1. THE CATHEDRAL OF LICHFIELD (fn. 1)
Early History
St. Wilfrid, who at the request of King Wulfhere
performed episcopal duties in Mercia at various
times between 666 and 669, received many grants of
land from the king. Lichfield was one of these grants,
and Wilfrid decided that it should become the seat of
the hitherto peripatetic bishops of the Mercians. (fn. 2) St.
Chad, Bishop of the Mercians from 669 to 672, was
the first to have his seat at Lichfield, and when he
died he was buried there 'close to the church of St.
Mary'. (fn. 3) This church was probably on the site of the
present cathedral; (fn. 4) about half a mile to the northeast, on the site of the present St. Chad's Church
next to Stowe Pool, is the spot where Chad is
traditionally supposed to have preached to the
people. (fn. 5) The first church definitely known to have
stood on the site of the present cathedral was that
built by Bishop Headda and consecrated in December 700. Chad's bones were transferred to a wooden
shrine in the new cathedral and became a popular
object of pilgrimage. (fn. 6) The dedication of this cathedral presents some problems. Bede's statement that it
was dedicated to St. Peter (fn. 7) appears to be the only
early reference to such a dedication. By the time of
Domesday Book the cathedral was 'the church of St.
Chad', (fn. 8) and this remained its popular name. (fn. 9) The
present dedication, to St. Mary and St. Chad, is
found from at least the late 1150s. (fn. 10) The dedication
to the Virgin may represent a 12th-century accretion. (fn. 11) Alternatively, since Bede states that
Chad's cathedral was dedicated to St. Mary, it may
have formed part of the dedication of Headda's
cathedral and have been overshadowed by the cult of
the local saint until the 12th-century revival of the
cult of the Virgin. (fn. 12)
Nothing is known of the administration of the
cathedral until 822 when, according to the Lichfield
Chronicle, (fn. 13) Bishop Æthelweald set up canons in
the cathedral for the first time. There were 20 of
them, including a provost — 11 priests and 9
deacons. (fn. 14) The date of this event suggests that
Æthelweald was introducing the decretulum of
Bishop Chrodegang of Metz, a rule of common life
drawn up for his cathedral clergy about 755. A
characteristic of this rule was the placing of a provost
at the head of the body of canons. (fn. 15) A rule similar to
that of Chrodegang was introduced at Canterbury in
813, but, apart from Lichfield, there is no evidence
that the rule was adopted in other English cathedrals
until shortly before the Norman Conquest. (fn. 16)
The history of the cathedral from 822 until the
episcopate of Roger de Clinton (1129-48) is obscure
— so obscure that Clinton, who reorganized the
cathedral, was thought by a 13th-century Prior of
Coventry to have been the first to introduce canons
at Lichfield. (fn. 17) The tradition was that before Clinton's
time there had been only five priests, deservientes
quinque capellis, singuli singulis. (fn. 18) This is supported
by the entry for Lichfield in Domesday Book which
says that there were on the bishop's manor five
canons holding three ploughs. (fn. 19) The break-up of
common life and the division of great parts of the
common estates and goods into separate portions or
prebends for the canons were common tendencies in
cathedrals during the 10th and 11th centuries; (fn. 20) at
Lichfield the Danish invasions of the 9th and 10th
centuries and the transference of the bishop's see to
Chester in 1075 and thence to Coventry in 1102 (fn. 21)
must have contributed to the disintegration of the
communal life instituted by Æthelweald.
A late-16th-century history of the cathedral
wrongly ascribed to Æthelweald the foundation of
prebends to support his canons. (fn. 22) The earliest
canons were more probably supported by estates
held in common. Traces of these estates may
possibly be found in Domesday Book where some of
the estates held by the bishop in 1086 are said to
have belonged to the cathedral ('the church of St.
Chad') before the Conquest. (fn. 23) In one case, that of
Tachbrook (Warws.), the bishop was the tenant-inchief, but it was said that the land belonged to (est
de) the church of St. Chad. (fn. 24) Portions of several of
the manors, such as Baswich, Brewood, and Eccleshall, were said to have been held by the cathedral
and are known to have become prebends by the end
of the 12th century. It seems likely, however, that
an earlier beginning of the prebendal system is to be
seen in the tradition, found from the 13th century,
that the holders of five prebends had the special duty
of ministering at the high altar; (fn. 25) these prebends
were named in the 16th century as Freeford, Stotfold, Longdon, Hansacre, and Weeford. (fn. 26) These are
all places in or near Lichfield, and it is possible that
the prebends were in existence by 1086 and were
held by the five canons mentioned in Domesday
Book; if so, they would provide a link between the
early cathedral organization and the reconstituted
chapter of the 12th century.
The date at which a full prebendal system was
introduced at Lichfield is obscure. At Lincoln,
Salisbury, and York this took place in the 1090s, (fn. 27)
but it would be unwise to argue by analogy in the
case of Lichfield as it is impossible to know the
effects of the transference of the see to Chester and
then to Coventry. The most likely theory is that a
full prebendal system was created by Roger de
Clinton in the 1130s when he reorganized the
cathedral. Apart from the five possibly preConquest prebends already mentioned, none of the
prebends can be definitely dated to before 1130. (fn. 28)
On the other hand the Lichfield Chronicle says that
Roger de Clinton increased the number of prebends, (fn. 29) a statement which suggests that the prebendal system was in existence before his time. His
eight new prebends, however, all consisted of the
churches and tithes of manors in Warwickshire
which had been granted to Coventry Priory on its
foundation in 1043 and the administration of which
had been taken over by Bishop Clinton. (fn. 30) Only one
of these new prebends, Ufton, survived; (fn. 31) the
remaining churches were presumably recovered by
Coventry, probably by 1152. (fn. 32) It seems likely that
the other prebends of whose foundation there is no
evidence apart from the tradition that they were of
Saxon origin were formed from churches and tithes
on the bishop's estates in Staffordshire, Warwickshire, and Derbyshire at about the same time. These
were Brewood, Bishopshull, Curborough, Eccleshall,
Gaia, and Whittington and Berkswich in Staffordshire, Bishop's Itchington and Tachbrook in
Warwickshire, and Sawley in Derbyshire. (fn. 33) A few
additional prebends were formed during the later
12th century: Harborne was made a prebend about
1165, (fn. 34) and the prebend of Alrewas was presumably
formed some time after the royal grant of the church
to the cathedral and the bishop in the 1190s. (fn. 35)
Bishop Clinton reconstituted the cathedral
chapter in the 1130s, forming a collegium canonicorum along the same lines as those founded at
Lincoln, Salisbury, and York some forty years
previously. (fn. 36) It has been suggested that his motive
in setting up a secular chapter at Lichfield was to
obtain support against the monastic chapter at
Coventry. (fn. 37) The new chapter was headed by four
dignitaries, the usual 'four-square' constitution
found in all English secular cathedrals by the late
12th and the 13th centuries. It has been questioned
whether any Norman cathedral could have been the
precise model for this sort of constitution, at least
for those chapters formed in the late 11th century. (fn. 38)
The Lichfield chapter, however, was based on that
of the cathedral of Rouen, for Bishop Richard Peche
(1161-82) ordered that 'the institutions of the
church of Rouen, on which this church was
originally modelled, so far as they are sound and
possible, shall be strictly observed, both in choir and
chapter, and in the degrees and dignities of the
personae and the canons'. (fn. 39) The Rouen connexion
may account for the fact that in the earliest statutes
of the cathedral, drawn up in 1191, (fn. 40) the order of
precedence of the four dignitaries differs from that
of other English cathedrals, the Lichfield order
being dean, precentor, treasurer, and chancellor. (fn. 41)
By the mid 13th century, however, the order of
treasurer and chancellor had been reversed to
conform to the usual English practice. (fn. 42)
A dean of Lichfield, William, first appears about
1140 as a witness to the foundation charter of
Farewell Priory; a fellow-witness was Odo, the
treasurer. (fn. 43) The dignity of precentor is not mentioned by name until about 1177 when Bishop
Peche granted the office to his clerk, Matthew;
Matthew, however, succeeded Walter Durdent, the
clerk and probably the kinsman of Bishop Durdent
(1149-59), who in his turn had succeeded William
de Vilers, Archdeacon of Chester. (fn. 44) The chancellor
is first mentioned by name about 1200 when he was
granted a messuage in the Close. (fn. 45) A subdean is
found about 1165 when Bishop Peche constituted
the prebend of Harborne for him. (fn. 46) The deanery was
first endowed with lands and tithes from the bishop's
estates, but in or just after 1176 Bishop Peche found
that it was necessary to re-endow the deanery which
had been 'ruined during the time of war'. He gave
to it tithes in Lichfield, including a tithe of the fish
from the bishop's ponds, a tithe of the farms of the
archdeaconry of Derby, various pieces of land, and
also the prebend of Brewood. (fn. 47) In 1192 these widely
scattered endowments of land and tithes (with the
exception of the prebend of Brewood) were replaced
by the church of Adbaston which had previously
been attached to the prebend of Eccleshall; in 1291
the deanery was worth £26 13s. 4d. a year. (fn. 48) The
precentorship was endowed with the prebend of
Bishop's Itchington, formed from property in
Warwickshire belonging to Coventry Priory and
worth £40 in 1291. (fn. 49) The treasurer had the prebend
of Sawley, in 1291 worth £66 13s. 4d. and the richest
prebend in the cathedral. (fn. 50) The chancellor first
held the prebend of Gaia, but by 1255 he had been
given instead the richer prebend of Alrewas, worth
£20 in 1291. (fn. 51)
The duties and privileges of the four dignitaries
are described in the first statutes of the cathedral,
dating from the episcopate of Bishop Nonant
(1185-98). These, the earliest surviving statutes of
any English cathedral, were probably drawn up by
the dean and chapter for the bishop in 1191 when
the establishment of a secular cathedral at Coventry
necessitated a written statement of the Lichfield
organization and customs to supply a model for the
new cathedral. (fn. 52) In form the statutes follow closely
Bishop Osmund's Institutio of 1091 for Salisbury
and are very similar to the constitutional part of
Richard le Poore's Tractatus de Officiis — it is
possible that an earlier version of part of the
Tractatus was lent to Lichfield in the 1190s. (fn. 53) The
dean was entrusted with the direction and correction
of the canons and vicars and had the right of
visitation of the prebends and of the Lichfield city
clergy. He was also in charge of the cathedral
livings, and new prebendaries received their
prebends from him and were assigned a stall by
him. (fn. 54) The precentor was the deputy of the dean in
choir, being in charge of the cathedral services, with
the duty of instructing the rectores chori before every
solemn festival. He was also responsible for choosing
boys for the choir and for their instructio et disciplina.
The duties of the treasurer are described in elaborate
detail: he was the custodian of the treasures of the
cathedral and responsible for the lighting of the
church and for maintaining, through his deputy the
sacrist, the supply of candles, bread, wine, incense,
water, coals, and rushes. The chancellor was the
legal and literary officer of the cathedral; he kept
the seals and wrote the letters of the chapter and
was also expected to run a school. He was also
responsible for the standard of reading in services
and had the right to preach as often as he wished in
the cathedral, except on the two days a year reserved
for the dean. The statutes make no mention of the
archdeacons of the diocese, and at Lichfield, as at
Hereford, no special place or precedence was ever
assigned to the archdeacons in the choir or in the
chapter-house unless they held prebends. The
prebend of Bolton (Lancs.) was annexed permanently to the office of Archdeacon of Chester in
1253, but the archdeacons never lived within the
Close for soon after the annexation took place they
were assigned a house in Beacon Street by the dean
and chapter. (fn. 55)
The 1191 statutes start with an outline of the
daily services in the cathedral with the hours at
which they were to be performed and variations in
their sequence on different occasions. (fn. 56) There are
very few details of the ritual involved, but there is
frequent reference for details to the Consuetudinary
and the Ordinal; these are in fact the earliest
allusions in England to the Ordinal. (fn. 57) The section
on services also contains some notes on the 'Representations', spectacular ceremonies which took place
under the direction of the subchanter on the great
festivals — 'as is contained in the books about these
and other things'. The Ordinal of Rouen Cathedral
contains full directions for three of these ceremonies:
the Shepherds at Christmas, the Pilgrims at Easter
(the scene at Emmaus), and the Nebulae at Whitsuntide. This is another indication of the connexion
between Lichfield and Rouen. (fn. 58) At the end of the
statutes is a long and detailed scheme for the
ringing of the various bells which announced the
different services; this section is peculiar to the
Lichfield statutes. (fn. 59)
It is impossible to estimate how many canons
were actually resident at the end of the 12th
century; non-residence, however, was evidently
becoming such a problem that sometimes there were
not enough canons in residence to staff the cathedral
properly. The rules of residence laid down at
Archbishop Hubert Walter's legatine visitation of
Lichfield in 1195 were designed to remedy this
situation and are the earliest surviving statutes of
residence for any English cathedral. (fn. 60) They laid
down that each of the 22 canons should reside for a
minimum of 3 months, or a quarter of the year.
Each quarter was allotted to one of the 4 dignitaries
and the rest of the canons were divided into four
groups: 5 resided with the dean during the first
stadium or quarter, beginning at Michaelmas; 5
with the precentor during the second quarter; 4
with the treasurer during the third quarter; and 4
with the chancellor during the fourth quarter. In
this way at least 5 canons were always in residence.
No canon was to be absent except on the business of
the church or other necessary affairs, and any canon
failing to keep his residence was to pay a fine
totalling a fifth of the value of his prebend into the
common fund. This elaborate system, very similar
to one in force at Salisbury, (fn. 61) seems to have been
difficult to put into practice from the first. (fn. 62)
The main reason for the growth of non-residence
must have been the smallness of the common fund
at Lichfield. The chapter had accumulated very
little communal property by the end of the 12th
century. Bishop Clinton had endowed it with
'churches, tithes, lands, and other property', its
possession of which was confirmed by successive
popes; (fn. 63) and in 1149 King Stephen restored to it the
church of Gnosall which it had held under Henry I
— the sale of Gnosall prebends helped to augment
the common fund. (fn. 64) Bishop Richard Peche found
that the common fund had been reduced to nothing,
and to augment it he ordered that when a prebend
fell vacant the dean and chapter should appoint a
keeper who would apply its revenues to the common
fund for a year. The same bishop confirmed to the
chapter a number of endowments which consisted
largely of small rent-charges in money or goods on
the bishop's property. (fn. 65) Many grants to the chapter
during this century were of the same sort, such as
the grant of lands by the bishop to his steward in the
1150s in return for an annual payment of 4s. for
the lighting of the high altar of the cathedral. (fn. 66)
There were also some gifts by individuals, such as
the grant of a burgage in Lichfield to the common
fund by Peter Giffard in 1176. (fn. 67) The chapter in the
1160s and 1170s also successfully defended its right
to part of the revenues of two churches, Bradley and
Shenstone, of which it had been deprived by the
religious houses of Stone and Osney (Oxon.). (fn. 68) In
the 1170s two more churches were appropriated to
the common fund: Adam and Sybil de Port gave
the chapter their church of Arley (now in Worcs.),
and Robert Marmion gave it his church of Thornton
(Lincs.). (fn. 69) The most important donations to the
common fund, however, did not begin until the
1190s. (fn. 70)
Of the cathedral buildings little definite is known
before the rebuilding in the 13th century. The
Saxon cathedral, consecrated in 700, (fn. 71) was replaced
after the Conquest. Bishop Robert de Limesey
(1085-1117) is said to have used money obtained
from Coventry for magnas aedificationes at Lichfield; (fn. 72) his successor, Robert Peche (1121-6), is also
said to have been magnarum apud Licetfeld edificationum inchoator. (fn. 73) The Norman cathedral was
probably completed by Bishop Clinton, qui ecclesiam
Lichesfeldensem erexit tam in fabrica quam in
honore. (fn. 74) During the 19th-century restoration of the
cathedral the foundations of the Norman church
were discovered under the choir. (fn. 75) This church
originally had an apse with an ambulatory at the
east end and probably one or more radiating chapels;
a square-ended chapel, 38 feet long and 21 feet wide,
was added to the east end of the apse in the mid 12th
century, probably in the time of Bishop Clinton. In
the course of the 12th-century rebuilding a deep
moat was dug on three sides of the Close, and the
excavations probably provided stone for the new
cathedral. (fn. 76) A further rebuilding of the choir and
the tower crossing probably began during the last
years of the 12th century. (fn. 77)
The Thirteenth Century
The 1190s marked the end of the period of
reconstruction of cathedral life begun by Bishop
Clinton, and the 13th century was the time of the
most rapid advance in the cathedral's history. The
chapter grew in wealth, independence, and influence.
