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Some Biographical notes on English church musicians, chiefly working in London (1485–1560)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 1962

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Copyright © Royal Musical Association, 1962

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References

Bibliography and Reference Symbols

I. Churchwardens’ accounts, manuscript and printed. Symbols used for the manuscript accounts are underlined.Google Scholar
CA1 All Hallows London Wall (ed. Charles Welch, 1912).Google Scholar
CA2 All Hallows London Wall (Guildhall MS. 5090/1).Google Scholar
CA3 All Hallows Staining (Guildhall MSS 4956/1 & 2).Google Scholar
CA4 St Alphege London Wall (Guildhall MS. 1432/1).Google Scholar
CA5 St AndrewHubbard (Guildhall MSS 1279/1 & 2).Google Scholar
CA6 St Benet Gracechurch Street (Guildhall MS. 1568).Google Scholar
CA7 St Botolph Aldersgate (Guildhall MS. 1454/1).Google Scholar
CA8 St Dunstan-in-the-East (Guildhall MS. 4887).Google Scholar
CA9 St Dunstan-in-the-West (Guildhall MS. 2968/1).Google Scholar
CA10 St James Garlickhythe (Guildhall MS. 4810/1).Google Scholar
CA11 St Lawrence Pountney (Guildhall MS. 3907/1).Google Scholar
CA12 St Margaret Pattens (Guildhall MS. 4570/1).Google Scholar
CA13 St Margaret Westminster (extracts transcribed in the book of that name by H. F. Westlake, London, 1914).Google Scholar
CA14 St Martin-in-the-Fields (ed. Kitto, J. V., London, 1901; a transcript for the years 1525–1603).Google Scholar
CA15 St Martin Ludgatc (Guildhall MS. 1311/1).Google Scholar
CA16 St Martin Orgar (Guildhall MS. 959/1).Google Scholar
CA17 St Martin Outwich (Guildhall MS. 6842).Google Scholar
CA18 St Mary-at-Hill (Guildhall MS. 1239/1–3).Google Scholar
CA19 St Mary-at-Hill (ed. Henry Littlehales, in “The Medieval records of a London City church” for the Early English Text Society, 1905).Google Scholar
CA20 St Mary Magdalene Milk Street (Guildhall MS. 2596/1).Google Scholar
CA21 St Mary Woolnoth (Guildhall MS. 1002/1).Google Scholar
CA22 St Matthew Friday Street (Guildhall MS. 1016/1).Google Scholar
CA23 St Michael Cornhill (Guildhall) MS. 1016/1).Google Scholar
CA24 St Michael Cornhill (ed. A.J. Waterlow).Google Scholar
CA25 St Peter, West Cheap (Guildhall MS. 645/1).Google Scholar
CA26 St Peter West Cheap (Journal of the Archaelogical Association, XXIV, 1868).Google Scholar
CA27 St Sepulchre without Newgate (PRO E. 117.4/89).Google Scholar
CA28 St Stephen Coleman Street (Guildhall MS. 4457/1).Google Scholar
CA29 St Stephen Walbrook (Guildhall MS. 593/1 & 2).Google Scholar
CA30 St Stephen Walbrook (ed. Thomas Milburn, Transactions.of the London and Middlesex Archaelogical Society, V, 1881).Google Scholar
CA31 St Thomas's Chapel on London Bridge (incorporated in the accounts of the Bridgemasters and preserved in the Corporation Records Office).Google Scholar
CA32 St Margaret Southwark (ed. J.P. Collier in The British Magazine, 1847).Google Scholar

II. Manuscripts.

BM1 Part-books of Marian music, c. 1557 (BM. Add.MSS 17802–5).Google Scholar
BM3 Cardinal Pole's pension roll (BM. Add.MS. 8102).Google Scholar
BM4 Account of expenses of Cardinal Wolsey's embassy to France, 1521 (BM. Harl. MS. 620).Google Scholar
BM5 The Baldwin manuscript: Polyphonic music, mostly for three voices (BM. RM. 24. d. 2).Google Scholar
CAK Churchwardens’ accounts of All Saints, Kingston-on-Thames (transcribed by Miss D.L. Powell; transcript in Kingston Public library).Google Scholar
GPC Bede Roll of the Fraternity of St Nicholas (Guildhall MS. 4889/PC).Google Scholar
GSK Gild books of the gild of the Assumption of the Skinners’ Company (preserved at Skinners Hall, Dowgate Hill, London).Google Scholar
PCP Fifteenth-century church music (Pepys Library, Magdalene College Cambridge, MS. 1236).Google Scholar
REP Repertories of the Court of Aldermen of the City of London (in the Corporations Records Office).Google Scholar
RCC Wills proved in the Consistory Court of Rochester (Kent County Records Office, Maidstone).Google Scholar
PCC Wills proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury (Somerset House).Google Scholar
ROC Chantry Certificates, 1547 (PRO. E. 301/88).Google Scholar
WAM Westminster Abbey manuscripts (Muniments Room, Westminster Abbey).Google Scholar
WR Records of St George's Chapel, Windsor (The Aerary, St George's Chapel).Google Scholar
YM The York Masses (preserved in the Borthwick Institute, York).Google Scholar

III. Printed Sources

ASM Aungier, G.J., The History and Antiquities of Syon Monastery (1840).Google Scholar
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FLI Fry, G.S., Abstracts of Inquisitiones Post Mortem relating to the City of London, part 1, 1485–1561 (London, 1896).Google Scholar
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KCP “An inventory of the pryke songys longynge to the Kyngys College in Cambryge” 1529 (reprinted in The Ec clesiologist xxiv, 1863).Google Scholar
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LKM Lafontaine, H.C. de, The King's Musick (London, 1909).Google Scholar
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MCC Marsh, Bower (ed.), Records of the Carpenters Company (5 vols., Oxford, 1913).Google Scholar
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MLV Maddison, A.R., A short account of the vicars choral, poor clerks, organists and choristers of Lincoln Cathedral from the 12th century to the accession of Edward 6th, (London, 1878).Google Scholar
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RTD Reed, A.W., Early Tudor Drama (London, 1926).Google Scholar
SOR Sumner, W.L., The Organ (2nd edition, London, 1955).Google Scholar
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ABBOTT, Nicholas. Conduct of St James, Garlickhythe, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
ADAMS, Thomas. Clerk, St Margaret's, Westminister, 1534/6 (CAI 3)Google Scholar
ALEN, Andrew. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1527/8 (CA19); Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1514 (GPC).Google Scholar
ALEE, Richard. See LEE.Google Scholar
ALEYN, Peter. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1493, when he was parish clerk of St Pancras beside West Cheap (GPC).Google Scholar
ALFRED, Henry, Conduct, St Lawrence Jewry, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
ALSETOURE (ALCITUR), Thomas. Clerk, St Peter, West Cheap, 1517. (CA25); Clerk, 1515, dead clerk, 1519, Fraternity of St Nichoias (G & C).Google Scholar
ANDREW, . Organist, St Botolph, Aldersgate, 1502 (CA7, Roll 22). He is described ao ‘keper’ of the organs, and only served for one quarter of the year.Google Scholar
ALYSON, James. Clerk of St Mary Magdalene, Milk Street for the latter half of 1521 (CA20).Google Scholar
ANDREWS, William. Conduct, St Dunstan-in-the-East, 1547 (ROC). Another of the same name was a London minstrel who assisted in the Lord Mayor's Watcn arranged by the Skinners’ Company in 1518/19, when he played the tabret. This is presumably the minstrel who was a churchwarden of St Margaret Pattens in 1551 (LSK and CA1).Google Scholar
ANGELL (AUNGELL), John. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1515 (GPC). Sang at the funeral of Sir Thomas Lovell, 1524 (CPC, p. 149). Conduct, St Peter Wood Street, 1547 (ROC). Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, temp. Edward VI (HCR). Bought ‘One olde paire of Organs for xxs’ from the churchwardens of St Augustine's, Watling Street, 1549 (WLC, p. 175). The following year he bought ‘one olde Ambry for xijd', ‘another Ambry without a bottom for iiij', ‘dyvers parcelles of latyn weying lvjlb at iiijd the lb. for xviijs viijd’ and also ‘dyvers parcelles of pewter weying xijlb at vjd the lb. for vjs.’ A John Angell was granted an annuity, 2/3 Philip and Mary, as a former member of the Bridgittine Monastery of Syon (ASM).Google Scholar
APPUBY (–APPLEBY?), William. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1494, when he was clerk of St Benet Fink (GPC).Google Scholar
ARGALL, William. Apparently a priest, probably chantry priest of Lambeth, 1518 – 22. In 1518 he was paid 10s. ‘for the organes’ (DLA).Google Scholar
ASSHE, Roger. Clerk, custos of the college (or chapel) of the Guildhall. Complainant in a chancery case heard between 1533 and 1538 concerned with the lease of the ‘Cross Keys', a tavern in Fenchurch Street (ECP, 716/12).Google Scholar
ASSHETON (ASCIITON, ASSHTON), Thomas. Clerk of St Stephen Walbrook, 1534 – 38 (CA29/1); Conduct, St Peter, Wood Street, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
ATWODE (AWODE), John. Clerk, Fraternity of St. Nicholas, 1474 (GPC). There was a lay member of the same name in 1479. Clerk of St. Botolph, Aldersgate, 1509–12 (CA7, rolls 29–33). Parishioner of St. Martin Outwich, 1512–13 (CA17).Google Scholar
AVYSON, John. Conduct, St Lawrence Pountney, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
AWKES, Giles. See HAWKES.Google Scholar
AXE, (EX), Thomas. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1533–37 (CA19).Google Scholar
AYLESWORTH (AYLISWORTHE), Richard. Vicar of St Paul's Cathedral, 1547, when he was bequeathed 6s. 8d. in the will of John Redford (PCC 50 Alen). Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, temp. Edward VI(HCR).Google Scholar
BACON, Gregory. Clerk and organ player, 1552–53, St Mary Woolnoth (CA21). Conduct of St Helen's, Bishopsgate: a vestry minute dated 2. vi. 1558 reads ‘It is agreed that Gregory Bacon shall serve in the Quyer as a Conducte to play and singe there and to have iiijl by the yere for his wage’ (JLC).Google Scholar
BALDWYN, Thomas. Vicar choral of St Paul's, 1534 (ROK).Google Scholar
BALTASAR, , Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1530–31 (CA19). Gentleman of Cardinal Wolsey's chapel, 1521 (BM4).Google Scholar
BANKYS, John. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1515 when he was clerk of All Hallows the Great (GPC). He became a member of the Fraternity in 1509 and died in 1518.Google Scholar
BARBOUR, William. Priest, paid for pricking songs, St Mary-at-Hill, 1466 (CA19). Complainant in case of trespass against the sheriffs of London, Barbour having previously been acquitted of an accusation of raping a girl who had been entrusted to him, to teach her Paternoster, Ave and Credo (ECP, 291/78). Another of the same name was a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal in 1526 and temp. Edward VI (HCR).Google Scholar
BARKER, John. Master of the Fraternity of St Nichoas in 1505, when he was clerk of St Mary Woolnoth; and in 1520 when he was clerk of St Nicholas Aeon (GPC). He joined the Fraternity of St Nicholas in 1500.Google Scholar
BASSE, Richard. Clerk of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1515; dead 1519. Clerk of St Peter, West Cheap, 1518 (CA25). ‘Late warden’ of the Brotherhood of the Assumption, St Margaret's Westminster, 1516 (WMW p. 45). (Is his name derived from his profession as singer - Richard the Bass?)Google Scholar
BEDELLESDALE (BEDYLSDALE), Thomas. Morrow mass priest and occasional organist, St Martin Outwich, 1509–13 (CA17).Google Scholar
BEKETTE, Peter (Sir). Probably a priest, purchased a pair of organs from St Dunstan-in-the-East for £2 in 1502/3. They had been standing in the Trinity Chapel (CA8).Google Scholar
BENNET (BENNETT), William. Clerk, St Thomas’ Chapel, London Bridge, 1512–1518 (CA31, Vol.5).Google Scholar
BEST, Peter. Chorister of St Olave, Hart Street in 1512/ 13 until he was impressed for the choir of the monastery of St Peter's Westminster. He was a singing-man of St Margaret's Westminster, 1522/24 (PWA). Clerk, Bede Roll of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1519 (GPC).Google Scholar
BETTES, Thomas. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1549–50 (CA19).Google Scholar
BIRCHE, George. Conduct, St Margaret Pattens, 1522–23 (CA12). May possibly be identified with the interluder of that name (CES), 1538–59.Google Scholar
BEALE, Thomas. Engaged as conduct of St Benet Cracechurch Street under a bond of 1d., 1548. He was a Merchant Tailor, and does not seem to have remained in the service of the church the following year (CA6). During 1548 he is also described as ‘our late clerke and sexton'.Google Scholar
