11. THE ABBEY OF TILTY (fn. 1)
Tilty Abbey was founded by Maurice Fitz
Geoffrey and his overlord Robert de Ferrers,
earl of Derby, in the middle of the twelfth
century. According to the Louth Park Chronicle
it was colonized from the abbey of Warden in
Bedfordshire, which had itself been colonized
from Rievaux in Yorkshire; (fn. 2) and this is borne out
by the fact that Walter, abbot of Colchester,
made grants (fn. 3) of a mill to Hugh, abbot of
Warden, and to Auger, abbot of Tilty,
in almost identical terms. The year of foundation, according to a list (fn. 4) of the Cistercian houses
and the best of the evidence from the chronicles, (fn. 5)
was 1153; another list (fn. 6) adds the date 22 September.
The Dunmow Chronicle tells us that 'the work
of St. Mary of Tilty,' that is to say, the building of the church, was begun by Abbot Simon
on 16 March, 1188. (fn. 7) The abbey appears to have
thriven greatly in the next few years, for Ralph
of Coggeshall describes this abbot as having from
a very poor grange made a most beautiful and
opulent abbey in which zeal of religion and
secular prudence rivalled each other. (fn. 8) The same
historian says that on Christmas Day, 1215, a
part of King John's army violently entered the
church and offices of the abbey while mass was
being celebrated, overthrew the furniture, broke
open chests, and carried off booty. (fn. 9)
A number of grants relating to the abbey are
to be found in a small register (fn. 10) of two volumes
compiled by brother John Feryng, who was at
one time collector of the rents. He began in
1444 to make abstracts of certain charters relating to possessions of the abbey in Newport, and
afterwards extended his work to other places.
The grants are mostly small, and none of the
more important charters are given, the register
having evidently been made for his special purpose.
Several grants, including one of 2s. rent in
Canfield from Robert de Vere, earl of Oxford,
are stated to have been made at the time of the
dedication of the abbey church, which would
appear to be about 1220. The register also contains numerous extracts from rentals and court
rolls of various dates, and details of the expenses of
John Feryng on several journeys.
Richard I by a charter (fn. 11) dated 3 February,
1199, confirmed all grants made to the monks,
including the land of Tilty where the abbey was
founded as granted to them by Robert de Ferrers
and Maurice Fitz Geoffrey, the granges of
Duddenhoe, Chrishall, Duxford and Ringmer,
and various other lands, and granted liberties.
Henry III on 13 March, 1251, confirmed the
same and many more grants, including the
granges of Radwinter and Aythorpe Roding; (fn. 12)
and further confirmations were obtained from
Edward III in 1361 (fn. 13) and from Edward IV in
1475. (fn. 14) Henry III also confirmed a grant by
Ralph le Moyne for the support of sick monks, (fn. 15)
and a grant by the earl of Derby of land and
liberties in Lancashire between the Ribble and
the Mersey, (fn. 16) which they seem afterwards to
have parted with. On 26 March, 1246, he
granted to the abbot free warren in his demesne
lands adjoining the abbey in Easton, Chaureth,
Little Broxted and Chickney. (fn. 17)
The possessions of the abbey were widely distributed. The temporalities mentioned in the
Taxation of 1291 amounted to the value of
£163 13s. 5d. yearly. Of this £100 0s. 2d.
came from Essex; the principal items being
£17 4s. 6d. in Steeple, £9 19s. 10½d. in Debden,
£9 9s. 9½d. in Chrishall, £8 2s. 8d. in Chawreth,
£7 17s. 6d. in Chickney, £5 19s. 0d. in Radwinter and £5 1s. 8d. in Great Chishall, while
sums of over £1 came from Chigwell, Aythorpe
Roding, Littlebury, Elmdon, High Easter,
Wenden Lofts, Easton, Takeley and Thaxted,
and smaller sums from twenty-three other places.
Cambridgeshire contributed £48 6s. 5d., chiefly
from Duxford, Ickleton, Fulmer and Melbourn;
Hertfordshire £8 13s. 10d.; Suffolk £5 19s. 8d.
and London 13s. 4d. The church of Tilty was
appropriated to the abbey. The abbot and convent had licence on 10 February, 1332, to
acquire two messuages in London for a monk to
celebrate divine service in their church for the
souls of the donors; (fn. 18) and on 5 May, 1361, to
acquire land in Great Easton for the maintenance of two lamps in the church and one in the
dormitory. (fn. 19)
The abbot was summoned (fn. 20) to Parliament
under Edward I, but not afterwards. He is
mentioned as going to the general chapter of the
order at Cîteaux in 1308. (fn. 21) Tilty, like other
Cistercian houses, did a considerable trade in
wool with the Italian merchants, and a bargain
amounting to 340 marks is recorded in 1288. (fn. 22)
Similar dealings afterwards proved expensive;
for the abbot and convent repaid a debt of
£64 6s. 8d. to the Ricardi of Lucca, not knowing that the goods and debts of the latter had been
confiscated by Edward I in 1296, and consequently they had to pay it over again at the
Exchequer. In 1328 they were allowed (fn. 23) to pay
the balance still due in yearly instalments of 40s.,
their poverty having been testified to in open
Parliament.
Pope Boniface IX on 12 November, 1402,
granted (fn. 24) an indult for the abbot and monks,
whenever they should leave the monastery for a
reasonable cause, to eat flesh on lawful days.
The last years of the abbey were troubled.
