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ART, MIRACLES AND THE CULT OF THE VIRGIN AT THETFORD PRIORY: EVIDENCE FROM CAMBRIDGE, CORPUS CHRISTI COLLEGE MS 329

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2024

Matthew M Reeve*
Affiliation:
Matthew M Reeve, Department of Art History and Art Conservation, Queen’s University Kingston, Ontario, K7L 3N6, Canada.
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Abstract

This essay explores two texts in a fifteenth-century manuscript from Thetford Priory, Norfolk (now ms 329 in the Parker Library, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge). The first is an account of Marian miracles leading to the building of the Lady Chapel in the thirteenth century, and the second is an account of the formation of its relic collection in the twelfth century, which would be housed inside a statue of the Virgin Mary. The destruction of Thetford Priory at the Dissolution lends them a special significance since they offer evidence of a minor Marian cult that would be otherwise lost to us. The texts also highlight the interactions of aristocratic patrons – the Bigod family – and their Cluniac foundation. This essay explores the texts for the first time, offers a transcription and translation of them and considers their place in the cult of the Virgin at Thetford and in England generally.

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Research paper
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Society of Antiquaries of London

INTRODUCTION

Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, ms 329 (hereafter CCC 329) is a manuscript of 22.5 × 15.5cm comprising nearly 300 folios that was created for the Cluniac Priory of the Virgin Mary at Thetford, Norfolk c 1400–25 (fig 1). A compilation of six texts related to Thetford Priory, it contains the Historia Regis Waldei by Thetford monk John Bramis (fl fourteenth century), excerpts of William of Malmesbury’s Gesta Regum Anglorum relevant to Thetford, a chronicle of events at Thetford up to 1399 and a unique copy of the history of Thetford Priory by Prior Geoffrey de Rocherio (d after 1371).Footnote 1 Between the excerpts from the Gesta Regum and the Thetford chronicle are the subjects of this essay: written in a different hand, they comprise an account of the building of the thirteenth-century Lady Chapel at Thetford Priory and of the Marian reliquary statue that was its main devotional image at pp 206–9 (the manuscript is paginated rather than foliated), and on pp 209–10 an account of how a collection of relics came to be interred into the head of the statue in the twelfth century. The first text explores the building of the Lady Chapel due to the miraculous intervention of the Virgin Mary and recounts three further miracles connected to it. The second comprises a letter from the early twelfth century recounting the gift of relics originating in the Holy Land to Thetford Priory and a separate account of another relic collection that was interred in the statue. Located in sequence within CCC 329, these texts recount the origins of a significant relic collection, the housing of these relics in a reliquary and the architectural framing of this image in a new Lady Chapel. Although these texts have never been carefully studied, they have not been entirely overlooked. Scholars have drawn attention to them via the translation in Thomas Martin’s History of the Town of Thetford (1779) and they have entered into discussions of Marian art and miracles through the inclusion of Martin’s translation in Edmund Waterton’s Pietas Mariana Britannica (1879).Footnote 2 To date, no printed edition of the Latin text has been available, and scholars have relied on Martin’s English text without returning to explore the original manuscript. Martin offered a fluid but imperfect translation of the Latin text that now requires updating in the light of a wealth of scholarship on the medieval cult of relics, Marian devotion in England, the institutional and architectural history of Thetford Priory and the artistic and social environment of late medieval East Anglia.Footnote 3

Fig 1. The Parker Library, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, ms 329, p 206. Image: Reproduced with permission of Corpus Christi College, University of Cambridge.

Thetford Priory was one of the most important monasteries in late medieval East Anglia and one of England’s first Cluniac foundations.Footnote 4 Founded by the Bigod family in 1101/1103–4,Footnote 5 an aristocratic family in England from the time of the Norman Conquest, Thetford was the mausoleum of the earls and subsequently the dukes of Norfolk. Following the end of the Bigod family in 1306, patronage passed to Thomas Brotherton (1312), followed by the Mowbrays (1375) and the Howards (1483), who made Thetford Priory the centre of family piety and burial.Footnote 6 The original setting for Thetford Priory was the cathedral of the East Anglian bishops on the Suffolk side of the Little River Ouse, which was abandoned when the bishopric moved to Norwich in 1096. In 1106 the monks and their prior and founder, Stephen of Provence from Cluny, arrived via Lewes Priory and felt the setting was insufficient and congested and had no room for a guesthouse, so Roger Bigod (d 1107) provided the current land on the Norfolk side of the river. Building began in 1107 and the monks occupied the site from 1114. Even with the patronage of a significant family, Thetford was in decline after the removal of the bishopric to Norwich, although the cult of the Virgin would offer new revenue and pilgrims to Thetford. As such, aside from the insights into art and devotion that these texts offer, they also illuminate the complex relationships between a religious house, its aristocratic patrons and their tenants and relations in the High and Late Middle Ages.Footnote 7

CCC 329 contains the only known version of these texts. Existing as a fifteenth-century version of earlier texts, which would be heavily abbreviated in the process of compilation, the manuscript hints at what was once a rich documentary record at Thetford Priory. Unfortunately, we know very little of the literary traditions of Thetford Priory and almost nothing of its library.Footnote 8 Because we cannot check CCC 329 against the original account upon which it is based, we cannot always be certain when the compiler is copying the text verbatim or where he is adding his own material. Because John Bramis’ name is attached to the first of the texts in the manuscript, it has often been asserted that he compiled the entire manuscript, but it seems clear that multiple hands were involved.Footnote 9 To complicate matters, there are no cartularies from twelfth- and thirteenth-century Thetford that might inform our understanding of the events described in CCC 329. The material record is equally challenging: Thetford Priory was ravaged at the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and it now exists mostly at the level of its foundations (fig 2). Borrowing the maxim of the late historian of medieval England, Christopher Brooke, medieval (art) history often functions as a kind of detective story.Footnote 10 The clues left behind are documentary (principally but not exclusively the accounts in CCC 329), material (the building itself and its ex situ fragments) and contextual (particularly the extensive collections of Marian miracles in England and France). Scholars have used the miracles in CCC 329 as a documentary account of the cult of the Virgin at Thetford, but they were clearly informed by the distinct literary genre of the miracles of the Virgin that proliferated in the Middle Ages, and as such reflect a blend of historical accuracy and literary convention.

Fig 2. Aerial view of Thetford Priory. Photograph: Keith Mindham/Alamy Photo Stock.

This paper provides the first scholarly account of these texts. It considers their date(s), where possible it identifies the protagonists mentioned therein and it concludes by exploring the material and historical evidence for Thetford’s Marian cult. The texts begin at the end of this lengthy development of a cult of relics and move the reader through time to their point of origin, but our purposes are better served by describing the texts in the opposite order from how they appear (ie chronologically), thus beginning with the acquisition of the relics and progressing to the enshrining of them in a Marian statue, the resulting Marian miracles and the construction of the Lady Chapel. The first two parts of this paper offer an excursus on each of these texts; the third part explores the evidence for the Lady Chapel itself; and the final part considers the evidence for the cult of the Virgin at Thetford. Following this paper I provide a transcription of the original Latin text and a new translation of it in an appendix.

THE SECOND TEXT: THE ORIGINS OF THETFORD’S RELIC COLLECTION, ITS RELIQUARY, AND PATRONAGE

The account of the Thetford relics in CCC 329 bears the title given to it by its fifteenth-century compiler: ‘How the holy relics, discovered in the head of the abovesaid image, came to the monastery of Thetford (letter)’. It is in fact two texts: the first is a transcript of part of a twelfth-century letter from William of St Mary’s, Merlsham (Martlesham, Suffolk), to the aforementioned Stephen, Prior of Thetford, offering a gift of relics from the Holy Land; the second is a later account of another collection of relics discovered with the aforementioned Holy Land relics in a cavity in the head of the statue. The letter states that the relics originated from the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem and were given by William of Merlsham out of ‘paternal reverence’ to the priory at Thetford with the support of ‘my lord, Hugh Bigod’ and the ‘devout supplication of lord Ralph, your monk’. Unfortunately, William of St Mary’s, Merlsham, cannot be identified; nor is it clear how sacred relics of a high status were transferred from Jerusalem to what seems an inauspicious destination in the parish church of St Mary’s, Martlesham. What is clear is that the prior of St Mary’s Thetford was the aforementioned Stephen of Provence, prior from 1107 to as late as 1130.Footnote 11

Stephen was a key figure in the formation of the Cluniac monastery: he would lay one of its foundation stones and he would be commemorated alongside other founders and benefactors into the sixteenth century.Footnote 12 He was specifically requested to come from Cluny to preside over the new foundation by its founder and patron Roger Bigod, father of Hugh Bigod (1095–1177). Geoffrey de Rocherio indicates that Roger founded the Cluniac priory at Thetford in commutation of his vow to make a pilgrimage to the Holy Land during the First Crusade. Thetford was one of a long list of monasteries founded by new aristocratic wealth in the early twelfth century.Footnote 13 It drew its monks from Lewes Priory (East Sussex) founded by the Warenne family between 1078–82, another new, aristocratic foundation and the head of the Cluniac order in England. Although ‘Ralph, your monk’ (to whom we will return) cannot be identified, he was perhaps the first sacristan of Thetford Priory (he is also mentioned in connection with imagery made in the refectory in these years, of which more below).Footnote 14 The presence of Hugh Bigod and Stephen of Provence allows us to date the original letter with some precision. As Hugh only inherited his elder brother William’s estates when he drowned on the White Ship on 25 November 1120, the original letter was written and the relics acquired between c 1120 and 1130. Here we see the son of the founder of the priory working with the prior appointed by his father to transfer a series of Holy Land relics from a local parish church to Thetford Priory. The justification for this extraordinary gift was that the relics may be ‘celebrated more devoutly in your church’, which was doubtless true, but whether the relics were actually a gift or an opportunistic purchase by Bigod to endow his new foundation is unclear.

