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Holywell Priory

Holywell Priory or Haliwell, Halliwell, or Halywell (various spellings),[1] was a religious house in Shoreditch, formerly in the historical county of Middlesex and now in the London Borough of Hackney. Its formal name was the Priory of St John the Baptist.[2]

A map made in 1920, showing the details of the priory as they might have been in 1544 (from an agreement between Alice Hampton and the Prioress concerning her use of the Priory)

The Priory stood at Holywell Lane on the west side of Shoreditch towards Hoxton, its precinct lying within the area now bounded by Batemans Row, Shoreditch High Street, Holywell Lane, and Curtain Road.[3]

Foundation edit

It is sometimes said in secondary literature to be a Benedictine foundation, made by a Bishop of London, but it was certainly a house of Augustinian women, established in the twelfth century by Robert FitzGeneran (or Gelran), the second known holder of the prebend of Holywell or Finsbury in St. Paul's Cathedral (the prebend also passed to the Priory), his name occurring from 1133 to 1150. The founder made an endowment gift of three acres across the moor on which the Halliwell, or Holywell spring had its source.[4]

In 1239 there was a gift to the nuns of 300 tapers from King Henry III, who in 1244 also gave twelve marks for the rebuilding of mills that had been burnt down through the carelessness of the King's bakers. In 1318 came a gift of six oaks from the forest of Essex from Edward II. However, the crown paid little attention to the priory, at least as far as royal patronage was concerned. More generally, there were few benefactions from magnates before the reign of Henry VII when as almost the last great benefactor, Sir Thomas Lovell, Chancellor of the Exchequer appeared on the scene and virtually refounded the house. He caused extensive building work at the priory, including the construction of a chapel in which he was buried in 1524.[5]

The size of the community doubtless varied over the years. In 1379 there were eleven professed nuns in the priory.[5] At the election of the Prioress Elizabeth Prudde in 1472, it is recorded that seven nuns and ten novices were present.[6] At the election in 1534 of the last prioress, Sybil Newdigate, there were 13 professed nuns and 4 novices present.[5]

Apart from paid lay employees, there were also lay brothers attached to the priory. They may never have been very numerous. In 1314 a complaint was lodged about two brothers misappropriating property at Shoreditch. From an earlier period, we know the name of one of the brothers, Peter, whose father was Odo, a smith who in 1275 gave rents in London to the priory for his son.[5]

Known prioresses edit

The list given here is incomplete. The dates given refer to mentions in the historical record as prioress or to the period covered by several mentions, presuming continuity of office.[7]

  • Magdalena (about 1185 or 1210)
  • Clementia (1193-1204)
  • Maud (1224)
  • Agnes (1239-1240)
  • Juliana or Gillian (1248-1261)
  • Benigna (reign of Henry III)
  • Isabel (1261)
  • Christina or Christine of Kent (1269-1284)
  • Alice (1293)
  • Christine (1314)
  • Albreda or Aubrey (about 1320)
  • Lucy of Colney (1328-1330)
  • Mary of Stortford (1330-1334)
  • Theophania (1335-1336)
  • Elizabeth Montacute (1337-1357)
  • Ellen or Elena Gosham (1362-1363, mentioned as the "late prioress" in 1375)
  • Isabella Norton (1387-1392)
  • Edith Griffith (1400-1409)
  • Elizabeth Arundel (1428-1432)
  • Clementia or Clemence Freeman (1432-1444)
  • Joan Sevenok or Sevenoak (1462-1472)
  • Elizabeth Prudde (1472-1474)
  • Joan Lynde (1515-1534)
  • Sybil Newdigate (1534-1539), the last Prioress.

A particular case: Prioress Elizabeth Montacute edit

Elizabeth Montacute also Montagu, originally de Mont Aigu (of the sharp mountain) and Latinised to de Monte Acuto,[8] seems to have served as Prioress of Holywell at least in the years 1340-1357.

Dame Elizabeth was particularly well connected.[9] She was the third daughter of William Montagu, 2nd Baron Montagu of the first creation (died 1319) and Elizabeth Montfort (died 1354), daughter of the knight Sir Peter de Montfort, who survived her first husband and married Sir Thomas Furnivall of Sheffield, without royal licence, for which the groom was fined £200. On her death in 1354, the now widowed Lady Furnivall was buried in the Priory of St Frideswide, Oxford (now Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford), where her tomb still exists in the Latin chapel.[10]

The four brothers and six sisters of the nun, Dame Elizabeth, included William (1301–1344), who succeeded his father as 3rd Baron Montagu, and later became 1st Earl of Salisbury, and who was the "most intimate personal friend"[11] of King Edward III, and Edward de Montacute, 1st Baron Montacute of the second creation (died 1361), who married Alice of Norfolk, a granddaughter of Edward I.[12] A third brother, Simon (died 1345), was successively Bishop of Worcester and Bishop of Ely. Dame Elizabeth's sisters were Alice, Katherine, Mary and Hawise, all of whom married at least once; and Maud and Isabel, who both became successively Abbess of Barking Abbey from 1341-1352.[13]