BISSHOPP, Stephen. Conduct of St Mildred Poultry, 1547 (ROC). The clerk of St Mildred, Bread Street, c. 1550, was named ‘Bysshopp’ (WLC).Google Scholar
BLACKET, John. Conduct, St Lawrence Pountney, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
BLAKE, Raynold. Clerk, St Thomas's Chapel on London Bridge, 1509 – 1529. While he was there he was paid for supplying music books:Google Scholar
BLAKDEN (BLACKDON), Thomas. Conduct of St Lawrence Pountney named in the chantry certificates of 1547 (ROC). In 1549/50 he was a conduct of St Mary-at-Hill (CA19).Google Scholar
BLOUNT, John. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1497. He was then clerk of St Faith's, a church situated under the choir of St Paul's Cathedral (GPC).Google Scholar
BOGAS, John. Clerk of St Peter, West Cheap, 1518–25. In 1526 the church entered ‘a playnt’ against him but it is not clear how he had offended (CA25). His name appears in the Bede Roll of the Fraternity of St Nicholas among the new clerks in 1511 (GPC).Google Scholar
BOROWBRYGGE, John. Master of the Fraternity of St. Nicholas in 1503 when he was clerk of St Bride's, Fleet Street (GPC). See BURBRIG, John.Google Scholar
BONVYSE, Anthony. Not strictly a musician at all, but he was a Londoner, and it is interesting to note that when, on 25. ix. 1549 he ‘without licence from the King craftily and rebelliously took flight with all his family and went to parts beyong the seas', he left behind him, among his inventoried possessions, ‘2 pairs of old vyrgynalles’ (FLI).Google Scholar
BOUNTANS, (=BONTEMPS). Minstrel, lessee of a London house at 10s. p.a. from the churchwardens of All Hallows, Staining, 1508–13 (CA13/1). He may be identified with the Buntanes who was ‘minstrel of the chamber’ of the King who attended the funeral of Henry VII in 1509 (LP 1/20). He was not the only royal minstrel to reside in the City. See also WYLDER, Philip van.Google Scholar
BOWDON, (BODON), William. Clerk, the chapel of St Thomas, London Bridge, 1519–1524 (CA31).Google Scholar
BOWES (BOWYER), William. Choirmaster, St Mary-at-Hill, 1495–8 (CA18).Google Scholar
BOWET, Thomas. Clerk, paid 5s. for assisting over Christmas 1514 at the chapel of St Thomas, London Bridge, ‘to helpe forthe the Quere there’ (CA31).Google Scholar
BOWGYN, William. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1486 (GPC).Google Scholar
BRIGHT, . See WRIGHT, John.Google Scholar
BROMSDEN (BROMFLET, BROMSLET, BROMFFELD, BROMFELDE, BROMFETTE) Owen. Clerk of St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1516/17–1535/36, when he apparently died, for in that year the accounts have an entry: ‘Item pd. to Bromfettes wyfe for her husbondes buriall xxs'. The spelling of his surname is unusually varied and only a selection is given here. His Welsh name was probably difficult for Englishmen to pronounce correctly (CA9). He became a lay member of the Fraternity of St Nicholas in 1500 (GPC).Google Scholar
BOTHE, John. Played the organs of St Dunstan-in-the-West for one quarter of the year 1521/22 (CA9).Google Scholar
BROWNE, Robert. Clerk of St. Thomas the Apostle 1548/9 when he paid the churchwardens 6s. 8d. ‘for two awlter clothes of whyte damaske which he loste’ (WLC, p. 617).Google Scholar
BROWN (BROUNE), Thomas. Shoemaker and organ-maker. He repaired organs in London, Canterbury and Henley. Details of his life and of an important law-suit, the records of which include a detailed inventory of an organ-builder's workshop, may be found in SOR. In addition may be mentioned a payment of 26s. 8d. to Brown by the churchwardens of All Hallows Staining for 26s. 8d. repairs to the organ (CA3).Google Scholar
BRYGHT (BRYTH), William. Parish clerk of St Mary-le-Bow in 1520 when he was Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas (GPC). Joined the Fraternity as a clerk in 1507.Google Scholar
BRISE, William (Sir). Priest of St Mary-at-Hill who combined the duties of ‘kepyng the orgons’ with his other duties for an additional 10s. in 1509/10 (CA19).Google Scholar
BUCTON, William. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas and clerk of St Helen's Bishopsgate in 1491 (GPC).Google Scholar
BUCKROTE, William. Tailor and conduct of St Margaret Pattens, 1518/19 (CA12).Google Scholar
BURBRIG, John. Conduct, St Andrew Hubbard, 1523/5 (CA5/1). May perhaps be identified with John BOROWBRYGGE.Google Scholar
BURKE, Henry. Conduct, St Mary Woolchurch, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
BURTON, John. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1486 (GPC).Google Scholar
BURY, Edward. Conduct of St Magnus, 1547. He was also conduct of the Brotherhood of St Magnus attached to the church (ROC).Google Scholar
BUTTER, John. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, and clerk of St Matthew Friday Street, 1496. Dead clerk, 1505 (GPC)Google Scholar
BYRDE, Bastian. Minstre] (tabrct), servant of Henry, Duke of Richmond at his death (1536) (NHE). Parishioner of St Mary Woolnoth, 1540/41; his name is noted in the accounts that year for arrearages in his contributions towards the clerks’ wages (CA21).Google Scholar
BYRDE, John. Clerk of the Chapel of St Thomas, London Bridge, 1525. The following year he is mentioned as William Byrde, but there was some confusion of Christian names that year and it is doubtless the same person (CA31). Others of the same name about the same period were a Bishop of Bangor and various members of the Fraternity of St Nicholas (lay, 1502, 1509, 1512; priest, 1514) (GPC). Probably related to the composer William Byrd (1543–1623).Google Scholar
CALLERCKEYFF, John, (alias Hans). Organ builder. Sued by Sir Edmund Bray, £. 1529, for non-delivery of organs. Apparently he had contracted to supply a pair for £ 4; he supplied them but they were deemed to be ‘insufficient’ for the price (ECP. 475/12).Google Scholar
CARPENTER, William. Clerk, ChapeJ of St Thomas, London Bridge, 1529 (CA31).Google Scholar
CAMERDY, William. Clerk, St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1555 (CA9).Google Scholar
CAPPER, John. Clerk, St Martin-in-the-Fields, 1536 (CA14).Google Scholar
CATER, Thomas. Clerk, St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1535–39 (CA9).Google Scholar
CATOUR, William. Clerk of St Katharine-by-the Tower, late one of the clerks of St Giles, Cripplegate, 1485/6. Complainant in an action of trespass against the mayor and sheriffs of London concerned with goods taken from the vestry of St Giles, (ECP. 76/111).Google Scholar
CENTON (KENTON), Roger. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1536/7 (CA19). He was a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, temp. Edward VI, died 11. i. 1569 (HCR).Google Scholar
CHAMBRE, John. Marshal of the Royal Minstrels at the funeral of Henry VII, 1509 (LP, 120). He was granted the Freedom of the City through the City Gild of Minstrels in 1510 and was one of the Wardens of that gild in 1518 (CCM).Google Scholar
CHAUNCELER, James. Clerk of St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1539–43. During his last year there he was paid 10s. ‘ffor iiij pricke sounge bookis’ (CA9).Google Scholar
CHECHELLY (CHICHELEY, ’ CHECHELY), Dunstan. Lay member of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1515 (GPC). He was a parishioner of St Stephen Walbrook, 1509 (CA29/1). A chancery case in which he was involved between 1518 and 1519 describes him as citizen and tailor of London. Between 1517 and 1525 he was living in a house on the West end of London Bridge for which he paid rent of 46s.8d. p.a. (CA31). In 2529/ 30 he was a conduct of St Mary-at-Hill. (CA19).Google Scholar
CHESSEFEYD, Thomas. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1482 (GPC).Google Scholar
CHOOS, Richard. Singing-man in the Drapers’ Midsummer Show, 1522 (RDR).Google Scholar
CHURCHEMAN, Reynold, Conduct, St Peter, Wood Street, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
CLAVER, Robert. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1476 (GPC). Clerk (and probably organist) of St Mary-at-Hill, 1512/13. Before Claver's engagement there had been nobody to play the organ, and it is reasonable to assume that he held this post as well (CA19).Google Scholar
CLERK, . This is a difficult surname since it sometimes seems to indicate nothing more than ‘John the clerk’ or ‘Robert the clerk'. The following biographies cannot therefore be regarded as always referring to single persons.Google Scholar
CLERK, John. Clerk, St Martin Outwich, 1508–1515 (CA17). Conduct, St Andrew Hubbard 1525/26 (CA5/2). Conduct, St Botolph, Aldersgate, 1555/58 (CA7, Rolls 61–63). A chantry priest of St Peter's Westminster (Westminster Abbey) of the same name, was executor of John Surdevall, priest of St Paul's Cathedral who died in 1522 (PCC, 28 Maynwaryng). Between this date and 1529 he was involved in legal trouble over his executorship when a clerk Thomas Harwood sued him for money and clothing alleged to have been entrusted with Surdevall (ECP, 519/6).Google Scholar
CLERK, Richard. Clerk, St Thomas's Chapel, London Bridge, 1532/35 (CA31, Vol. 6). Conduct, St Margaret, Bridge Street, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
CLERKE, Robert. Paid 1s. 4d. by the churchwardens of St Michael Cornhill in 1474 ‘for prekyng of a messe’ (CA24, p. 55).Google Scholar
CLERK, William, Clerk, St Botolph, Aldersgate, 1534/39 (CA7, rolls 49/52). Rector of St Magnus, 1535 (VE). Clerk, St Michael Corchill, 1548 (CA24, p. 62).Google Scholar
CLYMMOWE, John. London organ-builder, partner of John Howe. Details of his life will be found SOR. In addition may be mentioned a payment in the accounts of the Midsummer Show arranged by the Skinners in 1535: ‘5s. to John Clembow, organ maker, for taking down, setting up and mending portatives’ (RDR).Google Scholar
CLYDROWE, . Sang in St Michael's, Cornhill, ‘by all Cristemas haledais’ 1472 (CA24, page 48).Google Scholar
COBBE, Thomas. Priest. Sold a pair of organs to the wardens of All Hallows, London Wall, c. 1512. He received the old organs and ‘v marke of money’ for them (CA1, p. 56). Priest, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1505 (GPC).Google Scholar
COLMAN, William. Chorister of the Chapel Royal 1509 (LP1/20). Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, 1520, 1524, 1526 (HCR). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1521 (GPC). Colman, John Tyll, and John Giles were three Gentlemen of the Chapel Royal who sang at St Mary-at-Hill, 1524/25 (CA19). Colman came again in 1527/28.Google Scholar
COKE, (COOKE, KOK, COK etc.), John. A very common name at this period. Clerk of St Olave, Silver Street, in 1501 when he was Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas (GPC), and the probable composer of Mass, Venit Dilectus (YM). The Bede Roll records his death in 1507. Possibly to be identified with the clerk of St Anthony's Hospital in 1495 and 1501 (WR, xv. 37. 8, and WR, 37. 25). There was a chantry priest of the same name at St Dunstan-in-the-East in 1495 (CA8) and there were also skinners and a tailor of the same name living about the same time (as well as priests of Lincoln and Chichester). A ‘John Cok’ was at St Bartholomew's hospital, temp. Henry VI and Edward IV and wrote ‘Cok's Cartulary’ which is among the archives there.Google Scholar
COLETT, Richard. Clerk, St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1534 (CA9).Google Scholar
COLSON, Robert. Clerk, possibly professional music copyist. Described as ‘Songpricker’ in the Household Accounts of Edward VI, 1547–49 (WES, p. 299). Edward paid him a salary of £4 a year. Among the payments made to him by the wardens of St Benet Gracechurch Street are items ‘for prycking of Certeyne songes’ for 15s.8d. in 1548; ‘for ye pricking of certeyne songes into the grete song bookes’ for 9s. 6d. in 1549; and ‘for prycking of certeyne songes in to the ffowre bookes’ for 12s. 4d. in 1550 (though the latter entry is made in favour of Thomas Colson - no doubt a scribe's error). The sums he was paid by St Benet's were remarkably large (CA6).Google Scholar
COLSON, Thomas. See above, COLSON, Robert.Google Scholar