The Holy Land relics comprised fragments

  • of the purple robe of Our Lord

  • of the girdle of the Virgin, the Lord’s mother

  • of the Sepulchre of our Lord

  • of the rock of Calvary

  • of the tomb of the Virgin

  • of the manger of our Lord

  • of dust found in the tomb of St John the Evangelist

  • of St George

The general credulity of the medieval cult of relics aside, there is no obvious reason to doubt the relics’ authenticity.Footnote 15 It should be noted, however, that the collection did not all hail directly from the Holy Sepulchre, as the text indicates, but from the Holy Land more broadly: St George’s relic would have originally come from his cult site in Lydda, while others came from Bethlehem and the Mount of Olives. The collection described here feels much like a generic relic collection that could be acquired in Jerusalem by crusaders and pilgrims from stalls around the Holy Sepulchre, which may explain why the letter ascribes the relics to the Holy Sepulchre in particular. While Holy Land relics had a history in England, France and elsewhere before the First Crusade, it is most likely that the relics were recently acquired as part of the flood of holy remains that came to Europe with returning crusaders, whether as diplomatic gifts or as booty after c 1100.Footnote 16 Jerusalem was described by Bernard of Clairvaux as the thesaurus caelestis, or ‘treasury of Heavenly things’, and its conquest was understood to have been a gift from God to Christendom. Relics were acquired by pilgrims and crusaders to bring to their homelands so that the saints might be embraced ‘more closely with the arms of faith’, as Raymond of Aguilers put it contemporaneously.Footnote 17 It is notable that the recovery of the Holy Land would be central to the politics of twelfth-century Thetford beyond Bigod’s commuted crusade and the resulting construction of Thetford Priory.Footnote 18 Only 300 metres from the new site of Thetford Priory, William iii de Warenne founded an Augustinian priory in 1146–8 dedicated to the Holy Sepulchre.Footnote 19 Thetford would be one of the earliest religious houses of the canons of the Holy Sepulchre in England, and it was staffed by the order of Augustinian canons established in the church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem by 1114. In the course of the twelfth century, the canons of the Holy Sepulchre had a fair on the Invention of the Holy Cross, another on the feast of the Holy Sepulchre and a third on the exaltation of the cross, thus linking at least some locally held relics to the economic and social world of medieval Thetford.Footnote 20

The ‘gift’ of the relics to Thetford had an important context in the Bigods’ creation of a new monastery. Endowments of lands and relics went hand-in-hand with monastic foundations. As Julian Luxford has shown, a relic list could function analogously to a foundation charter, as it substantially kick-started a religious foundation, legitimated its altars and liturgy and bolstered its religious authority.Footnote 21 As patron and would-be crusader, Bigod was surely keen to endow Thetford with some of the most venerable Christian relics from the Holy Land.Footnote 22 Doing so immediately positioned Thetford among a series of important and, in many cases, established relic collections held by English monasteries. The New Minster Liber Vitae records the gift of a Byzantine triptych to New Minster by Queen Emma (probably in the 1030s) that included relics from the Holy Land and the Byzantine world.Footnote 23 Many were in common with Thetford, including stones from the Holy Sepulchre, wood from the manger in Bethlehem, a relic from Mount Calvary and relics of John the Baptist and of St George. Thorney Abbey had a similar list of Holy Land relics, including a fragment of the Holy Sepulchre and a relic from Mount Calvary as well as relics of the True Cross and the tomb of the Virgin Mary.Footnote 24 Endowing a monastery with Holy Land relics was a particularly common practice in Anglo-Norman foundations after the First Crusade, since it was facilitated by the quickened transit of relics from east to west. Reading Abbey, a Cluniac foundation founded by Henry i in 1121, likewise acquired a substantial collection of relics including an extended list of relics from the Holy Land, many of which were also held at Thetford.Footnote 25 At Barnwell Priory (Cambridgeshire), Robert Peverel (standard bearer to Robert Curthose) relocated the priory, rebuilt it and endowed it with relics and a reliquary of gold and topaz he had acquired on the First Crusade.Footnote 26 At Bridlington Priory in Yorkshire, the founder (Walter of Gant, d 1138) gave a reliquary filled with relics from Jerusalem in the early twelfth century.Footnote 27 Bigod was thus participating in a much broader pattern of relic acquisition from the Holy Land after the First Crusade, whether he went on crusade or not.

We can now move to the second part of the account of relics. Following a line filler in the manuscript is a later account of other relics found in the head of the statue. These are not mentioned in the letter from Stephen of Merlsham, and appear to derive from a different collection altogether assembled in early twelfth-century Thetford. Functioning like a relic list in two parts, it is typical of the genre in listing Christ and the Biblical saints first, before listing subsequent Christian saints, martyrs and so on.Footnote 28 The text lists relics of the martyrs Vincent, Leodgar, Agnes and Barbara, of Sts Gregory and Jerome and relics of East Anglian origin, namely the caskets of St Edmund King and Martyr and St Etheldreda (from Bury St Edmunds and Ely respectively), and a piece of clothing of St Lazarus.Footnote 29 All of these relics, including those from the Holy Land, were interred in the head of a Marian statue apparently procured by the aforementioned monk, Ralph, in the early twelfth century.Footnote 30

A complicating feature of the account is that the first miracle story claims that the statue was from the former cathedral of Thetford prior to the translation of the bishopric to Norwich, thus dating it to the original bishopric of Thetford 1071–94/5. The image was moved into the new church (presumably after 1114) and placed upon the high altar, but this would seem to contradict the account that Ralph ‘worked energetically to acquire [the statue] along with the smaller images pertaining to it and with a tabernacle most splendidly adorned, as is most fitting, with gold, stones and colour’. Assuming the text is not a strictly factual account, it would accord with a tradition in which Marian reliquaries (and ars sacra generally) were employed in medieval texts to suggest continuity of an institution over time, occasionally involving subsequent rebuildings of its architectural setting. There is an instructive parallel with the image of the Virgin at Glastonbury, which was apparently made by Joseph of Arimathea in the first century. It miraculously survived the 1184 fire of Glastonbury Abbey with only slight blistering to the face of the statue, only to be repositioned on the altar of the rebuilt Lady Chapel as the centre of the Marian cult.Footnote 31 John of Glastonbury would consider the miraculous survival ‘a worthy demonstration of the miracle that fire could not touch the image of her who remained ever virgin in body and mind and who knew no lust of the flesh’.Footnote 32 It has recently been suggested that the image was commissioned by Henry of Blois (abbot 1126–71), and that its general appearance is reflected in the twelfth-century seal of Glastonbury.Footnote 33 Whatever the case, the Glastonbury statue, like that at Thetford, may operate as a figure to demonstrate devotional and institutional continuity.

But we may also read the account literally and suggest that Ralph ‘worked energetically’ to acquire the statue, which must have been translated along with the episcopal throne and other ornamenta from Thetford cathedral to Norwich by Bishop Herbert de Losinga (d 1119).Footnote 34 Here it should be noted that, as a new religious order in post-Conquest England, Cluniac priories did not have the luxury of inheriting relics and liturgical ornamenta such as reliquaries, altarpieces, cloths etc from a previous church.Footnote 35 Although this is not recorded in documentation, the letters of de Losinga to Thetford Priory create an important context to understand such a situation.Footnote 36 Thetford was officially exempt from episcopal jurisdiction and subject instead to Cluny, a situation that was not agreeable to de Losinga. Although de Losinga attended the initial laying of the foundation stones, relations between Thetford Priory and Norwich Cathedral would be strained after the death of Thetford’s founder, Roger Bigod, because de Losinga claimed Bigod’s body against the will of Roger and his wife, who granted it to Thetford Priory.Footnote 37 This was an extremely acrimonious situation, and it is entirely possible that part of Ralph’s energetic works as sacristan (if indeed he was) was to negotiate for the return of the statue as the new focus of Thetford Priory’s devotional life.

Fortunately, we can say a little more about the other objects Ralph acquired. The splendidly adorned tabernacle was probably a wooden frame with hinged doors that concealed and revealed the statue at specific occasions during the liturgical year. While we have no physical evidence for such wooden tabernacles in England in this period, a number exist on the Continent and particularly in Scandinavia, where the design of tabernacles is understood to parallel those that existed in England. The reconstructed twelfth-century tabernacle and Marian statue from Urnes, Norway, may offer us an approximation of the form of the statue and tabernacle at Thetford (fig 3).Footnote 38 However, its description, which states that it is adorned with ‘gold, stones and colour’ indicates that the Thetford tabernacle was a more sumptuous, ‘multi-media’ object, perhaps comparable to that in the Capilla Real in Seville, which was likewise encrusted with precious stones.Footnote 39 The tabernacle is noted again in the 1473 will of Peter Benne, chaplain of the Lady Chapel, who left money to repaint it; the same will notes the presence of a tabernacled reredos that stood behind the altar, which was also to be repainted.Footnote 40 A ‘tabernakyl Assumptionis Sancte Marie’ and a ‘tabernakyl Nativitatis Sancte Marie’ are noted in the early sixteenth century, but it is not certain that these are the same as those mentioned in the letter or if they reflect later additions.Footnote 41 The text then moves to the monastic refectory, where we learn that Matilda of Saxmundham has, with the support of Ralph the Monk and a Ralph of Caen (Radulfo de Cadamo), made a new picture (pictura) in the refectory. The term pictura probably indicates a wall painting, although whether it refers to a single image or an entire cycle is unknown. It has been assumed that the imagery featured Marian iconography, but this is not stated in the text, and Christological imagery would be far more common in a Romanesque refectory.Footnote 42

Fig 3. Reconstruction of the tabernacle and statue from Urnes, Norway, of c 1150–1200, now in the University Museum of Bergen. Image: Reconstruction by Justin Kroesen and Stephan Kuhn, drawing by Åsta Lindemann.

Matilda of Saxmundham is considered ‘a sister of this place’, although she was not a ‘sister’ (soror) of the affiliated nunnery of St George, Thetford, which was founded only around c 1160.Footnote 43 Matilda is more likely to be a laywoman with confraternity within Thetford Priory. As such, she can be securely identified as Matildis de Langetot, daughter of Ralph de Langetot. Matilda’s husband was Ranulf Fitz Walter, a Domesday tenant of Roger Bigod, a donor to Thetford Priory and a signatory of its early charters.Footnote 44 The identity of Ralph of Caen is slightly more complicated. A recent hypothesis suggests that he is the elusive Ralph of Caen who wrote the Gesta Tancredi, the crusade epic that recounts the Norman campaigns in Cilicia and Norman rule in Antioch.Footnote 45 Hailing from Caen and trained at the cathedral school there under Arnulf of Chocques, Ralph spent much of his life in Jerusalem, possibly serving Arnulf as Patriarch of Jerusalem, which put him close to the source of the relics (as the argument follows).Footnote 46 This is an alluring suggestion, but it is quite certainly incorrect. First, the text is clear that Ralph of Caen contributed in some way to the imagery in the refectory and was not specifically connected with the acquisition of the relics. Second, a different de Cadamo family was closely involved with the Bigods as benefactors to Thetford Priory and tenants of the Bigod family from shortly after the Conquest.Footnote 47 Ralph de Cadamo is, in all likelihood, the son of Walter de Cadomo (sic) who attested the foundation of Eye Priory (Suffolk) as Walter of Huntingfield/ de Cadamo, held the barony of Horsford (Norfolk) and was an important Domesday tenant of Robert Malet.Footnote 48 Ralph is called a ‘dear friend’ of the monastery, and so he too is a lesser donor to Thetford Priory. A relation of Ralph – Richard de Cadamo – also signs Bigod charters at Thetford in these years, as does Robert Malet’s descendant, William Malet, thus reflecting two generations of interconnected families involved in the formation of Thetford Priory.Footnote 49

It is notable that Walter de Cadamo’s children – Ralph, Roger and Robert – would feature in the art and patronage of twelfth-century Norfolk. Robert Fitz Walter/de Cadamo, would be the founder of Horsham St Faith Priory, Norfolk, in 1105. In the thirteenth century, the walls of the refectory there were painted with the remarkable cycle narrating its foundation during the twelfth century.Footnote 50 While on a pilgrimage to Rome, Robert Fitz Walter/ de Cadomo and Sybilla, his wife, were imprisoned and they prayed to St Faith, who delivered them from imprisonment and brought them to the abbey of Conques (and thus to another famous reliquary statue, that of St Foy of Conques).Footnote 51 Visualising this narrative, the paintings at Horsham St Faith conclude with Sybilla witnessing the creation of Horsham St Faith Priory. Our knowledge of refectory decoration in medieval England is sparse at best, so the association between the decoration of the refectory at Thetford and the refectory at Horsham St Faith is intriguing: did Matilda, via Ralph, commemorate the founding of Thetford Priory on the walls of the refectory as a model for the future paintings of Horsham St Faith?