Apart from these family connections, the historical record mentions two incidents connected with Elizabeth de Montagu's life as a nun. The first is more personal. When exactly Elizabeth entered the priory of Holywell as a nun, is not clear. In 1334 a Westminster Abbey made a grant to Holywell Priory of a yearly pension of 100 shillings to cover Elizabeth's food and clothing, alleging four considerations: that Elizabeth had no personal means from which to provide for her own sustenance; that Holywell Priory had insufficient funds to cover the expense; that the abbey had received many benefactions from her family, especially from her brother Simon, Bishop of Worcester, and that the abbey had formerly paid the same amount to the bishop. Odd as this sounds,[14] it is true that Elizabeth's father had died in 1319, her mother had married again before 8 June 1322 and was widowed a second time before 18 April 1332. It is possible that there may have been a technical requirement for the payment of a dowry for a nun entering the Priory community, which her brother, as a churchman, arranged to be paid in some roundabout fashion. It sounds likely that at this juncture she had only recently entered the monastery.[14] The prioress and nuns gave permission for Elizabeth to receive the pension and dispose of it herself. Moreover, the following year it was confirmed by both the Bishop of London and the King, and records show it being paid not only in 1335 but also in 1351.[5]

In any case, Elizabeth's situation was not so precarious as the matter of the pension might make it sound, for by Michaelmas 1340 she is mentioned as Prioress of Holywell in a lawsuit. It is as Prioress, too, that she was present at the blessing of her sister, Maud, as Abbess of Barking, on 29 April 1341, along with her brother Bishop Simon.[14]

Finally, perhaps the intricate interconnections between social and economic status, dynastic marriages and convent life explain why, in response to a complain lodged by "Elizabeth, prioress of Halewell", King Edward III on 26 January 1357 ordered an investigation into an incident when a group of men broke violently into the Priory and abducted Joan, the daughter of John of Coggeshall (or Coggeshale), who had been committed to the Prioress's safekeeping by Henry Galeys, Elizabeth having pledged to restore Joan unmarried. It appears that the intruders had caused the woman to undergo a form of marriage.[14] The case may not be concerned so much with romantic elopement as with sordid exploitation of a woman in order to secure economic gain.[15] The names John of Coggeshall (or Coggeshale) and Henry Galeys (or Waleys) seems to lead us into the trade and financial dealings of the medieval city of London. Anyhow, this appears to be the last mention of Elizabeth in the surviving historical records.

Elizabeth Prudde edit

We know some details of the priory from an agreement made between Alice Hampton and the prioress Elizabeth Prudde in 1492. Alice was the only known unmarried vowess; she was rich and had influence in London. She had inherited her uncle's riches but also his influence. She paid the prioress eight pounds of pepper a year.[16] In exchange for this she was allowed to use her well and washing facilities and to make changes to the building's structures. She arranged for her living area to have a view of the church altar and for a locked entrance to her garden. She had her own exit and a dedicated pew in the Lady Chapel,[17] however she lived in two rooms that were just over 18 feet by ten feet.[16]

The last prioress, Sybil Newdigate edit

The last Prioress of Holywell, Dame Sybil Newdigate, was the daughter of John Newdigate (died 1528), a Sergeant-at-law,[18] and his wife Amphyllis (or Amphelisia) (née Neville) (died 1544). We have access to some details about the family from the Newdigate Cartulary.[19]

Dame Sybil was herself born on the Eve of St Thomas, 2 July 1509 at Harefield, Middlesex, and was the youngest daughter and 12th child of her parents' fourteen children. Her Godfather was the priest Robert Malber and she had two Godmothers, Sybil Bynchestre (Binchester) and Isabell Antony. Her sponsor at Confirmation was John Bynchestre. Although the family had known social success, the 1530s brought some grim moments, and not just the dissolution of Holywell Priory. Among Sybil's brothers and sisters was Sebastian, almost nine years her elder, who as a young man was a courtier and member of Henry VIII's Privy Chamber, on close personal terms with the King. However, he later entered the Carthusian Priory or Charterhouse in London as a monk, being also ordained a deacon (on 3 June 1531) and prior to his death, a priest. He was arrested on 25 May 1535 for refusal to accept the King's assumption of supremacy over the English church, and underwent harsh imprisonment, during which he was twice visited by the King but resisted Henry's blandishments. Condemned to death for treason, on 19 June he was dragged to Tyburn on a hurdle, and hanged, drawn and quartered. Regarded as a martyr for the Catholic faith, Sebastian was beatified by Pope Leo XIII on 9 December 1886.[20]