COLSON, William. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas and clerk of St Michael, Wood Street, 1502. The Bede Roll records his death in 1502 (GPC).Google Scholar
COLYNS, Robert. Master of the Gild of Parish Clerks and clerk of St Andrew Hubbard in 1512 (GPC). He was clerk of St Andrew's from 1506, but his name does not appear in the accounts after 1512 (CA5). He was parish clerk of St Margaret Pattens for part of the year 1518/19 (CA12). He may be the same man whom Thomas BROWNE (q. v.) neglected to teach the art of organ-making, 1504/15, though this Colyns is described as a wireseller. Haberdashers and skinners of the same name are found in London, 1520–42.Google Scholar
COOTES, William. Clerk and organ-player, St Botolph, Aldersgate, 1524–38 (CA7, rolls 43–52).Google Scholar
CORBRAND, William. Chaplain of Bokingfold free chapel, Kent (whose patron was Leeds Priory), 1481-c. 1493 (HKC). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1502 (GPC). Royal payments for 1515 record one of £3. 6s. 8d. to ‘oone Corbronde a syngyng man’ by the hand of William Cornyshe (HCR). Between 1503 and 1510 Corbrand was paying rent of 26s. 8d. to the Carpenters’ Company of a tenement which was apparently part of the Carpenters’ Hall (MCC, Vol.II). This was close to Moorgate, and to the church of All Hallows London Wall; and among the accounts of that church for 1510 we find a payment of 1s. ‘to master Corbrand for hellpyng of the quere at Ester’ (CA2). Corbrand is one of the practitioners of music whose works Morley consulted when writing his Plaine and Easie. (MPE, p. 321). His only surviving music is for two voices end is found in PCP. The pieces are In manus tuas and Confitemini.Google Scholar
CORBY, William. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1481 (GPC).Google Scholar
CORNYSHE, William (the younger). Son of William Cornyshe. the elder. Composer, dramatist, and Gentleman of the Chapel Royal. Master of the Children of the Chapel Royal from the death of William Newark in 1509 until his own death in 1523. His will is PCC 13 Bodfelde. For the principal details of his life see Grove and MGG. Together with John Kyte he was a visiting musician at St Mary-at-Hill in 1510/11 (CA19). I have established his relationship to other musical Cornyshes in Music and Letters, July 1955, p. 310.Google Scholar
CORREY (CORRE), Morris. Clerk of St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1542–46 (CA9).Google Scholar
COTTON, John. Described as conduct and organ-player of St Dunstan-in-the-West in the chantry certificates of 1547 (ROC). In the accounts of the same church he is described as clerk; he was there from 1546 to 1549 (CA9).Google Scholar
CRANE, William. Gentleman of the Chapel Royal from 1509 until his death in 1546 (LP I, 20 and II, 707; HCR &c.) He was Master of the Children of the Chapel from the death of Cornyshe in 1523 until 1545 (HCR), when he was succeeded by Richard Bower. He died the following year; his will is PCC 7 Alen. He had close contacts with the City; he was a clerk in the Bede Roll of the Fraternity of St Nicholas in 1506 (GPC), and, by direction of the King, he was made a freeman of the Mercers’ Company in 1525 (LMC). He lived at Greenwich but he also held property in the City at St Helen's Bishops gate which he left to his wife Margaret (FLI). He also owned lands at Wickham, near Plumstead, Kent, for which he paid an annual quit-rent of 13s. 4d. to the Dean and Chapter of St Paul's in 1534 (VE). His membership of the Mercers’ Company was appropriate; like others of the Chapel (e.g. John Lloyd) Crane was an active merchant; in October, 1512, together with a London merchant named Hugh Clopton, he was granted a licence to export 600 sacks of wool (LP I, /1462/7), and this was one of many similar licences. Earlier in his life Crane had been granted another tenement in the City, in Mark Lane (August, 1511), but no doubt he relinquished it by the time of his death (LP I, 857/14). See, generally, C.W. Wallace, The Evolution of the English Drama to Shakespeare (1912).Google Scholar
CRASE (CROSSE), Nicholas ('lytill'). Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1532/33 (CA19). Singing-man, St Mary Woolnoth, 1549–51 (CA21). No doubt the name ‘Lytill’ implies he was a short man.Google Scholar
CRASE, Thomas. Morrow Mass priest of St Martin Outwich, 1512/13 (CA17). For three quarters of the year he was also organist.Google Scholar
CRISMORE, William. Conduct, Barking Chapel, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
CROSSE, Thomas. Conduct, ‘sengeing man', of All Hallows Staining, 1551–54 (CA3/2).Google Scholar
CYPRIAN, . Conduct, St Andrew Hubbard, 1511–12 (CA5). Organ-player and vestment mender, All Hallows Staining, 1515–18 (CA3/1).Google Scholar
DALBY, William. Clerk, assisted the choir for two weeks at Easter, 1515, of the Chapel of St Thomas, London Bridge (CA31, Vol.5).Google Scholar
DANERS, (or DAVERS ?), John. Parish clerk, All Hallows Staining, 1503–5 (CA3/1).Google Scholar
DARLINGTON, John. Admitted chorister of Lincoln Cathedral, 1485; senior chorister, 1501 (MLV). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1519 (GPC). Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1521/2 (CA19).Google Scholar
DAVYS, William. Singing-man, St Peter, West Cheap, 1557/8 (CA25).Google Scholar
DAVY, John. Clerk, St Mary-at-Hill, 1512/ 13 (CA19).Google Scholar
DAVY, Symon. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1509 (GPC). Clerk and organ-player St Botolph, Aldersgate, 1515–19 (CA7, rolls 35–38).Google Scholar
DAVY, William. Clerk, St Mary-at-Hill, 1549/50 (CA19).Google Scholar
DAWRENEY, William. Clerk, Fraternity of St. Nicholas, 1496, the entry in the Bede Roll repeated the following year. The ‘Iohanna Dobeney’ who became a member in 1500 may have been his wife (GPC). He was clerk (also referred to as conduct) of St Dunstan-in-the-East, 1498–1500 (CA8). Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, 1509–24 (HCR).Google Scholar
DAWE, William. Singing-man, St Mary-at-Hill, 1551/52. He is described as ‘our base'.Google Scholar
DAY, John. Conduct, St Marv-at-Hill, 1535–40 (CA19). He may have been the prominent printer.Google Scholar
DEANE, William. Clerk; Fraternity of St Nicholas; Master, 1516, when he was clerk of All Hallows Lombard Street; Died, 1519 (GPC).Google Scholar
DEEN, George, Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1481 (GPC).Google Scholar
DEYNYS, John. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1487, and again in 1495. On this latter occasion he was clerk of All Hallows Lombard Street. Dead, 1503 (GPC).Google Scholar
DOBLE, Gabriel. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1495, when he was clerk of St Michael's Cornhill (GPC). The Bede Roll records the death of his wife Margaret in 1514, and his own death in 1518. No doubt he is the ‘Gabriell the Clerk of Saint Mighells’ who was paid 9s. 4d. by the wardens of the Drapers’ Company in 1481/2 ‘for the kepyng of our lady masse atte Drapers ffest and for the dirige & masse kept the same tyme’ (JDC, I p. 356). The Drapers’ Hall was close to Cornhill, in Throgmorton Street and there was a strong link between church and Company. Doble is not mentioned in the wardens’ accounts of St Michael's, but there are some lamentable gaps in these records at about the time of his clerkship.Google Scholar
DONDYE, William. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1499 (GFC). Some interesting Litany-Kyries with Faburden by him are in the library of Lambeth Palace. They are described by Frere, Biblioteca Musico-Liturgica.Google Scholar
DRAPER, William. Clerk, St Michael Cornhill, 1555–59 (CA23).Google Scholar
DWYTE (DWYTH), William. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas in 1507, and again in 1518. On both occasions he was clerk of St Katherine Cree (GPC). His wife Anna became a member of the Fraternity in 1507.Google Scholar
DYER, Thomas. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1488, when he was clerk of St Michael, Crooked Lane (GPC).Google Scholar
DYX, Matthew. Conduct, St Dunstan-in-the-East, 1503–05 (CA8) Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1506; his wife Anna is enrolled the same year (GPC).Google Scholar
EDMONDES, William. Clerk, St Mary-at-Hill, 1490/91 (CA19). Dead clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1502.Google Scholar
EDWARDES, William. Clerk, St Vedast, Foster Lane, and Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1504 (GPC).Google Scholar
ELUYSDEN (ELVYSDEN, ELUYNDEN), Nicholas. Conduct, St Dunstan-in-the-East, Michaelmas quarter, 1500 (CA8). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1514 (GPC).Google Scholar
EMERY, Robert. Sexton, St Mary Woolnoth, 1539–52. During 1551/52 he was paid 3s. 4d. ‘for prycking of certayn bokes’ (CA21).Google Scholar
ENTWICH, Edward. Conduct, St Michael Wood Street, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
ERINEST, , see METTYGHAM.Google Scholar
EVANS, Thomas. Royal minstrel, sometime before 1515 (ECP, 306/25) since he was complainant in a law case between 1504 and 1515 and in another, 1515/18 (ECP, 406/27). He was still playing the rebec in the King's band as late as 1540 (WES, p. 298) though he is sometimes described as Queen's minstrel. It is probably he who was living in the parish of St Andrew Holborn in 1555, though he is not here described as minstrel and had perhaps retired (FLI).Google Scholar
EVE, Thomas. As a choirmaster he provided child actors and a child organist for the Midsummer show provided by the Skinners’ Company in 1535/6 (LSK). Conduct and choirmaster, St Mary Woolnoth, 1539/40 (CA21). There was a schoolmaster of the same name at Chelmsford attached to the Morrow Mass or Corpus Christi gild in 1547 (LSR). He is described as of 40 years or more and ‘literate and of good usage'. A ‘Thomas Eve off the livery’ is mentioned in the accounts of the London Tallowchandlers, 1534/35 (MTC, vol. II, p. 277). This volume, a copy of which is in the Guildhall library was printed but never published.Google Scholar
FFARLEYBY, William. Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1481 (GPC).Google Scholar
FARMER, William. Conduct, St Michael Cornhill, 1554 (CA23).Google Scholar
FAWCONER, Richard. Lay member, 1517; clerk, 1521 of the Fraternity of St Nicholas (GPC). Conduct of Whittington College, 1547 (ROC). He may have been related to the earlier musician who composed music preserved in the Eton manuscript. The king's master gunner, who died in 1521, had the same name. His will is PCC 14 Maynwaryng.Google Scholar
FAYRFAX, Robert. Distinguished composer and Gentleman of the Chapel Royal (see Grove). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1502 (GPC).Google Scholar
FFERYS, Benjamin. Clerk, London Bridge, chapel of St Thomas of Canterbury, 1535/39 (CA31).Google Scholar
FFERYS, John. Clerk, chapel on London Bridge, 1513–41. Possibly the father of Benjamin Fferys (CA31).Google Scholar
FITZJOHN, Thomas. An inventory of the goods of St Stephen, Coleman Street opens with the words, ‘This book, written by Thomas FitzJohn, sometime clerk of this parish, in the month of August, in the year of Our Lord one thousand four hundred and sixty-six’ (FSC). The inventory mentions no specific pricksong books or an organ. The wardens’ accounts of St Stephen's open in 1486; Fitzjohn is only mentioned in 1495/6 when he receives 6d. for frontals; but the clerk is not always named (CA28). It is probably his son who was a clerk in the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1515 (GPC). He was clerk of All Hallows Staining, 1525–27 (CA3/1), and bought ‘all the lynone banor clothes that covered theyeddolles [–idols, images] in lente’ from the churchwardens of St John Zachary for 2s., C. 1549 (WLC, p. 310). A ‘Thomas Ffyion’ is among the list of dead clerks of the Fraternity of St Nicholas in 1501.Google Scholar
FOOTEHEDDE, (FFOTEHED, FFOTEDDE etc.), John. Conduct, Barking chapel, 1547 (ROC). He is mentioned as clerk of St Botolph, Aldersgate in the accounts of 1555–58, with the small salary of 6s.8d. p.a. (though there was probably a separate account book for the full clerks ‘wages)(CA7, rolls 61–63). He was certainly clerk of this church earlier than this, though the clerk is not actually named in the accounts, for in 1551 he bought ‘one vestment blew’ for 5s. from the wardens of St Botolph's (WLC, p. 202).Google Scholar