THE FIRST TEXT: MARIAN MIRACLES, THE RELIQUARY AND ITS SETTING

Despite the fact that the first text in CCC 329 is titled ‘These are the extraordinary reasons why the chapel of the glorious Virgin was constructed on the north side of the monastery of the monks and Prior of Thetford’ by its fifteenth-century compiler, it is in fact a collection of four Marian miracles, and only the first of them concerns the Lady Chapel. This miracle was manifestly the most significant to the compiler and it is accordingly my focus here. The three other miracles are distinctly local and focus on miraculous cures for people in Thetford and its environs, including the healing of the child of a carpenter from Hockham, Norfolk, and the revivification of a child who suffocated while co-sleeping with its mother in Thetford. Unfortunately, the miracles offer little if any internal evidence to date them. The first miracle refers to the Lady Chapel itself, which I note below can be dated to the middle years of the thirteenth century, so the first miracle was probably composed in response to the building of the Lady Chapel in the second half of the century. While the other miracles may have been composed contemporaneously, it is also possible that they reflect an earlier history of Marian miracles at Thetford.Footnote 52 The first miracle in particular was informed by a rich tradition of Marian miracles that began to be collected in England in the twelfth century.Footnote 53 Marian miracles were, in general, formulaic narratives designed to communicate Mary’s power and mercy: frequently involving a devotee such as Theophilus who angers the Virgin through disobedience, sin or arrogance, the Virgin then must intervene with a miracle to save (or punish) the devotee and re-establish Christian order. The proliferation of Marian miracles on one hand and their standardised narrative structures on the other means that tracing precise lines of transmission is often impossible.Footnote 54 In the absence of further evidence of the literary culture at Thetford Priory, the miracles themselves are testaments to a keen awareness at Thetford of Marian miracles from England and France.Footnote 55

The first miracle begins with the origins of the Romanesque statue of the Virgin that was apparently part of the former cathedral of Thetford but was moved into the new church and positioned there upon the altar. Over time, the Romanesque statue of the Virgin was replaced by what was likely a contemporary thirteenth-century Gothic version of its predecessor, while the Romanesque image was demoted to a niche or pedestal above a door next to the chapel. As I note below, this statue may have been moved to the niche in the north transept directly beside the door to the chapel itself where it stood as a signifier of the Marian cult but was not in the place of privilege at the Lady Chapel’s high altar (see fig. 10). Typical of descriptions of art in Marian miracles, it is the act of devaluing an ancient Marian statue, whether for its outmoded style, poor manufacture or material – perceiving it as an aesthetic object rather than as a signifier of, or vehicle for, the Virgin’s power – that angers the Virgin and catalyses the miracle story.Footnote 56 Understanding that offence to the Virgin’s image is offence to the Virgin herself, such narratives reinforce the danger of treating images as inert matter rather than as matter animated by the Virgin’s presence. Offering a cogent anthropology of what images mean and how medieval viewers were to interact with them, the Thetford miracles endorse the idea that Marian miracles helped to theorise the very idea of ‘art’ in the Middle Ages.Footnote 57

The Virgin visits a humble builder (simplex operarius) with failing health who had long prayed for her assistance.Footnote 58 For the return of his health, the Virgin asks him to speak to the prior and urge him to build a new Lady Chapel on the north side of the priory. The Virgin visits him three times before the builder finally speaks to the prior (whose identity is not given). The prior assents to have a wooden chapel built, but the builder is clear that the Virgin wishes that the chapel be built from stone and mortar and traces out its footprint on the ground. Returning for the third conversation with the prior, the builder finds him absent, and he instead speaks to a venerable member of the monastery. Both men witness the miraculous appearance of the sign of the cross decorated with gold and gems on a stone that would mark the site of the main column of the Lady Chapel (presumably the easternmost column that separated the Lady Chapel from the presbytery). The miraculous appearance of the cross to mark the site of Marian architecture was common enough in Marian miracles: a useful parallel here is in the Evesham Chronicle in which St Ecgwin seeks out the Virgin, who appears before him and presents a golden cross to mark the future site of Evesham Abbey.Footnote 59 The prior’s absence from Thetford slowed progress on the new building, and so the Virgin appeared to a certain woman in Thetford urging her to speak to the prior and hasten his work on the chapel. Like the builder before her, the woman does not heed the Virgin’s command and the Virgin then punishes her by rendering her arm immobile. The monks advise her to offer an arm of wax (an ex voto) to the Marian image, and her arm is healed.Footnote 60

The story then jumps ahead to the discovery of the relics in the head of the Marian statue, which may suggest that the fifteenth-century compiler skipped a passage from the original text. Referencing a passage in Luke 11:33 commonly evoked to gloss the discovery and display of relics, ‘No one lights a lamp and puts it in a place where it will be hidden, or under a bowl. Instead, they put it on its stand, so that those who come in may see the light’, the aforementioned prior responds to the Virgin’s interventions: ‘wishing to increase the devotion of the people towards the glorious Virgin as much as possible’, he had the image translated from its subordinate position to, presumably, the main altar of the Lady Chapel. But, first, the prior had a painter clean and repaint the statue, during which the painter discovered a silver plate nailed to the top of its head. Calling the prior and the monks to witness his discovery, the prior removed the plate and miraculously discovered the relics enclosed in lead with identificatory tituli attached. The gist of the story is that appropriate veneration of the Virgin in an elegant new setting and the renewed attention to her image resulted in the miraculous discovery of relics, a spiritual quid pro quo within the priory. Bringing the reader to the present with the knowledge that these very relics are currently worshipped in the chapel, the arc of the story is completed, from the acquisition of the relics to their veneration in the new chapel. Intricate and topographically specific though this account is, it is manifestly not a straightforward account of the building of the Lady Chapel. There is a tension between recounting a narrative that ‘fit’ with the physical and devotional world of thirteenth-century Thetford, and one that adhered to an established literary tradition of miracle stories that focus on Marian art and architecture.Footnote 61 The text offers no evidence of when the chapel was built or the identity of the prior who built it, as we have seen, and it alludes to multiple phases of construction or repair to the chapel but gives no evidence of what this work entailed.

We can now look more closely at the object and space our texts describe and the literary topoi that inform them. Beginning with the Marian image, the Latin term ymago used to describe it is frustratingly unspecific, but that it was easily moved from place to place and was positioned above a door, that it had a hollow cavity for relics in its head covered by a silver plate nailed on and the fact that it bore paint, suggests that it was a wooden Madonna or Madonna and Child (sedes sapientiae) reliquary of a type that was common from the mid-tenth century.Footnote 62 The only Marian image to survive from Thetford in these years is the priory’s seal, which shows the Virgin seated with Christ on her left knee (fig 4).Footnote 63 The style of the seal is closely related to the sculpture of the west façade of Wells Cathedral (Somerset) and can be dated to c 1240–50. If the seal does reflect a Marian image at Thetford, this is likely the Gothic image that replaced our Romanesque subject. Whatever the case, the original, Romanesque statue at Thetford is one of a number of reliquary Madonnas in England known from documentation, including a statue of the Virgin filled with relics created by Abbot Fabritius of Abingdon, Oxfordshire (1100–15), another at Barking Abbey (set within a tabernacle) and the miraculous Virgin at Glastonbury, which was adorned with gold and precious stones and relics were enclosed within it during the abbacy of John Chinnock (1375–1420).Footnote 64 A list of extant wooden Madonnas on the Continent, including the Montvianeix (fig 5) and Morgan Madonnas, both of which have relic cavities and bear significant traces of polychromy, offer contemporary parallels.Footnote 65

Fig 4. Thirteenth-century seal of Thetford Priory. Drawing: Martin 1779, 157.

Fig 5. Montvianeix Madonna. Cloisters Museum, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. French c 1150–1200. Photograph: Reproduced with permission of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

As we can contextualise the Marian image within the history of medieval art, so can we understand the accounts in CCC 329 within the tradition of Marian miracles. The account of the statue, in which its return to a place of honour was rewarded by the ‘discovery’ of relics, can be compared to a story in Hugh of Poitiers’ Vezelay Chronicle in which a wooden statue of the Virgin survived an 1165 fire, only slightly blackened and untainted by the scent of smoke. When the statue was examined, a hollow section was discovered in its back and, as at Thetford, the monks were called to bear witness as it was opened and a wealth of relics hidden within were revealed, each identified by tituli. The statue was returned to the high altar and ‘then all the people came flocking, both pilgrims and locals, and there was wonderfully great joy and exultation in the church, in the whole town, and in the neighbouring countryside’.Footnote 66 Painting a Marian statue as a stimulus to a miracle would also be a trope of Marian miracles. Our narrative recalls the ‘The Painter and the Devil’ miracle in which an artist paints the Devil exceedingly ugly to contrast with the beauty of the Virgin, and the Virgin intercedes on the artist’s behalf when attacked by the Devil. This story is recounted in the miracle collections of John of Garland and Vincent of Beauvais, and a version of it appears on the frontispiece of the Lambeth Apocalypse (Lambeth Palace Library ms 209) in which a Benedictine monk paints a statue of the Virgin and Child which comes alive in the process and rewards the monk with the apple she holds (fig 6).Footnote 67 Versions of this story are recounted in the thirteenth-century Cantigas de Santa Maria of c 1280,Footnote 68 in which the artist is shown painting a Virgin and Child sculpture and a deformed image of the Devil. The model for the sculpture was probably the aforementioned Virgen de los Reyes, a thirteenth-century statue in Seville Cathedral.Footnote 69 Containing and concealing the relics of saints within the body of the Virgin, the Thetford statue and its miracle story anticipate the ‘complex revelatory potential’ of late medieval Marian art, as statues of the Virgin quite literally open outward to reveal their hidden contents.Footnote 70

Fig 6. Frontispiece, Lambeth Apocalypse. Lambeth Palace Library ms 209. Image: Reproduced with permission of Lambeth Palace Library.