Five years after the Dissolution, Dame Sybil, then aged 35, is mentioned in the will of her brother George Newdigate, dated 13 August 1544. George left £10 a year to be paid by his widow "to my Sister Sybell". If his widow were to die during the minority of his children, his "landes, annuities and Rentes do remayne to my syster, Sibell Newdegate, and she to have the dysposing of them to thuse of my children, and if they dye the remaynder to her only, whome I make overseer of this my last will and testament".[21] George was three years older than Sybil, and was the sibling born to their parents immediately before her, on 26 April 1506.[22] Sybil is known to have been alive still in 1549.[23]

Dissolution edit

It is documented that when Holywell Priory was formally dissolved on 10 October 1539, the convent then comprised 14 nuns, including the prioress and subprioress. Prioress Sybil Newdigate received a pension of £50, the subprioress, Ellen Claver or Claire or Cavour, £6 13 shillings and 4 pence, and twelve nuns pensions varying from 53 shillings and 4 pence, and to 93 shillings and 4 pence each. The other nuns are named as Margerye Frauncis, Alice Martyn, Alice Goldwell, Kateryn Grene, Kateryn Fogge, Isabell Gine, Beatrix Lewes, Mary Good, Elene Clave, Agnes Bolney, Alice Frelond and Cristyane Skypper. Of these women, sixteen years later, on 24 February 1556, six were still drawing their pension.[24]

The fate of the priory buildings edit

The loss of this functioning institution must have had notable effects on the social and economic life of the area. The Priory precinct covered about eight acres. Already in the year of the Priory's surrender, one Thomas Pointz mentioned it in a letter he wrote to Thomas Cromwell in the hope of acquiring a suppressed monastic house as a dwelling for his family.[5] However, it would seem that nothing happened, for it was some years after the Dissolution of the community, that the part which had been occupied directly by the nuns was granted by sale on 23 September 1544, to Henry Webb, then a gentleman usher to Queen Catherine Parr.[14] It would seem that there may have been distant family connections by marriage between the Queen and the Webb family. The property that went to Webb is described as including the hall and all the rooms, kitchens and buildings both upstairs and downstairs; extensive other houses and other buildings in several blocks, including the fratry (frater), both upstairs and downstairs; several barns, brewhouses, granaries, stables, workshops, dovecotes, etc., and various plots of land, including several garden areas, among which the prioress's garden and the convent orchard, of one acre. The priory chapel was speedily demolished,[5] as may have been a more or less formal requirement for this kind of purchase from the crown. After Webb's death in 1553 the property passed to his daughter and her husband (Susan and George Peckham) who sold it in 1555, sold it to Christopher Bumsted, who soon mortgaged it to Christopher Allen and his son Giles. After Christopher Allen's death, Bumsted quarrelled with the son, who however manage to gain possession, at least by the time of his own death in 1609, upon which it was quickly sold on to others.[21] The remains of the Priory were popularly known for a time as "King John's Palace", though by the end of the 18th century there was little left to see.[5]

