RELIGIOUS HOUSES (fn. 1)

RELIGIOUS HOUSES
Benedictine Nuns
1. Stratford at Bow Priory
Carthusian Monks
2. Charterhouse
Augustinian Canons
3. Bentley Priory
Augustinian Canonesses
4. Clerkenwell, St. Mary's Priory
5. Haliwell Priory
6. Kilburn Priory
Bridgettines
7. Syon Abbey Trinitarian Friars
8. Hounslow Priory
Knights Hospitallers
9. Clerkenwell, St. John's Priory
9A. Hampton camera1
9B. Harefield commandery, later camera2
Alien Houses
10. Harmondsworth Priory
11. Ruislip Priory
Hospitals
12. Aldersgate (in London)
13. Brentford, All Angels
13A. Brentford, St. Mary, St. Anne, & St. Louis3
13B. Enfield, St. Leonard4
14. Hammersmith
15. Highgate, St. Anthony
16. Holborn, St. Giles-in-the-Fields
17. Kingsland
18. Knightsbridge, St. Leonard
19. Mile End, St. Mary Magdalen
19A. Tottenham, St. Loy5
1
V.C.H. Mdx. ii. 325=6, 327, 371; see p. 194 and n. 26.
2 Ibid. iii. 238; see p. 194 and n. 27.
3 See p. 153.
4 See p. 154.
5 See p. 153.
The register (c.1244-8) of Fulk Basset, Bishop of London 1244-59, lists five
religious houses in the deanery of Middlesex and two more situated in the
county but in the archdeaconry of London. (fn. 2) Those in the deanery of
Middlesex were Westminster Abbey, (fn. 3) the nunneries of Stratford at Bow
and Kilburn, and the leper hospitals of St. James, Westminster, (fn. 4) and St. Giles-in-theFields. The nunneries of Haliwell and St. Mary, Clerkenwell, were in the archdeaconry of London. Five houses, whose histories are included in this volume and which
were in existence when the list was made, are not mentioned. (fn. 5) The priory of Hounslow
is first mentioned in 1200, although it probably did not come into the possession of
the Trinitarian friars until the mid-13th century. (fn. 6) Harmondsworth and Ruislip were
the cells of foreign abbeys, and Bentley was a cell of St. Gregory's, Canterbury. In
each of these there were probably no more than two or three religious, (fn. 7) and the houses
may have been too small to merit the attention of the compiler of the list. A more
important omission was the Priory of St. John of Jerusalem, Clerkenwell, founded in
the mid-12th century. (fn. 8) The Knights Hospitallers also had camere at Hampton and
Harefield; the latter even enjoyed the status of a commandery for some time in the
13th century. (fn. 9) Both houses were very small and neither is dealt with individually in
this section. Two other Middlesex houses, both founded after the 13th century, had a
more than local importance. The London Charterhouse, founded in 1371, was regarded
as the senior house of the Order in England, and missives from the General Chapter of
the Carthusians were usually sent to its prior. (fn. 10) In the early 16th century the reputation
of the London Charterhouse was very high, especially in the performance of divine
service. (fn. 11) The abbey of Syon, founded in 1415, was the only house of the Bridgettines
in England. This fact alone would have made it remarkable, but, in addition, like the
Charterhouse, it enjoyed a high reputation. The laity were attracted by the sermons
in English, and the spiritual treatises produced by the brethren were widely read. (fn. 12)
But apart from these three, the religious houses of Middlesex were of little importance.
As well as the preceding religious houses there were in Middlesex nine hospitals,
six of which were for lepers. Two of the hospitals for the poor were at Brentford;
the other was at Tottenham. (fn. 13) All three were small, and almost nothing is known of
them. This is particularly true of the hospital of St. Mary, St. Anne, and St. Louis at
Brentford, (fn. 14) newly-built in 1393, (fn. 15) and consisting of a chapel and two houses with
bedding and other necessaries for poor travellers; (fn. 16) and an ancient spital house at
Tottenham, mentioned in 1416 (fn. 17) and 1484, (fn. 18) but then no more. Aldersgate hospital,
here described, was omitted from V.C.H. London, i.