The account of the building of the Lady Chapel also adheres to a tradition of Marian miracles that concern the Virgin’s role as patron, architect and even builder of architecture. Indeed, it belongs in particular to an East Anglian tradition of Marian building miracles. It was probably informed by a story in William of Malmesbury’s De miraculis beatae virginis Mariae in which a humble labourer happens across a small country church and there meets the Virgin and her court who ask him to speak to the priest and urge him to build the Virgin’s church on a larger scale. The Virgin went out with the labourer and marked out the footprint of the building with her staff and set out stones as markers. After some mishaps, the church is built and the Virgin is more suitably housed in a larger and more magnificent setting, and the labourer, because of his fidelity to the Virgin, is promoted to the status of master mason. Occurring in the environs of Bury St Edmunds, the story was surely known in nearby Thetford.Footnote 71 Marian building miracles would occur again in the fifteenth-century Pynson Ballad, which recounts the Virgin’s intervention in the creation of the Lady Chapel at Walsingham. The Virgin again measured out the footprint of the building, but the masons could ‘nat ken neither mesure ne marke/ To ioyne togyder their owne proper werke’, and so it was the Virgin herself who, with angel’s hands, miraculously joined the stones together, ‘Hirsylfe beynge here chyef artyfycer’.Footnote 72 The chapel at Walsingham was thus an acheiropoieton – a work not made by human hands – a status fitting East Anglia’s greatest Marian shrine.Footnote 73

The Thetford miracle was located physically and chronologically between William of Malmesbury’s Bury St Edmunds miracle and Walsingham’s Pynson Ballad. It borrows a number of features from the Bury miracle: a humble builder, a Marian setting in need of expansion or improvement and the Virgin’s direct involvement in it via the builder. The stories emblematise material and social elaborations: at Bury, the church must be enlarged, while at Thetford, the Lady Chapel’s humble construction in wood does not sufficiently honour the Virgin, and so, at her insistence, the chapel is updated to the more costly, permanent and elegant construction in stone. As in architecture, so in sculpture: the worn and dirty surfaces of the reliquary suggest decay due to neglect and a resulting lack of splendour unsuited and even offensive to the Virgin Mary. Indeed, it is the intention to move the Marian image to a suitably honourable place and to redecorate this signifier in a manner that faithfully conveys the beauty of its signified – with paint but probably also with ornamentation including garments, applied gems, a veil and a crown – that causes the relics to be revealed in the first place.Footnote 74 In its many manifestations, Marian art was defined by its superior material character and by its technical sophistication. From the perspective of the medieval viewer, Marian art was often understood to have been made by the Virgin or through her involvement and was intended to bear the stamp or look of divine artistry, to possess the immaculate sheen of the Queen of Heaven’s court.Footnote 75

THE LADY CHAPEL

We can now turn to the Lady Chapel itself as the locus for the cult of the Virgin. It formed the northern part of an asymmetrical extension added to the Romanesque fabric that included the Lady Chapel and presbytery (fig 7). It was one of a long list of Lady Chapels added to English great churches from the later twelfth century, but it is especially part of an East Anglian tradition in which Lady Chapels were added to the north side of great Norman churches at Peterborough and Bury St Edmunds (1270s) and Ely (1320s). Unlike Peterborough and Ely, which featured attached but distinct rectangular chapels, Bury is the closest comparison, being built against the east wall of the north transept and the north wall of the choir.Footnote 76 The nearly complete destruction of the Lady Chapel during the Dissolution, and the post-medieval robbing-out of the fabric means that the majority of what is currently visible is the building’s rubble core and few worked stones (fig 8). Although reading the fabric is challenging, the main lines of its development are discernible from the archaeology and documentation.Footnote 77

Fig 7. Plan of Thetford Priory. Drawing: © Historic England Archive.

Fig 8. Thetford Priory Lady Chapel, from west to east. Photograph: author.

Building the thirteenth-century Lady Chapel and presbytery onto the north-east corner of the priory necessitated the removal of much of the fabric of the Romanesque triple-apse. This meant squaring off the southern apse and extending a curtain wall from the junction of the main and southern apse eastward, turning north across the eastern part of the building to create a flat eastern wall for the presbytery and Lady Chapel, and returning west to terminate at the northern apse. In 1935 F J E Raby argued that the presbytery and Lady Chapel were built in one campaign, while more recently it has been suggested that the addition was built in two phases during the thirteenth century.Footnote 78 The key evidence offered for a multi-phase build is the foundation of what was interpreted as the original west wall of the Lady Chapel on the line of the buttress on the north wall; it is assumed that this is the termination of the chapel prior to the continuation of the north chapel wall in a putative later-thirteenth-century campaign (there is no aboveground evidence visible for this at present).Footnote 79 The difficulty in accepting that the north wall was extended in a second campaign is the fact that the design of the plinth at the north-east corner of the Lady Chapel is identical to those in the north-west wall of the chapel (ie that assumed to be later). The section of plinth between these two points is of a different design, a feature that may have been intended to accommodate an existing structure against the wall with a flat plinth.Footnote 80 The visual evidence we have for the north wall of the chapel – an engraving by Wenceslaus Hollar (1607–77) – shows the entirety of the north wall of the Lady Chapel substantially complete: built in identical bays, there is no indication of a change in design in the western bays of the chapel (fig 9). Logic indicates that removing the Romanesque fabric would not have been a piecemeal affair. The fact that the masonry of the new east wall appears continuous likewise suggests that the destruction of the Romanesque apse cleared the way for an integrated presbytery and Lady Chapel built in a single campaign.

Fig 9. Wenceslaus Hollar, Thetford Priory from the north showing the north elevation of the Lady Chapel at left. Drawing: Reproduced with permission of the British Museum.

When complete, the Lady Chapel was a rectangular addition accessed from the west off the north transept or from the presbytery through an arcade that divided the two spaces (patronal tombs filled these areas in the later Middle Ages).Footnote 81 In conjunction with the new Lady Chapel was the creation of the aforementioned niche within the east wall of the north transept, which presumably held a Marian image (fig 10) and may have been the place that the original Marian image was set after it was removed from the altar.Footnote 82 Hollar’s engraving (fig 9) confirms that the Lady Chapel had a two-level elevation with lancet windows in the aisles and round oculi in the clerestory.Footnote 83 The east window was recorded by Francis Grose as a single traceried window (fig 11), but it is clear that this is a later insertion of c 1300 (doubtless one of the changes to the fabric referred to in the miracles).Footnote 84 A newel stair was built just south of the northern transept chapel to access a viewing chamber, which must have been intended for the priory’s patrons to gaze upon the elevated host at the altar below.Footnote 85 The date of the building of the Lady Chapel is not recorded and so it must depend principally on the fabric and antiquarian evidence. The interior of the east window retains some of the only worked stones remaining in the Lady Chapel that have diagnostic value: the inner capital and springer of the east window remains attached to the inner east wall at the north end (fig 12). Featuring spool capitals, en délit shafting and label stops with head busts, the stonework here confirms Peter Draper’s dating of the Lady Chapel to the middle years of the thirteenth century.Footnote 86 If so, the date of the building of the chapel broadly agrees with the date of the priory’s new Marian seal and perhaps the new Marian statue mentioned in the miracles. Although the nature of the evidence does not allow for certainty, this points to an intention to promote a cult of the Virgin at Thetford in the middle years of the century.

Fig 10. Niche in the east wall of the north transept leading to the Lady Chapel at Thetford Priory, which probably once held a Marian image. Photograph: author.

Fig 11. Thetford Priory from the east showing the remains of the east wall of the Lady Chapel at right. Drawing: Grose 1797.

Fig 12. Detail of the in situ capital on the inner north-east corner of the Lady Chapel, Thetford Priory. Photograph: author.

THE CULT OF THE VIRGIN AT THETFORD

The texts in CCC 329 and the new Lady Chapel offer remarkable evidence of a Marian cult at Thetford centred upon its miracle-working statue. How successful was the Marian cult and, aside from the Cluniac monks, who were its devotees? The statue, Lady Chapel and miracles were components of a cult that would eventually be dwarfed by the major East Anglian cults at Bromholm and Walsingham in the course of the thirteenth century. Bromholm, another Cluniac monastery, was founded by William de Granville in 1113 and boasted a relic of the True Cross apparently acquired during the Fourth Crusade. The relic came to Bromholm c 1220, and miracles were first recorded in 1223.Footnote 87 Bromholm would grow in importance and appear in Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales and Langland’s Vision of Piers Plowman.Footnote 88 St Mary Walsingham was begun by Richeldis de Faverches in the twelfth century after a miracle in which the Virgin brought Richeldis from England to Nazareth to see the Holy House where the Annunciation was received. Richeldis apparently built a replica of the Holy House before founding an Augustinian priory with its own miracle-working Marian statue.Footnote 89 To these major cults should be added lesser local cults including St Mary, Woolpit, Suffolk. Located just sixteen miles from Thetford, Woolpit was a minor Marian cult from at least the early thirteenth century, and its focus was a Marian image that was the subject of devotion and benefaction in the later Middle Ages.Footnote 90 Later additions to East Anglia’s Marian shrines would include Our Lady of Ipswich, where around 1300 a statue of the Virgin was miraculously discovered in the ground and miracles were recorded there by 1327.Footnote 91

While we do not know how early miracles were recorded at Thetford, it is clear that Walsingham, Bromholm, Woolpit and Thetford were all lesser cult centres when they began in the twelfth or thirteenth centuries. The fame associated with Walsingham and Bromholm would be due in large part to royal interest in them. Henry iii would visit Bromholm and Walsingham in 1226 and would grant fairs to each institution, which substantially invigorated the beginning of both cults. Our Lady of Woolpit is first recorded in 1211–14 and it would receive a fair in 1286.Footnote 92 Competition with these local centres is recorded only once in CCC 329, and it is notable that the miracle references St Mary Woolpit rather than a larger cult centre. The third miracle recounts a devotee of the Virgin who had seemingly suffered from facial paralysis and dysphagia. Although instructed to take a penny to Our Lady at Woolpit, the mute woman gestures instead to Thetford Priory and its Marian statue and goes there in the hope of being healed. Her prayers and donation animate the statue of the Virgin, who reaches its hand into the woman’s throat and dislodges her tongue, restoring her speech.Footnote 93 The woman pledges to maintain a candle at the statue of the Virgin for the rest of her life, thus transitioning from devotee to donor. This miracle offers a blunt account of the competition between two local cults for the attention and renumeration of devotees. As Carol Rawcliffe has shown, these major cults served to draw a significant pilgrimage trade to East Anglia and churches such as St Mary Woolpit and Thetford Priory seized upon this.Footnote 94