A Shakespearean connection edit

In 1576, James Burbage, a joiner, actor and impresario, leased land on the former property of Holywell Priory. There he built The Theatre, one of the first purpose-built London play-houses since Roman times. It was probably here that the playing company or actors' company Leicester's Men played from the early days, and in the 1580s the Admiral's Men. From 1594 to 1597, it was the venue for The Lord Chamberlain's Men. It was for them and their successors that Shakespeare wrote and acted for most of his career, and it was at The Theatre that some of Shakespeare's early plays had their première. A dispute arose with the landlord, Giles Allen, when the twenty-one-year-old lease ran out. Failing to reach an agreement for its extension,[25] James Burbage's son, Cuthbert hired Peter Streete to take down the old Theatre and to build a new one using as much of the salvaged material as possible. With the help of others, on the night of 28 December 1598, the structure was dismantled and the materials were transported across the River Thames and reassembled there on Bankside in Southwark, as The Globe, which was functioning by the following September.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hasted, Edward (1797). "The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent". Institute of Historical Research.
  2. ^ Cockburn, J. S.; et al., eds. (1969). "A History of the County of Middlesex". Victoria County History.
  3. ^ The Augustinian Priory of St. John the Baptist, Holywell, in James Bird (ed.), Survey of London: Volume 8, Shoreditch, London, 1922, pp. 153-184 and pls. 1 and 183. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vol8/pp153-187 [accessed 26 September 2017]; Religious Houses: Houses of Augustinian canonesses: 5. The Priory of Haliwell, in J.S. Cockburn, H.P.F. King and K.G.T. McDonnell, A History of the County of Middlesex, Volume 1, London, 1969, pp. 170-182. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/middx/vol1/pp170-182 [accessed 26 September 2017].
  4. ^ The Augustinian Priory of St. John the Baptist, Holywell, in James Bird (ed.), Survey of London: Volume 8, Shoreditch, London, 1922, pp. 153-187. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vol8/pp153-187 [accessed 26 September 2017]; Religious Houses: Houses of Augustinian canonesses: 5. The Priory of Haliwell, in J.S. Cockburn, H.P.F. King and K.G.T. McDonnell, A History of the County of Middlesex, Volume 1, London, 1969, pp. 170-182. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/middx/vol1/pp170-182 [accessed 26 September 2017].
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Cf. Religious Houses: Houses of Augustinian canonesses: 5. The Priory of Haliwell, in J.S. Cockburn, H.P.F. King and K.G.T. McDonnell, A History of the County of Middlesex, Volume 1, London, 1969, pp. 170-182. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/middx/vol1/pp170-182 [accessed 26 September 2017].
  6. ^ Cf. Caroline Barron & Anne F. Sutton (edd.), Medieval London Widows, 1300-1500, Hambledon Press, London, 1994, p. 178; Religious Houses: Houses of Augustinian canonesses: 5. The Priory of Haliwell, in J.S. Cockburn, H.P.F. King and K.G.T. McDonnell, A History of the County of Middlesex, Volume 1, London, 1969, pp. 170-182. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/middx/vol1/pp170-182 [accessed 26 September 2017].
  7. ^ The Augustinian Priory of St. John the Baptist, Holywell, in James Bird (ed.), Survey of London: Volume 8, Shoreditch, London, 1922, pp. 160–164. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vol8/pp153-187 [accessed 24 September 2017].
  8. ^ Winnifred M. Sturman, Barking Abbey: A Study in its External and Internal Administration from the Conquest to the Dissolution, PhD thesis, University of London, 1961, pp. 375, 382, 400-401, 404.
  9. ^ Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, Salt Lake City, 2nd edition 2011, vol. II, pp. 96-97.
  10. ^ George Edward Cokayne, The Complete Peerage, St. Catherine Press, London, 1936, vol. IX, p. 82
  11. ^ May McKisack, The Fourteenth Century: 1307-1399, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1959, p. 152.
  12. ^ George Edward Cokayne, The Complete Peerage, St. Catherine Press, London, 1936, vol. IX, pp. 82, 84; Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, Salt Lake City, 2nd edition 2011, vol. II, pp. 634-635.
  13. ^ Winnifred M. Sturman, Barking Abbey: A Study in its External and Internal Administration from the Conquest to the Dissolution, PhD thesis, University of London, 1961, p. 9.
  14. ^ a b c d e The Augustinian Priory of St. John the Baptist, Holywell, in James Bird (ed.), Survey of London: Volume 8, Shoreditch, London, 1922, pp. 153-187. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vol8/pp153-187 [accessed 24 September 2017].
  15. ^ Cf. Gwen Seabourne, Imprisoning Medieval Women: The Non-Judicial Confinement and Abduction of Women in England, c. 1170-1509, Ashgate, Farnham, 2011, pp. 125-127.
  16. ^ a b Mary C. Erler (9 March 2006). Women, Reading, and Piety in Late Medieval England. Cambridge University Press. p. 15. ISBN 978-0-521-02457-0.
  17. ^ Wood, Laura M. (24 May 2012), "Hampton, Alice (d. 1516), vowess and benefactor", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/102118
  18. ^ cf. Will of John Newdigate, Sergeant-at-law, of Harefield, Middlesex, proved 25 August 1528, National Archives] Retrieved 2 April 2013: http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/SearchUI/Details?uri=D976621 .
  19. ^ cf. Frederick Arthur Crisp (ed.), Fragmenta Genealogica. 12, Crisp, London, 1906, pp. 1-2.
  20. ^ Lawrence Hendriks, The London Charterhouse, Its Monks and Its Martyrs, Kegan Paul Trench, London, 1889, p. 175.
  21. ^ a b The Augustinian Priory of St. John the Baptist, Holywell, in James Bird (ed.), Survey of London: Volume 8, Shoreditch, London, 1922, pp. 153-187. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vol8/pp153-187 [accessed 24 September 2017].
  22. ^ cf. Frederick Arthur Crisp (ed.), Fragmenta Genealogica. 12, Crisp, London, 1906, pp. 1-2.
  23. ^ The Augustinian Priory of St. John the Baptist, Holywell, in James Bird (ed.), Survey of London: Volume 8, Shoreditch, London, 1922, pp. 160-164. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vol8/pp153-187 [accessed 24 September 2017].
  24. ^ Cf. The Augustinian Priory of St. John the Baptist, Holywell, in James Bird (ed.), Survey of London: Volume 8, Shoreditch, London, 1922, pp. 153-187. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vol8/pp153-187 [accessed 26 September 2017].
  25. ^ Bernard Capp, The Burbages at Law (Again), in Notes & Queries 47:4 (2000) 433.
  26. ^ "Survey of British Place Names -- Holloway Down". Retrieved 22 July 2021.