FORTESCEWE, , Master. A payment in the accounts of St Martin-in-the-Fields, 1545, runs: ‘Item payd to Mayster fortescewe for the organys Summa vjli.xiijs. iiijd.’ He may have been an organ builder, but is much more likely to have been the middleman (CA14).Google Scholar
FFOSTER (FOSTER), Henry (Harry, ‘the goodman'). Conduct, Barking Chapel, 1547 (ROC). Singing-man, St Peter, West Cheap, 1557–61 (CA25).Google Scholar
FFOSTER, Richard. Clerk, St Andrew Hubbard, 1506/07 (CA5).Google Scholar
FFOSTER, Thomas. Lay member, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1514 and again in 1518 (GPC). Conduct, St Margaret Pattens, 1524/25 (CA12).Google Scholar
FFOX, Robert (or Richard). Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1537–40 (CA19).Google Scholar
FRANKELYNG, John. Conduct, St Michael Crooked Lane, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
FREMAN, Thomas. Brother of the Gild of the Assumption attached to the Skinners’ Company (1516) (GSK). Skinner in Walbrook, rent-payer to the church of St Stephen's there, 1521 (CA29/1). Master of the Mercers’ chapel school, 1542–49. This school had been incorporated with the school of St Thomas of Aeon, twenty years earlier and provided for the training of choristers. Freman was appointed High Master of St Paul's School (Colet's school, not the Cathedral school) in 1549, but in 1559 he was removed from office for ‘insufficency of learning’ (MPS).Google Scholar
FFYLOTT, John. Parish clerk, All Hallows Staining, 1532/33 (CA3/1).Google Scholar
FFYAN, Thomas. Conduct, St Dunstan-in-the-East, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
FYNKE, (ffynk & c.), Harry (Henry). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1514. Clerk, St Stephen Walbrook, 1518–32. His wife Joan was still doing odd jobs about the church in 1536/37 (CA29/1). She joined the Fraternity of St Nicholas in 1518.Google Scholar
GABRIEL, . See DOBLE.Google Scholar
GELL, Edmond. ‘Senghengman', All Hallows Staining, for ¾ of 1553 (CA3/2).Google Scholar
GILES, John. Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, 1511, 1520, 1524 (HCR). Visiting singer, St Mary-at-Hill, 1524/5 (CA19).Google Scholar
GILLOW, John. Clerk of St Margaret Southwark and Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, in 1513. Death noted in the Bede Roll the following year (GPC).Google Scholar
GLADWYN, Nicholas. Conduct for a quarter of the year 1514/15, St Mary-at-Hill (CA19). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1516 (GPC). In 1526 he was conduct of the College of Stoke-by-Clare, Suffolk (JVN, p. 233).Google Scholar
GLOUCESTER (CLOUCETER, GLOCETUR∗), Michael. London organ-maker. Built an organ for St Michael Cornhill in 1475 and repaired the organ of St Mary-at-Hill in 1477/9 (CA18 and CA23). He was probably identioal with the Michael of Gloucester who repaired the organs of Wells Cathedral 1449/50; and he may have been the son of John of Gloucester who built an organ at Wells in 1414 (COW). He paid rent for a house belonging to St Mary-at-Hill, 1483–87 (CA19).Google Scholar
∗GLOCETIR in CA19 should read GLOCETUR.Google Scholar
GLANCETS in Ca24 should read GLOUCET [UR]Google Scholar
GODARD, Master. Chantry singer, St Dunstan-in-the-East, 1495 (CA8).Google Scholar
GOLDE, Thomas. Parish clerk of St Margaret Moses and Master of the Fraternity of St. Nicholas, 1489 (GPC). Organ-player All Hallows Staining, 1511 (CA3/1). Dead clerk, 1517 (GPC)Google Scholar
GOLDER, Robert. Teacher of four children who took part in the pageant of St Margaret, part of the Midsummer Show arranged by the Drapers’ Company in 1541 (JDC vol. 2 from REP 7, pp. 649–51). Conduct, St Lawrence Jewry, 1547 (ROC). Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1549/50 (CA19). Organist, St George's Windsor, c. 1560–63 (FOW). An In Nomine for four voices by ‘Mr Goldar’ in BM5 (f. 24) is probably by Robert Golder.Google Scholar
GORE, Morris. See CORREY.Google Scholar
GORRAM, John. In 1462 the household accounts of John, Duke of Norfolk (15 February) have a payment of 14s. 4d. ‘to John Goram, Maister of the Children of seint Anthony, for a song booke and iiij antemys’ (CNS, p. 161). The Duke was in London at this time and St Anthony's is almost certainly St Anthony's Hospital. Goram (Goreham) is mentioned in the records of St Anthony's 1495–1502 (WR. xv. 37. 8; 23; 25), but he was not Master of the Choristers and his position is not stated.Google Scholar
GOSTON (GOWGHTON), Thomas. Clerk, St Botolph Aldersgate, 1511–13 (CA7, rolls 31–33). He may possibly be identified with the Thomas Goston, Ll. B., notary public, of Lincoln who was the scribe of the will of John Forster, dean of St Stephen's Westminster in 1512 (PCC, 21 & 22 Fetiplace).Google Scholar
GRENE, Michael. Clerk, St Mary-at-Hill, 1529–35 (CA19).Google Scholar
GRENEWOOD, Matthew. Conduct, St Mary Bothaw, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
GRESSEN, . See GRIFFITH, Richard.Google Scholar
GRIFFITH, Richard. Clerk of Barking Chapel, Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1515 (GPC). Clerk of St Margaret Pattens, 1516–20. The annual payment of his salary was designated to him ‘and to his company keping of the Salve before the Rode for a yere’ or to him and James Howe ‘for kepyng of the Salve before the Roode wt their children'. In his last year here, the scribed writes his name ‘Gressen’ (CA12). He assisted at St Mary-at-Hill in 1522/23 when he was paid 1s. 8d. ‘for a Reward for him and his children’ (CA19).Google Scholar
GRIGORY, Richard. Clerk, St Andrew Hubbard for a year between 1535 and 1537 (CA5/2).Google Scholar
GROVE, John. Conduct, St James Garlickhithe, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
GWYNNETH, John. Priest and composer. Doctor of Music (Oxon), 1531 (WDM). He was rector of St Peter, West Cheap, from 1543 to 1556, and in 1550 his brother-in-law Stephen Vaughan bequeathed him a house opposite the church (FL1). For full details of his life see MGG.Google Scholar
GYE, Thomas. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1505. Master, 1519, when he was clerk of St Leonard East Cheap (GPC).Google Scholar
GYLMAN, Richard. Clerk, St Matthew Friday Street, 1553/54 (CA22).Google Scholar
HACKET, John. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1539/40 (CA19). There is a four-voice setting of Kyrie by ‘Hake’ or ‘Hacke’ in BM1 which is probably the work of John Hake who was a clerk of St George's Windsor in 1547 (FAI, p. 173) and who was master of the choristers there in 1541/2 (FOW), and who may also be identified with Hacket. Hake is mentioned in letters from Lawrence Starkey to Lord Darcy in 1523 (LP 3, 2954 & 3187); Hake was a kinsman of Starkey's and offered his services as a singing-man to Darcy through Starkey. Whether or not he was ever engaged is not recorded.Google Scholar
HALL, K. Choirmaster of St Anthony's Hospital, 1501 (WR.XV.37.25).Google Scholar
HAMOND, Thomas. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1547/8 (CA19). Probably the same as William HAMOUNDE, below.Google Scholar
HAMOUNDE, William. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1547 (ROC). See also Thomas HAMOND, above.Google Scholar
HARRES, Richard. Conduct, St Botolph Aldersgate, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
HARROLD, Thomas (Sir). Conduct, St Michael Cornhill, 1550–53. He evidently lived in a house owned by the church for the accounts note a payment for ‘makyng cleane of a Jakes’ in his house (CA23) in 1550/51.Google Scholar
HARRYSON, John. Clerk of All Hallows Staining, c. 1500–10 (CA3/1). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1507 (GPC). A man of the same name (probably his son) was clerk of All Hallows Staining, 1551. He is again named as sexton in 1556 (CA3/2). It was probably this man who was described as ‘of the Citie of London singingman’ and named sole executor in the will of John Richarde, a vicar of ‘the cathedrall churche Saint Peter, Westminster’ which was proved in May, 1550 (PCC 14 Coode). A John Harryson was buried at St. Martin-in-the-Fields during the plague years of 1557/8 (CA14). A John Harryson was chantry priest of St. Paul's Cathedral in 1534 (VE).Google Scholar
HAWKES (AWKES, AWBES), Giles. Clerk, St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1544–47 (CA9). Conduct, St Michael Wood Street, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
HADDOCKE (HADDOK), John. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1480. Organist of St Dunstan-in-the-East, 1495–96 (CA8). Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1499 and 1504. In both years he was clerk of St Dionis Fenchurch Street. Dead clerk, 1518 (GPC).Google Scholar
HAYWARDE, John. Clerk. St Thomas’ London Bridge, 1513–28 (CA31, vols. 5 & 6). Succentor of St Paul's Cathedral, 1534. Perhaps he may be identified with the buyer of ‘Crosse Stones’ from St Katherine Cree, 25 December 1547 (WLC).Google Scholar
HEATH (HEITHE, HETHE,) Lawrence, (Lancelot). Conduct, St Benet Gracechurch Street, 1549–51. In the accounts of 1554/55 ‘Lawncelot Hethe’ is described as ‘citezen and payntersteynor of London’ and is paid for doing work appropriate to this trade (CA6). In 1554/5, ‘Hethe the singing man’ was paid 7s. by the wardens of St Mary-at-Hill ‘for xxj dayes servis’ and may have been the same man (CA 19). Lawrence Heath was clerk of St Michael Cornhill in 1555 where he remained until 1590 (CA23).Google Scholar
HEMYNGHAM, John. Parish clerk of All Hallows Staining, 1494 (CA3/1).Google Scholar
HICKMAN (HYCKMAN, HICMAN), Thomas. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas 1508 (GPC). Said to have been Redford's predecessor as master of the choristers of St. Paul's, died 1534 (RTD). A priest of this name appears in the Bede Roll of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1518 (GPC).Google Scholar
HYGYNS, Andrew; Clerk, Fraternity of St. Nicholas, 1518 (GPC). Described as parish clerk of St Botolph Aldgate in a law case c. 1518 concerned with his exchange of his income for an annuity of £ 8; apparently he took the annuity but also kept his income (ECP, 531/56).Google Scholar
HOBBYS, John. Clerk, St Mary Woolnoth, 1539–41 (CA21). He may have been the Hobbes who is mentioned in the accounts of St Mary-at-Hill, 1556/7. The entry runs ‘Payed to sir Iohn parkyns, a base, for helpe the quere when hobbes was dead…’ (CA19).Google Scholar
HOGESON, Thomas. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1535/6 (CA19).Google Scholar
HOLE, Richard. Conduct, St Margaret Pattens, 1512/13 (CA12). May possibly be identified with the interluder, 1526–30 (CES, vol.2, p. 295). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1513 (GPC).Google Scholar
HOLLAND, William. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas; sang at the funeral of Sir Thomas Lovell, 1524 (CPC, p. 148). In 1549 he was living in a cottage in Bishopsgate attached to the Parish Clerks’ Hall (CPC, p. 95).Google Scholar
HOLME, Robert. Clerk, Fraternity of St. Nicholas, 1469, dead 1504 (GPC). The accounts of St Stephen, Coleman Street have an entry in 1494/5: ‘Item to Robert holme for syngers upon ye church halyday iiijs; It seems likely that he was a London choirmaster, though it is not known where (CA28). He was the composer of an optional additional bass part for the Gloria of a Mass, which is preserved in a Lambeth fragment. Another Robert Holme was a stipendiary of Mettyngham College in 1515/16 (BM.add.MS. 339, 89, f. 143').Google Scholar
HOLT, Stephen. Sexton, St Mary Magdalene, Milk Street, 1518–1528 (CA20). Clerk, St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1534–42 (CA9). Lay member of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1515. (GPC).Google Scholar
H ORNE, Thomas. Conduct, St Michael, Queenhythe, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