The miracle stories and Lady Chapel aside, the evidence for a cult of the Virgin at Thetford is not extensive. The Victoria County History nonetheless states: ‘Pilgrims flocked to the priory, and as a result of their offerings a fine Lady Chapel was built on the north of the quire; the quire was itself extended forty feet, the frater was rebuilt on a larger scale, and […] monks were added to the establishment.’Footnote 95 This is based on the 1291 Taxatio, but, with no earlier point of comparison, it is open to question. Indeed, many of the sources we expect to note the presence of a cult do not: for instance, Matthew Paris recounts that Prior Stephen ii was murdered by a monk within Thetford Priory, but he says nothing of a Marian cult.Footnote 96 The 1279 visitation of Cluny indicates that the number of monks increased from 13 to 22, but this follows a pattern of thirteenth-century monasteries generally and may or may not relate to a thriving cult. This visitation records that the church and cloister were in good condition, that the monastic residences were repaired and a new grange was built, but neither the Lady Chapel nor the cult of the Virgin is mentioned.Footnote 97 We are also lacking evidence of pilgrim badges from Thetford and other material signs we might expect of cult activity. The pilgrim badges and ampullae found in Thetford are mostly related to Walsingham and appear in Thetford as an accident of being on a pilgrimage route.Footnote 98

Royal interest in the cult was relatively minor, a factor that helped to tip the scales in the favour of Bromholm and Walsingham. Henry iii (1216–72) visited Thetford five times between 1234 and 1245; although the Priory of St Mary is not specified, that it was his host institution is likely. Henry’s itinerary also included major shrines at Bromholm, Norwich, Bury St Edmunds and Ely.Footnote 99 In 1239 Henry iii asked that the Sherriff of Norfolk take 11 tons of wine for the king’s use and send it ahead to Thetford, Castle Acre, Walsingham, Bromholm, Norwich and Bury St Edmunds (a similar request would be made the following year).Footnote 100 That Thetford Priory was intended here is suggested by a 1244 notice in which Henry iii gifted a ton of wine to the priory and its monks.Footnote 101 A devotee of the Virgin Mary, Henry’s preference among East Anglian shrines was for Walsingham, and his devotion to the cross was performed at Bromholm, where he bestowed gifts of wax, money and ex votos.Footnote 102 No gifts are recorded to the Marian cult at Thetford, although Henry did give the aforementioned Prior of Thetford, Stephen ii (a royal servant), 14 marks 6s 8d for a chasuble and a cope on 28 March 1246.Footnote 103 Henry’s son, Edward i (1272–1307) spent less time in Norfolk, although he signed letters patent at Thetford in 1285, 1293 and 1305.Footnote 104

The fourteenth century was a period of decline for the monastery, which led to it being significantly in debt. An alien priory connected to Cluny, Thetford’s revenues would be harshly taxed and its lands sequestered to fund wars with France. In 1313 the priory would be ransacked by a mob and the prior’s goods carted away.Footnote 105 The 1321 Cluny visitation records that some of the priory buildings were ruinous and threatening collapse.Footnote 106 This situation changed in 1376 when Edward iii naturalised the priory (thus removing the requirement to pay additional taxes), one year after the Mowbray family became its main patrons. It may be no surprise that it is after this point that evidence for the cult of the Virgin begins again. Indeed, the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries up to the Dissolution appear to have seen the cult flourish. In 1406 Henry iv visited Thetford Priory as part of a journey of healing at East Anglian shrines including Norwich and Walsingham, and, as we have seen, a series of donations to the Lady Chapel can be charted in wills.Footnote 107 The 1520s and 30s witnessed renewed attention to the Lady Chapel, including purchasing a new bell rope and altar cloths, and work on the ceiling of a chamber identified as a watching chamber in the upper west end of the Lady Chapel paid for by the Duchess of Norfolk.Footnote 108 In the following year there is evidence that the Lady Chapel owned the White Hart Inn in Thetford, which was tenanted out.Footnote 109

While there is still much to be learnt about CCC 329 and its composition, the renewed interest in the cult alone suggests why its fifteenth-century compiler felt it necessary to include the texts of a twelfth-century account of its relic collection and a thirteenth-century record of the miracles in a volume focused upon the history of the priory. Seemingly always at the mercy of their patrons’ generosity, the cult of the Virgin remained a lesser cult centre that never reached the heights of its local competitors, and it is in this very precarity and locality that its interest lies. There can be little doubt that the monks of Thetford would wistfully agree with Reginald Pecock who claimed that ‘no place in erthe is holier than an other place is, and noon ymage is holier than an other lijk ymage is. Wherfor it is vein waast and idil forto trotte to Wasingam rather than to ech other place in which an ymage of Marie is’.Footnote 110

APPENDIX: CCC 329 TRANSCRIPTION AND TRANSLATION

[page 206]

Hec sunt motiva exhortatoria quare capella virginis gloriose in parte aquilonari monasterij monachorum Thetfordie per Priorem eiusdem loci extiterat constructa.

Olim dum sedes episcopalis fuerat in civitate Thetfordie predicta in ecclesia provinchiali sancte marie. Deinde translata ad Helmham. Novissime ubi iam situatur apud Norwycum erat quedam ymago virginis benedicte in predicta ecclesia eiusdem Thetfordie que postmodum ad ecclesiam monachorum deportata ac in loco honorifico videlicet ad magnum alta re collocata est. Demum decencioris ymaginis occasione a loco illo deposita et in loco obscuro quasi totaliter derelicta ponebatur. Est verum et publice per provinciales divulgatur quod erat quidam simplex operarius in prefata villa Thetfordie qui quia incurabili infirmitate diutius laboravit virginemque benedictam pro sua sanitate recuperanda incessanter interpellabat. Tandem in visione nocturna ei beata virgo apparuit sic inquiens si tuam desideras optinere sanitatem surge dilacione postposita et dic priori domus mee ut ad honorem mei nominis mihi capellam fabricet in parte aquilonari per ipsum noviter reparata. Qui sua verba reputans quasi frivola opus illud celitus sibi iniunctum perficere non curavit. Tribus admonicionibus ex parte virginis per prefatum languidum non obstantibus tandem pro certitudine maiori tale secretum prefato priori firme intimavit. Quod nulli viventi extiterat revelatum. Quod audiens prefatus Prior ultra quod credi possit in se stupefactus tremuit et de revelacione multum admirans ligneam finaliter proposuit construxisse capellam. Sed prefatus languens iterum ad Priorem redijt asserendo voluntatem virginis esse non ligneam habere capellam sed de cemento et lapidibus fore fabricandam locum ei signando et spacium. Modico intervallo habito accidebat priorem devillasse et eo absente redijt vir prefatus racione confabulandi cum eo. Quo non presente accessit ad quemdam senem multum devotum in eodem monasterio moram continue trahentem ostendens ei signum crucis habens formam in quodam lapide auro gemmisque preciosis mirabiliter decoratam fere per duarum horarum spacium omnibus intueri volentibus manifeste apparuit. Super quem columpna principalis prefate capelle situatur.

Demum priore ad monasterium redeunte ac structuram capelle predicte aliqualiter procrastinante causis legitimis veraciter prepedito cuidam mulieri ville prelibate virgo sanctissima visione consimili qua prius viro apparuit intimans ut quemdam monachum eiusdem loci devotum adiret sibi iniungendo quod

[page 207] priorem provocaret ut structuram capelle sue celerius festinaret omni excusacione penitus remota. Cuius iussionem sedule non advertens revelacionem sibi factam adimplere non curavit. Sed virgo benedicta sue intencionis non immemor tempore nocturno redijt ad prefatam mulierem ac acriter eam redarguens quia suum contempsisset preceptum. Sic brachium mulieris manu sua strinxit atque palpavit ut omnem usum levandi ac administrandi penitus amisit. Que vigilans non iniuncto turbata ac de sua negligencia corditer dolens cum summa festinancia predictum monachum adivit omniaque que ei ex parte virginis fuerant facta cum eiulatu et fletibus revelavit. Cuius doloribus compaciens monachus prelibatus ei consuluit ut brachium de cera formatum ymagini beate virginis offerret. Quo facto mulier pristine sanitati est restituta ac a dolore brachij totaliter aliena.

Cum dicat evangelicus ille lucas quod lucerna accensa modio submitti non debeat sed super candelabrum ut luceat et cetera. Ideo ad maiorem dei ac matris sue laudem et sanctorum veneracionem cum reverencia ac summa devocione fidelium mentibus est commendandum de sanctissimis inventis reliquijs in capite ymaginis situate in capella predicta per priorem ut pretactum est noviter reparata. In prima constructione capelle predicte volens prefatus prior in quantum possit erga virginem gloriosam devocionem populi augmentare fecit prefatam ymaginem noviter ornari atque depingi que antiquitus supra quoddam hostium iuxta prefatam capellam in loco minus honesto erat situata. Sed cum pictor de putrida pictura ymaginem purgaret in capitis summitate quoddam lamen argenteum firmissime clavatum invenit. Qui de signo insolito intra se admirans priorem celeriter inquisivit eique lamen in summitate ymaginis sic clavatum demonstravit. Prior convocatis pluribus monachis ac alijs personis sperans ibidem aliquod dei donum esse manu sua omnibus cernentibus lamen abstraxit ibique plurimorum sanctorum invenit reliquias plumbo inclusas nominibus universorum sedulis scriptis que in eadem capella usque hodie devotissime venerantur.

Erat quedam mulier in prefata villa Thetford tenellum habens infantem etatis sex mensium. Que quadam nocte in stratu suo recubans sinistrante fortuna illa dormientem puerum oppressit. Que evigilans repperit suum infantem omnino fore mortuum. Et velud amens effecta prefatum mortuum subito in ulnis arripuit ac nuda ad ecclesiam monachorum cucurrit et coram prefata ymagine devotissime prostrata vitam sui pueri a virgine

[page 208] gloriosa magnis fletibus corditer flagitabat. Oratione autem finita puer revixit et vivus apparuit. De quo feliciter gratulata gaudens ad propria remeavit.

Erat in Thetfordia mulier quedam diutina infirmitate prostrata ac in articulo mortis veraciter posita et quod mirum est auditu ita in sua lingua erat capta quod in suo gutture profundius erat retracta ita ut omnem usum loquendi vel eam movendi totaliter amiserat. Reliquam tamen membrorum suorum potenciam sufficienter possidebat. At assistentes sibi benivoli pro sua sanitate habenda quendam denarium super capud suum flexerunt ymagini virginis gloriose offerendum apud wylput. Quod considerans mulier prefata manu sua signavit versus monasterium monachorum ville pretacte. Quod cernentes prefati benevoli et amici assignaverunt predictum denarium ymagini situate in capella monasterij monachorum per priorem noviter reparata. Quo assignato mulier incontinenti loquebatur recte benedicens deum et eius matrem gloriosam. Et ut prefata mulier asseruit similitudo ymaginis predicte sibi assistebat et linguam suam sic in gutture suo retractam manu sua miraculose extrahebat. Sicque ad laudem dei pristine sanitati mulier restituta in signum tam evidentis miraculi per totum vite sue spacium coram prefata ymagine candelam vovebat sustinere.