51°31′30″N 0°04′48″W / 51.525066°N 0.07995°W / 51.525066; -0.07995

holywell, priory, haliwell, halliwell, halywell, various, spellings, religious, house, shoreditch, formerly, historical, county, middlesex, london, borough, hackney, formal, name, priory, john, baptist, made, 1920, showing, details, priory, they, might, have, . Holywell Priory or Haliwell Halliwell or Halywell various spellings 1 was a religious house in Shoreditch formerly in the historical county of Middlesex and now in the London Borough of Hackney Its formal name was the Priory of St John the Baptist 2 A map made in 1920 showing the details of the priory as they might have been in 1544 from an agreement between Alice Hampton and the Prioress concerning her use of the Priory The Priory stood at Holywell Lane on the west side of Shoreditch towards Hoxton its precinct lying within the area now bounded by Batemans Row Shoreditch High Street Holywell Lane and Curtain Road 3 Contents 1 Foundation 2 Known prioresses 3 A particular case Prioress Elizabeth Montacute 4 Elizabeth Prudde 5 The last prioress Sybil Newdigate 6 Dissolution 7 The fate of the priory buildings 8 A Shakespearean connection 9 See also 10 ReferencesFoundation editIt is sometimes said in secondary literature to be a Benedictine foundation made by a Bishop of London but it was certainly a house of Augustinian women established in the twelfth century by Robert FitzGeneran or Gelran the second known holder of the prebend of Holywell or Finsbury in St Paul s Cathedral the prebend also passed to the Priory his name occurring from 1133 to 1150 The founder made an endowment gift of three acres across the moor on which the Halliwell or Holywell spring had its source 4 In 1239 there was a gift to the nuns of 300 tapers from King Henry III who in 1244 also gave twelve marks for the rebuilding of mills that had been burnt down through the carelessness of the King s bakers In 1318 came a gift of six oaks from the forest of Essex from Edward II However the crown paid little attention to the priory at least as far as royal patronage was concerned More generally there were few benefactions from magnates before the reign of Henry VII when as almost the last great benefactor Sir Thomas Lovell Chancellor of the Exchequer appeared on the scene and virtually refounded the house He caused extensive building work at the priory including the construction of a chapel in which he was buried in 1524 5 The size of the community doubtless varied over the years In 1379 there were eleven professed nuns in the priory 5 At the election of the Prioress Elizabeth Prudde in 1472 it is recorded that seven nuns and ten novices were present 6 At the election in 1534 of the last prioress Sybil Newdigate there were 13 professed nuns and 4 novices present 5 Apart from paid lay employees there were also lay brothers attached to the priory They may never have been very numerous In 1314 a complaint was lodged about two brothers misappropriating property at Shoreditch From an earlier period we know the name of one of the brothers Peter whose father was Odo a smith who in 1275 gave rents in London to the priory for his son 5 Known prioresses editThe list given here is incomplete The dates given refer to mentions in the historical record as prioress or to the period covered by several mentions presuming continuity of office 7 Magdalena about 1185 or 1210 Clementia 1193 1204 Maud 1224 Agnes 1239 1240 Juliana or Gillian 1248 1261 Benigna reign of Henry III Isabel 1261 Christina or Christine of Kent 1269 1284 Alice 1293 Christine 1314 Albreda or Aubrey about 1320 Lucy of Colney 1328 1330 Mary of Stortford 1330 1334 Theophania 1335 1336 Elizabeth Montacute 1337 1357 Ellen or Elena Gosham 1362 1363 mentioned as the late prioress in 1375 Isabella Norton 1387 1392 Edith Griffith 1400 1409 Elizabeth Arundel 1428 1432 Clementia or Clemence Freeman 1432 1444 Joan Sevenok or Sevenoak 1462 1472 Elizabeth Prudde 1472 1474 Joan Lynde 1515 1534 Sybil Newdigate 1534 1539 the last Prioress A particular case Prioress Elizabeth Montacute editElizabeth Montacute also Montagu originally de Mont Aigu of the sharp mountain and Latinised to de Monte Acuto 8 seems to have served as Prioress of Holywell at least in the years 1340 1357 Dame Elizabeth was particularly well connected 9 She was the third daughter of William Montagu 2nd Baron Montagu of the first creation died 1319 and Elizabeth Montfort died 1354 daughter of the knight Sir Peter de Montfort who survived her first husband and married Sir Thomas Furnivall of Sheffield without royal licence for which the groom was fined 200 On her death in 1354 the now widowed Lady Furnivall was buried in the Priory of St Frideswide Oxford now Christ Church Cathedral Oxford where her tomb still exists in the Latin chapel 10 The four brothers and six sisters of the nun Dame Elizabeth included William 1301 1344 who succeeded his father as 3rd Baron Montagu and later became 1st Earl of Salisbury and who was the most intimate personal friend 11 of King Edward III and Edward de Montacute 1st Baron Montacute of the second creation died 1361 who married Alice of