HORWOOD, William. Clerk, Fraternity of St. Nicholas, 1459; entered in the Bede Roll again in 1463; Master of the Fraternity, 1464 (GPC). Master of the choristers of Lincoln Cathedral, 1477–89 (MLV). Composer of four pieces in the Eton manuscript, and of a Kyrie O rex clemens which survives in the fragmentary form in YM. A ‘Horwods Gaude’ is mentioned in the inventory of pricksong books belonging to King's College, Cambridge in 1529 (KCP).Google Scholar
HOWE, John, father and son; London 15th/16th century organ builders. A long essay could be written about the achievements of these two men. Suffice it here to mention their main achievements. When they began work (the earliest records concern the organ of York Mnster in 1485), organ building seems to have been, almost always, a part-time job. By the time the younger Howe died, in 1571, a full-time professional practice had been built up: it was certainly the most extensive in England at the time; probably of all time. It seems probable that they carried out work on all the organs (some churches had two or mere) in all the hundred-odd City of London churches at some time or other but their practice extended also to Westminster, Wandsworth, Eton and Bletchingley; and further afield to York, Sheffield and Coventry. In London, they built new organs at St Martin Outwich (1513/4: CA17), St Dunstan-in-the-West (c. 1534: CA9) and All Hallows Staining (1545: CA3/1); and doubtless a great many others. They established a regular maintenance service for organs; most London churches paid them an annual fee of 2s. per organ for regular tuning and minor repairs. Their premises were in Walbrook at the ‘Sign of the Organ Pype'. The elder Howe died in 1519 (GPC); his son, who in old age was known endearingly as ‘Father’ Howe, in 1571. Further details may be found in SOR and MGG but the full story has yet to be written.Google Scholar
HOWE, James. Clerk of St Dunstan-in-the-East and Master of the Fraternity of St. Nicholas, 1513 (CA8). He became a member (clerk) of the Fraternity in 1506. Conduct, St Margaret Pattens, 1520. With Richard GRIFFITH he kept ‘Jhesus Masse and the antems’ (CA12).Google Scholar
HUCHYNS, Gregory (Degory). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1510; dead, 1520 (GPC). Clerk, St Margaret Pattens, 1511–13 (CA11).Google Scholar
HUNT (HWNT), William. Master, the Fraternity of St Nicholas and clerk, St Alphege London Wall, 1509. Dead, 1514 (GPC).Google Scholar
INNSTABULL, Lancelot. Probably clerk of St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1523. The payment in the wardens’ accounts reads: ‘payd to Syr lawnslette Innstabull & hys felows . . lvjsixd’ (CA9).Google Scholar
IVY (JOE), Nicholas. Chorister, the Chapel Royal, 1509 (LP I/20). He became a London draper and, in his will dated 1558 requested to be buried in St Dunstan-in-the-East (PCC 24 Noodes).Google Scholar
JENYNGES (JENYS), Symond. Clerk, St Martin Outwich, 1525–44 (CA17).Google Scholar
JOHN, Pety. See SAVERNAKE.Google Scholar
JOHNSON, Thomas. Organ-player, St Margaret Pattens, 1518/21 (CA12). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1518. Dead 1519 (GPC).Google Scholar
JOHNSON, Robert. Player who took the part of Tracy in a pageant of St. Thomas a Becket arranged by the Skinners in 1518/19 (LSK). Clerk, St Thomas’ Chapel London Bridge, 1528–30 (CA31/6). This name was common in the sixteenth century and it is difficult to distinguish between the various men: there was, of course, a notable composer of this name at the time, though he probably had no connection with London (see Grove and MGG); and there were many secular Robert Johnsons - including a royal mole-catcher. (See Grove and MGG)Google Scholar
JONES, Richard. Schoolmaster of St Paul's School; legatee of his cousin Richard Pygott, 1549 (PCC 42 Populwell), who refers to him as ‘my cosyn Johns scole Master of the gramer scole in Powles'. Jones, who was a friend and correspondent of Andrew Ammonius, the King's Latin secretary, himself died in 1549, apparently of the plague, for he says of himself that there was then ‘a phwer quartyn then Reynyng in his bodye’ (PCC 43 Populwell). Jones may have been the ‘Scolle Mr of Polles’ who, in 1548, was paid 5s. by the churchwardens of St Michael Cornhill ‘for wrytyng of the masse in English & ye Benedicites’ (CA24).Google Scholar
JONES, Hugh. Conduct, responsible for the ‘teaching of singing childeren', St Mary Woolnoth, 1547 (ROC). The accounts of the church ‘refer to him merely as ‘Hugh'; but they do indicate that he was only at the church for one year (CA21).Google Scholar
KERZEN, Harry. Singing-man, St Mary-at-Hill, 1551 (CA19).Google Scholar
KEYNSTON, see KYNGSTON, Robert.Google Scholar
KNYGHTCOTE, William. Clerk of St John Zachary and Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1494 (GPC).Google Scholar
KYLLYK (KELKE), Thomas. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1511; dead, 1519 (GPC). Complainant in chancery case against Andrew HYGYNS.Google Scholar
KYNGSTON (KEYNSTON), Robert. Clerk, St Stephen Walbrook, 1536/7 (CA29/1). Clerk, St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1544–47 (CA9).Google Scholar
KYTE, John. Chaplain to the King, 1509 (LP I/20), sub-dean, 1511 (LP I/707). Archbishop of Armagh, 1513 (LDC). ‘His promotions to Thebes and Carlisle came so quick upon him that the fees of the bulls of his translations and the retention of other benefices amounted to the sum of 1790 ducats’ (Rawdon Brown, ed., Despatches of Sebastian Giustinian ii, 164 (1854)). Took part with Cornyshe and other Gentlemen of the Chapel Royal in various Court pageants and masquerades (LP II, passim), and in 1510/11 was a visiting singer at St Mary-at-Hill, together with William Cornyshe (CA19); he apparently repeated his visit the same year in the company of Henry Prentes. His will is PCC 6 Dyngeley, 1537.Google Scholar
LANY, Richard. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1512 (GPC). ‘Clerk and organ player', St Botolph Aldersgate, 1511–13 (CA7, rolls 32–33).Google Scholar
LAWE (LAU), John. Parish clerk, St Mary-at-Hill, 1503–09 (CA18). Master of the Fraternity of St. Nicholas, 1508; dead, 1514 (GPC).Google Scholar
LAWRENCE, John. Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas, and parish clerk of St Vedast, Foster Lane, 1514 (GPC). He became a member of the Fraternity in 1507.Google Scholar
LEE (ALEE, LEESE, LYE), Richard. Clerk, St Mary-at-Hill, 1511/12 (CA19). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1510 (GPC). Conduct, St Stephen Westminster, complainant in a chancery case, an action of maintenance between 1515 and 1518 (ECP, 424/58). Master of the song school, St Anthony's Hospital, 1521/22 (The Master of the hospital at the time was the physician John Chamber, who was also a canon of St Stephen's Westminster) (WR. XV. /37. 33). Described as parish clerk in the will of Philip Clynche, Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, dated 1535. He is here named as both legatee and executor (PCC 27 Hogen). Provided children from St Anthony's to perform in the Lord Mayor's pageant staged by the Merchant Taylors’ Company in 1556 (SMT). A Richard Alye was executor of the will (1517) of William Tebbe (ROC VII, 99). This man is described as ‘gentylman of the Kyng's honorable Juell housse’.Google Scholar
LENARD, Patrick see PATRICK, Lenard.Google Scholar
LEWYS, William. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1507 (GPC) Clerk, All Hallows Staining, 1508/10 (CA3/1). In 1522/3 he was appointed ‘to be a conduct at Guildhall Chapel & play and serve the choir at the organs there & to have for his salary 20s. a quarter'. He is here described as ‘late one of the vergers of Paul's’ (REP. 6, f. 24'). He seems to have been a troublesome person, for later in the same year persons were appointed to examine a controversy between Lewes and the custos and priests of the Guildhall Chapel (f.273). Supplier of virginals to the King, April 1530 (NHE), February 1531.Google Scholar
LORYMER, Symond. Various payments to him in the accounts of St Stephen, Coleman Street indicate he was a musician. A payment in 1494/95 of £ 1 is ‘for his labour this yere'. Another payment in 1500 runs ‘Item paid to Lorymer of Poules for hym and his company for the Masse on the Invencion day of Seint Stephens iijs iiijd & for brede and ale spent in the chirche the same day, ijd ob, iijs vjd ob'. This seems to indicate that he had now become a vicar choral or even master of the choristers of St Paul's (CA28). There was a scrivener of the same name in London in 1474 who may have been a musician as well. A facsimile of his handwriting may be found in Hilary Jenkinson's Later Court hands.Google Scholar
LOVE, Robert. Singing-man in the Drapers’ Midsummer Show 1522 (RDR).Google Scholar
LOVEKYN, Arthur. Chorister, the Chapel Royal, 1509 (LP I/20). in 1511, the King authorised a payment of £ 7. 17s. 4d. to Robert Fayrfax ‘for the diet and learning for a whole year of Wm. Alderson and Arthur Lovekyn, our scholars’ (LPI, Preface, p.xviij, footnote). Lovekyn came of an important family of City burgesses and he himself seems to have returned to trade, probably becoming a tailor. His will, 1546, shows that he was then living at Brasted in Kent (PCC 27 Alen); but he was apparently buried in the City, for among the payments of the wardens of St Andrew Hubbard, 1546, are one of 6d. ‘for Arthur Lovffkyn knell’ and one of 2s.4d. ‘for paving Arthur Lovffkyn grave’ (CA5/2).Google Scholar
LOWE, John. Clerk, St Sepulchre without Newgate, 1556 (CA27).Google Scholar
LUGGE, Edward. ‘Late conduct’ of Guildhall Chapel, 1548/9 (REP. 12/1. f. 15').Google Scholar
LUTT, John. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1498 and 1510. In both these year he was parish clerk of All Hallows the Great, Thames Street (GPC). Dead, 1512.Google Scholar
LYNCOLN, John. Clerk of St Giles Cripplegate and Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas in 1507 and 1519 (GPC).Google Scholar
MAN, Nicholas. ‘Ye basse', St Mary-at-Hill, 1548/9 (CA19).Google Scholar
MAN, Thomas. Lay member of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1515 (GPC). Lived in the parish of St Mary Aldermanbury in 1532; described as ‘syngyngman’ in the Inquisition post mortem on William Buck, tailor (FLI). The books in the Lady Chapel, ChristChurch Canterbury, 1535, included ‘iij small querys off thomas mann’ (LCC). There was a clerk of St George's Chapel. Windsor, named Thomas. Man in 1547 (FAI. I. p. 172).Google Scholar
MAN, William. Clerk, St Mary-at-Hill, 1549/50 (CA19).Google Scholar
MARCHE, John. Master of the choristers, St Anthony's hospital, 1495 and 1509/10 (WR. XV. 37.8. and WR. XV. 37. 27). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1506. Dead, 1518 (GPC).Google Scholar
MARCHAUNT, William. Clerk, St Peter, West Cheap and Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1506 (GPC). He had previously been a chorister of St. George's Windsor, resigning on June 16, 1472 (WR. V. B. 2).Google Scholar
MARCHAUNT, Robert. Conduct, St Christopher-le-Stocks, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
MARKES, Roger. Conduct, St Martin Vintry, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
MARLOWE, John. Parish clerk of, and - with his wife Agnes - member of the parish gild of, St Botolph Aldersgate, 1499 (BM.add. MS. 37664, the book of the gild). He was clerk of the same church, 1511–13 (CA7, rolls 31–33), but there were other clerks during the intervening period. Parish clerk, St Martin-in-the-Fields, 1538–40 (CA14). A London wait in 1502 (CCM) and (though he is not named as wait on this occasion) c. 1530 (ECP 656/1) may possibly have been his father. He was a member of the Fraternity of St Nicholas in 1499 (GPC). There was an abbot of Bermondsey (+1519) of this name.Google Scholar
MARTYN, John. A regrettably common name during this period.Google Scholar
1) Clerk, Fraternity of St. Nicholas, 1487, dead clerk 1501 (GPC). Gentleman of the Chapel Royal; left a bequest to his church, St Peter West Cheap, in his will, dated 1500, proved the following year (PCC 7 Blamyr) so presumably he resided in the City.Google Scholar
2) Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1511 (GPC). Gentleman of Wolsey's Chapel, 1521 (BM4, f. 24). Conduct, St Sepulchre, 1547 (ROC). In the accounts of that church he is described as sexton, 1347–52 (CA27).Google Scholar