Ad dei misericordiam magnificandam et sue genitricis gloriose laudem ampliandam unum admirabile et insigne miraculum dignum duxi provulgare Non enim occultandum est vel negandum quicquid ad honorem dei et sue genitricis dinoscitur pertinere. In quadam villa Norffolch vocata Hokham fuit quidam homo carpentarius nomine Willelmus Heddrich iunior cum uxore sua Ysabella comorans. Hij filium tenellum etate trium annorum habebant. Qui et tempore autumpnali dictum puerum in campum secum adduxerunt prout habetur in consuetudine a quampluribus in patria. Quadam die ad occasum solis contingebat puerum predictum oppressum sompno in humo cecidisse et obdormisse ad finem illius terre in qua mater sua metebat. Et crepusculo superveniente venit quidam ducens carectam cuius rota super capud pueri dormientis transiens illum interfecit ductore de puero penitus ignorante. Quam quidem carectam pater pueri sequebatur inveniensque puerum in brachijs suis suscepit. Quem videns mortuum multum doluit. Et festinans cucurrit ad quendam virum fidelem in eadem villa commorantem qui plures a diversis morbis et

[page 209] infirmitatibus virtute medicinarum graciose curaverat. Hic cum vidisset puerum et diligenter tangendo atque palpando mortuum veraciter cognovisset patri consuluit ut illum domum deferret et pro eius sepultura in crastino ordinaret. Qui audiens flevit et filium multum condolens et graviter lugens domum redijt corpus exanime uxori sue tradens ut illud in lecto. Collocaret et convocatis amicis suis et propinquis sicut mos est funeris faciendi vigilabant orantes et voventes beate dei genitrici marie quod si filium suum iam defunctum sua intercessione vivum potuerint optinere nudis corporibus peregre proficiscentes ymagini beate marie in ecclesia monachorum apud Thetford offerrent constitute. Oratione autem finita et votis devote promissis circa mediam noctem revixit puer. Quo viso multum congratulabantur laudantes deum et benedicentes. Qui et vota sua adimplere cupientes puerum sustulerunt et ymagini gloriose virginis supradicte devotissime optulerunt.

Qualiter sancte reliquie in capite supradicte ymaginis repperte ad Thetfordense monasterium pervenerunt. Epistula.

Domino et patri Stephano Thetfordensis ecclesie procuratori egregrio Willelmus ecclesie sancte Marie de Merlesham minister humilis salutem paternamque reverentiam. Caritas que non est ambiciosa queque non querit que sua sunt sed que aliena cogit me facere vobis que neque episcopo nostro nec ulli unquam homini facere volui pro sancta religione et observantione sacri ordinis quam vestre inesse ecclesie a multis audivi. Et hoc precipue facio suffragante domino meo Hugone Bigoto et devota supplicacione dompni Radulfi monachi vestri. Mitto igitur vobis de sacris reliquijs nostre ecclesie a sanctissimo sepulcro domini transmissis. Scilicet de purpurea veste domini et de cingulo sancte marie matris domini et de sepulcro domini de petra calvarie de sepulcro sancte marie de presepio domini et de pulvere in sepulcro sancti Johannis evangeliste invento qui inde ebullire et scaturire a verace assertore perhibetur et de sancto Georgio. Et hoc ea devocione facio ut horum memoria sanctorum devocius in vestra ecclesia celebretur.

Iste sacre prenominate reliquie et cum istis sacra pignora plurimorum sanctorum scilicet de sancto Vincentio martyre et de sancto Leodegario martyre de capillis sancte agnetis virginis et martyris de sancta Barbara virgine et martyre de sancto Gregorio pontifice de sancto Leonardo de sancto Jeromino de ligneo locello gratia non natura imputribili in quo sanctus edmundus rex et martyr post multos passionis sue annos inventus

[fol 209v] est integer et viventi simillimus et adhuc in eodem iacet positus. Similiter de sancto ligneo locello sancte etheldrede in quo post undecim annos inventa est integra et dormienti similis. Et de vestimento sancti Lazari et eius sepulcro et de multis alijs quorum merita et nomina deus scit nos autem salva veritate nominare non audemus. Hec omnia recondita fuerunt in ymagine sancte dei genitricis supradicta quam ymaginem dompnus Radulfus huius loci monachus et a iuventute sua nutritus in hoc eciam thetfordensi oppido natus sua vivaci strenuitate et adquisicione fecit cum appendentibus ymaginibus minoribus et cum tabernaculo sicuti est decentissimum auro lapidibus et coloribus adornato. Sed et picturam in refectorio licuit domina matildis de samundeham huius loci soror et singularis amica cuius animam absolvat omnipotens sua de peccunia fecerit adnutante eciam quodam clerico Radulfo de Cadamo amico nostro caro. Predictus tum Radulfus monachus sua ammonicione et exhortacione et laboriosa procuracione fecit in quo opere multos labores et tribulaciones sustinuit donec ad effectum perduxit. Pro hijs et pro alijs que devote secundum posse suum huic ecclesie fecit servicijs concessum est ei in hac ecclesia anniversarium suum imperpetuum devote fieri quod est. Idus Octobris.

These are the extraordinary reasons why the chapel of the glorious Virgin was constructed on the north side of the monastery of the monks and Prior of Thetford

Once, while the episcopal seat was in the city of Thetford in the provincial church of St Mary, which was transferred to Elmham, and most recently situated at Norwich, there was a certain image of the Blessed Virgin in the aforesaid church of the same Thetford. It was afterwards carried down to the church of the monks and set in an honourable place, namely at the high altar. In the fullness of time, another image replaced the ancient image; it was taken down from the altar and laid in an obscure place as if totally abandoned. It is true and well known by those in the region that there was a certain humble builder in the town of Thetford who, because he suffered from an incurable infirmity for a very long time, prayed incessantly to the Blessed Virgin to restore his health. At last, in a nighttime vision the Blessed Virgin appeared to him and said, ‘If you wish to regain your health, rise without delay and tell the Prior of my house to build a chapel for me to the honour of my name on the north side which had been newly repaired by the same man’. Thinking that her words were frivolous, he did not complete that task which had been sent from Heaven, even after three warnings by the Virgin. At last, he resolved to make the secret known to the aforementioned prior, the like of which had not been revealed to any living man. On hearing this, the prior trembled, being astonished beyond belief. Marvelling at the revelation, he finally resolved to have a wooden chapel built. But the sick man returned again to the prior, asserting that the wish of the Virgin was not to have a wooden chapel, but that it should be built from mortar and stones, and he showed the prior where the chapel was to be built and marked out its footprint. Shortly afterward, it happened that the prior was away, and while he was absent the aforesaid man returned in order to speak with him. With the prior away, he went to a certain pious old man who was living in the same monastery and showed him the sign of the cross, which appeared upon a stone miraculously decorated in gold and precious gems. For almost two hours this clearly appeared to all those who wanted to look at it. Upon this stone the main column of the aforesaid chapel is situated.

When the Prior finally returned to the monastery, he delayed the building of the Lady Chapel (although for legitimate reasons), and the most Holy Virgin appeared to a certain woman of the aforesaid town. Appearing in a vision just as she had appeared to the sick man, she commanded that the woman go to a certain devout monk of the same place, urging him that he should press the prior to hurry more swiftly with the building of her chapel, completely removing all excuses. Not paying heed to the revelation, she did not diligently carry out the Virgin’s command. Not forgetting her intentions, at nighttime the Blessed Virgin returned to the woman and sharply rebuked her because she had defied her orders. She touched and squeezed the woman’s arm with her hand so that she completely lost all ability to lift and use it. Awake and disturbed and deeply regretting her negligence, the woman went to the aforesaid monk with the utmost haste and revealed all the things which had been done to her by the Virgin with lamentation and tears. Having pity for her pains, the monk advised her to offer an arm formed from wax to the image of the Blessed Virgin. Having done this, the woman was restored to her former health and was totally free from pain in her arm.

Luke the Evangelist says that a burning lamp ought not to be put in a place where it will be hidden, but put on its stand so that it may shine, etc.Footnote 111 Therefore for the greater praise of God and his mother, and the veneration of the saints with reverence and the utmost devotion, we commend to the minds of the faithful the most sacred relics found in the head of the image, situated in the aforesaid chapel, having been newly repaired by the prior. In the first construction of the chapel, the aforesaid prior, wishing to increase the devotion of the people to the glorious Virgin as much as possible, caused the aforesaid image to be newly adorned and painted, which had long been situated above a certain door next to the chapel in a less worthy place. But when the painter was cleaning the badly worn paint of the image, he found on the top of the head some sort of silver plate, very firmly nailed on. Marvelling to himself at this extraordinary sign, he quickly sought out the prior and showed him the plate which had been nailed on the top of the image. Having gathered several monks and other people and hoping that it was there as a gift from God, the prior removed the plate with his own hand while all looked on and found there relics of several saints enclosed in lead, with the names of all of them carefully written, which are devoutly venerated in the same chapel today.

There was a woman in the said town of Thetford who had a young infant aged six months. One night while lying in her bed, by misfortune she crushed her sleeping child. On waking up, she found her baby to be completely dead. And as if deprived of her senses, she suddenly snatched up the dead child in her arms and ran naked to the church of the monks and she most devoutly lay prostrate before the aforesaid image and heartily pleaded with tears to the glorious Virgin for her boy’s life. Once her prayer had finished, the boy came back to life and appeared fully restored. Happily having giving thanks at this, she returned home rejoicing.

There was in Thetford a certain woman, laid low with a long-standing infirmity and near the point of death. Remarkably, her tongue was caught so deeply in her throat that she had totally lost all use of speaking or moving it, but she still possessed the power of her limbs. Some kind men assisted her and placed a penny upon her head for the sake of preserving her health to be offered to the image of the glorious Virgin at Woolpit. Considering this, the aforesaid woman made a sign with her hand towards the monastery of the monks of Thetford. On seeing this, the kind men and friends gave the aforesaid penny to the image, situated in the chapel of the monastery of the monks that had been newly repaired by the prior. After this had been given, the woman immediately spoke properly, blessing God and his glorious mother. And as the aforesaid woman asserted, the image stood beside her and miraculously extracted her tongue that had been stuck in her throat with its hand. Once the woman had been restored to her former health, to the praise of God and as thanks for such a miracle, she vowed to maintain a candle throughout the whole space of her life before the aforesaid image.