Norfolk a granddaughter of Edward I 12 A third brother Simon died 1345 was successively Bishop of Worcester and Bishop of Ely Dame Elizabeth s sisters were Alice Katherine Mary and Hawise all of whom married at least once and Maud and Isabel who both became successively Abbess of Barking Abbey from 1341 1352 13 Apart from these family connections the historical record mentions two incidents connected with Elizabeth de Montagu s life as a nun The first is more personal When exactly Elizabeth entered the priory of Holywell as a nun is not clear In 1334 a Westminster Abbey made a grant to Holywell Priory of a yearly pension of 100 shillings to cover Elizabeth s food and clothing alleging four considerations that Elizabeth had no personal means from which to provide for her own sustenance that Holywell Priory had insufficient funds to cover the expense that the abbey had received many benefactions from her family especially from her brother Simon Bishop of Worcester and that the abbey had formerly paid the same amount to the bishop Odd as this sounds 14 it is true that Elizabeth s father had died in 1319 her mother had married again before 8 June 1322 and was widowed a second time before 18 April 1332 It is possible that there may have been a technical requirement for the payment of a dowry for a nun entering the Priory community which her brother as a churchman arranged to be paid in some roundabout fashion It sounds likely that at this juncture she had only recently entered the monastery 14 The prioress and nuns gave permission for Elizabeth to receive the pension and dispose of it herself Moreover the following year it was confirmed by both the Bishop of London and the King and records show it being paid not only in 1335 but also in 1351 5 In any case Elizabeth s situation was not so precarious as the matter of the pension might make it sound for by Michaelmas 1340 she is mentioned as Prioress of Holywell in a lawsuit It is as Prioress too that she was present at the blessing of her sister Maud as Abbess of Barking on 29 April 1341 along with her brother Bishop Simon 14 Finally perhaps the intricate interconnections between social and economic status dynastic marriages and convent life explain why in response to a complain lodged by Elizabeth prioress of Halewell King Edward III on 26 January 1357 ordered an investigation into an incident when a group of men broke violently into the Priory and abducted Joan the daughter of John of Coggeshall or Coggeshale who had been committed to the Prioress s safekeeping by Henry Galeys Elizabeth having pledged to restore Joan unmarried It appears that the intruders had caused the woman to undergo a form of marriage 14 The case may not be concerned so much with romantic elopement as with sordid exploitation of a woman in order to secure economic gain 15 The names John of Coggeshall or Coggeshale and Henry Galeys or Waleys seems to lead us into the trade and financial dealings of the medieval city of London Anyhow this appears to be the last mention of Elizabeth in the surviving historical records Elizabeth Prudde editWe know some details of the priory from an agreement made between Alice Hampton and the prioress Elizabeth Prudde in 1492 Alice was the only known unmarried vowess she was rich and had influence in London She had inherited her uncle s riches but also his influence She paid the prioress eight pounds of pepper a year 16 In exchange for this she was allowed to use her well and washing facilities and to make changes to the building s structures She arranged for her living area to have a view of the church altar and for a locked entrance to her garden She had her own exit and a dedicated pew in the Lady Chapel 17 however she lived in two rooms that were just over 18 feet by ten feet 16 The last prioress Sybil Newdigate editThe last Prioress of Holywell Dame Sybil Newdigate was the daughter of John Newdigate died 1528 a Sergeant at law 18 and his wife Amphyllis or Amphelisia nee Neville died 1544 We have access to some details about the family from the Newdigate Cartulary 19 Dame Sybil was herself born on the Eve of St Thomas 2 July 1509 at Harefield Middlesex and was the youngest daughter and 12th child of her parents fourteen children Her Godfather was the priest Robert Malber and she had two Godmothers Sybil Bynchestre Binchester and Isabell Antony Her sponsor at Confirmation was John Bynchestre Although the family had known social success the 1530s brought some grim moments and not just the dissolution of Holywell Priory Among Sybil s brothers and sisters was Sebastian almost nine years her elder who as a young man was a courtier and member of Henry VIII s Privy Chamber on close personal terms with the King However he later entered the Carthusian Priory or Charterhouse in London as a monk being also ordained a deacon on 3 June 1531 and prior to his death a priest He was arrested on 25 May 1535 for refusal to accept the King s assumption of supremacy over the English church and underwent harsh imprisonment during which he was twice visited by the King but resisted Henry s blandishments Condemned to death for treason