9. THE PRIORY OF SPALDING
The priory of Spalding it is said was
founded in 1051, when Thorold of Buckenhale,
sheriff of Lincoln, (fn. 1) and a special benefactor of
Crowland Abbey, granted the manor of Spalding
to that house for the relief of its necessities.
Sustenance was thus provided for six of the
brethren, and their departure from the parent
abbey lessened for a while the expenses of the
refectory. (fn. 2) In 1059 Earl Algar moved the
abbot to give the monks of Spalding the little
wooden chapel of St. Mary, and himself bestowed
on them certain lands and rents for their support. (fn. 3)
But in 1071 Ivo Tailbois, who had been standardbearer at Hastings, apparently married the heiress
of Spalding, and came to live in the neighbourhood.
If the chronicle of Crowland may be believed, he
seems to have had his full share of that Norman
arrogance which marred the first days of the
Conquest, and despised the monks of Spalding
because of their Saxon blood. 'By the instigation
of the devil,' says Ingulf, he was roused to such
an extremity of hatred and fury against them
that he did everything he could think of to
annoy and vex them; and being his near neighbours they were indeed very much at his mercy.
He would lame their cattle, kill their swine, and
browbeat all their tenants and servants in his
manorial courts, until at length, worn out by the
hardships of their position, after vain efforts to
propitiate his servants with gifts, the brethren of
Spalding returned to the mother house, taking
with them all their movable property. For a
good while after this a single monk was sent to
celebrate the divine office and mass at the wooden
chapel of St. Mary, for the sake of the village
folk who worshipped there: but when he was
drowned one day on his way to perform this
duty, in the floods caused by a great storm of
rain, no other was willing to take his place, and
the services ceased. Then Ivo, 'being greatly
overjoyed because the Lord Himself seemed to
be fighting for him against Crowland,' sent to
the abbot of St. Nicholas, Angers, and offered him
the manor of Spalding for the support of a prior
and five monks, promising to have a fair and
sufficient cell prepared for them. The offer was
accepted, and Spalding became a cell of St.
Nicholas. (fn. 4) William I confirmed the charters of
Ivo. (fn. 5) Countess Lucy, the widow or heiress of
the founder, (fn. 6) renewed the gift in 1129, and her
charter was in turn confirmed by William de
Romara, her son by another marriage. (fn. 7) The
abbots of Crowland made vain efforts all through
the twelfth century to recover the property;
but the priory was never restored to them. Indeed, for a while it was rather worse than lost:
the priors of Spalding were their open rivals and
enemies. At the end of the reign of Henry II
the chronicler of Crowland asserts that all the
most powerful men of the wapentake of Elloe,
with the prior of Spalding at their head, marched
into the abbot's enclosures, dug up turf, cut down
woods and alder-beds, and depastured their cattle
on his meadows. A long and tedious suit
followed, as to the marshes on which Crowland
was built, and the influence of William de Romara and other powerful friends of Spalding was
used against the abbot, and he was threatened
with the loss of the best part of his lands.
Ultimately, however, in 1193, judgement was
given in favour of Crowland. (fn. 8)
The property of the priory increased very
much during the twelfth century. To the
original gifts of Ivo Tailbois, William de Romara, son of Countess Lucy, and his grandson
after him, with other benefactors, added lands and
churches of considerable value, (fn. 9) and the monks
were soon involved, as a natural consequence, in
many lawsuits. Thomas of Moulton, who had
granted the church of Weston to the monks on
the day of his father's burial, (fn. 10) reclaimed it in
1198, (fn. 11) while the prior in 1195 secured the
advowson of the churches of (Gate) Burton and
Lea against Roger de Trihamton. (fn. 12) About the
same time the abbot of Peterborough had to
resign all claim to the church of Hautberg (fn. 13)
(Alkborough); in 1205 Roger de Lacy quitclaimed the church of Addlethorpe to the
prior; (fn. 14) the church of Holbeach was lost in
1224. (fn. 15) In 1234 there were new troubles in
connexion with Crowland Abbey. The abbot
complained that the prior took and imparked his
cattle and exceeded his rights in common of
pasture on Crowland marshes. The prior agreed
to offend no more in this respect. The abbot
undertook, however, not to impark the cattle
of the prior or of his men of Spalding and
Pinchbeck in the same marshes. (fn. 16) In the same
year a baker of Crowland, one of the abbot's
men, was caught selling bread in the market of
Spalding against the prior's assize, and was put
on the tumbrel. The abbot complained that
his liberties were invaded, and that he ought to
have the punishment of his own subjects. It