To magnify God’s mercy and amplify praise of his glorious mother, I have considered it worthy to make known one wonderful and remarkable miracle, for whatever is known to pertain to the honour of God and his mother should not be kept hidden or denied. In a certain town of Norfolk called Hockham there was a carpenter named William Heddrich the younger, living with his wife Isabel. They had a young three-year-old son. They brought the boy with them in autumn into the field, as is generally done in the region by many people. One day at sunset it happened that the boy, being overwhelmed by sleep, had fallen down on the ground and gone to sleep at the end of that land in which his mother was reaping. With dusk coming, there came a certain man driving a cart completely unaware of the boy, whose wheel passed over the head of the sleeping boy and killed him. The father of the boy was following the cart, and upon finding the boy he took him up in his arms. Seeing him dead, the father grieved greatly. He quickly ran to a certain reliable man living in the same town, who had graciously cured several people of diverse diseases and infirmities with the power of medicine. When this man had seen the boy, diligently touching and stroking him, he acknowledged that he was truly dead and advised the father to take him home and make arrangements for his burial on the following day. On hearing this, the father wept, felt much pain for his son and greatly mourned him. Returning home, he gave his son’s lifeless body to his wife so that she might place it on a bed. Their friends and kinsmen gathered, as is their funerary custom, and kept vigil. Praying and vowing to the blessed Mary, mother of God, that, if the dead boy lived by her intercession, they would depart from home naked and make an offering to the image of the blessed Mary in the church of the monks at Thetford. Once this prayer had been finished and vows had been devoutly made, the boy came back to life around midnight. On seeing this they were very joyful, praising and blessing God. Desiring to fulfil their vow, they took up the boy and very devoutly made an offering to the abovesaid image of the glorious Virgin.

How the holy relics, discovered in the head of the abovesaid image, came to the monastery of Thetford (letter)

To the excellent lord and father Stephen, Prior of the church of Thetford, William, humble minister of the church of St Mary of Merlesham, sends greetings and paternal reverence. Charity, which is not ambitious and which does not seek things for itself but for others,Footnote 112 disposes me to do for you what I have never been willing to do either for our bishop or any other man, for the sake of holy religion and the observance of holy order which I have heard from many men is present in your church. And I do this especially with the support of my lord Hugh Bigod and by the devout supplication of lord Ralph, your monk. Therefore, I am sending to you some of the sacred relics of our church, which were transferred from the Lord’s most Holy Sepulchre. Namely, of the Lord’s purple robe; and of the girdle of St Mary, the Lord’s mother; and of the Lord’s Sepulchre; of the rock of Cavalry; of the tomb of St Mary; of the Lord’s manger; of dust found in the tomb of St John the Evangelist, which is said by a truthful claimant to be moist and watery there;Footnote 113 and of St George. And I am doing this with devotion so that the memory of these saints may be celebrated more devoutly in your church.

These are the aforenamed sacred relics and with them the holy body parts of very many saints, namely, of St Vincent the martyr and of St Leodegar the martyr; of the hair of St Agnes virgin and martyr; of St Barbara virgin and martyr; of St Gregory the pope; of St Leonard; of St Jerome; of the wooden casket, intact through grace not by nature, in which St Edmund king and martyr was found complete after many years since his martyrdom and almost lifelike, and still lies placed in the same. Similarly, a piece of the holy wooden casket of St Etheldreda, in which after 11 years she was found entire as though sleeping. And a piece of the clothing of St Lazarus and his tomb, and of many others, whose merits and names God knows, but in truth we do not dare to mention. All these were stored in the aforementioned image of the holy mother of God, which lord Ralph, monk of this place, born and raised in the town of Thetford, worked energetically to acquire along with the smaller images pertaining to it and with a tabernacle most splendidly and appropriately adorned with gold, stones and colour. But the picture in the refectory that lady Matilda of Saxmundham, sister of this place and a singular friend – may the Almighty absolve her soul – caused to be made with her own money, along with a certain clerk Ralph de Cadamo, our dear friend. The aforesaid monk Ralph then had it made by his suggestion and encouragement and laborious management, in which work he sustained many labours and tribulations, until he brought it to effect. For these and for other services, which he devoutly made to this church to the best of his ability, it was granted to him that his anniversary, which is the Ides of October, be devoutly observed in this church forever.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

My principal debts are to Jackie Hall, FSA, who shared her vast knowledge of the site and kindly toured it with me, and to Jean Hoff, who read my transcription and translation of the Latin text and offered valuable suggestions that improved both. I am also indebted to Jenny Alexander, FSA, Douglas Biggs, Elina Gertsman, Richard Halsey, FSA, Philippa Hoskin, FSA, Seema Kahn, Bernard Kavenaugh, Katharine Keats-Rohan, FSA, Justin Kroesen, Julian Luxford, FSA, Nigel Morgan, Marc Morris, Anna Russakoff and Beth Williamson.

ABBREVIATIONS AND BIBLIOGRAPHY

Abbreviations

BL

British Library, London

CCC

Parker Library, Corpus Christi College, University of Cambridge

CPR

Calendar of Patent Rolls

CLR

Calendar of Liberate Rolls

JBAA

Journal of the British Archaeological Association

NRO

Norfolk Record Office, Norwich

TNA

The National Archives, London

Footnotes

1. For a description of the ms, see James 1911, vol 2, 150–3. For an edition of the Historia Regis Waldei, see Imelmann Reference Imelmann1912. Geoffrey de Rocherio’s text is transcribed in Martin 1779, App vi, 29–32. On Bramis, see Sharpe Reference Sharpe2001, 219.

2. Martin 1779, App 18. Waterton Reference Waterton1879, 147–51. See most recently Solberg Reference Solberg2023.

3. Among the most significant recent work on late medieval Thetford is: Wassan Reference Wassan1977; Wilcox Reference Wilcox1987; Andrews Reference Andrews1993; Dymond Reference Dymond1995, Reference Dymond1996; Hall Reference Hall2012; Lindley 2015. For the attribution of the Thornham Parva Retable to the Dominicans in Thetford, see Massing 2003.

5. The ‘Chronology of memorable events to the year 1399’ in CCC 329, 217, notes that ‘MCI Constructio Monasterii Sancte Marie de Thetford’, which predates other evidence by 2–3 years. The rest of the early documentation for Thetford is summarised in Lehmann-Brockhaus Reference Lehmann-Brockhaus1956, 564–5.

6. Morris Reference Morris2005; Lindley 2015.

8. In 1402, however, a monk was given permission to reside for life ‘because the library possesses a copy of diverse books in which he desires to study’. See Ker Reference Ker1964, 188–9; Dymond Reference Dymond1995, 3. For other texts held at Thetford Priory, see below nn 18 and 55.

9. Thanks to Philippa Hoskin for discussing this with me.

10. I am pleased to remember Professor Brooke who often reminded me of this aspect of historical endeavor while I was a doctoral student at Gonville and Caius College.

11. Blomefield Reference Blomefield1805, ii, 107.

12. Dymond Reference Dymond1996, 28.

13. Davis Reference Davis2005, 287.

14. Smaller Cluniac houses sometimes necessitated obedientiary monks occupying multiple roles. Pearce Reference Pearce2017, esp 236–7.

15. Cleaver Reference Cleaver2014.

16. Wilkinson 1988, 170–1. For a discussion of the healing properties of soil eulogia from the Holy Sepulchre, see: Van Dam 1988, 27; Hahn Reference Hahn and Ousterhout1990, Reference Hahn and Luyster2023. See also Purkis Reference Purkis2018a, Reference Purkis2018b.

17. Purkis Reference Purkis2018a, 187–8.

18. Leland 1770, 4, 25, records in the library of St Mary’s, Thetford, ‘Beda de situ terrae sanctae’, Bede’s report of a pilgrimage to the Holy Land.

19. Hare Reference Hare1979; Slater Reference Slater2022, 130–2.

20. Dugdale 1726, 574; Dymond Reference Dymond1995, 45; Sear Reference Sear, Lord and Amor2020.

22. A relative of the Bigod family, Ilger Bigod, returned from the First Crusade with a collection of relics including hairs of the Virgin Mary given him by the Patriarch of Antioch. Bosanquet Reference Bosanquet1964, 192–3; Purkis Reference Purkis2018a, 205.

23. Jones 2009, 504 n 18; Bartal Reference Bartal2018; Smith Reference Smith, Bartal, Bodner and Kuhnel2020.

24. BL, Add ms 40000, fol 11v. Thomas Reference Thomas1974, 36–7; Wallis Reference Wallis2011; Rollason 2015, 277–83.

25. Baxter Reference Baxter2016, 41–72, App A; Koopmans Reference Koopmans2016.

26. Clark 1907, 46–7; Edgington Reference Edgington and Edbury1985. Peverel has convincingly been associated with the patronage of the Holy Sepulchre Chapel, Cambridge, in Hundley Reference Hundley, Byng and Lunnon2022.

27. Luxford Reference Luxford and Powell2017, 77, n 75, citing BL Add ms 40008, fol 13r.

30. For the later history of relic acquisition at Thetford, see: Martin 1779, 190–1; Dymond Reference Dymond1995, 56; Luxford Reference Luxford2020, nn 21, 80.

31. Thurlby Reference Thurlby1995.

32. Carley 1985, 44–5.

33. Hopkinson-Ball Reference Hopkinson-Ball2012, 15.

34. Whittingham Reference Whittingham1979.

35. Thomas Reference Thomas1974, 243–4. For the Cluny relics, see Bruce Reference Bruce, Bruce and Vanderputten2021.

36. Goulburn Reference Goulburn1878, i, 163–78, 233–4.

37. Orderic Vitalis quotes the epitaph of the tomb at Thetford, which suggests that a tomb at Thetford may have been made in advance of his death. Chibnall 1969–80, vi, 146–7; Golding Reference Golding and Brown1981, 67–8.

38. Anderson Reference Anderson2015; Kroesen and Tångeberg Reference Kroesen and Tångeberg2021.

39. Paul Reference Paul2020; Kroesen and Tångeberg Reference Kroesen and Tångeberg2021, 95–6. My thanks to Justin Kroesen for suggesting this to me.

40. NRO NCC will register Paynot 57 (will of Peter Benne): ‘Item lego tantum pecunie quantum poterit sufficere ad picturam tabernaculi beate Marie et tabule et canopei ad dorsum summe altaris et de le candelheure in eadem capella’. Benne was to be buried in the Lady Chapel, and left to it a vestment (unum vestmentum ad dei servicium). Expenses of a ‘keeper of the Lady Chapel’ (‘in expensis custodis capelle Sancte Marie’) are recorded in 1499/1500. Dymond Reference Dymond1995, 19, 114.

41. Dymond Reference Dymond1996, 691.

42. Harrod Reference Harrod1852, 123. For the broader context, see Kabala Reference Kabala2001.

43. Andrews Reference Andrews1993.

44. Keats-Rohan Reference Keats-Rohan2002, 541. She appears in Thetford charters as Matilda of Saxmundham.

45. Bachrach and Bachrach Reference Bachrach and Bachrach2005; Schmoelz Reference Schmoelz2017, 205–7.

47. The relation with the de Cadamo family continued into the 13th century: Morris Reference Morris2005, 215.

49. For Richard de Cadomo at Thetford, see Keats-Rohan Reference Keats-Rohan2002, 363. BL, Cotton Vitellius FIV, fol 176; BL, Lansdowne 229, fol 148. Both charters are printed in Aiken Reference Aiken1979, 272–7 (charters 8 and 9). At 359–62 is a listing of grants to Thetford Priory, with gifts by the de Cadomo family at 359.