There was also a conduct of this name at St Dunstan-in-the-East, 1500–04. He is paid ‘for kepyng of our lady masse and techyng children and to kep the quere every sonday and every dobill ffest in the yere as well thei that be no halidays as holy days’ (CA8). A ‘John Marton’ was boy bishop of York in 1526 (Yorkshire Archaeological and Topographical Journal XII, 400); and a John Martyn was sub-sacrist of St. Stephen's Westminster, mentioned in the will of Henry Sharp, dean of St Stephen's, 1489 (PCC 19 Milles).Google Scholar
MARTIN (MARTEN, MARTON), Thomas. Parish clerk of St Mary-at-Hill, 1547 (ROC). He is mentioned in this capacity in the accounts of the church, 1547/8, but the following year he was replaced by William Mundy (CA19).Google Scholar
MASON, Peter. Conduct, St Michael Cornhill for a quarter of the year 1550/51 (CA23).Google Scholar
MANFFELD (MAWUDEFFEILD), Thomas. Clerk, St Mary Magdalene, Milk Street, 1522–28 (CA20). See also MAWUDFELDE.Google Scholar
MATEWS, Edmond. Assisted the choir of St Andrew Hubbard for 1s. on St Andrew's Day, 1532/33 (CA5/33).Google Scholar
MATHEWE, Robert. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1502; Master in 1508 when he was clerk of St Antholin (GPC).Google Scholar
MATHEW (MATHY), William. Conduct, St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1547 (ROC). Described as clerk in the accounts of St Dunstan-in-the-East; he was there from 1547 to 1557 (CA9).Google Scholar
MATRAVERS (MATREVERSE, MATERVERSE), Richard. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1514 (GPC). Parish clerk, St Margaret Pattens, 1518–21, where he was also paid ‘for oure lady Messe & antemns'. (CA12).Google Scholar
MATRYVERS, Edmund. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1529–32 (CA19). The accounts for 1550/31 also include a payment of 6d. ‘for papur to Edmond and for pryckyng the'reof'.Google Scholar
MARPERLEY, William. Conduct, St Magnus, 154 (ROC). No doubt he is to be indentified with the William MAUPERLEY who was a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, temp. Edward VI (HCR).Google Scholar
MAWUDFELDE, . Organist, St Margaret Pattens, 1518/20 (CA12). Probably to be identified with Thomas MANFFELDE.Google Scholar
MAY, Thomas. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1549/50 (CA19).Google Scholar
MAY, Richard. Singing-man who assisted the choir of St Dunstan-in-the-East in 1500/01 (CA8). ClerkeD Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1514 (GPC).Google Scholar
MAYDINVEL, John. Conduct, All Haellows Staining, 1545 (CA3/1).Google Scholar
MAYHEW, John. Clothworker; cceduct, St Benet Grace church Street, 1548–52. Over and above his ordinary-wages he was paid extra ‘bycause he shoulde bside the holydayes also come on the wedynsdayes and frydayes to syng the suffrages in the mornyng’ (CA6).Google Scholar
MEDDOWS (MEDOW), Henry. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1518 (GPC). He was apparently ordained priest soon afterwards for in 1530/32 we find ‘Sir Harry Meddows’ teaching the choristers of St Margaret's Westminster (CA13).Google Scholar
MELLOWE, Nicholas. Clerk of St Dunstan-in-the-West for part of 1536 (CA9). Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, temp. Edward VI (HCR).Google Scholar
MARBECK, John. Composer, clerk and organist of St. George's Chapel, Windsor; for full details see Grove &c. He was made a freeman of the London Weavers’ Company in 1549 on payment of a redemption fee of £1 (CWC).Google Scholar
MICHELSON, John. Clerk, London Bridge, St Thomas’ Chapel (1528–38). (CA31/VII).Google Scholar
METYNGHAM, (Matthew). Organ-player, St. Margaret's Westminster, 1478/80 (CA13). The will of ‘Mathew erinest alias metyngham’ of the parish of ‘Allhalowen berkyng beside the towre hille of London’ is among the accounts of St Dunstan-in-the-East for 1503/4, and may refer to the same man though there is no reference in it to confirm this (CA8).Google Scholar
MODY, Henry. Clerk, St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1545–47 (CA9).Google Scholar
MORE (MOORE), John. Clerk and teacher of the children, St Margaret's Westminster, 1530–36 (CA13). Clerk, St Martin-in-the-Fields, 1538/39 (CA14).Google Scholar
MORECOCKE, Robert. Conduct and choirmaster, St Mary Woolnoth, 1542–45 (CA21). Teaement holder of St Martin Outwich, 1545 (CA17). Conduct, St Michnel Cornhill, 1547, acting in place of a chantry priest in John Langethorne chantry. Conduct at the same church, 1547–9; he was paying rent for ‘a chamber’ to the church in 1551/52 (CA23). Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, temp. Edward VI; clerk of the cheque, 1561; died 1582 (HCR). A 3-voice Gloria laus by Morecocke is preserved in HM5.Google Scholar
MORNTELL, Robert. Conduct, St Magnus, 1547 (ROC)Google Scholar
MOYSER, William. Conduct, St Lawrence Pountney, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
MUDDE, Henry. Conduct, St Magnus, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
MUNDY, Thomas. Sexton, St. Mary-at-Hill, 1527–58 (CA19). The accounts for 1539/40 innlude a payment of 2d. ‘to the sexten for prycking of a song bocke’ In 1554/54 he is called ‘father mondaye’ perhaps because William Mundy, who may have been his son was now parish clerk. Similarly he is called ‘olde Mundy’ in 1556/7.Google Scholar
MUNDY, William. Chorister, Westminster Abbey, 1542/3 (PWA), probably son of Thomas Mundy. Conduct, St. Martin Vintry, 1547 (ROC). Parish clerk, St Mary-at-Hill, 1548–58. Among the entries concerning him, one of 2s. on May 12 1557 – ‘for his charges to Rochester to hier a conducte, a base, for our churche’ – shows that he was responsible for running the music at the church. He was sworn a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal in 1563/64 and died c. 1591. He was a prolific composer and father of the composer John Mundy; for further details see Grove.Google Scholar
MYTON, Hugh. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1502 and 1509, when he was clerk of St Michael Cornhill. The Bede Roll records his death in 1512 (GPC). The accounts of St Michael Cornhill for the time when Myton was clerk are lost.Google Scholar
NASHE, Robert. Clerk, Chapel of St Thomas, London Bridge, 1528–31 (CA31/VI).Google Scholar
NELSON, Master. Organ-player in 1514for half the year, St Martin Outwich (CA17).Google Scholar
NEWGATE, Richard. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1534/5 (CA19).Google Scholar
NICOLLES, George. Clerk, St Thomas’ Chapel, London Bridge, 1515–19. During his last year he is mistakenly given the Christian name ‘John’ (CA31/V).Google Scholar
NORFOLKE, William. Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1485, and again in 1493 when he was clerk of St Mary Magdalene Milk Street. He is listed as dead in 1509 (GPC). See John NORTHFOLKE.Google Scholar
NORMAN, John. Clerk, St Thomas’ Chapel, London Bridge, 1528–34 (CA31/VI). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1521 (GPC). Possibly the composer whose Masse ‘Ressurexit Dominus’ has survived at Oxford (Bodley, Mus. Sch. e. 376–381), together with a motet, Euge dicta, in the Peterhouse earlier Tudor part-books.Google Scholar
NORTHFOLKE, John. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1523/4–29/30. He is mentioned frequently in the accounts of the church during this period when he was evidently the leading musician. He inaugurated a regular choir-school; in 1523/4 arrangements were made to ‘clene a chambre in the Abbottes yn for to be a skole howse for Northfolkes children and for havyng away of Strawe and Rubbush owte of that howse'; and the same year, ‘Northfolke and his company & the children’ were granted ‘a playng weke to make mery'. He was probably the organist, and at least he had ideas about organ-building, for there is a payment of 2s. in 1524/5 ‘to the orgon maker for mendyng the orgons Accordyng to the mynde of Mr Northfolke and at his devyse'. He was also a music copyist and in 1529/ 30 provided pricksong books ‘of the whiche v of them be with Antemys and v with Massis’ (CA19). He may have been the son of William NORFOLKE.Google Scholar
NOTT (NUTTE), John. Singer who assisted at St Mary-at-Hill on St Barnabas day 1499/1500 with ‘dyverse other Syngars and theyr childryn [choristers]; and in 1500/01 with ‘his Company Sungers’ (CA19). An earlier payment to him in 1496/7 of ls. is recorded: ‘to Nutt & to an odyr for masse & booth evynonges’ and probably refers to St Barnabas even and day (CA18).Google Scholar
NYCOLLEJohn, Clerk John, Clerk, St Margaret Pattens, 1555/6 (CA12).Google Scholar
NYGHTYNGALE, Thomas. Clerk, St Lawrence Jewry, and Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1516 (GPC). Perhaps he was the ‘yonge man callied Nyghtyngale’ who received 2d. from the churchwardens of St Mary-at-Hill in 1496/7 for some unspecified service (CA18). He joined the Fraternity of St Nicholas in 1506.Google Scholar
ODY, Bartholomew. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1493; Master in 1510 when he was clerk of St Peter Cornhill. His wife Joan was enrolled in 1510 (GPC). Between 1509 and 1512 he was a parishioner of St Martin Outwich (CA17). Together with John Redford he was a vicar choral of St. Paul's in 1534 (RAS). His will, dated 1537, is at Somerset House (D & C, St. Paul's, A, f. 6), and shows that, for all his importance as a London church musician he died in poverty; it is in sharp contrast with that of Redford. Joan Ody was his principal beneficiary: she later went to live in a cottage adjoining the parish clerks’ Hall in Bishopsgate where we find her in 1549 (CPC, p. 95).Google Scholar
OKELAND (OCLANDE), Robert. Organ-player, St Mary-at-Hill, 1533–35 (CA19). As a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal he sang at the Coronation of Edward VI and at the funeral of Henry VIII in 1547 (LKM), but nothing further about his life is known. Morley mentions him as one of the composers whose works he consulted when writing his Plaine and Easie (MPE p. 322), but all that now survives of his music is an anthem, ‘Prayse we the father', and a prayer ‘Prayse the Lord, O our souls’ in Day's Certaine Notes of 1560; together with a fine four-voice setting of Kyrie Eleison (net a complete Mass setting as stated in Grove) in BM1.Google Scholar
OLIVER (OLVER), John. Clerk, All Hallows Staining, 1525/6 (CA3/1).Google Scholar
ORLOW, Henry. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1509 (GPC). Appointed conduct, teacher of four choristers, St Michael Cornhill, 1509. Details from the covenant of his appointment, taken from CA23, f. 1., are printed in CA24.Google Scholar
OROM, John. Clerk, St Botolph Aldersgate, 1508 (CA7, roll 28).Google Scholar
PADDE, . Conduct, St Michael Cornhill, 1548 (CA24).Google Scholar
PALADYE, Edward. Conduct, St Dunstan-in-the-East, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
PAPWORTH, John. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1502(GPC). Conduct, St Dunstan-in-the-East, 1503–5 (CA8). Died in 1512, when he was clerk of St Michael Queenhythe, during his term of office as Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas (GPC).Google Scholar
PARES, Leonard. Conduct, St James Garlickhythe, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
PARKYNS, John (Sir). ‘A base’ who helped the choir of St Mary-at-Hill during 1556/7 when their conduct died (CA19). Priest.Google Scholar
PASSHE (PASCHE & c.), William. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas 1513. The enrolment of his wife Embryth is not entered, but her death is recorded in 1517 (GPC): Evidently both of them were Welsh: He was clerk of St Peter West Cheap for a short period the accounts of that church have two references to him. In 1527 there is a payment of 10s. to ‘Master Passhe apon lamas daye for hys dyner and the syngers at the Egyll’ – the Eagle may have been the tavern of that name in Leadenhall. The following year there is a payment of £5, 5s. ‘to Passhe the clerke for hys wages for iij quarters, that is to saye from Myghellmas onto mydsomer next, after vijli the yere’ (CA25). He is no doubt identical with the ‘Mr Passhe of london', who in 1514/15 was paid 1s. 8d. for ‘oversyght of ye orgens’ of Kingston-on-Thames parish church. In 1536/7 the churchwardens paid him a further 4d. ‘in Ernest', probably for his continued care of the organs (CAK). A number of compositions by Passhe survive (see Grove).Google Scholar