Of the ten leper hospitals strategically sited on the main roads out of London, (fn. 19)
six were in Middlesex. (fn. 20) These were at Enfield, (fn. 21) Hammersmith, Highgate, Holborn
(St. Giles's), Kingsland, and Mile End. Two more leper hospitals-St. James's (fn. 22) and
Knightsbridge (fn. 23) -lay in Westminster. Of the Middlesex leper houses the earliest was
that of St. Giles', Holborn, (fn. 24) founded by Queen Maud in the early 12th century. The
City authorities gradually assumed responsibility for the London lepers and probably
themselves founded additional hospitals. (fn. 25) The City certainly administered the four
hospitals at Kingsland, Knightsbridge, Mile End, and Southwark (the Lock). Later
the leper hospitals at Hammersmith (in existence by 1500) and Highgate (independently
founded in 1473) were taken over. Supervision was exercised by two elected wardens,
first mentioned between 1191 and 1211, (fn. 26) and described in the late 14th century as
'the wardens and surveyors of lepers at St. Giles' Hospital, the Lock, and at Hackney
[Kingsland]'. (fn. 27) The wardens' duties included general supervision, daily visits to the
hospitals, and the correction and punishment of difficult inmates. (fn. 28) Wardens were
excused all other civic duties. (fn. 29) In 1549 the administration of the City's leper hospitals
of Kingsland, Hammersmith, Highgate, Knightsbridge, Mile End, and Southwark (the
Lock) was transferred to St. Bartholomew's Hospital. (fn. 30) The City continued to elect
two wardens until 1574, (fn. 31) but St. Bartholomew's assumed routine supervision and the
right to appoint the master or 'guider' of each house. These guiders were always
surgeons, and the practice developed of appointing the two junior assistant surgeons
at St. Bartholomew's to the two houses of the Lock and Kingsland. (fn. 32) In 1553 £60 was
given to the leper hospitals round London on condition that the inmates did not beg
within three miles of the city. (fn. 33) In 1555-6 and on two other occasions 26s. 8d. were
allotted by St. Bartholomew's to four of the hospitals, and in 1556-7 the six houses
received £22 4s. 6d. for 'keeping the poor'. (fn. 34) Subsequently St. Bartholomew's made
more or less regular monthly payments of varying amounts to the six 'outhouses', to
which patients, often with complaints other than leprosy, were sent from St. Bartholomew's. (fn. 35) From 1608 the guiders or masters, who were expected to be continually on
duty, (fn. 36) were paid about £4 a year and 4d. a day for each patient's food. (fn. 37) By 1682 one
master's annual salary had risen to £30, with an additional £3 for washing the patients'
sheets. In one case £50 was provided in a year for medicines. (fn. 38) The decline of the
Middlesex leper houses as such came in the 16th century. Mile End is not mentioned
after 1589. (fn. 39) The five others remained on the books of St. Bartholomew's as ordinary
hospitals until 1623. (fn. 40) After this date only the Lock and Kingsland were maintained
by St. Bartholomew's, (fn. 41) but the others continued independently for some time.
The Lock and Kingsland finally closed in 1760. (fn. 42)
Little is known of the hermits of Middlesex. (fn. 43) Even when a hermitage had been
endowed it was not always possible to find a hermit. The buildings were often granted
by the patrons to ecclesiastics who wished for rural retirement without committing
themselves to asceticism. (fn. 44) It is impossible to make a reliable list of the inmates of any
particular hermitage, and references to hermits in Middlesex are rare. When the
nunnery of Kilburn was founded, about 1130, the nuns were given as their superior a
hermit called Godwin, who had formerly built a hermitage on the site. (fn. 45) The hermitage
in Monken Hadley which was given to Walden Abbey (Essex) by Geoffrey de Mandeville in about 1136 may by then have been unoccupied. (fn. 46) The best known Middlesex
hermitage was at Highgate. It was just outside the Bishop of London's manor of
Hornsey, and consisted of a chapel and dwelling-house in his gift. In 1386 Bishop
Braybroke granted this hermitage to William Lichfield to hold as the earlier 'poor
hermits' of Highgate had done. (fn. 47) A hermit was presented in 1531. (fn. 48) The tradition that
the hermit of Highgate was responsible for maintaining the causeway between Highgate and Islington is not older than the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, (fn. 49) although it may
have been based on genuine information. The claim that there was a hermitage at
Harrow dedicated to St. Edmund and St. Catherine rests on very slender evidence. (fn. 50)
When Bishop Swinfield of Hereford stayed at Kensington in the winter of 1289-90
he gave alms to the anchoress there. (fn. 51) There was also an anchorite attached to the
hospital of St. Giles-in-the-Fields in 1371. (fn. 52)