was agreed finally that if such a thing should
occur again the man should, on the first offence,
be pardoned; for the second offence, delivered
over to the abbot's bailiff; for the third, he
should undergo the penalty of the tumbrel at
Spalding, and lose for ever the protection of the
abbey. (fn. 17) These disputes between the two houses
continued throughout the thirteenth century;
in 1283 they could not agree as to their
respective duties in maintaining the bridges,
gutters, dikes, and ditches of Spalding, (fn. 18) and as
late as 1329 the abbot accused the prior of
having cut in pieces the beams placed to
strengthen the dikes which defended the abbey,
and extorted tolls and customs from those who
came to Crowland Fair. (fn. 19) At last, however, in
1332 a final agreement was made, and the two
monasteries formally entered upon a league of
brotherhood. Henceforward each was to share
the spiritual goods of the other, the divine
office, and all prayers, masses, meditations, vigils,
&c.; a monk who died in either house was
to have his absolutions and requiem celebrated
in both, and each should strive to reclaim and
reform apostates from the other. (fn. 20)
The priory of Spalding grew in wealth and
importance. In the thirteenth century the priors
claimed lordship in the vills of Weston, Spalding,
Moulton, and Pinchbeck, with wreck of the sea
for three leagues along the coast, free warrens
and fisheries in several places, (fn. 21) and their income
in 1294 amounted to £515 0s. 7d. (fn. 22) The
monks became more and more desirous to be
free of all subjection to the parent abbey of
St. Nicholas at Angers. The history of their
gradual emancipation is interesting, but can only
be briefly sketched here. The priors had been
at first sent direct from Angers, and were placed
and displaced entirely at the abbot's will; and
when they were recalled to France they were
wont to carry away with them all the money they
could collect together. (fn. 23) In consequence of these
proceedings, the bishop of Lincoln, Hugh of
Wells, and Ralf earl of Chester, as patron of
the house, invited the abbot to a conference, and
explained to him the many disadvantages which
this system produced. (fn. 24) An agreement was made
in 1232 that in future the priors of Spalding
should be elected in England and instituted by
the diocesan, so as to have full administration in
things temporal and spiritual; but the right of
visitation was reserved to the abbot on condition
that he did not make his visits too expensive
and burdensome. Novices were still to be
professed at Angers unless the abbot of his own
free will chose to allow them to make their
profession at Spalding, and four monks from the
abbey were to be maintained at the priory, being
under obedience to the prior, but liable to be
recalled by the abbot from time to time. A
pension of 40 marks a year was to be paid to
the abbey. (fn. 25)
This arrangement, however, did not give
complete satisfaction to either party; Before
1241 Pope Gregory IX, at the instance of the
abbot of Angers, had published two bulls against
the prior of Spalding for not sending his novices
to the mother-house for profession, (fn. 26) and for not
going there himself for visitation, (fn. 27) as well as
another addressed to the bishop of Lincoln
ordering him to inquire into the quarrel, and
informing him that the abbot had excommunicated the prior for disobedience, while the prior
complained that the abbot exceeded his rights. (fn. 28)
A new agreement was made in 1242, and confirmed by Pope Innocent IV in 1245. (fn. 29) It was
very similar to the previous one, only that now
the abbot agreed to visit the priory every three
years and to receive the profession of novices
there instead of requiring them to come to
Angers; his stay, however, was not to exceed a
month, nor was he to bring more than fifteen
mounted attendants with him. The pension
was to be increased to 60 marks on account
of the great expense incurred by the abbot in
forwarding his suit at the apostolic see. The
bishop of Lincoln was to see that all these
arrangements were faithfully carried out, and
arrears of pension paid.
Towards the close of the thirteenth century
the priory suffered some losses from inundation, (fn. 30)
a recurrent difficulty with all houses near the
Lincoln coast. In the reign of Edward II the
monks of Spalding were in trouble on other
accounts: in 1314 for usurping the possession
of Deeping manor during the minority of
Thomas Wake; (fn. 31) in 1316 they were charged
with carrying corn and other victuals to the
Scots (fn. 32) ; in 1316 and 1318 they had difficulties
about getting in their rents and market tolls (fn. 33) ;
in 1324 they were accused of harbouring and
selling the goods of a traitor. (fn. 34) The outbreak
of the French wars brought anxiety and loss to
all monasteries dependent on foreign abbeys, and
to Spalding among the rest, as its exemption
from the mother-house was not yet complete.