The number of prebends was increased, there was a
succession of important donations to the common
fund, and the chapter acquired several pensions.
There were some important developments in the
organization of the chapter, which in this period
asserted both its right to take part in the election of
the bishop and its independence of him. The 13th
century also saw the emergence of minor corporations in the cathedral and the beginning of the
complete rebuilding of the church.
The prebend of Wolvey was formed about 1200
by Bishop Muschamp. (fn. 78) Bishop Stavensby founded
the prebend of Wellington (Salop.) in 1232, (fn. 79) and
when he annexed Burton-in-Wirral (Ches.), a
prebend ab antiquo, to his new hospital for the
shipwrecked at Denhall (Ches.) in the early 1230s,
he created in its place a prebend from the church of
Tarvin (Ches.). (fn. 80) Prees (Salop.), also known as Pipa
Minor, became a prebend soon after 1235. (fn. 81) Bishop
Pattishall formed the prebends of Colwich and
Meresbury (Ches.) in 1241; the latter apparently
had only one holder and then lapsed. (fn. 82) The two
Warwickshire prebends of Bobenhull and Ryton
were founded in 1248 after the churches had been
granted to Bishop Weseham (1245-56) by the Prior
of Coventry. (fn. 83) Bolton (Lancs.), the prebend attached
to the Archdeaconry of Chester, was formed in 1253
after the church had been given to the bishop by
Mattersey Priory (Notts.). (fn. 84) In addition the two
small prebends of Dernford and Dasset Parva
(Warws.) were in existence by 1255. (fn. 85)
The confirmation in 1255 by Bishop Weseham
to the chapter of all its existing prebendal endowments marks the virtual end of the construction of
the prebendal system at Lichfield. In 1255 there
were 26 prebends with endowments of churches or
land, and an additional 3 'bursarial' prebends. (fn. 86)
These latter were formed by Bishop Stavensby and
were in the nature of retaining fees for suitable
canons until a full prebend should fall vacant. (fn. 87) At
first the stipends of 3 or 4 marks were paid from the
bishop's own purse; under Weseham they were paid
from the Peter's pence collected in the Archdeaconry of Derby. (fn. 88) Bishop Meuland (1257-95)
replaced the bursarial prebends by the three normal
prebends of Sandiacre (Derb.), Flixton (Lancs.),
and Pipa Parva. (fn. 89) The chapter was not anxious to
accept these additional prebends, fearing that the
new canons might become a charge on the common
fund; Meuland therefore agreed that the three new
prebendaries should not be allowed to go into
residence until they had arranged to augment the
common fund by £40 a year each. (fn. 90) The chapter
was eventually forced to agree to Meuland's request
that the holders of the three new prebends should
be admitted before the augmentation was carried
out, but these were the last new prebends to be
constituted. (fn. 91) There were a few changes in the
existing prebends; Meresbury lapsed, (fn. 92) and in 1279
Harborne was assigned to the common fund. (fn. 93) Two
other prebends were divided: Gaia into Gaia Major
and Gaia Minor before 1279, (fn. 94) and Eccleshall into
Eccleshall (later sometimes called Johnson) and
Offley in 1332. (fn. 95)
After this final division there were 32 prebends in
the cathedral. (fn. 96) In 1535 their combined value was
under £400, much less than that of other, larger
cathedrals; at Salisbury, for example, the deanery
alone was worth over £200 in 1535. (fn. 97) The Lichfield
prebends then ranged in value from Sawley, worth
£56 13s. 4d., to Dasset Parva, worth 3s. 4d. Only
three were worth £40 and above, five were worth
between £20 and £40, eight between £10 and £20,
and the rest under £10. There were two types of
prebend. The first, of which there were 24, consisted
of appropriated parishes, from which the prebendary
received the tithes and other income and where he
often had peculiar jurisdiction. The second type
consisted solely of property, partly land and partly
tithes; of these there were eight, seven of them
endowed from land and tithes in Lichfield and
carrying with them responsibilities in the city
churches.
The members of the 12th-century chapter are
shadowy figures who usually occur as mere names in
lists of witnesses to charters. With the 13th century,
however, it is possible to discover something more
about the personnel of the cathedral. Most of the
elements which are regarded as typical of medieval
secular chapters can be found at Lichfield. (fn. 98) Royal
clerks and officials were granted prebends and
dignities in the cathedral. Thus in 1214 Ralph
Nevill, a royal clerk and later Bishop of Chichester
and Chancellor of England, was nominated to the
vacant deanery by the king; (fn. 99) in 1223 Luke des
Roches, chaplain of Hubert de Burgh, was granted
the chancellorship; (fn. 100) Thomas Wymondham, who
became Treasurer of England in 1265, was precentor
of the cathedral in 1241 and held the post until his
death in 1278. (fn. 101) In addition other canons are described as king's clerks — notably John of Derby, an
influential royal clerk who was elected dean in 1280
and who in 1282 is found going abroad on the king's
business. (fn. 102) Ralph de Hengham, the judge, occurs as a
canon in 1286 and gave some vestments to the
cathedral; (fn. 103) both Anthony Bek (d. 1311) and his
brother Thomas (d. 1293) were canons in 1280. (fn. 104)
Some canons acquired places in the chapter through
their services to the bishop: among them was
Richard of Gloucester, who after being the official
of Bishop Stavensby became Archdeacon of
Coventry and successively chancellor and treasurer
of the cathedral. (fn. 105) Richard was only one of a contingent of secular clerks from Gloucester who held
prebends or dignities at Lichfield in the earlier years
of the 13th century. This link with Gloucester seems
to have been begun by Alexander de Swereford, the
notable Exchequer official and a chaplain to Bishop
Cornhill, who in 1235 resigned his prebend at
Lichfield in favour of his nephew, Simon of
Gloucester. (fn. 106) Compared with other cathedrals Lichfield seems to have had few connexions with the
schools and universities in the 12th and 13th
centuries, though the canonist Simon of Southwell,
who became treasurer in 1203, had lectured at
Bologna, Paris, and probably Oxford, Dean
Sempringham had been Chancellor of Oxford, and
Luke of Ely, who became chancellor in 1292, was a
distinguished Oxford theologian. Alfredus Anglicus
de Sareshel, author of a treatise 'De motu cordis' and
translator of at least two works from the Arabic,
probably held a prebend at Lichfield in the early
13th century. (fn. 107)
From the sparse records which survive of the
activities of the chapter in the 13th century there
emerge some figures who played important parts in
the development of the cathedral but whose activities
were confined to Lichfield. Outstanding among these
was William of Mancetter, the first elected dean and
one of the most notable men to have held the office. (fn. 108)
Others were Ralph of Chaddesden, treasurer (c.
1259-c. 1276) and a great mediator in disputes, who
in 1276 bequeathed £100 for the development
(promocio) of the cathedral, (fn. 109) and Ralph de Lacok (d.
1257), the last subdean to be found at Lichfield and
a man active in the service of the cathedral for over
25 years. (fn. 110)
Information about developments within the
chapter during the 13th century comes mainly from
two sets of statutes: those of Bishop Pattishall, dated
1241, and those of Bishop Meuland, dated 1294. (fn. 111) In
spite of the increase in the number of prebends
non-residence continued to be a problem. In 1224
it seems that certain canons were avoiding their
terms of residence by a subterfuge (dissimulacione),
and Bishop Stavensby reinforced the penalties
imposed by Archbishop Walter. (fn. 112) In 1241 Bishop
Pattishall repeated the residence regulations in his
code of statutes, fitting the prebends created since
1191 into the scheme and setting out the amount
of the fine to be levied for non-residence from each
prebend. (fn. 113) Each canon was allowed to take up to 30
days' leave during his term of residence, thus
reducing each stadium to two months only. The
scheme was given flexibility by the provision that
any canon could reside for the whole year, or for
half the year, if he wished. Hubert Walter's regulations appear for the last time in the statutes of
Bishop Meuland; (fn. 114) when the statutes were revised
in the 16th century all references to the scheme were
removed. In fact the system seems to have been
unworkable from the start, and the usual practice
was for certain canons to reside the whole year,
although occasionally they would be joined by other
canons residing only for one quarter or two. (fn. 115) Until
the act books begin in the 14th century it is impossible to know how many canons were usually in
residence; the number of canons witnessing 13thcentury charters ranges from between three or four
to nearly twenty and is probably not a reliable guide
to the numbers of canons in residence. (fn. 116)
The most important constitutional development in
the 13th century was the establishment by the
chapter of its right to elect a dean. The first deans
were probably appointed by the bishop, (fn. 117) but when
Richard of Dalham died in 1214 the see was vacant.
King John claimed the right to nominate and sent
his legate to see that his clerk, Ralph Nevill, was
appointed. The chapter had already discussed the
election of a dean but agreed to accept the king's
choice on condition that it did not prejudice the
chapter's right of election in the future. (fn. 118) A few
years later it obtained from Bishop Cornhill a
charter granting it the right to elect its own dean in
perpetuity. (fn. 119) In 1222 the chapter exercised its new
privilege for the first time when William of Mancetter was elected dean, (fn. 120) and the right of election
was exercised without interruption until 1325. (fn. 121)
Under William of Mancetter the office of dean
became more powerful. In the statutes of Bishop
Pattishall, which were probably drafted by Dean
Mancetter himself, the importance of the office was
stressed: in the cathedral the dean was second only
to the bishop — all were to rise when he entered the
church or the chapter. He exercised archidiaconal
jurisdiction in the cathedral, the city of Lichfield,
the prebendal parishes, and the parishes of the
common fund churches. (fn. 122) In the statutes of Bishop
Meuland 50 years later it was laid down that the
dean had the right to visit prebendal churches every
three years with a 'reasonable' train — about ten
horsemen. (fn. 123) In both sets of statutes it was laid down
that the dean should be in residence for the whole
year; the other dignitaries need keep only their
quarterly residence. (fn. 124) According to Meuland's
statutes the dean was also to receive double commons
while he was in residence — the bishop too was to
have double commons when in the city. (fn. 125)
At Lichfield daily commons seem to have been
paid wholly in money rather than partly in kind from
at least the 1240s. (fn. 126) Under Bishop Pattishall the rate
of commons was 4d. daily to each residentiary, 6d.
on feast days, 12d. on solemn feast days, and 5s. at
Christmas, the feast of St. Chad, Easter, and the
Assumption. (fn. 127) Fifty years later Bishop Meuland
raised the daily commons, which were then 6d., to
12d., with 2s. on solemn feast days and 10s. on the
four principal feasts. (fn. 128) The common fund was
managed by one or two canons elected by the chapter
at Michaelmas. These communars were forbidden
to convert the money of the chapter to their own use
or to lend it without permission. They had to render
a yearly account to the chapter, and any surplus
after the payment of commons and other expenses
was to be divided among the resident canons
according to the number of quarters during which
they had been in residence. (fn. 129) The common fund met
the expenses of lawsuits dealing with the property
of the cathedral, but the expenses of any case
involving only a prebend had to be paid by the
prebendary concerned. (fn. 130)
From at least the end of the 13th century the
resident chapter met every Friday morning. The
dean had to give a day's notice of any other meeting
of the chapter, unless the business was extremely
urgent. (fn. 131) Provision was made in Meuland's statutes
for the appointment of a chapter clerk to write the
chapter's letters under the supervision of the
chancellor and to deal with legal business on behalf
of the dean and chapter; he was to be paid a salary
from the common fund. (fn. 132) There was also to be a
chest for the common seal and the privilegia of the
chapter; keys to it were to be held by the four
dignitaries. (fn. 133) The statutes of 1241 are concerned
more with directing the services of the cathedral
than with the workings of the chapter. The ceremony
for admitting and installing a new canon is described
and the order of stalls in the choir is given. Instructions are also given for movements in the choir
during the daily services and for the wearing of the
appropriately coloured copes on the various feast
days. The saints' days which were to be specially
observed at Lichfield are listed and details of services
on feast days given. (fn. 134) All this went to make up the
Use of Lichfield.
Between 1190 and 1220 the chapter was given
several important churches. In 1192 Bishop Nonant
granted those of Cannock and Rugeley to the
common fund; he had been sold the manors and
churches by Richard I three years previously. (fn. 135) In
1535 the two churches were worth £32 a year. (fn. 136)
Also in 1192 John, Count of Mortain (later King
John), gave the chapter the Derbyshire church of
Bakewell, on condition that it should always be
served by three priests and that the chapter should
appoint a priest-prebendary to say a daily mass for
the king's well-being and in due course for the king's
soul. (fn. 137) John also gave Bishop Nonant the neighbouring church of Hope with the chapel of Tideswell
to be assigned either to the church of Coventry or
to that of Lichfield. Bishop Muschamp granted to
the Lichfield chapter, 'considering the extreme
meagreness of the common fund', 20 marks a year
from Hope and its chapelries for the provision of
ale. About 1220 Bishop Cornhill granted Hope and
Tideswell outright to the chapter 'to provide
commons of bread and ale'. (fn. 138) Bakewell, Hope, and
Tideswell, known collectively as the Peak parishes, (fn. 139)
were the chapter's most valuable possession; in 1535
they and their thirteen chapels (fn. 140) were worth over
£200 a year, nearly half the total revenue of the
chapter. (fn. 141) In the 1280s Edward I tried to take back
the advowson of Bakewell but was finally persuaded
that his claim was false — at a cost to the chapter of
1,000 marks. (fn. 142) The common fund acquired another
Derbyshire church in 1290 when Bishop Meuland
granted it Kniveton, formerly a chapelry of Ashbourne. (fn. 143) A further Staffordshire church, Dilhorne,
had been appropriated to the fund by at least 1272. (fn. 144)
Thus most of the chapter's income came from
appropriated churches. The usual procedure with
the churches of the common fund, and with many
of the prebends, was the appointment of a farmer,
who might be one of the canons. The farmer
collected the chapter's share of the tithes and held
the rectory lands in return for an annual rent and
the duty of keeping the church and rectory buildings
in repair. The chapter ordained a vicarage in many
of the prebends and appropriated parishes and gave
the vicar an income independent of the farm; (fn. 145) the
farmer was, however, often the vicar himself. Where
there was no vicar, it was usual for the farmer to
appoint a chaplain. Included in the statutes of
Bishop Meuland were several regulations about the
granting of farms. Whoever held a farm, whether a
canon or not, was to have a five-year lease only.