on 19 June he was dragged to Tyburn on a hurdle and hanged drawn and quartered Regarded as a martyr for the Catholic faith Sebastian was beatified by Pope Leo XIII on 9 December 1886 20 Five years after the Dissolution Dame Sybil then aged 35 is mentioned in the will of her brother George Newdigate dated 13 August 1544 George left 10 a year to be paid by his widow to my Sister Sybell If his widow were to die during the minority of his children his landes annuities and Rentes do remayne to my syster Sibell Newdegate and she to have the dysposing of them to thuse of my children and if they dye the remaynder to her only whome I make overseer of this my last will and testament 21 George was three years older than Sybil and was the sibling born to their parents immediately before her on 26 April 1506 22 Sybil is known to have been alive still in 1549 23 Dissolution editIt is documented that when Holywell Priory was formally dissolved on 10 October 1539 the convent then comprised 14 nuns including the prioress and subprioress Prioress Sybil Newdigate received a pension of 50 the subprioress Ellen Claver or Claire or Cavour 6 13 shillings and 4 pence and twelve nuns pensions varying from 53 shillings and 4 pence and to 93 shillings and 4 pence each The other nuns are named as Margerye Frauncis Alice Martyn Alice Goldwell Kateryn Grene Kateryn Fogge Isabell Gine Beatrix Lewes Mary Good Elene Clave Agnes Bolney Alice Frelond and Cristyane Skypper Of these women sixteen years later on 24 February 1556 six were still drawing their pension 24 The fate of the priory buildings editThe loss of this functioning institution must have had notable effects on the social and economic life of the area The Priory precinct covered about eight acres Already in the year of the Priory s surrender one Thomas Pointz mentioned it in a letter he wrote to Thomas Cromwell in the hope of acquiring a suppressed monastic house as a dwelling for his family 5 However it would seem that nothing happened for it was some years after the Dissolution of the community that the part which had been occupied directly by the nuns was granted by sale on 23 September 1544 to Henry Webb then a gentleman usher to Queen Catherine Parr 14 It would seem that there may have been distant family connections by marriage between the Queen and the Webb family The property that went to Webb is described as including the hall and all the rooms kitchens and buildings both upstairs and downstairs extensive other houses and other buildings in several blocks including the fratry frater both upstairs and downstairs several barns brewhouses granaries stables workshops dovecotes etc and various plots of land including several garden areas among which the prioress s garden and the convent orchard of one acre The priory chapel was speedily demolished 5 as may have been a more or less formal requirement for this kind of purchase from the crown After Webb s death in 1553 the property passed to his daughter and her husband Susan and George Peckham who sold it in 1555 sold it to Christopher Bumsted who soon mortgaged it to Christopher Allen and his son Giles After Christopher Allen s death Bumsted quarrelled with the son who however manage to gain possession at least by the time of his own death in 1609 upon which it was quickly sold on to others 21 The remains of the Priory were popularly known for a time as King John s Palace though by the end of the 18th century there was little left to see 5 A Shakespearean connection editIn 1576 James Burbage a joiner actor and impresario leased land on the former property of Holywell Priory There he built The Theatre one of the first purpose built London play houses since Roman times It was probably here that the playing company or actors company Leicester s Men played from the early days and in the 1580s the Admiral s Men From 1594 to 1597 it was the venue for The Lord Chamberlain s Men It was for them and their successors that Shakespeare wrote and acted for most of his career and it was at The Theatre that some of Shakespeare s early plays had their premiere A dispute arose with the landlord Giles Allen when the twenty one year old lease ran out Failing to reach an agreement for its extension 25 James Burbage s son Cuthbert hired Peter Streete to take down the old Theatre and to build a new one using as much of the salvaged material as possible With the help of others on the night of 28 December 1598 the structure was dismantled and the materials were transported across the River Thames and reassembled there on Bankside in Southwark as The Globe which was functioning by the following September See also editSt John the Baptist Hoxton List of monastic houses in Middlesex List of monastic houses in England Essex village of Holloway Down now part of Leytonstone 26 References edit Hasted Edward 1797 The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent Institute of Historical Research Cockburn J S et al eds 1969 A History of the County of Middlesex Victoria County History The Augustinian Priory of St John the Baptist Holywell in James Bird ed Survey of London Volume 8 Shoreditch London 