PATON, Richard. Singing-man in the Drapers’ Midsummer Show 1522 (RDR).Google Scholar
PATRIK, Lenard. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1490 (GPC). He was an occasional performer at St Mary-at-Hill: in 1496/7 he is called ‘Patryk Lenard’ and receives 8d. for an unspecified service; in 1500/01 there is a payment of 4s. ‘to lenard, conducte, for xij days in crystmas syngyng & playing at the organs’ (CA18). A ‘Joan Patryke', clerk's wife, joined the Fraternity of St Nicholas in 1510, and may have been his wife.Google Scholar
PATTEN, William. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1529/30–39/40 (CA19).Google Scholar
PAYNE, Christopher. Clerk, St Peter., West Cheap, 1529–34(CA25).Google Scholar
PERY (PYRRY), William. Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1500 when he was clerk of All Hallows the Great, Thames Street. His death is noted in 1515 (GPC). He may be identified with the William Pyrry ‘that sang in the Quire’ of St Margaret's Westminster ‘from cadelmas to lamas’ in 1514/15 (CA13).Google Scholar
PERYMAN, William. Conduct, St Vedast, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
PERYN, Alexander. Vicar of St Stephen's Westminster, 1547 (ROC); in receipt of a pension of 1555 (BM3). Together with John TAYLOR he subscribed to a bill of John Howe's expenses for mending the organs of Westminster Abbey c. 1562 (WAM38667).Google Scholar
PETYWADE, Lewes (Lodowicus). Clerk, St Martin Orgar; master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1500 and 1511. Dead, 1517 (GPC) The death of his wife Joan is noted in the Bede Roll in 1505.Google Scholar
PLOTT, Humfrey Clerk, St Botolph Aldersgate, 1515 (CA7, roll 35).Google Scholar
PLUMPTON, Robert. Clerk, St Sepulchre, 1557 (CA27)Google Scholar
POULE (POWLL), William. Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas, and clerk of St Botolph Aldgate, 1491 and 1499 (GPC)Google Scholar
PRENTES, Henry. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1502; death noted, 1514 (GPC). Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, 1511 (LP I/707). Visited St Mary-at-Hill in 1510/11 together with John KYTE (CA19). A fine 5-voice Magnificat by Prentes survives in the Caius choir-book. His wife Beatrix joined the Fraternity of St Nicholas in 1508.Google Scholar
PRESTON, John. Organist, St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1544/5 (CA9).Google Scholar
PRINCE, Richard. Conduct, All Hallows the Great, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
PURSSET, Thomas. Received 6s. from the churchwardens of St Michael Cornhill in 1548 for providing ‘vj songes bokes for the Churche.’ (CA24).Google Scholar
PYNKEY, Thomas. Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas, clerk of St Clement, Temple Bar, 1512. He died during his year of office (GPC).Google Scholar
RANTALL, William. Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas, clerk of St Anne, Aldersgate, 1489 (GPC).Google Scholar
REDFORD, John. Vicar choral and choirmaster of St. Paul's: important composer. See Grove and PJR. Very little is known about his early life before 1540: his will, 1547 (PCC, 50 Alen), shows him to have died comparatively wealthy. Possibly the ‘Mr Rudford’ with whom the wardens of St. Mary Woolnoth bargained for a conduct in 1541/42 (CA21).Google Scholar
REDKNAP, Robert. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1518/19 (CA19).Google Scholar
REFFORD, Thomas. Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas and clerk All Hallows the Great 1521 (GPC).Google Scholar
RHYS, Philip ap. Parishioner of St Martin Outwich, 1509/10–12/13 and perhaps later. Warden of ‘Our Lay Bretherhed’ in the church for two years, 1521–23 (CA17). Organ-player, playing at daily Lady Mass, St Mary-at-Hill, 1547 (CA19). A payment of 1s. 4d. to ‘mr phillip of poles’ in 1559 ‘for playing at organs on enson [evensong] ye xvij daie of July at ye salutacion’ must refer to ap Rhys, for he is known to have been organist of St. Paul's Cathederal about this time. It has been said that he was at St Paul's with John Redford but this seems impossible since Redford's will was proved on November 30 1547, while ap Rhys did not leave St Mary's until after Christmas that year. The most important work by Ap Rhys is an organ mass based on the kyrie trope Deus creator omnium, preserved in BM6.Google Scholar
RICHARDE, John. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1509. Died 1550 (see HARRYSON, John) (GPC).Google Scholar
RICHARDSON, Thomas. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1502; death noted in 1515 (GPC). Between 1504 and 1515 Richardson was sued by a tailor for redress for wrongful imprisonment which he had suffered when accused of stealing a maser. Richardson then being the complainant. The tailor had apparently been accused of the theft only as the result of ‘divination by young children and a looking glass’ (ECP, 307/41).Google Scholar
ROBYNS, Roger. Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas, and clerk of St Bride's, Fleet Street, 1521 (GPC). He was the clerk of the chapel of St Thomas, London Bridge, 1534–38 (CA31, Vol. VI)Google Scholar
ROBYNSON, Roger. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas and clerk, St Margaret, New Fish Street, 1506 (GPC).Google Scholar
ROBYNSON, Rowland. Conduct, St Lawrence Jewry, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
ROBSON, Steven. Organ-player, St Michael Cornhill; 1551 (CA24). No doubt the Steven Robynson described as clerk in the accounts for the succeeding two years was the same man (CA23)Google Scholar
ROLFE, Jasper. Conduct, St Mary-le-Bow, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
ROO (ROWE), Thomas. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1537–40 (CA19)Google Scholar
ROSE, John. Maker of viols, leased the Chamber of Presence of Bridewell Palace in 1561 (DBH).Google Scholar
ROWLAND, John. Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1485; and again in 1498 when he was clerk of St Nicholas Shambles. His death is recorded in 1501 (GPC).Google Scholar
RUDMARIGE, Robert. Clerk, chapel of St Thomas London Bridge, 1509–15 (CA31, vol.5). He lived in a house on the bridge.Google Scholar
RUNGYER, James. Organist and choirmaster of Glastonbury Abbey, 1534 (LP XII, 411). Master of the choristers, St Dunstan-in-the-East, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
RYSE, William. See RICHARDS William.Google Scholar
SANDELONDE, Thomas. Conduct, St Lawrence Jewry, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
SARGENTEdmund, Clerk Edmund, Clerk, 1510, Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas and clerk of All Hallows Barking, 1517 (GPC).Google Scholar
SAVAGE, George. Singingman, complainant in a chancery case concerning an action for debt, between 1528 and 1532 (ECP, 676/1).Google Scholar
SAVEREY, John. Clerk, St Botolph Aldefsgate, 1511–15 (CA7, Rolls 32-.Google Scholar
SAVERNAKE, John. Minstrel who lived in London close to Philip van WYLDER. He was a Frenchman: in 1518 wages of 1s. 4d. a day were paid to ‘John Saverneac of France, the King's minstrel’ to play the rebeck. His name appears in various forms until 1558 (WES, p. 297). The will of van Wylder makes it clear that he is to be identified with Pety John Cokeren who has hitherto been regarded as a different minstrel. The two names of Pety John and John Savernake appear frequently in the royal accounts.Google Scholar
SAWNDER, Hugh. Clerk, St Peter, West Cheap, 1528/9 (CA25).Google Scholar
SAYE, Robert. Conduct, St Magnus, 1547 (ROC). In an inquisition post mortem of 1555, ‘Robert Saye, citizen and clerk of London’ is mentioned as living in St Mary Hill Lane. (FLI).Google Scholar
SAYER, Nicholas. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1513 (GPC).Google Scholar
Clerk and organ-player, St Botolph Aldersgate, l519–23(CA7, Rolls 39–42). Clerk of the Skinners’ Company, 1533/34 (GSK).Google Scholar
SCAMPYON, John. Conduct, St Michael Cornhill, 1547 (ROC). He is not mentioned in the accounts of the church, but these only resume in 1547/8 after a long gap.Google Scholar
SCARLETTE, Robert. Secular member of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1469 (GPC). Organ-player, St Dunstan-in-the-East, 1495/6 – 1498/9 (CA8).Google Scholar
SELERS, John. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1487; master again in 1496 when he was clerk of St Dunstan-in-the-West (GPC). A payment in the accounts of St Dunstan-in-the-East, 1500/01, seems to indicate that he was in some way connected with that church also; it runs, 'paide to John Selers for his childern and a man from midsomer til michelmas xlsiijd'. His death is recorded in the Bede Roll of the Fraternity of St Nicholas in 1503.Google Scholar
SETTYLL, William. Organ-maker of London. Named as one of the defendants in a chancery case concerning the price of ale which proved unmerchantable between 1533 and 1538 (ECP, 824/36).Google Scholar
SEWELL, William. Clerk, St Clement Eastcheap and Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1505 (GPC).Google Scholar
SHARPE, John. Conduct, St Margaret Pattens, 1511/12 (CA12).Google Scholar
SHARPULLES, James. Conduct, 1535–38, St Mary-at-Hill, (CA19). The James Sharpwith named in the accounts, 1537/38 is doubtless the same man. Conduct, St Martin Orgar, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
SHAXTON, John. Clerk, St Mary-at-Hill 1536/7 (CA19).Google Scholar
SHERMAN, Thomas. Mus. Bac. (Oxon), 1508/9 (WDM). Apparently sang at St Andrew Hubbard 1521/22 (CA5/1). Parishioner of St Katherine Cree, 1547, consenting to the sale of the church plate (WLC).Google Scholar
SCHORT, James. Organ-player, St Andrew Hubbard, 1527/28 (CA5/2).Google Scholar
SIBILIS, William. Clerk, St Stephen Walbrook, Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1488 (GPC).Google Scholar
SIDBOROUGH (SUDBOROW), John. Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, 1503–1520 (HCR). Probably lived in the parish or St Mary-at-Hill, for it was he who provided dinner for visiting Gentlemen of the Chapel Royal (such as John Kyte and Henry Prentes) in 1509–11 and he also assisted at the selection of a new clerk for the church in 1512/13 (CA19). His death is recorded in the Bede Roll of the Fraternity of St Nicholas in 1520 (GPC)Google Scholar
SKREWYNE, John. Parish clerk of All Hallows Staining from 1559 (CA3/2)Google Scholar
SKYNNER, John. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1537/38 (CA19).Google Scholar
SMYTH, John. A name of such frequent recurrence that it is impossible to decide how many different men are involved in the entries given below:Google Scholar
Organ-player, St Andrew Hubbard, 1507/8 (CA3/1). Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, 1509 (LP 1/20), though hot in 1511 (LP I/707). Organbuilder, repaired the bellows of organs at St Peter, West Cheap, 1524 (CA25). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1514 (GPC) Gentleman of the Chapel Royal temp. Edward VI (HCR). Interluder c.1547–80 (CES). Canon of St Paul's (alias HARRYS), died 1540; his will is PCC 19 Alenger. Peti-canon of Westminster, died 1554; his will is PCC 2 More.Google Scholar
SMYTH, Henry. Clerk, St Martin-in-the-Fields, 1559 (CA14).Google Scholar
SMYTH, Peter. Singing-man in the Drapers'Midsummer Show, 1522 (RDR).Google Scholar
SMYTH, Thomas. 1) Organ builder. Installed a pair of portatives in St Thomas's Chapei London Bridge for £ 2 16s. 8d. in 1514/15, and carried out repairs there in 1523/24 (CA31). Repaired great and small organs of St Margaret's Westminster for 16s. in 1514/15 (CA2) Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas and clerk of St Andrew Undershaft, 1490 (GPC). Clerk, St Botolph Aldersgate, 1511/12 – 1515/16 (CA7, rolls, 32–35). Dead clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1514 (GPC).Google Scholar
SMITH, Reynold. Conduct, St James Garlickhythe, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