This could be renewed by five-year terms to a limit
of 20 years, but no lease was to be renewed at a loss.
The lease was to be withdrawn if the farmer did not
pay his rent promptly, and the farmer was to keep
the buildings in proper repair. No farmer was to
have jurisdiction of any sort. (fn. 146) These regulations
were probably the result of papal action: in about
the 1280s the Dean of Salisbury was ordered to
investigate allegations that the Lichfield chapter had
been leasing its property, under pressure and at
serious loss, to various clerks and laymen for life or
for long terms, or even in fee farm. (fn. 147)
The Peak parishes provide an example of one of
these long leases. In the earlier 13th century the
chapter leased to Robert of Lexington, the judge and
a prebendary of Southwell (Notts.), the churches of
Bakewell and Hope, with all their appurtenances
except the chapel of Tideswell, for life at a rent of
125 marks. (fn. 148) Subsequently the lease was transferred
to Robert's brother, Henry, who surrendered it
when he became Bishop of Lincoln in 1254. (fn. 149) The
chapter evidently continued the policy of farming
out Bakewell and Hope; (fn. 150) in Tideswell, however, it
seems to have employed a proctor to collect its
revenues. (fn. 151)
The Peak parishes were the cause of almost
continuous litigation during the 13th century. In
1113 William Peverel, an illegitimate son of the
Conqueror, had given to the newly founded priory
of Lenton (Notts.) two-thirds of the tithes of
various lordships including Bakewell and Tideswell,
two-thirds of the tithes of pasture in the lordship of
the Peak, and various other tithes. Under Henry II
the Peverel estates escheated and were given to the
Count of Mortain; the churches of Bakewell, Hope,
and Tideswell had passed into the hands of the
chapter by the early 1220s. (fn. 152) The subsequent
disputes centred on three issues: the extent of the
lordship of William Peverel, whether he had the
right to grant tithes of land not under cultivation in
his lifetime, and how far the charters of the Count of
Mortain overrode those of William Peverel. (fn. 153) By the
1220s there was already a 'long-standing controversy' between the chapter and the priory about the
tithes of Bakewell. A composition was then made by
which the priory was to have two-thirds of the tithes
from land then or afterwards cultivated within the
former demesne of William Peverel and two-thirds
of the tithes of lead; the remaining third of both
tithes was to go to the dean and chapter. (fn. 154)
There were occasional disagreements after this
settlement, (fn. 155) and in 1250 a major dispute broke out
again. In that year the chapter complained that the
monks of Lenton had seized its tithes of wool and
lambs in Tideswell, and the following year it
ordered the sheep to be folded in the church for
safety. The monks broke into the church and took
away some of the lambs by force; during the fight
some of the chapter's servants were wounded and
the church was polluted with blood. (fn. 156) The chapter
appealed to the Pope, and with the help of two papal
commissioners an agreement was reached in 1253.
The priory was to return what had been wrongly
taken and to pay the chapter 100 marks in four halfyearly instalments to cover damages and expenses.
The chapter was to have all the tithes in Tideswell,
except two-thirds of the tithe on lead and the tithes
of the stud-farm and chase in the parish. The former
agreement on tithes in Bakewell and Hope was to
stand, but the chapter was to give the priory 14
marks of its yearly share of these tithes, and the
priory was to receive in future two-thirds of the
tithes on newly-cultivated land. (fn. 157)
In the 1270s the chapter was complaining that
this agreement was very disadvantageous to it and
petitioned the Pope to cancel it. (fn. 158) In 1278 a band of
35 men led by a Lichfield canon, William Wymondham, was accused of seizing the tithes of the priory
stored at Bakewell and of raiding the prior's house
at Haddon; Wymondham and one of the Bakewell
chaplains were seized by the Sheriff of Nottinghamshire and imprisoned for a while. (fn. 159) In 1280 Anthony
Bek and his brother Thomas, both canons of
Lichfield, negotiated a new agreement. Under the
terms of this the arrangement of 1253 was confirmed,
the priory was to pay 75 marks owing to the chapter
and an additional sum of 280 marks, and was also to
give to Lichfield half the advowson of Handsworth
church. (fn. 160) This agreement remained in force for the
rest of the Middle Ages, although the division of
tithes on newly-cultivated land occasionally caused
fresh disputes. (fn. 161)
During the 13th century the chapter was also
involved in years of litigation with Halesowen
Abbey (Worcs.) over the right of presentation to the
church of Harborne (fn. 162) and with the collegiate church
of Penkridge over the church of Cannock. (fn. 163)
Much of the chapter's income was made up of
annual pensions from churches which had been
appropriated to religious houses. Before the bishop
could allow any church to be appropriated, the
permission of the Lichfield and Coventry chapters
had to be obtained; the price of this permission was
often a pension to both chapters. The earliest
example of the acquisition of a pension by the chapter
is in the 1170s when the chapter challenged the
appropriation of the church of Shenstone to Osney
Abbey and was awarded a pension of 10s. a year
from the church. (fn. 164) Most of the chapter's pensions,
however, were acquired in the 13th century: £10
from Dunchurch (Warws.) in 1229, (fn. 165) £6 13s. 4d.
from Abbots Bromley a few years later, (fn. 166) and £10
from Leamington Hastings (Warws.) in 1232. (fn. 167)
Three other pensions were to cause much litigation
in the 14th century: a grant by the bishop in 1231 of
25s., raised to 24 marks in 1248, from the rich church
of Winwick (Lancs.) to supplement the 'inadequate
resources' of the common fund; (fn. 168) a pension acquired
in 1248 from the church of Southam (Warws.) which
was not appropriated but whose rector was under
obligation to pay £20 a year; (fn. 169) and 20 marks from
Aston (Warws.) granted in 1253. (fn. 170) Three more
pensions were acquired in the 13th century: 10 marks
from Mayfield by 1255, (fn. 171) 10 marks from Stowe-byChartley in 1278 to augment the common fund, (fn. 172)
and £2 from Alspath (Warws.) by 1291. (fn. 173)
The growing power and influence of the Lichfield
chapter is shown most clearly by its successful
assertion of its right to a share in the election of the
bishop. (fn. 174) Its long feud with the Coventry chapter
centred on the status of the Lichfield chapter after
the see was transferred first to Chester and then to
Coventry. Lichfield did not claim the sole right of
election but only an equal voice with Coventry; the
monks of Coventry denied that the canons had the
right to any representation at all. The first evidence
of a dispute occurs in 1149, when Walter Durdent
became bishop. It continued until 1228 when the
canons' persistence was finally rewarded. Gregory
IX then decreed that all future elections should be
made jointly by Lichfield and Coventry — the first
to take place at Coventry with both chapters sitting
together, the next at Lichfield, and so on alternately.
The Prior of Coventry was to have the first vote in
each election. This judgement was a notable victory
for Lichfield, since at the beginning of the struggle
it seemed to have little chance against the richer
and more influential Coventry. A further refinement was added in 1255 when it was agreed that at
future elections the two chapters should be reckoned
equal in number, even though one might in fact
be more numerous than the other.
During most of the 13th century the chapter's
relations with the bishop were cordial. No prebend
was attached to the bishopric, so that the bishop was
not a regular member of the chapter. He had the
right, however, of choosing and instituting the
canons and of making statutes in conjunction with
the chapter. (fn. 175) He was also occasionally called in to
settle a dispute: in 1264 he mediated between the
chapter and the priory of St. Thomas near Stafford
in a controversy over tithes, (fn. 176) and in 1279 he tried
to settle a quarrel between the chapter and one of
the canons. (fn. 177) The chapter was not, however, prepared to allow the bishop the right of visitation,
either of the chapter itself or of its prebends and
common fund churches. Coventry Priory finally
acknowledged the bishop's right of visitation in
1283 after a dispute lasting 50 years. (fn. 178) There may
have been a similar attempt to visit the Lichfield
chapter during this period. In the 1240s the chapter
was trying to find out whether any of the other
secular cathedrals were visited by their bishops, (fn. 179)
and the agreement about visitation between the
Bishop of Lincoln and his dean and chapter in 1261
was entered in Lichfield's Great Register. (fn. 180) The
problem of visitation did not, however, come to a
head until the 14th century. No resistance was
shown to the occasional visitations of the Archbishop
of Canterbury; when Archbishop Pecham fulminated in 1280 against the provision made by the
chapter for the spiritual care of Bakewell, the
chapter simply ignored his ordinance as illegal. One
of the conditions of a compact made with the
parishioners of Bakewell in 1315 was that Pecham's
ordinance should be declared void. (fn. 181) The only
serious dispute between the bishop and the chapter
during the 13th century concerned the extent of the
bishop's jurisdiction over the canons' tenants in the
city of Lichfield, and this was settled amicably by
arbitration in 1252. (fn. 182)
The 13th century saw the development of bodies
of lesser clergy in the cathedral. Vicars were first
mentioned in the statutes of Hugh de Nonant when
non-residence of canons was already becoming a
problem. (fn. 183) Bishop Meuland's statute in the 1290s
that every canon, whether resident or not, was to
appoint a vicar merely enforced a consuetudinem
diutius usitatam; (fn. 184) in the 1240s it was laid down that
any canon who had no vicar was to pay the
equivalent of a vicar's salary to the chapter. (fn. 185) The
first statutes for the vicars were made in 1241. (fn. 186) All
the vicars were to be continuously resident in
Lichfield and were not to be absent from services
on pain of expulsion; one of them was to be
appointed to note the absences and defects of his
fellows. Five at least were to be priests; these were
the vicars of the five canons who had the traditional
duty of ministering at the high altar. (fn. 187) Those with
duties at the high altar were to be entered on the
weekly table of services and were to receive a fee of
6d. from the hebdomadary. In addition to the vicars
who were priests there were a number of secular
clerks, known as 'clerk vikars', whose duties were to
attend mass sine murmure et chachinno and to sing
anthems at services with cantationibus dulcibus, sine
organis on feast days. (fn. 188) These vicars were to be paid a
salary of at least 20s. a year by their canons and were,
according to custom, to be paid quarterly; vicars
who were priests were to be paid higher salaries. (fn. 189)
In addition the vicars received daily commons,
evidently 1d. a day, (fn. 190) from the chapter; their
commons were paid twice a day, apparently
according to attendance at services. (fn. 191)
Each new vicar was presented to the dean by his
canon and tested in reading and singing by the
precentor; in 1294 it was necessary to order that
new vicars should not be forced to make gifts to the
other vicars. (fn. 192) There is little evidence that the vicars
led an organized common life before the 14th
century; the chapter, however, is said to have
assigned them a house in the 1240s, (fn. 193) and under
Bishop Meuland a house at Stowe was set apart for
old and infirm vicars. (fn. 194) The subchanter, one of the
two leading vicars, had a house of his own in the city
during the 13th century. (fn. 195) The subchanter and the
other leading vicar, the sacrist, are both mentioned
in the earliest statutes of the cathedral. The subchanter was the precentor's deputy and in his
absence had the task of arranging all cathedral
services, as well as the special duty, peculiar to
Lichfield among English cathedrals, of arranging
the 'Representations' at major feasts. (fn. 196) The sacrist
was the treasurer's deputy and was responsible for
the physical property of the church and for maintaining the supply of candles, bread, and wine for
services; in return he was entitled to some of the
candles used in various services. (fn. 197)
From the earlier 13th century the vicars owned
and probably managed their own property. In the
time of Bishop Stavensby they were given control
of the lands attached to the martiloge; (fn. 198) this was the
place, probably a small chapel off the south aisle of
the choir, (fn. 199) where the relics of St. Chad and other
saints were kept. The martiloge had its own
property from at least the beginning of the 13th
century when many small grants of lands and rents
were made to it. (fn. 200) When this property was placed in
the charge of the vicars it was kept separate from
their other property and managed by vicars called
keepers of the martiloge. (fn. 201) Grants of property, mainly
burgages in Lichfield, were also made to the vicars,
usually with the condition that they should keep the
obit of the donor. (fn. 202) The vicars acquired at least one
pension: £5 a year was allotted to them from the
church of Bolton (Lancs.) as part of the arrangements made in 1253 by Bishop Weseham for the
establishment of the new prebend of Bolton. (fn. 203) In
addition the sacrist was, by the end of the century,
receiving pensions from Berrington (Salop.), Youlgreave (Derb.), and Wigan (Lancs.). (fn. 204) The vicars
who ministered at the mass of the Virgin in the
cathedral were granted a pension of £2 by Dale
Abbey (Derb.) in 1237, (fn. 205) acquired a pension of £1
from the church of Walsall in 1248, (fn. 206) and benefited
from a further endowment when the chantry of
Peter of Radnor was established in 1277. (fn. 207)
Many bishops and canons left lands in trust to
provide payments for the vicars who observed their
obits: for example, in 1208 Bishop Muschamp left
one mark a year to the vicars who kept his obit, (fn. 208)
and in 1249 Dean Mancetter arranged with Coventry
Priory that it should pay 40s. to the vicars for his
obit from lands bought with money given by him. (fn. 209)
In Bishop Pattishall's statutes the keepers of the
martiloge were ordered to record the attendances of
the vicars at obits so that the money could go to
those who had fulfilled their duty. (fn. 210)
During the 13th century at least thirteen chantries
were founded in the cathedral, and all but Roger
Weseham's chantry at Stowe (fn. 211) were attached to one
of the ten lesser altars around the high altar. (fn. 212) These
chantries were endowed by their founders either
directly with lands and rents or by giving enough
money to a religious house to buy lands to produce
a yearly sum to support the chantry; the endowment
had to be enough to provide a salary for a priest
and to buy candles for the altar. Examples of the
former sort of endowment were the chantry of
Canon Hugh de Sotesby at the altar of St. Radegund,
founded in 1242, (fn. 213) and that of Canon Reynold de
Cleydon established at the altar of St. Katherine a
few years later. (fn. 214) On the other hand the chantry of
Bishop Pattishall, founded in 1254 at the altar of
St. Stephen, (fn. 215) and that of Dean Mancetter, founded
in the same year at the altar of St. Peter, (fn. 216) were both
supported by payments from Kenilworth Priory
(Warws.). During the 13th century most of the
chaplains who ministered at the chantries were
vicars; it is only at the end of the century that a
separate body of chantry chaplains begins to
emerge. (fn. 217) Three vicars had chantries permanently
attached to their stalls: the subchanter had that of
Bishop Pattishall, (fn. 218) the sacrist that of Canon Ralph
of Chaddesden, (fn. 219) and the vicar of the Archdeacon
of Chester that of Canon Thomas de Bradford. (fn. 220)
There were also two chantries for the souls of the
kings of England; they were attached to the altar
of St. John and were in the charge of the prebendaries of Dernford and Ufton, though probably
held by their vicars. (fn. 221)
Of the other body of cathedral personnel, the
choristers, little is known for this period. From 1265
there seem to have been six of them, chosen by the
bishop; they were then given a pension of 10 marks
from the church of Wigan, to be collected for them
by the sacrist. (fn. 222) By statute their musical education
was in the hands of the precentor, whose deputy,
the subchanter, supervised the song schoolmaster. (fn. 223)
A Master Peter occurs in 1272; variously called
Rector and Master of the Scholars of Lichfield, (fn. 224)
he probably taught the boys grammar under the
general direction of the chancellor.
