28. HOSPITAL OF ST. NICHOLAS,
ROYSTON
The hospital of St. Nicholas, Royston, with
a chapel in which mass was to be said three
times a week for lepers there, was founded,
according to the statement of the warden in
1358-9, (fn. 1) by a certain Ralph son of Ralph son
of Fulk, who afterwards granted the chapel and
advowson of the hospital by charter to Giles de
Argentein. As, however, the house was certainly in existence in 1213 (fn. 2) and Ralph was still
living in 1283, (fn. 3) he appears to have been the
founder of the chapel rather than of the hospital.
Possibly the patronage of the chantry was given
to the Argenteins because they were already
connected with the house: for they seem to
have been lords of the site, (fn. 4) which there is good
reason to believe was on the Cambridgeshire
side of Royston. (fn. 5)
King John received the brothers of the house
into his protection in January 1212-13, (fn. 6) and
granted them a fair to be held on the vigil and
feast of the Translation of St. Nicholas (fn. 7) ; and
Henry III in March 1235-6 confirmed to them
the fair, extending its duration to three days. (fn. 8)
This fair and 30 acres of land in the neighbourhood given for the maintenance of the
chaplain (fn. 9) comprised apparently the whole
endowment of the hospital, which must have
depended largely on alms.
Poverty, plague or fear of robbers may have
brought it to an end. In July 1359 it was
reported as long deserted, 'lepers refusing to
come or dwell there,' and the services with the
chantry endowment had in consequence been
transferred from the chapel of St. Nicholas to
that of St. James. (fn. 10) No names of masters
survive, for although John de Norwich was
called Warden of St. Nicholas in 1359, there
was then apparently no hospital of that name
in Royston.
Footnotes
| 1 |
Chan. Inq. p.m. 33 Edw. III (1st nos.), no. 44.
He was concerned to prove that the hospital and
chantry were not of royal foundation, and that their
lands therefore should not have been taken into the
king's hands. Apparently he established his case
(Cal. Close, 1354-60, p. 587). |
| 2 |
Rot. Lit. Pat. (Rec. Com.), 96. |
| 3 |
See Broadfield, V.C.H. Herts. iii, 210. |
| 4 |
In 1359 the land was held of the Earl of Richmond and John Argentein by the service of finding a
lamp in the church of Wendy, co. Camb. |
| 5 |
The old burial ground found at the north end of
the town (Kingston, op. cit. 46-7) was probably the
cemetery of this hospital, for the advowson of St.
Nicholas Chapel, Royston, figures in the 15th century
among the Cambridgeshire possessions of the Alingtons,
the descendants of the Argenteins (Chan. Inq. p.m.
38 & 39 Hen. VI, no. 42). |
| 6 |
Rot. Lit. Pat. (Rec. Com.), 96. |
| 7 |
Cal. Rot. Chart. 1199-1216 (Rec. Com.), 189b. |
| 8 |
Inspeximus July 1371 (Pat. 45 Edw. III, pt. ii,
m. 32). |
| 9 |
Cal. Close, 1354-60, p. 587. |
| 10 |
Cal. Close, 1354-60, p. 587. |