1922 pp 153 184 and pls 1 and 183 British History Online http www british history ac uk survey london vol8 pp153 187 accessed 26 September 2017 Religious Houses Houses of Augustinian canonesses 5 The Priory of Haliwell in J S Cockburn H P F King and K G T McDonnell A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 1 London 1969 pp 170 182 British History Online http www british history ac uk vch middx vol1 pp170 182 accessed 26 September 2017 The Augustinian Priory of St John the Baptist Holywell in James Bird ed Survey of London Volume 8 Shoreditch London 1922 pp 153 187 British History Online http www british history ac uk survey london vol8 pp153 187 accessed 26 September 2017 Religious Houses Houses of Augustinian canonesses 5 The Priory of Haliwell in J S Cockburn H P F King and K G T McDonnell A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 1 London 1969 pp 170 182 British History Online http www british history ac uk vch middx vol1 pp170 182 accessed 26 September 2017 a b c d e f g h Cf Religious Houses Houses of Augustinian canonesses 5 The Priory of Haliwell in J S Cockburn H P F King and K G T McDonnell A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 1 London 1969 pp 170 182 British History Online http www british history ac uk vch middx vol1 pp170 182 accessed 26 September 2017 Cf Caroline Barron amp Anne F Sutton edd Medieval London Widows 1300 1500 Hambledon Press London 1994 p 178 Religious Houses Houses of Augustinian canonesses 5 The Priory of Haliwell in J S Cockburn H P F King and K G T McDonnell A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 1 London 1969 pp 170 182 British History Online http www british history ac uk vch middx vol1 pp170 182 accessed 26 September 2017 The Augustinian Priory of St John the Baptist Holywell in James Bird ed Survey of London Volume 8 Shoreditch London 1922 pp 160 164 British History Online http www british history ac uk survey london vol8 pp153 187 accessed 24 September 2017 Winnifred M Sturman Barking Abbey A Study in its External and Internal Administration from the Conquest to the Dissolution PhD thesis University of London 1961 pp 375 382 400 401 404 Douglas Richardson Plantagenet Ancestry A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families Salt Lake City 2nd edition 2011 vol II pp 96 97 George Edward Cokayne The Complete Peerage St Catherine Press London 1936 vol IX p 82 May McKisack The Fourteenth Century 1307 1399 Oxford University Press Oxford 1959 p 152 George Edward Cokayne The Complete Peerage St Catherine Press London 1936 vol IX pp 82 84 Douglas Richardson Plantagenet Ancestry A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families Salt Lake City 2nd edition 2011 vol II pp 634 635 Winnifred M Sturman Barking Abbey A Study in its External and Internal Administration from the Conquest to the Dissolution PhD thesis University of London 1961 p 9 a b c d e The Augustinian Priory of St John the Baptist Holywell in James Bird ed Survey of London Volume 8 Shoreditch London 1922 pp 153 187 British History Online http www british history ac uk survey london vol8 pp153 187 accessed 24 September 2017 Cf Gwen Seabourne Imprisoning Medieval Women The Non Judicial Confinement and Abduction of Women in England c 1170 1509 Ashgate Farnham 2011 pp 125 127 a b Mary C Erler 9 March 2006 Women Reading and Piety in Late Medieval England Cambridge University Press p 15 ISBN 978 0 521 02457 0 Wood Laura M 24 May 2012 Hampton Alice d 1516 vowess and benefactor Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 102118 cf Will of John Newdigate Sergeant at law of Harefield Middlesex proved 25 August 1528 National Archives Retrieved 2 April 2013 http discovery nationalarchives gov uk SearchUI Details uri D976621 cf Frederick Arthur Crisp ed Fragmenta Genealogica 12 Crisp London 1906 pp 1 2 Lawrence Hendriks The London Charterhouse Its Monks and Its Martyrs Kegan Paul Trench London 1889 p 175 a b The Augustinian Priory of St John the Baptist Holywell in James Bird ed Survey of London Volume 8 Shoreditch London 1922 pp 153 187 British History Online http www british history ac uk survey london vol8 pp153 187 accessed 24 September 2017 cf Frederick Arthur Crisp ed Fragmenta Genealogica 12 Crisp London 1906 pp 1 2 The Augustinian Priory of St John the Baptist Holywell in James Bird ed Survey of London Volume 8 Shoreditch London 1922 pp 160 164 British History Online http www british history ac uk survey london vol8 pp153 187 accessed 24 September 2017 Cf The Augustinian Priory of St John the Baptist Holywell in James Bird ed Survey of London Volume 8 Shoreditch London 1922 pp 153 187 British History Online http www british history ac uk survey london vol8 pp153 187 accessed 26 September 2017 Bernard Capp The Burbages at Law Again in Notes amp Queries 47 4 2000 433 Survey of British Place Names Holloway Down Retrieved 22 July 2021 51 31 30 N 0 04 48 W 51 525066 N 0 07995 W 51 525066 0 07995 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Holywell Priory amp oldid 1188943448, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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