The cathedral itself was much rebuilt during the
13th century, and the work done then and in the
following century shaped the plan of the building
as it is today. It is, however, difficult to date exactly
the different stages of construction. There are no
surviving medieval fabric accounts, and the chapter
act books, which do not begin until the early 14th
century, contain comparatively little information
concerning the fabric. Although stylistic evidence
supplements what can be gleaned from documentary
sources, even this is sometimes difficult to assess.
The medieval cathedral was built of a soft sandstone
which weathers badly, and the extensive rebuilding
and restoration which was necessary in the 17th,
18th, and 19th centuries has also to some extent
hampered investigation.
The task of rebuilding the choir and the tower
crossing was probably finished by 1208. (fn. 225) There is
then no further evidence of work on the cathedral
until 1221, when the king gave the chapter 20 oaks
from Cannock Forest; these, it was stated, were to
be used for rafters and timber for the church, (fn. 226) and
the gift may indicate that the rebuilding of the
transepts, the next stage of the reconstruction, was
already under way. (fn. 227) Building operations must have
been almost continuous during the deanery of
William of Mancetter (1222-54). The major work
was initially on the transepts. The king aided it
with gifts of wood and stone from Cannock Forest:
in 1231 he gave timber from Ogley Hay for ladders (fn. 228)
and in 1235 and 1238 permission to use a quarry in
Hopwas Hay which had already provided stone for
the cathedral. (fn. 229) At least one of the transepts was
evidently completed by the early 1240s: Henry III,
who was at Lichfield in 1235, 1237, and 1241, (fn. 230)
admired the high wooden roof of 'the new work at
Lichfield', carved and painted to resemble stonework, and in 1243 ordered the construction of a
similar roof for the royal chapel at Windsor. (fn. 231)
The agreement with Coventry on joint elections
made it necessary for Lichfield to have a chapterhouse large enough to accommodate both chapters.
A chapter-house is mentioned in the statutes of
Bishops Nonant and Pattishall, and it has been
suggested that it stood in the angle between the
north transept and the nave. (fn. 232) The new chapterhouse, in the angle between the north transept and
the choir, was built in the 1240s; (fn. 233) in 1244 the
chapter was granted 40 oaks from the bishop's woods
ad operationem ecclesie, presumably for this purpose. (fn. 234) It resembles the chapter-house at Lincoln
but is of two storeys, of which the lower was used as
a chapter-house and the upper as the chapter's
treasury and library. The design, an elongated
octagon with a ten-celled roof vaulted from a
central pillar, is unusual; it is possible that it was
originally planned to have the entrance in the north
transept but that this scheme was abandoned to
avoid interfering with St. Stephen's altar and the
grave of Bishop Pattishall. Instead a door was cut
through the north wall of the choir aisle, and a
vestibule built to the entrance of the chapter-house
in the west face of the octagon. (fn. 235) The vestibule, with
its row of canopied stalls along the west wall,
remains one of the outstanding features of the
cathedral.
Another work dating from Mancetter's deanery
was the chapel, dedicated to St. Peter, for his
chantry; this was said in 1254 to be 'attached to the
church on the south side' and has been identified
as the room now used as the consistory court. (fn. 236)
Above it was a chapel, later known as the Chapel of
St. Chad's Head, which was probably used as the
martiloge. (fn. 237)
The rebuilding of the nave dates from the
episcopate of Roger Meuland (1257-95), and
features of the design reflect Henry III's new work
at Westminster Abbey. (fn. 238) Building was evidently in
progress by 1270, when the king granted the chapter
timber from Kinver Forest for the cathedral fabric,
and the eight bays were probably finished about
1285. (fn. 239) Work on a new west front began shortly
afterwards. It was built in at least three stages, of
which only the lowest is 13th-century. This was
completed during the 1290s, possibly by about 1295;
work on the west front may then have ceased for a
few years, for the next stage shows the hand of a
new architect. (fn. 240)
Little is known about how these works were
carried out or how they were financed. The
cathedral's master mason in the 1230s and 1240s was
probably Thomas the mason, (fn. 241) who was succeeded
in the 1250s and 1260s by his son, William the
mason (or William fitz Thomas). (fn. 242) In the 1270s a
Thomas Wallace was variously described as 'Mason
of the Church of Lichfield' and 'Master of the
Work in the Mother Church of Lichfield'. (fn. 243) Building
material was obtained locally. In addition to the
gifts of timber and quarrying rights already mentioned the chapter had its own sources of supply.
Some stone no doubt came from around the
cathedral itself. Also, during the deanery of Ralph
of Sempringham (1254-80), the chapter bought the
right to dig for sand in a piece of ground on the
Longdon road; (fn. 244) both this transaction and the purchase at an unknown date of a quarry at 'Hoppelee' (fn. 245)
may be connected with the rebuilding of the nave.
Money for the cathedral buildings went into a
separate fabric fund which had its own keepers,
the keepers of the fabric; they first occur in 1272, (fn. 246)
and the first mentioned by name are two vicars in
1283. (fn. 247) The only known sources of income for the
fabric fund in the 13th century are a pension of £3
paid by Halesowen Abbey from its appropriated
church of Walsall (fn. 248) and a few rent-charges. (fn. 249) The
congregations of the churches of the diocese
contributed to the support of the fabric by the
payment of Pentecostals, known as Chad-farthings
and levied at the rate of a farthing a year from each
household, (fn. 250) and by the alms which were collected
annually for the fabric fund by the questores of the
brotherhood of St. Chad. (fn. 251) The cost of rebuilding
the cathedral could obviously not have been met
from these sources alone, and the chapter must
have relied largely on unrecorded gifts and legacies.
An undated survey of the Close, (fn. 252) written before
it was surrounded by a stone wall, describes it as
enclosed by banks and ditches; the moat, which
drew its water from the bishop's fish-pool, was
probably the work of Roger de Clinton. (fn. 253) In 1299
licence was granted for the building of a crenellated
stone wall round the Close. (fn. 254) In the north-west
corner of the Close was the site of the bishop's
palace, 320 feet long and 160 feet wide. Next to it
was the dean's locus exactly half the size, and the
canons each had a portion half the size of the dean's.
In all there were 26 houses in the Close. (fn. 255) The
canonical houses in the Close were assigned by the
bishop to canons when they first came into residence,
and they were then responsible for keeping them in
repair. (fn. 256) Each canon had authority over his own
household, and every member of a canonical
household was entitled to be buried in the Close
cemetery. (fn. 257) At some time before 1280 the Close had
been provided with a piped water-supply from
Maple Hayes, two miles west of the city: in that
year the Archdeacon of Chester, who lived outside
the Close, (fn. 258) was given permission to pipe water for
his own use from the chapter's 'great conduit'
which passed through his land. (fn. 259)
The Fourteenth Century
The systematic compilation of capitular records of
various kinds began in the early years of the 14th
century. The man chiefly responsible for this seems
to have been Walter of Leicester, a former sacrist;
he was specially appointed to take charge of the
treasury, the treasurership being held at the time
by an absentee. (fn. 260) Under him an active scriptorium
was built up composed of professional scriveners
and vicars with literary and legal ability. (fn. 261) One of
these vicars, Alan of Ashbourne, wrote the Lichfield
Chronicle; he began work in 1323 and continued
until his death in 1334. By 1345 his chronicle was on
display in the choir as one of the treasures of the
cathedral with the Anglo-Saxon St. Chad's Gospels,
which had belonged to the cathedral from at least
the 10th century. (fn. 262) Another vicar, John of Aston,
also wrote a chronicle, of which only fragments
survive in a 16th-century copy. (fn. 263)
Even more important for the history of the
cathedral was the compilation, between 1317 and
1328, of the Magnum Registrum Album, an invaluable collection of transcripts of documents
bearing on the cathedral's privileges and property. (fn. 264)
The Great Register was followed by at least two
other minor registers: a Parvum Registrum, which
has been lost, and a Registrum Tercium, which is a
list of pensions belonging to the cathedral and a
cartulary of the Peak parishes. (fn. 265) In addition the
chapter acts began to be recorded in a permanent
form; the first surviving entry in the earliest act
book is dated 22 April 1321. (fn. 266)
Another aspect of this activity was the assembling
of a library at Lichfield. When the new chapterhouse was completed it was decided to use the room
above it as a library as well as a treasury, and about
1260 the chapter acquired copies of the Burton and
Chester Annals for the new library. (fn. 267) Alan of
Ashbourne must have been able to draw upon an
extensive collection when compiling his chronicle,
since he uses not only the records of the cathedral
itself but also other historical works, such as the
chronicles of William of Malmesbury. (fn. 268)
As with most of the other English secular cathedrals a notable feature of the Lichfield chapter in the
14th century was the non-residence of the
dignitaries. (fn. 269) Between 1320 and 1390 the deans spent
less than 10 years in Lichfield; it was only with the
election of Thomas Stretton in 1390 that the dean
became once more permanently resident. The
precentor was also non-resident for much of the
century; holders of the office included a Frenchman,
three Italians, and a clerk of the king's pantry. The
14th-century chancellors were more often resident
than other dignitaries, and it was only after 1364
that the office was held by non-residents. Nearly
all the treasurers, however, were non-resident; two
of them, Cardinal Gaucelin Johannis Deuza (13171348) and Hugh Pelegrini (1348-70), were distinguished papal officials.
The main reason for the non-residence of the
dignitaries was the growth of papal provisions,
which brought about a great change in the personnel
of the chapter as a whole. (fn. 270) Ninety-four, or about a
third, of the 14th-century canons were provided by
the Pope. The number of provisions reached its
height in the middle of the century: of 98 canons
installed under Bishop Northburgh (1321-58) 47
were provided, while of 47 installed between 1385
and 1400 only 6 were provided. In the first half of
the century most of the provisions were direct,
resulting mainly from the Pope's appointment of
members of the chapter to other benefices. The first
such provision was to the richest prebend in the
cathedral, that attached to the treasurership, which
became vacant in 1316. Usually provisors had little
trouble in obtaining possession of their prebends,
but there were two long-drawn-out suits when the
king and the Pope both claimed the right to collate
to the prebends of Colwich and Tervin; in the
former the Pope upheld his right of provision, while
the latter case established the important principle
that if a canon died at the papal court during a
vacancy of the see the king had the right to present
to his prebend. In the second half of the century the
number of direct provisions decreased and the
number of provisions by expectation rose. Under
the system of expectations a clerk was granted a
canonry in the cathedral and was admitted into the
chapter, but without income or rights; he then
waited until he was granted a vacant prebend. The
records of expectations are incomplete, but it seems
that during the century about 50 clerks obtained
their Lichfield prebends by expectation, while at
least 75 held expectancies but never obtained
prebends; few of those obtaining expectations were
foreigners. The statutes of 1351 and 1353 had little
effect, although they did cause some provisions to be
challenged. The 1390 legislation, however, had an
instant effect; the last admission by expectation was
in 1389 and the last by direct provision in 1391.
As a result of papal provisions the 14th-century
non-resident chapter was unusually distinguished. (fn. 271)
There were 27 foreign canons, most of them
members of the papal court or members of prominent French or Italian families with papal connexions. Among them were eight cardinals, notably
John XXII's relative Cardinal Gaucelin Johannis
Deuza, a leading cardinal for 30 years, and Cardinal
John Gaetani de Urbe who was one of the principal
papal agents in the struggle against the Emperor
Henry VII and the antipope. In the second half of
the century there were the Cardinals Francis de
Teobaldeschi and Pileus de Prata, the latter being
largely responsible for bringing about the Agreement of Bruges in 1375 between the Pope and
Edward III.
The composition of the rest of the non-resident
chapter followed the usual pattern. Leading royal
servants, such as William of Wykeham, Richard of
Bury, and William Ayermine, and great numbers of
household and chancery clerks were given prebends
by royal presentation. There were also a number of
clerks of the nobility, such as John de Kynardessey,
the clerk of Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, who tried
to hide his master's treasure in Tutbury Priory before
Boroughbridge. (fn. 272) There were several clerks whose
careers were solely ecclesiastical; most of these were
in the service of the bishops of Lichfield. Some of
the non-resident canons had successful careers at
Oxford or Cambridge, such as Richard Tonworth,
Principal of Hart Hall and Black Hall, and William
of Gotham, Master of Michaelhouse and Chancellor
of Cambridge.
The resident chapter was composed mainly of
men who had retired to Lichfield after active careers
in the service of the Crown or the Church or at the
universities. Hugh of Hopwas had been in the service
of the Black Prince before coming to Lichfield where
he was a leading member of the chapter for some 30
years until his death in or before 1384. Richard de
Birmingham, official of Bishop Stretton, was an
effective member of the chapter from 1366 to 1386,
and John of Merton, a Fellow of University (later
Clare) Hall, Cambridge, and an advocate in the
Court of Arches, did much legal business for the
chapter in the 1370s. There was also a group of men
who spent short periods of their lives as resident
canons at Lichfield before being given bishoprics or
deaneries; among them were John Sheppey, from a
great family of Coventry wool merchants and a
noted lawyer and diplomat, Stephen Segrave, a civil
servant and leading churchman, and Edmund
Stafford, Keeper of the Privy Seal and Chancellor
of England. The most famous resident canon during
the 14th century was undoubtedly Richard FitzRalph, who was provided to the deanery by the Pope
in 1336 and held it until he became Archbishop of
Armagh in 1346. One of the most important
theological writers of the century, he spent about
three years in residence at Lichfield, and there
survive twenty sermons which he preached at the
cathedral and in the neighbouring parishes. (fn. 273)
The survival of some accounts from the 1290s and
the beginning of the act books make it possible to
discover the size of the resident chapter for the first
time. Some fragments of commons rolls for the 1290s
show an average of six canons in residence during
each quarter, usually the four dignitaries in continual
residence joined by two or three other canons for one
or more quarters. (fn. 274) The only communars' account
for the 14th century—in fact the only more or less
complete medieval account roll of the chapter to
survive — is for the year Michaelmas 1325 to
Michaelmas 1326 and shows that the size of the
resident chapter had increased considerably. (fn. 275)
There were then ten or eleven canons resident in
each quarter, six of them resident the whole year
and the rest resident for one or more quarters. This
account shows quite clearly that the attempt to
impose quarterly residence had broken down
altogether and that more canons wished to reside the
whole year. There was already considerable concern
about the growing number of residents, and in 1301
measures had been taken to restrict it. (fn. 276) Canons were
to give at least 40 days' notice of their intention to
take up residence, so that the chapter could discuss
their admission. No canon was to be allowed to take
up residence unless he was prepared to spend at least
£40 a year of his own money at Lichfield, 'lest, like
a drone among bees or like a thief entering upon the
labours of others, he should seem to eat the honey
from which those labouring day and night in the
vineyard of the Lord ought to be sustained and
should so destroy the apiary'. (fn. 277) This ordinance seems
to have resulted in the imposition of a fee of £40 on
new canons on their first beginning residence. (fn. 278) In
1396 regulations were made laying down that new
canons were to pay 100 marks to the dean for
cathedral use on beginning residence and that no
canon was to be admitted who was not prepared to
spend 100 marks a year. (fn. 279)
The reason for these measures seems to have been
the chapter's fear that unless new residentiaries had
an adequate private income they would be unable
to meet the expenses of the hospitality to which they
were obliged by statute without making impossible
demands on the common fund. This anxiety may
have been caused by the general rise in prices during
the century and by the reduction in the size of each
canon's share in the yearly surplus caused by the
rise in the number of residentiaries. Certainly the
surviving communars' account shows that very
small sums were being distributed at the annual
division of the year's surplus: in 1327 there was a
£40 surplus, and a canon residing the whole year
received only 73s. (fn. 280) The rising cost of residence was
a problem common to all the secular cathedrals at
this time and was met by them in different ways; (fn. 281)
the entrance qualifications imposed at Lichfield seem
to have been successful in halting the increase in the
number of residentiaries which remained at an
average of 10 for the rest of the century. (fn. 282)
As well as restricting the number of residents the
chapter was concerned to collect the statutory fees
from non-resident canons. (fn. 283) In 1322 it was decided
to levy contributions for non-residence for the last
five years and canons in arrears were to have their
goods sequestrated. At a general meeting of the
chapter in 1325 it was again decided to collect
non-residence fees with the further provision that
in future the statute about non-residence was to be
read to the chapter yearly so that no one could plead
ignorance. In the year 1325-6 'contributions' from
non-residents amounted to almost £25. (fn. 284) There was
a further effort to collect arrears in 1357 when it
was decided that those who disregarded sequestration orders should be excommunicated, and in
1368 the chapter ordered that expenses incurred in
levying the fees should be met from the common
fund. At the same time the vicars were warned that
if they did anything to impede the collection of the
fees they would be deprived of their dinners in the
canons' houses. In 1369 the non-residents petitioned
against the fees, and there were no more concerted
efforts to levy them, although occasional sequestration orders were still issued by the chapter.
