INTRODUCTION
This volume is the eleventh in the series covering 1541–1857 in the Institute of
Historical Research's revision of Le Neve-Hardy's Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae.
It lists the higher clergy of the dioceses of the province of York, apart from the
archdiocese of York itself, which was the subject of volume four. The province of
York in the middle ages consisted of the very large archdiocese of York, together
with the small ones of Carlisle and Durham, each with a monastic cathedral. After
the dissolution of the monasteries, these two were re-established on similar lines
with secular chapters. The new diocese of Chester was set up on a comparable
pattern, consisting of the counties of Cheshire and Lancashire, and portions of
Westmorland, Cumberland and Yorkshire. The diocese of Sodor and Man was
attached to York province in 1542. The Ecclesiastical Commissioners of the
eighteen-thirties decided upon a further reduction in the size of the diocese of
York, and also that of Chester, and took out of them the dioceses of Ripon and
Manchester. Fuller details are given below in the introductions to each diocese.
During the middle ages, the diocese of Carlisle had had a monastic cathedral,
following the Augustinian rule, so that, when Carlisle priory was dissolved in 1540,
King Henry VIII introduced a secular chapter into the cathedral under a foundation
charter of 8 May 1541. The new chapter was to consist of a dean – the former
prior, who had been acting as warden since 1539 – and four canons, two of whom
were former regular canons. The right of presentation to these four prebends was
initially with the Crown, but Queen Mary I granted it in 1558 to the bishop. As in
the middle ages, the diocese had a single archdeacon, and was the smallest diocese
in England until 1856. (fn. 1)
Legal and practical problems arose in 1707–8, when Dean Francis Atterbury
maintained against the bishop, William Nicolson, that the foundation charter of
1541 was the only valid constitution of the cathedral. This meant that Queen Mary's
subsequent grant, and the statutes of 1545, under which the cathedral normally
operated, but which had never passed the king's Great Seal, were not binding.
Therefore, for example, it was the Crown, and not the bishop, who should legally
hold visitations of the cathedral chapter and possess the valuable patronage of
the prebends. This would have had national repercussions in all the twelve other
cathedrals of Henry VIII's 'new foundation'. After a few months of acute tension,
during which the dean took the bishop to the court of common pleas, and the
bishop defied the dean by holding three turbulent visitations and excommunicating
one of the canons, Nicolson's Whig politician friends secured the passage of a
bill in parliament to give legislative force to customary statutes. This was known
as the Cathedrals Act of 1708 (6 Anne c. 75). (fn. 2)
The bishopric of Carlisle ranked among the poorer sees. In 1702 William Grahme
refused it, claiming that the income would beggar him if he accepted it. The inquiry
of the commissioners into the revenue of bishops on an average of three years to
31 December 1831 revealed an annual income of only £2,213, putting Carlisle in
twenty-fourth position among the bishops, and well below the average income of
£5,936, though in addition Bishop Hugh Percy held the chancellorship of Salisbury
and a prebend of St. Paul's. Surprisingly, the cathedral corporation, with an income
of £5,318, ranked eleventh among cathedrals, although the commissioners
commented that these years had seen an unusually high income and a figure of
around £3,510 was to be expected for the next seven years. The dean had received
an average of £121 7s 6d in 1828–31, plus £1,602 as fines for the renewal of
leases of cathedral property. Individual canons had received a basic £22 5s plus a
further £80 10s from leases. (fn. 3)
In view of these figures, it was scarcely surprising that the ecclesiastical
commissioners recommended that the diocese of Carlisle be enlarged by
incorporating the deanery of Furness and Cartmel in Lancashire and those parts
of the counties of Cumberland and Westmorland that had been in the diocese of
Chester, and the Cumberland parish of Alston, formerly in the diocese of Durham.
More controversially, it was proposed that the diocese of Carlisle be united with
that of Sodor and Man. These recommendations were included in the statute of 6
& 7 Will. IV c. 77. The annual income of the bishop was fixed at £4,500 on 5
September 1837 by Order in Council. However, the proposal to incorporate the
diocese of Sodor and Man met with strong opposition from the clergy and
inhabitants of the Isle of Man, and was repealed by a further Act of parliament on
4 July 1838. (fn. 4) A new archdeaconry of Westmorland was established by Order in
Council of 10 August 1847 from parishes in the archdeaconry of Richmond in the
diocese of Chester, but Bishop Hugh Percy refused to accept this and the other
changes in the extent of the diocese and they were not carried out until after his
death in 1856, when the first appointment of an archdeacon of Westmorland was
made. (fn. 5) There was no reduction in the number of the prebends, but by Order in
Council of 1 May 1855 (to which Bishop Percy consented) the archdeaconry of
Carlisle was to be annexed to the next vacant prebend, which turned out to be the
4th. (fn. 6)
John Le Neve, whose Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae was published in 1716, seems
to have drawn his information from printed sources and some registers of
archbishops of Canterbury at Lambeth Palace. For the canons he gave only the
years of appointment and did not cite sources. Thomas Duffus Hardy, whose
revision of Le Neve was published in 1854, and was the standard reference work
for more than a century, gave fuller details, probably culled from the Public
Records, of which he was an assistant keeper, but seldom cited his sources.
Both the diocesan and the capitular records are good for this period, with
relatively few omissions in the registers and act books series. As a result the lists
given here are fairly definitive.
A consolidated index of all the higher clergy in the eleven volumes so far
published in the series 1541–1857, with the offices held by each man, may be
consulted on the Institute of Historical Research's website, History (http://
www.history.ac.uk), currently under Research Tools, Higher Clergy.