51. Fricke Reference Fricke2007.

52. The third miracle mentions Our Lady of Woolpit, which was active from at least the early 13th century. See below and Paine Reference Paine1993.

53. The literature is extensive. Wilson Reference Wilson1946; Southern Reference Southern1958; Williams Boyarin Reference Williams Boyarin2010, Reference Williams Boyarin2015.

54. Hennessy Reference Hennessy and Edwards2008; Williams Boyarin Reference Williams Boyarin2015, 11. For a useful overview of Marian miracles, see Meale Reference Meale and Pearsall1990. For Theophilus in particular, see Root Reference Root2017.

55. John Leland records the presence of hagiographical literature at Thetford, namely a copy of the Life of Edmund of Abingdon. See Leland 1770, 4, 25–6; Lawrence Reference Lawrence1954, 411. This was overlooked in Ker Reference Ker1964, 188–9.

56. It is notable that the Marian statue at Walsingham was likewise known for its small stature, humble style and medium. Waterton Reference Waterton1879, 169.

57. Sand Reference Sand2010, 150–9. See also Smith Reference Smith2006.

58. The exact profession of the operarius is unclear. While the term was sometimes used interchangeably for artifex or caementarius, the qualifier simplex used in the context of church building would seem to suggest that ‘humble builder’ best fits our protagonist. See Pevsner Reference Pevsner1942, 551.

59. Waterton Reference Waterton1879, 33–4.

60. On the use of ex votos, see Marks Reference Marks2004, 212–14.

61. For miracle-working Marian statues in medieval Britain, see Marks Reference Marks2004, 38–63, 121–56; Sansterre Reference Sansterre2006, esp 274–85.

62. Forsyth Reference Forsyth1972, 31–8; Smith Reference Smith2006; Dale Reference Dale2019, 32–46.

63. For an image of a flower in the Virgin’s right hand, see Ellis Reference Ellis1986, i, 87–8.

64. For Abingdon, see: Lehmann-Brockhaus Reference Lehmann-Brockhaus1956, no. 36; Forsyth Reference Forsyth1972, 36; Sansterre Reference Sansterre2006, 284. For the image of Our Lady of Barking, see: Lawler 1963–97, vol 6, pt 1, 222–3. For Glastonbury, see: Carley 1985, 44–5; Hopkinson-Ball Reference Hopkinson-Ball2012, 16–17. The statue is recorded in the abbey’s 14th-century relic list: Carley and Howley Reference Carley, Howley and Carley2001. Other Marian statues are known from documentation, but it is not clear whether or not they contained relics. For example, the Liber Eliensis describes an over life-sized Virgin and child enthroned that was ‘fabricated to an exceptionally high standard from gold and silver and jewels beyond price, such was the immensity of its value’: Fairweather 2005, 158–9, 200, 231.

65. Kargère and Rizzo, Reference Kargère and Rizzo2010. For the wooden Madonna statues in the British Isles that were not designed as reliquaries, see: Alexander and Binski Reference Alexander and Binski1987, cat no. 249; Williamson Reference Williamson2021. It has been optimistically proposed that the Langham Virgin may have been the original cult statue from Walsingham. See Rear and Young Reference Rear and Young2019.

66. Forsyth Reference Forsyth1972, 32–5; Scott and Ward 1992, 284–5.

67. Morgan Reference Morgan1990, i, 50–1; Lewis Reference Lewis1995, 237, suggests an alternate source in the miracles of Gauthier de Coinci. The fullest account is Rehm Reference Rehm and van Rosen2013.

68. Real Biblioteca de San Lorenzo de El Escorial, ms T.i.1, fol 109r; Lambeth Palace Library ms 209.

69. Katz Reference Katz2002, esp. 7–9; Gertsman Reference Gertsman2015, 133–6. A version of this story is featured in the marginalia of the Smithfield Decretals (BL, Royal ms 10.E.4, 209v). For French versions of the story, see Russakoff Reference Russakoff2019, 56–8, 67–71, 108–10.

70. Gertsman Reference Gertsman2015, 16.

71. Thompson and Winterbottom 2017, 104–5.

72. Dickinson Reference Dickinson1956, 124–30.

73. For another example of the Virgin as artist in the context of miracles, see Giles Reference Giles2013.

74. See, in general, Hyer Reference Hyer, Owen-Crocker and Hyer2019.

76. Draper Reference Draper2006, 212.

77. Dr Jackie Hall plans a study of the archaeology of Thetford Priory in the near future.

78. Raby Reference Raby1935, 7. This is changed to a two-phase plan in Raby and Reynolds Reference Raby and Reynolds1979, and repeated in Dymond Reference Dymond1995, 23, and Hall Reference Hall2012, 82.

79. Hall Reference Hall2012, 82.

80. Ibid, 81–2. A burial chamber and burials were located just north of the Lady Chapel, and a covered pentice walk or porch once projected from it.

81. Harrod Reference Harrod1852, 120; Hall Reference Hall2015, 22–5.

82. A Marian statue in an analogous position is recorded at thirteenth-century Peterborough; Sparke 1723, 149–50; Hall and Atherton Reference Hall and Atherton2011, 167.

83. Round windows of this sort are an eastern English feature, appearing, for example, as blind oculi on the west façade and gatehouse of Bury St Edmunds, and the in the naves of Tixover church (Rutland) and Cley-Next-the-Sea (Norfolk).

84. Grose 1797. The Lady Chapel’s east window tracery appears to be closely related to that in the east cloister walk at Norwich cathedral of c 1300. See Binski Reference Binski2014, fig 62.

85. Dymond Reference Dymond1996, 558, n 95.

86. Draper 1990, 140, Reference Draper2006, 212. Space prevents a full exploration of the archaeology of the Lady Chapel. The author plans to return to this in the near future.

87. Wormald Reference Wormald1937, 36–8.

88. Pratt Reference Pratt1955.

89. Dickinson Reference Dickinson1956. For the crusade context of Walsingham, see Foster Reference Foster2022, 91–114.

90. Paine Reference Paine1993.

91. Blatchly and MacCulloch Reference Blatchly and MacCulloch2013: Irvine Reference Irvine2018.

92. Paine Reference Paine1993, 8.

93. For ‘moving’ statues of the Virgin in miracle stories, see Smith Reference Smith2006.

94. Rawcliffe Reference Rawcliffe, Morris and Roberts2002, 125. Gibson Reference Gibson1989, 213, n 14: ‘The Priory at Thetford mounted what was perhaps the most transparent attempt to compete with Walsingham.’

95. Page Reference Page1906, ii, 364. Cf Raby Reference Raby1935, 7, who describes ‘the throngs of pilgrims to the miraculous image of the Virgin’.

96. Matthew Paris describes Stephen ii as a ‘clericus monstruosus’ whose laxity and abusive language would lead to his murder by a fellow monk within the monastery in 1248. Luard 1872–3, v, 23.

97. We also learn that the monastic community was saddled with the residence of John, ‘advocate’ of St Mary’s and brother of Roger Bigod, which apparently cost the monastery as much as its normal yearly costs: Duckett Reference Duckett1888, ii, 142–3; Morris Reference Morris2005, 174, n 213.

98. Spenser Reference Spenser1980, nos 26 and 39, and 2010, 135, notes that the Howards as the Dukes of Norfolk purchased souvenirs from Walsingham. Anderson Reference Anderson2010; Locker Reference Locker2012, 91.

99. CPR, 1232–47, 39, 97, 223, 278, 449; CLR, 1240–5, 294.

100. CLR, 1226–40, 409; 469.

101. CLR, 1240–5, 245.

102. Wormald Reference Wormald1937, 38–9; Dickinson Reference Dickinson1956, 17–21; Turner Reference Turner2001; Vincent Reference Vincent and Swanson2004, 133–5.

103. CLR, 1245–51, 37.

104. CPR, 1281–92, 154–5, 202; CPR, 1301–7, 313; Kanter Reference Kanter2011, 302.

105. Dymond Reference Dymond1995, 2–3. CPR, 1307–27, 55.

106. Duckett Reference Duckett1893, 327.

107. Biggs Reference Biggs, Dodd and Biggs2003, 198; Blomefield Reference Blomefield1805, i, 357; NRO, NCC Will register Paynot 57 (Wills of Richard Roger, 1482, and Thomas Estwyt, 1451) record gifts of liturgical ornamenta including a chalice and a breviary, and see above n 40.

108. Dymond, 1995, 114, Reference Dymond1996, 558, 663, 691.

109. TNA, Prerogative Court of Canterbury PROB 11/26, fol 120v, cited and discussed in Sear Reference Sear2016, 36, n 27.

110. Babington 1860, i, 194.

111. Luke 11:33.

112. 1 Cor 13:4–5.

113. Cf Aldhelm, De Virginitate, in Ehwald Reference Ehwald1984, 254–5.

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Figure 0

Fig 1. The Parker Library, Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, ms 329, p 206. Image: Reproduced with permission of Corpus Christi College, University of Cambridge.

Figure 1

Fig 2. Aerial view of Thetford Priory. Photograph: Keith Mindham/Alamy Photo Stock.

Figure 2

Fig 3. Reconstruction of the tabernacle and statue from Urnes, Norway, of c 1150–1200, now in the University Museum of Bergen. Image: Reconstruction by Justin Kroesen and Stephan Kuhn, drawing by Åsta Lindemann.

Figure 3

Fig 4. Thirteenth-century seal of Thetford Priory. Drawing: Martin 1779, 157.

Figure 4

Fig 5. Montvianeix Madonna. Cloisters Museum, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. French c 1150–1200. Photograph: Reproduced with permission of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

Figure 5

Fig 6. Frontispiece, Lambeth Apocalypse. Lambeth Palace Library ms 209. Image: Reproduced with permission of Lambeth Palace Library.

Figure 6

Fig 7. Plan of Thetford Priory. Drawing: © Historic England Archive.

Figure 7

Fig 8. Thetford Priory Lady Chapel, from west to east. Photograph: author.

Figure 8

Fig 9. Wenceslaus Hollar, Thetford Priory from the north showing the north elevation of the Lady Chapel at left. Drawing: Reproduced with permission of the British Museum.

Figure 9

Fig 10. Niche in the east wall of the north transept leading to the Lady Chapel at Thetford Priory, which probably once held a Marian image. Photograph: author.

Figure 10

Fig 11. Thetford Priory from the east showing the remains of the east wall of the Lady Chapel at right. Drawing: Grose 1797.

Figure 11

Fig 12. Detail of the in situ capital on the inner north-east corner of the Lady Chapel, Thetford Priory. Photograph: author.