Financial affairs too are illuminated by the
beginning of chapter records. In the early part of
the century a vicar and the chapter clerk were
usually put in charge of the common fund under
the supervision of the chancellor, (fn. 285) but later in the
century there was only one communar, a canon. (fn. 286)
The communars' duties included collecting the
revenues of the chapter—tithes, rents, pensions,
non-residence fees—and paying the salaries of
cathedral officials and the expenses of such people as
messengers and proctors employed on chapter
business. They also distributed commons to the
canons and vicars, noting absences and making
small payments to canons who came into residence
for only one or two days during general chapters. (fn. 287)
They were also responsible for collecting arrears of
revenue and arranging for their division among
resident canons. (fn. 288) In 1325-6 the total income of the
chapter was £429; of this £104 6s. went to pay
commons, £98 to pay arrears of commons, and £127
to pay salaries and other expenses. (fn. 289) At some time
during the century it was decided to set aside a sum
of money in what was called the baga de Whalley,
which was put in a cista gratiae with four keys held
by four elected vicars. If a communar did not have
enough money to pay the commons of the canons
and vicars he could borrow from the deposited
money, provided he repaid the sum during his term
of office; if the money was ever alienated the bishop
was given authority to raise £20 for the baga from
three churches of the common fund. (fn. 290)
The finances of the chapter must have been
embarrassed by certain transactions with Edward II
and Edward III. In 1321 Bishop Langton left the
chapter 904 marks to complete the Lady Chapel; in
July 1322 Edward II seized this money and extorted
a further £257 19s. 11d. from the chapter for the
expenses of his Scottish campaign. He undertook to
repay the full sum of £860 13s. 3d. from the farms
of the towns of Shrewsbury, Nottingham, Oxford,
and Bridgnorth, (fn. 291) but in 1332 the chapter claimed
that £65 was still unpaid. (fn. 292) In addition the chapter
made a loan of £100 to Edward III, which it was
still trying to recover in 1388. (fn. 293) In 1390 it had to
pawn a chalice to the vicars to raise £20 to lend to
Sir Walter Bagot who was going on crusade to
'Lettow' (Lithuania) with Henry, Earl of Derby
(later Henry IV). (fn. 294) Apart from these financial
transactions the chapter was little affected by
politics. The disturbances of 1321 and 1322 caused
alarm, and the chapter made elaborate plans to
guard the Close. (fn. 295) The Close was defended again in
1329 when two prominent local knights, Sir Ralph
Bassett and Sir Robert Mauvesyn, moved in. (fn. 296)
There were several royal visits to Lichfield: in 1323
the king stayed for one night in the bishop's palace
and the queen in the dean's house, while Richard II
visited Lichfield in 1386, 1397, and 1398 and as a
prisoner in 1399. (fn. 297)
There were few constitutional developments in
the chapter during the century. The statutes of
Bishop Langton, promulgated in 1300, (fn. 298) were mainly
concerned to curb the powers of the dean. (fn. 299) He was
to give proper notice of his visitations, and it was
emphasized that jurisdiction in the prebends and
churches of the common fund belonged to the dean
and chapter, not to the dean alone; nor had the dean
alone authority to dismiss a vicar. (fn. 300) Only the treasurer
was to have a key to the treasury, and the dean was
not to meddle in his affairs or those of the other
dignitaries. (fn. 301) When the dean was not in residence it
was usual for him to appoint one or more locum
tenentes; in 1365, however, the chapter decided that
it was against the statutes to have such a person and
after diversis allegationibus et responsionibus chose
instead a president of the chapter. (fn. 302) In 1329 it was
ordered that the common seal of the chapter was to
be used only if there were two canons present. (fn. 303) In
1393 there was some concern about the secrecy of
chapter meetings and the dean, with the authority
of the whole chapter, solemnly warned each canon
not to reveal the proceedings of the chapter. (fn. 304) Apart
from financial business and the regulation of chapter
property, meetings were concerned mainly with
disciplining vicars and settling disputes between the
chapter and individual canons. (fn. 305) In the 1340s there
was some concern because the citizens of Lichfield
were claiming a right of way through the Close, and
the chapter had to obtain letters patent from Edward
III restricting transit to members of the church and
their servants. (fn. 306) The chapter was also obliged by
statute to see that the water supply was properly
regulated and the aqueduct inspected. (fn. 307)
One of the chapter's regular concerns was to see
that the priests who served the three city churches
received weekly instructions from the subchanter
about services. (fn. 308) Bishop Langton's statutes contain
regulations about the celebration of major feasts, (fn. 309)
but there is little new information in the 14th
century about the Use of Lichfield. In 1311 the dean
and chapter of the collegiate church of Upholland
(Lancs.) were ordered by the bishop to follow as far
as possible the Lichfield Use in divine service; (fn. 310)
but when a chantry was founded in the prebendal
church of Colwich in 1341 its breviary was ordered
to be that of the Use of Salisbury. (fn. 311) In 1398 the
Convocation of Canterbury ordered that the feast
of St. Chad should be observed throughout the
province and thus it came to be included in the
Salisbury Use. According to the Salisbury breviary
the canonical hours on that day were to be according
to the Use of Lichfield. (fn. 312)
The chapter acquired only two more churches for
its common fund during the 14th century. Chebsey,
together with the tithes of Slindon, a township in
Eccleshall, was in the hands of the chapter by
1321. (fn. 313) The second appropriation, that of Worfield
(Salop.), came later in the century. In 1318 Bishop
Langton acquired the advowson from Edward II in
exchange for the manor of Greenford (Mdx.)
which Langton had intended to use to found a
chantry for the soul of Edward I. (fn. 314) In 1371, however, Edward III accused Langton's successors of
fraudulently retaining the advowson. (fn. 315) In 1394
Bishop Scrope granted the church to the chapter,
after founding a chantry from its revenues. (fn. 316) The
cost of the appropriation to the chapter was 200
marks, which was found by a levy of one-tenth of the
value of every prebend for two years and the assignment of part of a new canon's entrance fee. (fn. 317)
All the churches of the common fund, with the
exception of those of the Peak parishes, were farmed
out during the century. (fn. 318) There was a great difference in their value: the highest farm was that of
Chebsey which reached £40 at the end of the
century, and the lowest that of Rugeley, farmed for
10 marks. There was a general tendency for the
value of the churches to fall between 1291 and 1535,
but the value of the farms fluctuated only very
slightly during the 14th century. It is probable that
the farming of churches was not very profitable for
it was not unusual for farmers to be in arrears. In
1386 the Vicar of Chebsey said that he could no
longer pay the same farm; the chapter, wishing to
keep up the value of the farm, asked the same rent
but agreed to remit him £2 at the end of each year.
Sometimes it was difficult to find anyone willing to
take on a farm: in 1356 the chapter was trying to
find a farmer for Thornton, and in 1382 it was still
having to arrange the sale of produce and repair of
buildings itself.
Farms were only rarely held by canons, although
Cannock was held for many years by John of
Melbourne, the president of the chapter. Occasionally farms were given to other ministers of the
cathedral: in 1323 two vicars choral were given
Kniveton, and in 1359 the tithes of Harborne were
farmed to the chapter clerk. Farms were more
usually held by the vicar of the church or a local
resident: for example, in the 1320s Arley was farmed
by Thomas de Arley who had been given the farm
at a reduced rate because the chapter thought him
well qualified to look after its woodland there. The
upkeep of the chancel of the church was supposed
to be the responsibility of the farmer, but in many
cases the chapter itself had to undertake repairs: for
example, in 1382 the Vicar of Dilhorne was warned
that the chapter clerk was coming with a carpenter
to repair the chancel and the farmer was asked to
help meet the cost. The parishioners of the chapter's
churches were supposed to provide their own
chalice and missal while the chapter supplied books
and ornaments, and occasional gifts and loans by
the chapter from its own considerable collection of
ornaments, service books, and vestments are
recorded in the act books. (fn. 319)
Individual canons farmed their prebends in the
same way and on the same sort of terms. A roll of
receipts and expenses of the deanery which has
survived for the year 1333-4 gives some idea of how
a canon managed his property. (fn. 320) The dean received
£40 from the farmer of his prebend of Brewood and
Adbaston and various smaller sums from rents of
other property and perquisites such as mortuary
dues. There was obviously some difficulty over the
farm of this prebend as the dean employed messengers to take letters to the farmer and to the Vicar of
Brewood and the Abbot of Lilleshall (Salop.)
'touching the farm of Brewood'; he also sent a
representative to Brewood to inspect defects in the
houses there.
Unlike the other churches of the common fund
those of the Peak parishes were administered
directly by the chapter in the 14th century; this was
a change from its policy in the previous century
when some of the parishes were leased. (fn. 321) The
chapter had a proctor to safeguard its rights to the
Peak, usually a prominent local knight. In the 1350s
the proctor was Sir John Cockayne of Ashbourne;
in 1370 he was succeeded by Sir Godfrey Foljambe,
steward of the honor of Tutbury, (fn. 322) who was followed
in 1376 by Sir Nicholas Stafford, holder of the
manor of Tideswell in the right of his wife. As well
as a proctor the chapter had an agent to do the routine
work and present accounts to it. The mineral tithes
were farmed out: in 1358 Robert de Hethcote of
Tideswell was granted them at 24 marks a year for
ten years. The chapter received a very large income
from the Peak parishes. In 1339, for example, the
tithes of grain were worth £218, mineral tithes £18
10s., and mortuaries £23; the tithes of wool and
lambs, which were accounted for separately, may
have been worth at least £200. The chapter kept a
close watch on the Peak parishes. In 1376 the
chapter clerk, who was taking some vestments to
Bakewell, was ordered to inquire into the value of
lambs and the prospects for the sale of the autumn
harvest; two weeks later two canons were sent to
Bakewell to look for buyers of grain, wool, and
lambs. In 1382 the chapter clerk was again sent to
Bakewell to deal with merchants about the price of
wool. Sometimes the chapter had difficulty in
disposing of the wool. In 1375 it was decided that
the wool unsold by 15 August should be brought to
Lichfield and distributed there; in 1382 and 1383
the wool from Bakewell was stored in the chapterhouse.
During the century the chapter acquired at least
20 new pensions, the price of appropriations to
religious houses. (fn. 323) They ranged from 5 marks from
the church of Condover (Salop.) (fn. 324) to 20d. from the
church of Weston-upon-Trent, (fn. 325) but few of them
were worth more than a mark. Occasionally the
payment of pensions fell into arrears: in 1305 the
chapter started a suit to recover arrears of 140 marks
from the Priory of St. Thomas near Stafford for the
pension from Stowe-by-Chartley, and in 1318 the
officers of Pipewell Priory (Northants.) were excommunicated for being in arrears with their pension
from Dunchurch. (fn. 326) Three large 13th-century
pensions, those of Southam, Winwick, and Aston,
caused the chapter endless trouble and continual
litigation throughout the 14th century, (fn. 327) and there
were also less serious disputes over the pensions
from Wigan and Leamington Hastings. (fn. 328)
The relations of the chapter with the bishop
during this century were determined more by the
personality of the bishops than by any issues of
privilege or authority. With Bishop Langton
(1296-1321), a benefactor munificentissimus to the
cathedral, its relations were very good apart from
a protracted dispute over the visitation of certain
prebends. (fn. 329) In 1302-3, when Langton was suspended by Boniface VIII for suspected adultery,
murder, simony, and pluralism, the chapter wrote
to the Pope in his defence, testifying that he was
devoted to his ministry and had performed notable
services for the cathedral. (fn. 330) After his death the
quarrel between Lichfield and Coventry over the
right of election flared up once more. The election
took place at Coventry, and when the two sides failed
to reach agreement, the monks denied that both
chapters should be counted as equal in numbers and
elected their prior. The canons of Lichfield appealed
to the Pope who meanwhile had provided Roger
Northburgh to the see; the case dragged on at
Avignon for at least twelve years, and the final
decision probably only confirmed the arrangement
which had been worked out in the 13th century. (fn. 331)
The relations of the chapter with Bishop Northburgh (1321-58) were unhappy in every way. Soon
after his consecration he announced his intention of
visiting the chapter, a move which led to a protest
from the dean. (fn. 332) In 1323 the chapter refused to
recognize the bishop's right to excommunicate the
Archdeacon of Chester on the ground that the
disciplining of the chapter was the duty of the
dean. (fn. 333) A few months later the dean publicly abused
the bishop's steward, who had earlier been arraigned
before the chapter for attempting to test the weights
used by some of the canons, 'disgracing him and
railing against the bishop'. (fn. 334) After the appointment
of Dean Segrave to the archbishopric of Armagh in
1324, Northburgh claimed jurisdiction in the
deanery during the vacancy and the chapter
hurriedly inquired into the customs of other secular
cathedrals during vacancies. (fn. 335) The chapter was
united against him, and it was more than once
decided that any canon or minister of the church
prosecuted by the bishop should be defended from
the common fund. In 1329 seven cases were pending
in the Court of Arches between the bishop and the
chapter, and the question of visitation was later
taken to the papal court. (fn. 336) After Northburgh's death
the relations between chapter and bishop were
peaceful, although the question of visitation was
revived in the 1390s. Bishop Scrope attempted to
conduct a visitation in 1390 and announced one in
1396; after protests from the chapter he then agreed
that he and his successors should visit the chapter
only once every ten years and that the rest of the
cathedral should be exempt from their jurisdiction.
He visited the chapter in 1397, but the question of
episcopal visitation was not finally resolved for over
thirty years. (fn. 337)
Much of the work of running the cathedral was
in the hands of the vicars at this period. With the
precentor almost continually non-resident the
subchanter was permanently in charge of the
cathedral services, while the sacrist replaced the
treasurer as custodian of the goods of the cathedral.
