how to preach/ Holy sermons and always to love learned men./ He was generous to the poor whom he knew to be deserving,/ In his studies he was patient and reasoned,/ A man of illustrious character, shining with every virtue;/ Through such great merits his soul reaches heaven.
This generous and rather touching epitaph in the chancel of the parish church of Holy Trinity at Dartford in Kent is all that remains of the memorial brass to John Hornley, vicar there from 1442 until his death in 1477. If we take it at face value, Hornley was indeed a remarkable pastor. Such epitaphs, however, are usually considered at best self-serving and at worst hyperbole and have rarely been given serious attention by historians. The aim of this essay is to try to establish whether Hornley's epitaph alerts us to an outstanding ministry – whether the lively parish piety which existed in Dartford in the second half of the fifteenth century can be attributed to him. For most incumbents and parishes this would be an impossible task, but the relative abundance of the later medieval records of Dartford enables an attempt to be made.
Studies of parish religion have flourished in the last thirty years. Eamon Duffy’s The Stripping of the Altars placed the parish firmly at the centre of late medieval religion. Clive Burgess has elucidated the richness of urban parish religion, Katherine French and Beat Kümin have written studies based on churchwardens’ accounts, and there have been regional surveys by Andrew Brown and Judith Middleton- Stewart.
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- Information
- The Fifteenth Century XVIExamining Identity, pp. 27 - 44Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2018