SMYTH, William. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1516 (GPC). Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill 1523/24 (CA19). Conduct and Lady Mass singer, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
SPREVER, John. Conduct, 1514/15, St Mary-at-Hill (CA19). Clerk, chapel of St Thomas, London Bridge, 1517–20 (CA31, vol. V).Google Scholar
SQUIRE (SQUIER, SQUYRE), William. Conduct, St Mary Woolnoth, 1544–47 (CA21); he was also master of the choristers. Conduct, St Mary-le-Bow, 1547 (ROC). He is probably the ‘Squyre’ who was clerk of All Hallows Staining, 1537/38 (CA3/1 & 2).Google Scholar
STANBANK, Robert. Clerk, St Mary Woolnoth, 1550/51–57 (CA21).Google Scholar
STEPHENS, William. Conduct, St James Garlickhythe, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
STODDARD, Richard. Clerk, St Thomas, London Bridge, 1531–34 (CA31, vol. VI).Google Scholar
STRETTON, Thomas. Teacher of children who took part in the Drapers’ Midsummer pageants of 1541 (JDC, vol. II, p. 273). He was also the composer of a song, Behold & see how byrds dothe fly, one voice part of which is preserved in BM. Pr. K. l. e. l. The words have been reprinted in Anglia XII, 1889, p. 596 (footnote). May be identified with the ‘Streton our Clarke’ of All Hallows, Lombard Street, who in 1552 bought ‘our churche bookes’ for £1 (WLC).Google Scholar
SWAYNE, Lawrence. Organist, St Mary-at-Hill, 1509–12 (CA19).Google Scholar
SWAYNE, William. Clerk, St Stephen Walbrook, (CA29/2).Google Scholar
SYMKIN SON, Richard (Sir). Chantry priest, SS. Anne and Agnes, 1522(MC SYVELL, William. Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas; clerk, St Clement, East Cheap, 1517 (GPC).Google Scholar
TAYLOR, John. Composer, Dramatic producer, and choirmaster, diedl569. Many details of his life may be found in PWA. Pine, however, assumes that the entry in the accounts of St Mary Woolnoth, 1556/57, implies that he was choirmaster there. The entry runs ‘Item paide the same day to Tailour the clark maister of the syngynge chyldren of the hospitall for hym and his chyldren… xvjd’ (CA21). In fact this reference almost certainly means that he was successor to Richard Lee as master of the choristers of St Anthony's Hospital (which was close to St Mary Woolnoth) and brought his boys to sing at St Mary's. Lee had established a connection with the Merchant Tailor's company, providing child actors for their pageants, and this connection was evidently maintained by Taylor. He became choirmaster of Westminster about 1560 and from then until his death he took part in various dramatic productions as a provider of child actors. Several of.these took.place in the City of London: in particular, pageants staged by the Merchant Tailors and the Ironmongers. He was probably the composer – ‘Mastyre Taylere’ – of a pavane (which is followed by a galliard, and therefore probably by the same composer) in the Dallis manuscript which dates from about 1560. This manuscript is discussed by Thurcton Dart in Music and Letters, XXXV (1954). A modern edition of the manuscript is The Dublin Virginal Manuscript, ed. John Ward. (Wellesley College, U. S. A. 1954).Google Scholar
TALLIS, Thomas. The facts about this important musician's life after the dissolution of Waltham Abbey in 1540 are well known and need not be rehearsed here. In 1531/32, he was ‘joculator organorum’ of Dover Priory; this was probably the first place that the King came into contact with him, for the computus of the Prior contains a payment of 4s. ‘in respect of servants and joculator for our Lord the king’ (HDP). He probably stayed at Dover (the accounts for other years than 1531/32 do not survive) until he became conduct of St Mary-at-Hill in 1536/37. He only stayed there until the middle of 1537/38, when, doubtless, he went to Waltham. The accounts of St Mary's suggest that there were strong links between that church and Waltham - the town house of the abbot was very close to the church - and this may have influenced his move (CA19). Some of his earlier works, particularly those in BMl and his settings of Matthew Parker's metrical psalms, may well have been written while he was at St. Mary's. He became a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, it is believed, towards the end of the reign of Henry VIII; he was certainly a Gentleman in the reign of Edward VI (HCR), and he was a legatee and overseer of the will of Richard Pygott in 1549 (PCC, 42 Populwell).Google Scholar
TANNER, John. Clerk, St Thomas, London Bridge, 1521/22 – 1527/28 (CA31)Google Scholar
TANNER, Robert. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1547/48 (CA19). Perhaps he was the ‘Tanner, the basse’ who sang at the same church for a quarter of the year 1557/58. He is noted as conduct of St Mary's in the chantry certificates of 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
TEMPEST, Walter. Conduct, St Mary-le-Bow, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
TENNE, (Sir) John. Priest, organ-player, St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1520/21, in the absence of John Scarlette (CA8).Google Scholar
TENWINTER (TYNWYNTYR), Andrew. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas in 1490, when he was clerk of St Bride, Fleet Street (GPC). Died in 1518. The death of ‘Marget Tymwynter', presumably his widow, is recorded in 1520.Google Scholar
THOMPSON, Cuthbert. Singing-man, St Peter, West Cheap, 1557/8 (CAGoogle Scholar
THORNE, John. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1539/40 (CA19). May possibly be identified with the ‘Thorn of York’ who was appointed organist of York and master of the choristers in 1543 (FAI/2). This Thorne was composer of an organ offertory ‘Exultabunt sancti’ in BM6, a motet ‘Stella celi extirpavit in BM5 and a four-part ‘In nomine at Oxford (Bodley 212–216).Google Scholar
TIPPE, Peter. Conduct, St Mary Aldermary, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
TOKAR, Richard. See TUCKER.Google Scholar
TOMSON, Roger. Clerk, St James Garlickhythe, 1557/58 (CA16).Google Scholar
TOMSON, Robert. Conduct, St Margaret Pattens, 1512/13 (CA12). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1514. His wife Alice was enrolled the same year (GPC).Google Scholar
TOWNSEND, Henry (Harry). Clerk, St Martin Outwich, 1540–44 (CA17)Google Scholar
TUCKER (TOKAR), Richard. Clerk, St. Dunstan-in-the-West, 1516–18 (CA9). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1516, dead 1520 (GPC).Google Scholar
TYLL, John. Gentleman of the Chapel Royal; his name appears in lists dated 1520 and 1524 (HCR) but he was certainly singing for a much longer period than this., for he is mentioned as a Gentleman of the Chapel in the will of another Gentleman, Robert Skynner, dated 1527 (RCC, viii, 137'-138); and ‘John Tylle, gentleman of the King s chapel’ is complainant in a chancery case that was heard between 1533 and 1538. This case was against an innkeeper of Godmanchester, and was concerned with a horse which ‘febeld and fayled’ (ECP, 905/62–63) Together with William Golman, Tyll was a visiting singer at St Mary-at-Hill in 1524/25 (CA19).Google Scholar
VEER, William, Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas and clerk of St Martin Pomery, 1511 The following year both the elected Master died and Veer returned to fill the place of one of the dead men, Thomas Pynkey (GPC).Google Scholar
VINCENT, John. Chantry priest, St Dunstan-in-the-East, 1498–1502. In 1501/02 he was paid 1s. 8d. ‘for paper for prikkyng of in exitu to be song on Estern day at Evyn song’ (CA8). He was to have become a priest of St Lawrence Jewry, but that church apparently changed its mind and Vincent had to sue them for breach of contract between 1493 and 1500 (ECP, 230/43).Google Scholar
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WADE, John. Clerk, St Andrew Hubbard, 1504/05 (CA5/1).Google Scholar
WALKER, John. Conduct, St Mary-le-Bow, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
WALKER, Robert. Conduct, St Mary-le-Bow, 1547 (ROC). In the dissolution inventory of this church he is described as the clerk; in 1550 he paid £2 for two copes, two tunicles, a chasuble, an altar cloth of roses of gold and stars, ‘very sore worne'; £1 for 29 ragged old vestments; and 7s. for the rood loft – ‘and he paid for taking Downe of it’ (WLC).Google Scholar
WALLDEN, Thomas. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1539/40 (CA19).Google Scholar
WALLER, John (Sir). Chaplain, supplied ‘a prycke songe booke of iij masses in papyr Royall’ to the chapel of St Thomas, London Bridge, 1512/13 (CA31, book V).Google Scholar
WALTON, William. Master, Fraternity of St Nicholas and clerk, St Mary Woolnoth, 1514 (GPC). His wife Margaret was enrolled a member of the gild the same year.Google Scholar
WEST, Ralph. Clerk of St Thomas, London Bridge for four weeks, 1519/20 (CA31, Vol. V). Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1505 (GPC).Google Scholar
WESTCOTT, Sebastian. Succeeded Redford as master of the choristers of St. Paul's Cathedral, 1547. Dramatist and impresario; for full details of Westcott, see Grove and SWH.Google Scholar
WESTWELL, Thomas. Singing-man, St Matthew, Friday Street, 1549/50 (CA22).Google Scholar
WHARLTON (WHORLESTON), Thomas. Clerk, St Dunstan-in-the-West, 1542–44 (CA9). Conduct, St Lawrence Jewry, 1547 (ROC). Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1549/50 (CA19).Google Scholar
WHETELEY, W. Conduct, Whittington College, 1547 (ROC).Google Scholar
WHITBROKE, William. Minor canon, first prebend, St Paul's Cathedral, 1534 (VE), and also sub-dean. Composer of a Mass on the square, and a pars ad placitum to Taverner's Audivi nocte inBMI; also a motet Sancte deus in the earlier Peterhouse part-books, and other works. He was at Cardinal College Oxford before he came to St Paul's. See Grove and FTC.Google Scholar
WHYTRYDYE, John. Organ-player, St Mary Woolnoth, 1560/61 (CA21).Google Scholar
WILLIAMS, Richard. Master of the choristers, St. Mary-at-Hill, 1547 (ROC). It seems certain that he is to be identified with the ‘Ryse William’ who appears in the churchwardens’ accounts, 1547/48. Payments are made to him for playing the organs, ‘daily at our lady masse’ (CA19).Google Scholar
WILLIAMSON, John. Clerk, St Andrew Hubbard, 1520/21 (CA5/1).Google Scholar
WOLASTON, William. Master of the Fraternity of St Nicholas; and clerk, St Thomas the Apostle, in 1492 and 1502 (GPC).Google Scholar
WRIGHT, John. Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1515 (GPC). Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1526/27. He is probably the same as ‘Bright the Conducte', who, the previous year, received 1s. 4d. ‘for goyng to Dartforth to speke for the Clark that shuld be with us’ (CA19). There in a setting of Nesciens mater for four voices by John Wright in BM1.Google Scholar
WRIGHT, Richard, Clerk, Fraternity of St Nicholas, 1510. Master in 1518, when he was clerk of St Matthew Friday Street (GPC).Google Scholar
WRIGHT, (Sir) William. Organist and Morrow Mass priest of St Martin Outwich, 1508–12 (CA17).Google Scholar
WURSLEY, Alexander. Clerk, St Mary-at-Hill, 1490/91 (CA19).Google Scholar
WYDOW, Robert. Rector of St Benet's, Paul's Wharf, Oct. 1489-(?) 150 (HNR). B. Mus. (Oxon), 1499; Mus. B. (Cantab), 1502 (WDM). Sub-dea of Wells Cathedral when he died in 1505. Also penitentiary of St Pau Cathedral. His will is PCC 38 Holgrave. See DNB.Google Scholar
WYLDER, Philip van. Keeper of the King's musical instruments and chief secular musician in the household of Henry VIII (see Grove). He was also the composer of songs, and sacredmusic with both Latin and English words. He lived in London in a house in the parish of St. Olave Hart Street which he shared with (among others) another royal musician, John SAVERNAKE (see the inquisition post mortem upon him, in F LI). His will, 1552, is PCC 1 Tashe.Google Scholar
WYLKINSON, John. Clerk, All Hallows, London. Wall, 1528/29 (CAI).Google Scholar
WYLLYNGALE, William. Clerk, St Margaret Pattens, 1523/24 (CA12).Google Scholar
WYNSLATE, Richard. Conduct, St Mary-at-Hill, 1537–40 (CA19). Organist of Winchester Cathedral in the mid-sixteenth century (Denis Stevens, Music and Letters, April 1955, p. 203). Composer of organ music in BM6.Google Scholar
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