In addition the vicars supplied the chapter with
communars, keepers of the fabric, chapter clerks, and
scribes; they served on commissions for the chapter,
acted as proctors for absent canons, and even represented the chapter at the papal court. (fn. 338) In 1311 the
commons of the vicars were raised from 1d. to 1½d.
a day with double payments on 14 feast days; in
1325-6 the commons of 29 vicars cost the chapter
£67. (fn. 339) In 1361 the vicars began a campaign to have
their commons increased; they complained to the
chapter that they did not have enough to live on,
what with the price of food, linen, and wool, but
the chapter replied that their complaint was minus
vera. (fn. 340) In 1374 the commons were doubled to 3d. a
day on condition that the vicars gave up their right
to dinner with the canons and provided themselves
with a suitable dining-hall; (fn. 341) this arrangement was
confirmed by the bishop in 1390. (fn. 342)
The vicars continued to accumulate small grants
of property in Lichfield and the surrounding area. (fn. 343)
In 1348 they acquired their first appropriated
church, that of Penn, from Bishop Northburgh. In
return they were to say two masses a year for
Edward III and one for Ralph, Lord Stafford;
those attending these services were to be given
special payments, and after pensions for the bishop
and the chapter had been deducted from the
revenues of the church, the rest was to be distributed among the vicars for their vestments and
other clothing. (fn. 344) Little is known about the way in
which the vicars managed their property, but they
had a common seal by at least 1315 and were
accustomed to appoint proctors to act for them by
1324. (fn. 345) They continued to receive gifts of money,
such as a share of the 200 marks left to the cathedral
by Bishop Stretton, (fn. 346) and pensions, such as £1
from the church of Tibshelf (Derb.) in 1319 and
£1 6s. 8d. from the church of Lullington (Derb.) in
1341. (fn. 347)
From the beginning of the century the vicars lived
in common. In 1315 Bishop Langton, concerned
about the dangers to the vicars of lodging outside
the Close in lay people's houses, (fn. 348) gave them a plot
of land in the north-west corner of the Close that
had formerly belonged to one of the canons. (fn. 349) On
this site some houses were evidently built by
individual vicars, since in 1330 John of Aston was
given permission to finish the house which he had
begun and two other vicars received permission to
rebuild their house; a condition was made that both
houses should revert to the chapter on the death of
the vicars. (fn. 350) The chapter allotted rooms to the vicars
— usually two vicars shared a room—and there
were occasional complaints: in 1326, for example,
the vicar of Gaia Minor complained that his room
was not suitable to his status. (fn. 351) The vicars had some
of their meals together from early in the century, for
in 1329 they were ordered to repair their kitchen and
hall, but they had their dinners with the canons until
later in the century. (fn. 352)
The vicars' behaviour was a constant problem for
the chapter. In 1321 the dean gave them a stern
lecture in their common hall on the theme de vita et
honestate clericorum. (fn. 353) An unruly vicar of that time
was Richard of Elmhurst, who in 1324 was indicted
before the king's court for attacking royal officers in
Gaia Lane; (fn. 354) in 1330 he was accused by the chapter
of being a dealer in chickens and cattle and of having
a fire in his room to the peril of other vicars. (fn. 355) The
most usual offence of the vicars was incontinence,
punishable by a fine to the fabric fund. In 1359
seven vicars, including the subchanter, were accused
of it; in the case of the subchanter five women were
involved. (fn. 356) In 1383 the chapter made regulations for
the behaviour of the vicars, forbidding them to go
outside the Close after nine in the evening or to have
any suspectam mulierem in their rooms; they were
to dress properly and follow the canonical hours,
day and night. (fn. 357) In 1394 it was decided by the
chapter that any vicars who attempted to interfere
with punishments imposed by the chapter by calling
in lay people should be suspended for three
months. (fn. 358)
Little is known about the choristers at this time.
They wore surplices and caps, were paid 1d. each
for attending certain special services, and received
in addition various unspecified payments from the
communar of the chapter. (fn. 359) The pensions allotted
to them, amounting to 13 marks a year, were
collected for them by the sacrist, and one 14thcentury sacrist left them a small legacy. (fn. 360)
The number of chantries in the cathedral decreased during the century: in 1335 there were 20
chantries, including the one at Stowe, but by the
beginning of the 15th century only 14 were still
being served. (fn. 361) A few new chantries were founded
during the century. Bishop Langton established
chantries at the altars of St. Mary and St. Nicholas
and endowed them both with pensions. (fn. 362) In 1321
the prior and brethren of St. John's Hospital,
Lichfield, founded a chantry at the altar of St.
Thomas for the soul of Canon Philip de Turvill, to
be served by one of their community. (fn. 363) In 1325 the
vicars founded a chantry for the soul of the chancellor, William de Bosco, which was served by all
the vicars, each taking a week's turn. (fn. 364) By the 1330s
the condition of the chantries was causing concern
to the chapter. There had already been an inquiry
in 1311 into the condition of the chantry at Stowe
which the vicars had allowed to become dilapidated, (fn. 365) and in 1335 the chapter ordered a full-scale
inquiry into all the chantries; the subchanter and
five other vicars were to find out what chantries
there were and who officiated at each. (fn. 366) They
discovered that only five of the 20 chantries were
being properly served. There were many complaints: in one case the chaplain celebrated
frequently but did not know for whose soul, in
another the chaplain celebrated for someone other
than the founder of the chantry, and in one case the
holder said he was too infirm to celebrate. The most
frequent complaint was that the endowment of the
chantry was insufficient to maintain the services laid
down in its ordination. A typical example was the
chantry of Ralph of Sempringham whose chaplain
reported that his salary was not sufficient for a daily
celebration and that he was allowed by the chapter
to celebrate every other day—it was said that in
fact he celebrated only once a year. The chapter
could do little to reform the chantries apart from
ordering the chaplains to celebrate properly in
future under penalty of a fine to the fabric fund.
Some of the smaller chantries seem to have lapsed
later in the century, usually because their endowment was insufficient. One poor chantry, that of
Reynold de Cleydon, was refounded by its chaplain
in 1364, two years after he had been given permission
to hold services only three days a week, the revenue
being insufficient for daily service modernis temporibus. (fn. 367) In another case, that of Bishop Weseham's
chantry at St. John's altar, it was the unusual
ordination that the prebendary of Bobenhull should
celebrate in person which led to the suspension of
the chantry; the prebendaries refused to serve the
chantry and the case was taken to the Court of
Arches in the 1350s. (fn. 368) During the century vicars
came to be displaced as the holders of chantries by
special chantry chaplains, and when Bishop Scrope
founded a chantry in 1386 one of the conditions was
that it should not be served by a vicar. (fn. 369)
At about the same time the chapter made its first
regulations for chantry chaplains; they were to dress
like other members of the choir and were to attend
services on Sundays and feast days. (fn. 370) The chaplains
did not yet live in common, and several of the
chantries had houses in Lichfield attached to them.
The chantry at St. Katherine's altar had a house in
Gaia Lane, in which the chaplain was keeping a
mistress in 1357. (fn. 371) In the same lane there was a
house belonging to Dean Mancetter's chantry,
whose chaplain claimed in 1335 to be celebrating the
chantry services in hospitio suo. (fn. 372)
The heavy building programme which had been
started in the 13th century was continued during
much of the fourteenth. It included the completion
of the west front with its two stone spires, and the
building of the central spire, probably also in stone.
It is impossible to date this work precisely: the
central spire, possibly the first to be built, was
destroyed during the Civil War, while the northwest spire and the upper part of the tower on which
it stands are later in date than the rest of the west
front and possibly represent a late-14th- or 15thcentury addition or rebuilding. (fn. 373) It is, however,
probable that work on the front was taken up again
about 1300, and it has been suggested that by the
time of Bishop Langton's death building had
progressed as far as the string-course below the
belfry-stage. (fn. 374) It may have been even further
advanced: a brief description of the cathedral by a
friar who visited it in 1323 (fn. 375) suggests that one at
least of the western spires must by then have been
complete or virtually complete. (fn. 376) It is in fact
possible that by 1323 the west front, with its spires,
window, (fn. 377) and rows of statues, was already finished,
and that for some reason the north-west spire had
later to be rebuilt.
Meanwhile work on the eastern arm of the church
was also in hand. Bishop Langton, whose gifts to
the cathedral during his lifetime included a magnificent shrine worth £2,000 for the relics of St.
Chad, (fn. 378) had persuaded the chapter to build a Lady
Chapel to the east of the choir and had left over
£600 in cash and plate to finish it. (fn. 379) From stylistic
evidence it has been suggested that work on the
chapel may have started about 1310 or, more
probably, about 1315. (fn. 380) Its plan, a rectangle of three
bays with a three-sided east end, is unique among
English cathedrals. In 1322 the architect, William
de Eyton, the cathedral's master mason, had seven
masons working under him, and an agreement of
1323 for the quarrying of stone for the chapel
noviter construenda implies that work was being
continued despite the king's confiscation of Langton's bequest. (fn. 381) The chapel had evidently been
finished to Eyton's designs by 1336, when two
keepers of its fabric were appointed. (fn. 382) Possibly the
date of completion was a year or two earlier, since
Eyton, who probably died during the winter of
1336-7, was also responsible for the first stages of
the construction of a new presbytery running west
from the Lady Chapel. The outer walls of this for
three bays westwards on the north and four bays
on the south are his work; they could have been
built outside the existing early-13th-century eastern
arm of the cathedral without interfering with it. (fn. 383)
In May 1337 the chapter engaged William of
Ramsey, the king's master mason, as consultant
architect. (fn. 384) Ramsey's work on the cathedral, which
is marked by its distinctive new Perpendicular style,
consists of the main arcades and upper levels of the
presbytery, the linking bays of the aisle walls to north
and south, and the upper levels of the choir. The
main arcades of the choir were virtually untouched,
though Ramsey remodelled the eastern pillars to
match the new work and mask the change of styles. (fn. 385)
The Lady Chapel had not been built on the same
axis as the choir and the rest of the church, (fn. 386) but
Ramsey solved this problem by modifying the axis
of the main arcades of the presbytery one bay at a
time. (fn. 387) When he died in 1349 no major work
remained to be done on the eastern arm of the
church. (fn. 388)
Work on the fabric after Ramsey's death can be
traced only from incidental references. It was
almost certainly interrupted by the Black Death but,
according to Bishop Northburgh, had been resumed
by 1352. This later work may merely have concerned
the embellishment of the choir and the new
presbytery; but since something more substantial
seems to be implied by the bishop's statement it
may have included the revaulting, in stone, of the
transepts and tower crossing. (fn. 389) In 1357 a glazier
from Lenton (Notts.) was employed to glaze three
large and four small windows of 'the new work'. (fn. 390)
There is evidence of what may have been quite
extensive work on the fabric in the 1380s. For
several years after 1380, when each residentiary was
ordered to give the fabric fund 10s. a quarter from
his commons for a year, (fn. 391) the expenses involved
evidently strained the chapter's resources. Work of
some kind was being done on the choir in 1382. In
May it was agreed that each existing residentiary
and each new residentiary should give £10 ad
reparacionem chori, (fn. 392) and in June that each residentiary should contribute 30s. a quarter from his
commons ad opus chori perficiendum. (fn. 393) The other
two references to the fabric that year also concern
the choir. (fn. 394) Three years later work was still in
progress, though no mention was then made of the
part of the cathedral affected. (fn. 395) In March 1385
Gilbert Mason was appointed for life as the
cathedral's master mason, (fn. 396) and in June John Douve
of Lichfield was appointed master carpenter. (fn. 397) New
residentiaries were now being ordered to pay their
entrance fees into the fabric fund. (fn. 398) Despite this,
money was running short, and in October the
chapter had to borrow in order to pay the masons'
wages during the winter. (fn. 399) The work, whatever it
was, was probably finished during the next few
years, for there is little subsequent reference to the
fabric in the act books.
The bulk of the money for building probably
came from individual gifts and bequests and from
contributions, voluntary or compulsory, by the
residentiaries. In addition the keepers of the fabric
had a small but steady income from pensions, rents,
and fines from cathedral clergy. (fn. 400) There were also
the receipts of the Chad-farthings and the alms
brought in each year by the questores of the brotherhood of St. Chad. (fn. 401) At times both these sources
evidently produced less than they should have done.
In 1322, for example, Northburgh warned his
archdeacons that questores collecting for other
causes had bribed parish priests to let them into
their churches during the months reserved for the
brotherhood. In 1352 he threatened to excommunicate laymen who were in arrears with their Chadfarthings and archdeacons' officials, rural deans,
apparitors, and parish clergy who had embezzled
money that had been collected. (fn. 402) During the later
14th century both collections were normally farmed
out: thus in 1389 John de Outheby, Archdeacon of
Derby, took the farm of the collections in the
archdeaconry of Coventry, paying £10 down and
£4 a year. (fn. 403)
Langton's building operations were not confined
to the cathedral itself. He fortified the Close,
constructing a stone perimeter wall (fn. 404) with massive
gatehouses at the south and west entrances. (fn. 405) He
was responsible for the Bird Street and Dam Street
causeways, set up about 1310 across the bishop's
fish-pool; the stretch of water between them forms
the present Minster Pool, south of the Close. (fn. 406) He
also built himself a large new palace in the Close, (fn. 407)
in which at the end of the 16th century Sampson
Erdeswick found 'a goodly large hall, wherein hath
been excellently well painted, but now much
decayed, the coronation, marriage, wars, and funeral
of Edward I'. (fn. 408)
The Later Middle Ages
The full extent of the destruction of the cathedral's
records during the Civil War (fn. 409) becomes apparent
when an attempt is made to write the history of the
cathedral for the period between 1400 and the
Restoration. There are no records of chapter acts
between 1439 and 1480 and very few after 1553; nor
are there any communars' or fabric accounts for
any part of the period, and only a handful of leases
have survived.
Such records as have survived, however, seem to
show that the 15th and early 16th centuries saw the
development of tendencies already apparent in the
fourteenth. The resident chapter shrank in size as
the revenues of the chapter shrank in value. There
were no great issues to be contested or projects to be
finished: relations with the bishop were usually
cordial, no constitutional innovations were necessary
in the chapter, and the cathedral building had
already been more or less completed. The chapter
confined itself to the task of straightening out
anomalies in administration and liturgy and, in the
realm of building, to enriching the interior of the
church. In addition there was a new concern to see
that the lesser bodies of cathedral clergy—the
vicars, choristers, and chantry priests—were
properly housed and disciplined.