In 1275 the king confiscated the 40 marks due
to Angers, (fn. 35) and the prior seems to have thought
this a convenient opportunity for escaping altogether from subjection to foreigners. He expelled the four alien monks who were quartered
on his house, and though at first the king ordered
him to take them back again, (fn. 36) the intercession of
Henry de Lacy, as patron of the priory, brought
about an agreement which made the monks
of Spalding virtually independent. The king
ordered the house to be released by the escheator
and granted it the privilege of governing itself
in future on condition that the pension due to
Angers was paid to the exchequer instead, and
that no aliens were received without his consent. (fn. 37)
The priory was again seized in 1325, but, after
a series of inquiries as to its patronage, released
in 1327 on payment of the arrears of pension, (fn. 38) At the conclusion of peace the proctor of
St. Nicholas tried again to assert his rights. From
1327 to 1329 a series of royal writs was issued,
ordering the prior to pay all arrears since the
conclusion of peace. (fn. 39) It was not, however, long
before war began again, and in 1339 the pension
was transferred once more to the exchequer. (fn. 40)
In 1341 the prior obtained exemption from
attendance in Parliament for himself and his
successors on the plea of all these expenses lately
incurred. In 1397 a bull of Pope Boniface IX
set the priory free for ever from all subjection
to Angers. (fn. 41) The abbot was no doubt more
easily reconciled to this mandate by the fact that
he had long ceased to reap any profits from his
English property.
Towards the middle of the fifteenth century
the monastery was considerably in debt, owing
to the mismanagement of its revenues, (fn. 42) but it
appears to have recovered from this during the
last fifty years before the suppression. In 1534
it was one of the richest monasteries in Lincolnshire. The prior had long enjoyed the right of
using the ring and pastoral staff, in consideration
of the dignity of the house, (fn. 43) and there were still
nineteen monks in it beside the prior and subprior, when the Act of Supremacy was passed. (fn. 44)
In 1526 great efforts were made by the bishop
of Lincoln to induce Prior Thomas (Spalding) to
resign his office: as it seems, because Cardinal
Wolsey was desirous of appointing some one else
to suit his own ' honourable pleasure and purpose.' The bishop wrote to Wolsey at this
time saying that the prior was himself good and
gentle, but had been induced by others (notably
the abbot of Peterborough) to resist all persuasion
on this point, and was determined to die prior of
the house. (fn. 45) In 1528 there was a rumour that he
had died, and the abbot of Bardney wrote to
John Heneage to solicit the cardinal in favour
of one of his own monks. (fn. 46) Thomas Spalding,
however, signed the acknowledgement of supremacy in 1534: but evidently resigned or
died some time between 1534 and 1540, for the
name of the prior who heads the pension list is
Richard Elsyn alias Palmer. (fn. 47) This monastery
was not actually implicated in the Lincoln
Rebellion, but it was reported that the prior had
refused to contribute any men to the royal forces,
on the ground that he was a ' spiritual man.' (fn. 48)
Either this report was not true, or the prior
managed to make his peace with Cromwell, whose
friend he seems to have been; (fn. 49) at any rate he
was not brought to trial. The house was finally
surrendered in 1540; the prior receiving a pen
sion of £133 6s. 8d., and the monks amounts
varying from £12 to 26s. 8d. (fn. 50)
The priory of Spalding was not liable to episcopal visitation until the fourteenth century, when
it was freed from all subjection to Angers. Until
this time the abbot of St. Nicholas had the right
of visitation, for the correction of the house, as
has been already seen: though during the French
wars it was impossible to exercise this right.