The cessation of papal provisions meant that the
15th-century non-resident chapter was less colourful
than that of the previous century. The only papal
official was John de Gigliis, papal collector, admitted
to the prebend of Bishopshull in 1481. (fn. 410) Otherwise
the non-resident chapter was composed of much
the same elements as before. A few eminent royal
servants and rising churchmen held prebends: for
example, Henry Chichele (Archbishop of Canterbury 1414-43) was Prebendary of Wellington from
1400 to 1407, (fn. 411) and Thomas Bourchier (Archbishop
of Canterbury 1454-86) held the prebend of Colwich
from 1429 to 1435. (fn. 412) Other prebendaries who later
became bishops included John Arundel (Bishop of
Chichester 1459-77), Lawrence Booth (Bishop of
Durham 1457-76), and Richard Sampson, who was
dean from 1533 to 1536 and Bishop of Lichfield from
1543 to 1554. (fn. 413) Others, such as Andrew Holes,
Chancellor of Salisbury, (fn. 414) and John Nottingham, a
Chancellor of the Exchequer and Treasurer of
York, (fn. 415) achieved distinction in other cathedral
chapters. The resident chapter also included the
same mixture of retired royal servants, lawyers, and
bishops' and noblemen's clerks. (fn. 416) In the second half
of the century an effort was made by Bishop Hales
(1459-90) to change the character of the chapter by
introducing and promoting scholars. (fn. 417) These included George Strangeways, D.Th., Richard Salter,
B.C.L., D.Cn.L., and Thomas Mills (or Milley),
who became Hales's registrar. (fn. 418) Of the 15th- and
early-16th-century deans none was so distinguished
as Richard FitzRalph, although John Yotton (14931512) was a theologian of some note (fn. 419) and James
Denton (1522-33) had a distinguished career as a
royal chaplain and as almoner and later chancellor of
Princess Mary, sister of Henry VIII. (fn. 420) Thomas
Heywood, dean from 1457 to 1492, was undoubtedly
the most important figure in the history of the
15th-century chapter, but he had no career outside
Lichfield. (fn. 421)
There were nine residentiaries present at the
installation of Bishop Burghill in 1398, (fn. 422) and the
same number were resident in the Close in 1417. (fn. 423)
By the 1530s, however, the normal number of
residentiaries had dropped to six and earlier in the
16th century had been as low as four. (fn. 424) The reason
for this reduction in numbers was undoubtedly the
stringent entrance qualifications imposed by the
chapter as a result of the drop in value of its
revenues. The entrance qualifications imposed at
the end of the 14th century (fn. 425) were incorporated in
the statutes of Bishop Heyworth in 1428; (fn. 426) further
regulations were then added stipulating that the 100
marks paid by new canons on beginning residence
were to be used partly for the fabric and partly for
ornaments for the church and that the money was
to be kept in a special chest with two locks, one key
held by the keeper of the fabric and the other by a
canon elected by the chapter. (fn. 427) These new rules were
necessary as the chapter had been dividing the fees
between the canons resident in the Close. (fn. 428) At the
time when Bishop Heyworth's statutes were made
the chapter was finding it very difficult to manage
its finances. In 1428 the communar was forced to ask
Dean Stretton's executors to return 19s. 1½d. to the
common fund as the dean had died in the middle of
a quarter. (fn. 429) The communars had been borrowing
heavily from the baga de Whalley, (fn. 430) which had been
augmented by many legacies. (fn. 431) When in 1429 it was
found that there was still not sufficient money to
meet the expenses of the church it was decided that
the canons should be allowed an absence of 40 days
in each quarter of the following year. (fn. 432) Even with
this measure or relief for the common fund the
chapter still had to borrow from the newly-established fund of entrance fees to pay the chantry
chaplains their salaries. (fn. 433)
By the 1490s, when the number of residentiaries
seems to have been reduced to five, (fn. 434) the communar
was again borrowing heavily from the baga de
Whalley. (fn. 435) In 1528 the chapter decided, after
considering the meagreness of the cathedral revenues
and the expenses incurred in the last few years, that
for the time being no new residentiary should be
admitted. (fn. 436) An exception was made in the case of
Richard Strete in consideration of his hard work for
the cathedral, (fn. 437) but when in April 1530 the chancellor, Ralph Whitehead, announced his intention
of coming into residence, the chapter refused to
admit him. (fn. 438) It argued that it could not afford to
maintain another residentiary: it had recently been
forced to pawn jewels to raise a loan of £100 for the
king, the Mortuaries Act had meant a reduction of
£40 or more in its annual revenues, and then there
were the costs of a suit against the bishop, and the
high price of provisions. (fn. 439) A few months later
Whitehead invited all the canons to an entrance
feast, hoping it would persuade them to change
their minds, and in September he was admitted at
the bishop's request. (fn. 440)
There were few changes in chapter procedure in
this period, and the four codes of statutes issued by
Bishops Heyworth (1428), Boulers (1454), Hales
(1465), and Blythe (1526) were concerned mainly
with straightening out existing procedures and
removing anomalies. The relations of the dean with
his chapter were generally smooth, although the
election of John Verney in 1432 was challenged by
a non-residentiary whose proctor had not voted for
him and the case was taken as far as the papal
court. (fn. 441) In 1512, after the death of Dean Yotton, the
chapter acted with a certain degree of independence.
Having fixed a date for the election of the next dean
the residentiaries sequestrated the income of the
deanery and made arrangements for a capitular
visitation decanatu vacante; the president and two
residentiaries then visited the prebends in and
around Lichfield. (fn. 442) In 1533, when Dean Sampson
appointed a notorious pluralist as his locum tenens,
the chapter refused to accept the nomination of such
a certain absentee to an irremovable post and
instead appointed him president during good
behaviour. (fn. 443) The statutes of 1428 and 1454 laid
down the procedure for settling disputes between
members of the chapter, and the latter laid down
severe penalties against canons who involved laymen
in their disputes with fellow canons; (fn. 444) the statutes of
1465 forbade any canon to employ a servant dismissed by another canon. (fn. 445)
According to the 1428 statutes canons had been
neglectful about attending chapter meetings, and it
was ordered that in future all residentiaries were to
be present when chapter business was being
discussed. (fn. 446) Later statutes and chapter acts emphasized the need for secrecy about chapter business. (fn. 447)
The statutes of 1526 ordered that the common seal ad
causas should be kept in the custody of three
residentiaries and that a communar's seal should be
cut. The common seal was not to be used without
the permission of the whole chapter. (fn. 448) In 1527 the
communar's seal, a new common seal ad causas, and
a chest with three locks were shown to the chapter. (fn. 449)
There was also concern that the statutes should be
readily available for inspection: in 1465 it was
ordered that they should be rewritten in a parchment book to which all the canons were to have
access. (fn. 450)
Apart from the management of chapter property
and the disciplining of the ministers of the cathedral,
chapter meetings were concerned with many aspects
of cathedral life. Business ranged from the general
order in 1483 that all ministers of the church were
to 'reform' their tonsures to ensure that their ears
were showing, (fn. 451) to the occasional admission of
notables, such as Humphrey, Earl of Stafford (1429),
and Richard, Earl of Warwick (1434), into confraternity. (fn. 452) There were also officials to be appointed,
ranging from proctors and attornies at common law (fn. 453)
to keepers of the clock. (fn. 454) In some of the appointments outsiders took an interest; thus in 1483
Thomas Rigley was appointed sergeant, or verger,
at the request of the Duke of Buckingham. (fn. 455) Canons
had also to nominate to vacant benefices and chantries in the gift of the chapter, and at the beginning
of the 16th century an elaborate scheme was worked
out by which the residentiaries nominated in
rotation, the order being determined by lot. (fn. 456)
The chapter was also much concerned with the
regulation of the Close, except for the allotment of
canonical houses which was the privilege of the
bishop. The statutes of 1465 laid down that all
refuse was to be carried out of the Close and that
canons were not to put piles of wood outside their
houses. (fn. 457) There was a graveyard in the Close, but
in the 1530s the chapter had to enforce the rule that
only those living in the Close were entitled to be
buried there. (fn. 458) The water-supply also caused trouble
in the late 15th century when the chapter accused
Sir Humphrey Stanley of breaking the conduit and
depriving the Close of water; the case was finally
taken before the king's council. (fn. 459) The Close was not
always popular with the city, and in 1436 a body of
citizens attempted to break open the gates and
attacked members of the church. (fn. 460) As a result of
this and further attacks the dean and chapter were
given extensive privileges within the Close in 1441:
no royal official was to be allowed beyond the gates,
and the dean and chapter were to have the return
and execution of all writs and were to be justices of
the peace for the Close. (fn. 461) In 1532 the subchanter
and sacrist asked a county justice to issue a warrant
against one of the canons but withdrew the request
on being warned by the chapter that this would
infringe the privileges of the Close. (fn. 462) A special guard
was employed to keep the gates of the Close, which
were not opened before seven in the morning. (fn. 463) In
1532 there occurred what was probably the last case
of sanctuary in the Close when a thief took refuge
there. (fn. 464)
The statutes of 1428 ordered that services in the
cathedral were to follow the Salisbury Use, (fn. 465) but
there is no evidence that this order was imposed.
During the 15th century there were repeated
demands that all ministers of the church should be
properly habited for services, (fn. 466) and in 1487 some
regulations were made about the administration of
sacraments in the cathedral. (fn. 467) There was, however,
no consistent attempt to reform the cathedral
liturgy until the time of Dean Denton. Bishop
Blythe at his visitation of 1523 found that cathedral
services still differed in many ways from the
Salisbury pattern, and his statutes laid down that
in future that Use was to be followed for all services,
except for those on the feasts of St. Chad, St.
Katherine, and St. Nicholas and on the Monday,
Tuesday, and Wednesday of Pentecost, when
observances were to be those most convenient. (fn. 468) As
a result several chapter orders were issued about
particular services: vicars were ordered that whenever they said requiems for the dead according to
the Salisbury Use they were to say immediately
afterwards the commendaciones animarum in conventu,
and that in future the saying of the Confession at
compline and prime was to be according to the Use
of Salisbury and not according to the Lichfield
Use. (fn. 469) In 1532 some of the canons complained that
they were being overburdened with duties in the
choir, and the chapter agreed that the ancient Use
of the cathedral should be followed until the dean
found out the practice of Salisbury in this
connexion. (fn. 470) In a dispute over ritual the following
year both sides cited the Salisbury Use, differing
only in their interpretation of it. (fn. 471)
The drive for conformity at Lichfield was not
confined to the form of the liturgy. By ancient
cathedral custom silk copes were not worn in
procession at Candlemas because of the expense of
replacing them if they should be spoilt by burns or
candle-wax. In 1523 Dean Denton, overriding the
protests of at least one of the canons, persuaded the
chapter to abolish this custom and bring Lichfield
into line with other English cathedrals; he promised
to give £40 to cover possible damage. (fn. 472) A levy from
the prebends was later ordered to renew the copes. (fn. 473)
In 1528 four processionals had to be obtained as the
cathedral had no suitable ones. (fn. 474)
Another apparent innovation of these years was
the arrangement made for the administration of the
sacraments to servants and those lodging temporarily in the Close. In 1523 it was decided that a
curate should be appointed to hear their confessions,
receiving 2d. from each servant at Easter and the
mortuaries of laymen dying within the Close; a
chantry chaplain was nominated to the post. (fn. 475) In
1528 this arrangement was confirmed, with the
proviso that if any of those in the charge of the
curate of the Close fell sick of the plague they were
to be visited instead by the curate who ministered to
the sick of Lichfield under the Vicar of St. Mary's. (fn. 476)
Two years later fear of the plague led to a more
complete isolation of the Close. The confessions of
all servants and laymen living within the Close were
to be heard in one of the chapels in the cathedral by
the Vicar of St. Mary's, but no inhabitants of the
city were to be admitted to receive viaticum in the
cathedral unless they belonged to the household of
a canon, were cathedral servants, or had been
granted a special licence by the chapter. (fn. 477)
In 1401, following his metropolitical visitation,
Archbishop Arundel confirmed the possessions of
the cathedral. (fn. 478) There was little change in the
property of the chapter during the later Middle
Ages. The few churches that were appropriated to
the cathedral were given to the vicars or choristers. (fn. 479)
The chapter acquired eight new pensions, but their
total value was not much over £2. (fn. 480) In the later 15th
century Dean Heywood bought some land at
Alrewas and King's Bromley and conveyed it to the
chapter; (fn. 481) in 1535 this property was the only
temporality of the chapter (as opposed to the
churches of the common fund which were
spiritualities) and was valued at 51s. 5¾d. (fn. 482) According
to the Valor Ecclesiasticus Lichfield was the poorest
of the secular cathedrals in 1535, (fn. 483) with a common
fund worth £436 10s. 3¼d. gross a year, of which
£160 17s. 1d. was earmarked for the payment of
vicars' commons, chantry priests' salaries, and other
fees and expenses. (fn. 484) The Peak parishes and their
chapels yielded £215 15s. 9½d. a year, while the rest
of the appropriated churches yielded a total of £125
a year; (fn. 485) 37 pensions from churches in six counties
brought in a yearly total of £93 3s. (fn. 486) The total annual
value of the prebends and dignities was given as
£390 1s. 10¾d. (fn. 487) The assessments of the individual
prebends, which are generally supposed to give the
minimum rental value of the property, (fn. 488) show
considerable variations from the values given in
1291. (fn. 489) The deanery had increased in value from
£26 13s. 4d. to £40, but the treasurership had
dropped from £66 13s. 4d. to £56 13s. 4d. Some of
the prebends had nearly doubled in value, such as
Flixton which had risen from £4 13s. 4d. to £7;
others had fallen considerably, such as Longdon,
which was assessed at £20 in 1291 and only £8 in
1535. The variations in value are too erratic to allow
any conclusions to be drawn about changes in the
value of cathedral property between 1291 and
1535. (fn. 490)
Very little is known about how the chapter
managed its property during this period since little
more than a dozen leases have survived, all but two
of them from the early years of the 16th century.
What evidence there is suggests that the 14thcentury policy was continued. It seems likely that
the farmers of cathedral property found their leases
less profitable; in 1481 the farmer of Worfield asked
for a remission of rent because of his great losses
during the year. (fn. 491) In the Peak parishes the mineral
tithes were leased as before: in 1482 the lead tithes
in the Peak were leased for five years at a rent of £11
a year. (fn. 492) In addition the other tithes (with the
exception of the wool tithes) and the lands in the
Peak were leased, and the chapter appointed an
attorney to collect its rents. (fn. 493)
The chapter continued to collect the wool tithes
and dispose of the wool directly. The tithes were
collected by local men, either by the vicars of the
churches or by specially appointed agents, and sold
by them; the proceeds, after the expenses of the
collectors had been deducted, were given to the
communar of the chapter. In 1427 the Vicar of
Bakewell accounted for £20, the proceeds of the
sale of fleeces at 8d. each. (fn. 494) In 1481 the chapter
leased the wool tithes for five years to its subproctor
in the Peak, (fn. 495) but by the end of the 1480s the
communar was administering the tithes again and
in one year the chapter's agents collected 3,365
fleeces. (fn. 496)
In the early 15th century leases were still being
made for short periods only, usually 5 years,
according to the statutes. (fn. 497) Where a comparison is
possible the rents paid seem to have been lower than
the annual value of the property given in the Valor; (fn. 498)
it would be necessary, however, to know the size of
entry fines before an assessment could be made of
the efficiency of the chapter's estate management. (fn. 499)
At the beginning of 1523 the manner of making
leases came under discussion; it was decided that
the granting of leases should be a matter for the
whole chapter and that a draft of the lease should be
available for alteration before a decision was made. (fn. 500)
Another matter which was causing concern was the
growing practice by which canons procured leases
for themselves or their relations on favourable terms
and then sublet the property. It was ordered that no
canon was to have a lease unless he paid as much
rent as an outsider would give and that canons were
themselves to occupy the property which they
leased. (fn. 501) If, however, a canon wanted a lease he was
to be preferred to outsiders. (fn. 502) In 1535 the chapter
was paying fees to six officials concerned in the
collection of its revenues: a receiver-general, a
collector of pensions, an auditor, a steward of courts,
glebes, and rectories, and a bailiff and a steward of
the Peak. (fn. 503)
In June 1400 there was a metropolitical visitation
of the cathedral by Archbishop Arundel at which a
levy of one-tenth of the value of all the prebends for
three years was ordered; the proceeds were to be
used to provide new vestments and to make stalls
in the choir. (fn. 504) The chapter was reluctant to take any
action; several general chapter meetings were called
to discuss the matter, but no non-residentiaries
attended and the levy was not agreed to until nearly
two years after the visitation. Even then it does not
seem to have been collected. (fn. 505) A few years later the
question of the bishop's right of visitation was
reopened. The chapter seems to have resisted Bishop
Burghill's attempt to visit it in 1407, (fn. 506) and in 1423
it obtained an inhibition from the court of Canterbury against Bishop Heyworth who had announced
his intended visitation. (fn. 507) Heyworth complained to
the Pope who restored him to 'the office of
visitation and reformation which his predecessors
have neglected to exercise'. (fn. 508) In 1427 two vicars
were appointed to note the defects of the residentiary
canons according to new arrangements for visitation
by the bishops, (fn. 509) and these arrangements were
sealed by the bishop and the chapter during a
visitation in October 1428. (fn. 510) Visitations were to take
place only at seven-year intervals and were to be of
the chapter only; the other cathedral clergy and the
churches of the common fund and the prebends
were, except in cases of scandalous neglect, to be
exempt. Any money arising from the visitation was
to go to the fabric or the ornaments of the church.
Apart from Hereford, which resisted visitation
until after the Reformation, Lichfield was the last of
the English secular cathedrals to submit to episcopal
visitation. (fn. 511)
After the settlement of the visitation dispute the
relations between bishop and chapter appear to have
been good, although occasionally storms blew up.
The last years of Bishop Blythe's episcopate were
marked by unsuccessful attempts by both parties to
encroach on each other's privileges. The first, in
1529-30, was over the bishop's claim to the patronage of St. Mary's, Lichfield; the case was hotly
contested, and Blythe showed his displeasure by
ostentatiously snubbing the chapter when he passed
through Lichfield on his way to London in June
1530. (fn. 512) The matter was settled by arbitration later
that year, (fn. 513) only to be succeeded by a fresh dispute
arising out of an attempt by the chapter to prevent
Blythe from visiting St. John's Hospital, Lichfield. (fn. 514)
By the beginning of the 15th century the subchanter had emerged as the ex officio president of the
vicars. (fn. 515) The statutes of 1428 ordered the subchanter
and the vicars of the three other dignitaries to wear
special amices trimmed with calabar fur; they were
to have 6s. 8d. above their usual salaries to pay for
them. (fn. 516) The same statutes laid down regulations for
ensuring that a vicar's stall was filled within a few
months of a vacancy but also stipulated that all new
vicars were to be examined to make sure that they
could chant to an organ. (fn. 517) By the end of the century
the chapter was imposing a year's probation on new
vicars, (fn. 518) and in 1530 a probationer was dismissed
because he was old and had lost his voice. (fn. 519) The
following year some of the vicars claimed that they
were being impoverished as a result of the custom
whereby a vicar fully admitted after his probationary
year had to provide a feast, called 'ly seynyfest'. (fn. 520)
The chapter ordered an investigation and found
that for many years the vicars had been illegally
demanding an entrance fee, or 'interest money', of
20s. from new vicars and two further payments of
26s. 8d.; these sums were said to impoverish newcomers and sometimes discouraged those with
musical ability from taking vicarships. (fn. 521) The chapter
decided that the entrance fee should remain but gave
the vicars £20 to buy lands to provide 10s. towards
each vicar's 'interest money'. (fn. 522) Ten years earlier the
vicars had been told that they must give the dean
and chapter a quarter's notice if they intended to
give up their stalls. (fn. 523)
The vicars' behaviour was a constant problem to
the chapter. Absenteeism was a continually recurring
offence. The statutes of 1465 imposed a fine of 2d.
to the fabric fund on unlicensed absentees, (fn. 524) and in
January 1496 the fine for being outside the Close
after the gates were shut in the evening was fixed
at 12d. (fn. 525) The latter order apparently led to fears for
the safety of the porter and his assistant, and in
February a scale of fines was drawn up for various
types of attack on them. (fn. 526) Another common offence
was incontinence, and in 1496 a vicar accused of
fornication was forbidden to leave the Close except
to practise archery with his fellow-vicars outside the
city. (fn. 527) Some vicars were sportsmen who bred dogs
in the Close and went out hunting at night, and in
1512 the chapter was forced to order the removal of
all dogs from the Close and to forbid vicars to go
hunting. (fn. 528) There were also the usual minor misdemeanours — vicars dealing with their own private
affairs during services and roaming around the Close
and city improperly dressed. (fn. 529) An unusual case was
that of Robert Bendbow who was summoned before
the chapter in 1523 for dicing and card-playing
instead of attending services; he was stated to have
obtained his stall on the petition of his father, in
spite of the fact that he was so young that a tutor had
to be appointed to look after him. (fn. 530) The vicars were
subject to visitation by the dean and chapter, (fn. 531) who
appointed one of them as intitulator to report on the
absences and other offences of his fellows; (fn. 532) this post
was an unpopular one. (fn. 533)
In 1513 the chapter's attempts to control and
discipline the vicars led to a short-lived strike. The
vicars refused to take part in services until the
chapter agreed to accept their traditional usage as to
rest days and to reinstate one of their number who
had been excommunicated. After two or three days
the chapter succeeded in breaking down their
resistance and the ringleaders were punished. (fn. 534)
Another dispute arose between the two bodies in
1526 when the vicars drew up several articles of
complaint against the chapter. (fn. 535) They alleged that
they were not being paid commons during reasonable
absences; that the chapter made statutes for them
without their consent; that they were summoned
before the chapter for trifling offences in spite of the
fact that they could be expelled after only three
admonitions; that the chapter had reduced the
number of vicars from 27 to 21 or less and was
pocketing the stipends of vacant stalls; (fn. 536) and that
vicars were having to perform the duties of
hebdomadaries without receiving any extra salary. (fn. 537)
They carried their complaints to the bishop, and at
the beginning of 1527 Wolsey appointed a legatine
commission to investigate the dispute; in April, after
the statutes had been revised, the vicars agreed to a
settlement. (fn. 538)
In 1528 the vicars made a bid for greater independence by applying for a royal licence of incorporation. This step was taken without the knowledge
of the chapter, although the vicars claimed afterwards that the suggestion had come from John
Veysey, Bishop of Exeter and formerly Archdeacon
of Chester. The chapter used its influence to prevent
the granting of the licence, which it said would be
injurious to the cathedral and the vicars themselves.
It advised the vicars to ask the help of Sir Anthony
Fitzherbert, the judge, in drawing up another
charter of incorporation, which it would then
consider; nothing more was heard of incorporation,
however, until after the Reformation. (fn. 539)
Unlike vicars in other cathedrals the Lichfield
vicars were not allowed to hold any preferments
apart from their stalls. In 1400 Bishop Burghill
changed this custom and allowed vicars to accept
any benefices other than those requiring continual
residence, but this concession was cancelled by
Archbishop Arundel at his metropolitical visitation
later the same year. (fn. 540) In 1412 Burghill obtained
licence to appropriate to the vicars their second
church, Chesterton (Warws.), 'as the possessions of
the vicars are at present much deteriorated and
many intend to depart for lack of maintenance'; (fn. 541) in
1505 the income from the church totalled £10 10s.
10d. (fn. 542) In 1535 the vicars' gross income was just over
£200 a year; apart from nearly £100 from the
chapter for commons, the greater part of the income,
£65, came from rents of property in and around
Lichfield. (fn. 543) By the early 16th century, when they
owned about 250 houses and an even larger number
of single pieces of land, the vicars must have been
the major landowners in the city. (fn. 544) To manage their
property they had a bailiff or rent-collector and a
receiver-general. (fn. 545) An ordinance made at the end of
the 15th century laid down that both these officials
were to be elected by the whole body of vicars and
that the receivership was to be held by a vicar and
the collectorship by either a vicar or a layman. (fn. 546) In
1528 the chapter decreed that in future no vicar
was to hold the latter office. (fn. 547) The property was
farmed under the management of the subchanter; in
1524 it was discovered that he had been leasing
property out at low rates and had failed to see that
the rents were collected properly. (fn. 548)
In the earlier 15th century the vicars' houses were
repaired and a common hall was built for them by
Canon Thomas Chesterfield (d. 1452) with the help
of Bishop Heyworth and two Oxford burgesses. (fn. 549)
Dean Heywood, a generous benefactor to the vicars,
completed the repair of their houses and in 1474
built them an infirmary or rest-house, which
contained a small chapel and a muniment room. It
was laid down that the building was not to be let or
occupied privately by any vicar. (fn. 550) The conduct of
the vicars in their common buildings was regulated
by a set of statutes which they themselves drew up. (fn. 551)
They were to behave well at table and not to refuse
the food put in front of them; they were not to
gamble in hall, except for ale; they were to keep their
rooms in good repair and free from fire, water,
women, and hunting-dogs. To manage their common hall they had their own steward and butler. (fn. 552)
In the 15th century two funds, the 'chest of charity'
(1419) and the 'bag of grace' (1490), were established
to provide vicars with extra money for such things
as food, repairs, and obits. (fn. 553)
The number of choristers had risen to twelve by
1535. (fn. 554) During the 1520s their part in the cathedral
services was greatly increased: they attended every
bishop's obit and were ordered to be present at the
services held in the middle of the night. (fn. 555) A master
of the choristers was appointed pro instruccione seu
doctrina eorum; in addition he taught them 'priksong
et descant' and sometimes, by special arrangement,
to play the organ. (fn. 556) The boys were not restricted to
sacred music. Visitors to the Close were sometimes
entertained by cantilenae vel ballettae sung by the
choristers, and in 1522 the chapter laid down the
way in which any rewards received after such
performances were to be divided. (fn. 557) In the 1520s and
1530s a boy bishop, presumably one of the choristers,
was being appointed on Innocents' Day (28 December); (fn. 558) there appears to be no other evidence
concerning the history of this custom at Lichfield.
Bishop Hales (d. 1490) left money to build a house
for the choristers, (fn. 559) but they did not live in common
until the late 1520s. In 1527 the Crown granted
the church and property of the dissolved nunnery at
Farewell to the chapter for the support of the
choristers. At the same time Bishop Blythe assigned
the choristers a house on the north side of the Close;
with the help of Dean Denton it was repaired and a
cook installed. (fn. 560) In 1535 the choristers had an income
of £39; their property was managed by the chapter,
and fees were paid from their income to a receivergeneral, a bailiff, and a steward. (fn. 561) Their net income
of £25 was not sufficient to feed and clothe twelve
boys, and they were being allowed an additional £20
a year by the chapter. (fn. 562)
The chantry chaplains numbered seventeen in
1535. Their only common property consisted of
some lands left to pay for obits, worth about £7 a
year. (fn. 563) They were principally supported by the endowments of their chantries, of which there were
seventeen left in the cathedral, worth about £95 a
year in all. (fn. 564) In 1411 Bishop Burghill gave the thirteen chantry priests without official houses a site on
the south side of the Close, and after his death in
1414 his executor built them the 'New College'. (fn. 565) In
1468 this building was improved by Dean Heywood,
who added a bakehouse and a brewhouse, glazed the
windows, and supplied the common hall with a
stove and a table-cloth. (fn. 566) Under Dean Denton the
chantry priests, like the choristers, were given
permission to draw water from the aqueduct. (fn. 567)
Their duties were laid down in 1428: they were
to celebrate their masses each day in turn from the
sixth to the tenth hour, and after the consecration
during high mass one of them was to say mass for
the benefit of travellers. (fn. 568) They were not to
absent themselves without permission and were to
submit their disputes to the dean and chapter for
settlement. (fn. 569)
In 1535 the seventeen chantries were being served
at thirteen altars. (fn. 570) Many of the chantries founded in
the 13th and 14th centuries had disappeared, for of
the seventeen survivors four had been founded
during the 15th and early 16th centuries. (fn. 571) The most
elaborate of these new foundations was the chantry
of Jesus and St. Anne, founded in 1468 by Dean
Heywood; its organization forms an interesting
contrast to the simpler arrangements of earlier
centuries. The chaplain was supported by annual
payments from Lilleshall Abbey (Salop.) and, after
1471, from Dale Abbey (Derb.); the Lilleshall
pension included a stipend to the New College so
that Heywood's chaplain could live with the other
chantry priests. Heywood furnished the chantry
chapel with statues of the Saviour and St. Anne,
stalls for a choir, and an organ, and supplied all the
necessary ornaments and vestments. In 1473 he
added to the ordination of the chantry; there was to
be in addition a cursal mass, celebrated by the
vicars, a week each at a time. Every Friday morning
there was also to be sung in the chantry chapel a
mass of the Name of Jesus followed by a requiem
mass for all the bishops, deans, and canons of
Lichfield. Moreover on Friday evening after compline in the choir a suitable antiphon was to be sung
before the Saviour's statue; people were to be called
to this latter devotion by the ringing of the great bell
of the cathedral during the saying of compline. The
object of this new service was to draw lay people into
the cathedral for special devotions; in 1473 Heywood obtained from Archbishop Bourchier an
indulgence of 100 days to all penitents of Canterbury
Diocese attending the Friday services and similar
indulgences of 40 days from the bishops of the
southern province. In 1482 he obtained from Rome
further indulgences for pilgrims attending first and
second vespers in the chapel on various specified
occasions. (fn. 572) In 1483 it was decided that offerings
given at the chantry should be used first to maintain
its ornaments and then for the maintenance of the
cathedral ornaments and fabric. A custos oblacionum
de Jhesu was appointed to account annually to the
chapter for the proceeds of the chantry, which by the
1490s was producing a steady income. (fn. 573)
It was only at the beginning of the 15th century
when the great work of rebuilding the cathedral
had been completed that the duties of the keeper of
the fabric were given statutory confirmation. (fn. 574) The
fabric fund was to be kept separate from the
common fund, although fabric money could be
borrowed by the chapter if it was promptly repaid;
also all entry fees were to be used for the fabric. No
extensive or special work on the fabric of the church
was to be undertaken without the permission of the
dean and chapter.
In fact no major work was undertaken before the
Reformation, and the fabric money was used only to
maintain the church. (fn. 575) During this period the
interior of the cathedral was enriched and beautified,
but this was at the expense and on the initiative of
individual deans rather than as a consistent policy.
Dean Heywood did much to improve the appearance
of the church: he adorned the chapter-house with
coloured glass, paintings, and panelling and bought
for the cathedral a great organ and a bell called the
'Jesus Bell' which alone cost £100. (fn. 576) While he was
dean a fine stone screen was erected at the entrance
of the Lady Chapel. (fn. 577) Another benefactor was Dean
Denton, a man of great liberality who, among other
things, spent £160 in roofing-over the market cross
at Lichfield 'for poor market folks to stand dry in'. (fn. 578)
In 1524 he offered to have the vaults at the west end
of the nave newly built in stone at his own expense
if the chapter would provide the stone; the offer was
evidently accepted. (fn. 579) It was probably at this time
that Bishop Blythe contributed 50 oaks and £20
towards the repair and restoration of the cathedral
and a further £20 for the decoration of the nave. (fn. 580)
At the end of the 15th century a new detached
library was built on the north side of the Close
beside the north transept. In 1490 Dean Heywood
gave £40 towards this library, then in the course of
construction, and it was finished in 1500 by Dean
Yotton at his own expense. (fn. 581) At the same period
three of the residentiaries, Thomas Milley, Henry
Edyall, and George Strangeways, were building
themselves new houses in the Close. (fn. 582)