Before 1232, when the first agreement was made
for the partial exemption of the house, its condition is said to have been somewhat unsatisfactory, as the priors were liable to be recalled
at the abbot's pleasure, and had little interest
therefore in their charge. One of them, Herbert, who ruled from about 1149 to 1156, is
said, however, to have taken pains to increase
the revenue of the priory, and obtained the
appropriation of the churches of Spalding, Pinchbeck, Moulton, and Alkborough. (fn. 51) At the death of
Ralf de Mansel in 1229, Bishop Hugh of Wells
interfered to settle a disputed election, when the
sub-prior and several monks appealed against the
candidate nominated by Ralf earl of Chester, as
patron of the house; and Simon of Hautberg
was finally appointed. (fn. 52) It was only three years
later that the convent gained the right of election,
so Simon became the first independent ruler of
the house. He was prior for more than twenty
years, and his name was long remembered at
Spalding. He came of a knightly family, and
from his earliest years was devoted to study;
and the house flourished under his rule. He was
one of the most magnificent prelates in England;
on one occasion he invited the king to dinner
with him in London and entertained him so
royally that the bishops and abbots who heard of
it complained loudly, fearing some fresh taxation:
and the prior's own diocesan even threatened to
depose him. Nevertheless he did not get his
house into debt. (fn. 53)
John the Almoner, who ruled the priory from
1253 to 1274, made himself very unpopular in
the neighbourhood: it was alleged in 1275 that
he had exceeded the bounds of his free warren,
had given shelter to felons in the priory, and had
maliciously detained certain persons until they
paid or granted him whatsoever he desired: he
had also let a bridge fall down, to the great loss
of the country-side. (fn. 54) None of these accusations
were, however, made matter of inquisition,
because the prior was already dead: so they
cannot be considered as proved. William of
Littleport, the next prior, was a great builder. (fn. 55)
Clement of Hatfield, who died in 1308, left
behind him a good reputation for his government
of the house and management of its property. (fn. 56)
Bishop Burghersh issued a commission of
inquiry in 1333 as to the causes of discord at
the election of Thomas of Nassington. (fn. 57) Regular visitations probably began after 1397, when
the priory was finally made independent. An
allusion is made in the visitation of 1438 to
certain injunctions lately delivered by Bishop
Gray, who had ordered the rebuilding of certain
parts of the monastery. The visitation of 1438
was conducted by Bishop Alnwick. The prior,
Robert Holland, allowed that he had not rebuilt
the hall or refectory, as directed by Bishop Gray,
and it was found by this time that other repairs
were needed also. The order of the house was
fairly good for the fifteenth century, when the
standard of life, secular and religious, was generally low: a certain number of monks always ate
in refectory, and there was no neglect of the
divine office; a scholar seems to have been
maintained at each university. (fn. 58) Sixteen of the
brethren, indeed, answered omnia bene to the
bishop's questions. But the prior, some alleged,
was not careful of the interests of the house, and
did not show his accounts or consult the brethren
duly in the disposal of property; (fn. 59) he was too
often away from the monastery. (fn. 60) He had
allowed wine to be sold in the cloister, a practice
which brought in many seculars: he did not help
his brethren to maintain the dignity of the
religious life, for there was sometimes laughter
at the chapter of faults. A few individual complaints about food, or the loss of pittances, or the
insolence of the prior's servants, or the neglect
of prayer and study, need not cause us much
surprise: such complaints may be found at all
times in the best regulated monasteries. More
serious was the accusation against two brethren
of being too familiar with women, of revealing
to them the private affairs of the monastery,
and of spreading ill-sounding opinions, through
ignorance of holy scripture. One of the chaplains was accused of bringing women into the
house. (fn. 61)
In 1519 Bishop Atwater found that the ornaments of the church needed repair. The prior
did not consult his brethren duly as to the disposal of property, but placed more confidence in
the advice of certain seculars, who bore themselves nimis elate towards the monks in consequence. The bishop enjoined that the seniors
should be consulted, and that an instructor in
grammar should be provided. (fn. 62) . It is evident that
the house was on the whole in good order, and
the rule kept. A few years before the dissolution,
the monastery seems to have suffered some disadvantage from the personal character of the
prior, who was ' good and gentle,' wrote Bishop
Longlands, but unwilling to see his office pass to
more capable hands—an infirmity which other
heads of houses have shared with him before and
since. (fn. 63) It is not clear whether it was this prior
or his successor on whose behalf Cromwell wrote
to Bishop Longlands in 1536; most probably the
latter. The bishop seems to have designed a
visitation of the house, and was somewhat roughly
reminded that it belonged to Cromwell's cure
and not to his, ' being nouther founder nouther
benefactor of the same.' The priory had been
lately visited by the royal commissioners, who
had reformed all that was necessary: and the
prior and convent were to be left in peace. (fn. 64) They
had to find, a few years later, that the king and
his vicar-general were harder patrons than the
bishop.
At the time of the dissolution a considerable
amount of money was distributed in alms
from this monastery, in fulfilment of various
bequests. On the five vigils of our Lady 42s.
was distributed to the poor: an annual dole of
5s. 3d. was given in memory of two benefactors,
and of 23s. 4d. in memory of five deceased priors,
as well as 60s. on the anniversary of William
Littleport. in particular: £4 18s. was paid out
in cloth and ' pardon beans' for the soul of
Countess Lucy the foundress. (fn. 65)
The original endowment consisted of the extensive manor of Spalding with its appurtenances
and the church. (fn. 66) Ralf earl of Chester and
Lucy the countess gave in addition the churches
of Belchford, Scamblesby, and Minting, (fn. 67) William
de Romara gave the church of Bolingbroke and
a moiety of East Keal, (fn. 68) Wido Laval the church
of Addlethorpe, (fn. 69) Roger de Trehamton the
churches of Gate Burton and Lea. (fn. 70) When
King John confirmed the charters of Spalding
in 1199 they had lordship in Spalding and Pinchbeck, the manors of Alkborough, Langtoft, and
Wilbeton (Wyberton), with the above churches
(except Minting and Scamblesby) as well as
Weston, Moulton, Pinchbeck, Surfleet, Sibsey,
Stickney, Hautberg (Alkborough) with Walcote
chapel. (fn. 71) By 1236 their lordship, with free
warren, extended over Weston and Moulton as
well as Spalding and Pinchbeck. (fn. 72) In 1294
the revenue of the priory was valued at
£271 13s. 7d. in temporals and £243 6s. in
spirituals. (fn. 73) In 1284, the prior of Spalding held
the vills of Spalding, Weston and Pinchbeck,
with some exceptions, and sixteen and a half
bovates in Long Sutton and Lutton and eight
bovates in Moulton which Thomas son of
Lambert of Moulton held of him (fn. 74) : in 1303
one third of a knight's fee in Kirkby Laythorpe,
and Evedon, and one sixth in Wyberton: (fn. 75) in
1346 the same. (fn. 76) In 1534 the temporals of the
priory were valued at £740 2s. 9d. including the
demesne land in Spalding and Weston, and the
granges of Halmer, Thornham, New Hall,
Ambreylathe, Sutton, Gannock, Pinchbeck,
Pinchbecklathe, Graves, Moulton-cum-Golwell
and Goll, Weston-cum-Westonlathe, Caldbyche,
Wykeham, Wyberton, Alkborough, Wythamcum-Obthorpe, Kirkby, Stickney, Belchford,
Lincoln, Ludford, Donnington; in spirituals at
£138 14s. 6d., including the rectories of Spalding, Pinchbeck, Moulton, Weston, Sibsey,
Alkborough, and the chapel of Cowbit. (fn. 77) The
Ministers' Accounts amount to £933 10s. 2d. (fn. 78)
Priors of Spalding
Nigel, (fn. 79) occurs temp. Henry II
Herbert, (fn. 80) occurs 1149 and 1156
Reynold, (fn. 81) elected 1176
Geoffrey (fn. 82)
Warin, (fn. 83) occurs 1182
Jocelyn, (fn. 84) occurs 1195 and 1198
John the Spaniard (fn. 85)
Nicholas, (fn. 86) occurs 1203-4
Ralf Mansel, (fn. 87) occurs 1224, died 1229
Simon of Hautberg, (fn. 88) elected 1229, died 1253
John the Almoner, (fn. 89) elected 1253, died 1274
William of Littleport, (fn. 90) elected 1274, died 1294
Clement of Hatfield, (fn. 91) elected 1294, died 1318
Walter of Halton, (fn. 92) elected 1318, occurs till
1332
Thomas of Nassington, (fn. 93) elected 1333, died
1353
John Esterfield, (fn. 94) elected 1353, occurs till 1396
John of Moulton, (fn. 95) elected 1404, died 1421
Robert Holland, (fn. 96) elected 1421, occurs till
1438
William of Pinchbeck (fn. 97)
Thomas II, (fn. 98) occurs 1462
Thomas III, (fn. 99) elected 1475, occurs till 1492
Robert, (fn. 100) occurs 1504 and 1509
Robert Boston, (fn. 101) occurs 1522
Thomas Spalding, (fn. 102) occurs 1515 to 1534
Richard Elsyn (fn. 103) or Palmer, occurs 1540
The common seal of Spalding (fn. 104) is thirteenthcentury style of work, the obverse representing
the Virgin with crown seated on a carved throne,
the Child on the left knee. In base, under a
pointed arch, slightly trefoiled with gables of
church-like structure at the sides, the prior halflength to the left in prayer.
SIGIL . . . ARIE: ET: BEATI . . . HOLAI
SPAL . . . GIE.
The reverse represents St. Nicholas standing on
a carved corbel, with mitre, pall, and pastoral
staff; the right hand is broken away.
SIGIL . . . PIT'LI: BEA . . . MARIE
ET BE . . . NGLE.
The borders are beaded.