In 1530 it was found necessary to depose Abbot
Roger Beverley, a pension of £20 being granted (fn. 25)
to him for life by the convent on 3 August.
His successor, Edmund Emery, also resigned
after a short time, and on 13 March, 1533, arbitrators awarded pensions of £14 to him and
£10 to Beverley. (fn. 26) In 1533 there appears a
new abbot, John Palmer, who writes (fn. 27) to complain to Cromwell that the bishop of London has
intruded a clerk into the benefice of Easton,
which the abbots have had for several years, so
that in addition to being charged with two great
pensions he is deprived of the benefice. Beverley
left England, and on 17 May, 1535, he wrote (fn. 28)
from Dublin to Cromwell asking for help. 'The
late marquess of Dorset sent to the fathers of the
religion to cause him to resign, and assured him
£20 under the convent seal, which had not
been truly paid. He was content to take £10,
but had had nothing since Michaelmas.' He
offered bribes and information to Cromwell, and
asked for a benefice. After the dissolution,
however, it appears that he was still in receipt of
his pension of £10. (fn. 29)
Some letters from Margaret, marchioness of
Dorset, to Cromwell, written from Tilty about
this time, are preserved. In one (fn. 30) she thanks him
for his goodness of late in quieting the poor
house of Tilty, which otherwise would have
been destroyed. In another (fn. 31) she thanks him for
the reformation of this poor house of Tilty, now
completed by the abbots of Tower Hill and
Coggeshall and Mr. Watkyns, who have deposed
the old unthrifty abbot and chosen a new one of
the house, and begs that he will thank the abbot
of Tower Hill for his zeal. It is not plain, however, whether she refers to the resignation of
Beverley or of Emery. Her interferences do not
seem always to have been well received, for at
another time she writes: (fn. 32) ' I assure you, Mr.
Secretary, it does me not a little trouble to hear
that you should think this abbey of Tiltey is
impaired by me. This is some sinister report,
and I beg you will not give it credence till I
come to my answer.' On 6 October, 1535, the
abbot and convent granted to her a lease (fn. 33) for
sixty years of the grange, demesne lands, and
manor of Tilty, including the house standing
against the west end of the church of the
monastery of old time called the founder's
house, otherwise the Gestes Hall. Such grants
made shortly before the dissolution were naturally suspected; but on an inquiry being made
afterwards it was found by the jury that the
lease was such as used to be granted and in
no way fraudulent, and it was consequently
allowed by a decree of the Court of Augmentations on 20 October, 1538, and confirmed on
4 November. (fn. 34)
The net value of the abbey is given in the
Valor as £167 2s. 6d. yearly, the gross value
being £177 9s. 4d., and consequently it did not
reach the limit fixed by the Act of 1536 for
survival. But, as in a few other cases, the
monks did not wait for this to come into operation, and on 28 February, 1536, a deed (fn. 35) of surrender was signed by John Palmer, abbot, John
Thaxsted, John Chechelay, George Chambryghem, Richard Gybson and George Casse.
This was formally acknowledged by the abbot
and convent in their chapter-house on 3 March
before the king's commissioner, and an order (fn. 36) was
made on the same day. The abbot and his five
brethren were to remain in the abbey till the
king's further pleasure, and other regulations
were laid down for the management of the house
by the abbot, who was to retain his five servants
and continue to support Alice Mills (his mother),
Agnes Lucas, widow, and Thomas Ewen, impotent persons. An inventory of the goods of
the monastery was taken on the same day. A
portion of another inventory, (fn. 37) taken probably in
June, 1536, is also preserved. Goods were sold
to the value of £19 19s. 0½d., and there were
forty-three ounces of plate, valued at £7 18s. 8d.
The debts of the house amounted to £126 13s. 11d.
A pension (fn. 38) of £16 yearly was granted to the
abbot on 29 June.
The possessions of the abbey were dispersed
after the dissolution. The reversion of the lease
of the monastery itself, the mansion called 'le
Founders Lodging and the Gest Hall,' Tilty
Grange and the manor of Tilty, the rectory
and chapel of Tilty, and some lands, was
granted (fn. 39) to Sir Thomas Audeley on 24 April,
1542.
Abbots of Tilty
Auger, (fn. 40) occurs circa 1170.
Simon, occurs 1188, (fn. 41) died 1214. (fn. 42)
Walter, occurs 1219, (fn. 43) 1230. (fn. 44)
Robert, occurs 1247, (fn. 45) 1264, (fn. 46) 1267. (fn. 47)
Nicholas, occurs 1272, (fn. 48) 1278. (fn. 49)
Adam, occurs 1295. (fn. 50)
Edmund, occurs 1318. (fn. 51)
John de Warden, occurs 1347. (fn. 52)
Richard Chishull, (fn. 53) occurs circa 1370.
William. (fn. 54)
Thomas, occurs 1401, (fn. 55) 1411. (fn. 56)
John Cresshale, (fn. 57) resigned circa 1420.
John Curteys, occurs 1430, (fn. 58) 1435. (fn. 59)
Simon Pakenham or Pabenham, occurs
1438. (fn. 60)
John, occurs 1453, (fn. 61) 1458. (fn. 62)
Thomas Thakeley, occurs 1465. (fn. 63)
John, (fn. 64) occurs 1487.
Richard, (fn. 65) occurs 1501, 1504.
John Oxford, (fn. 66) occurs 1504.
John London, (fn. 67) elected 1515.
Roger Beverley, elected 1517, (fn. 68) deposed
1530. (fn. 69)
Edmund Emery, elected 1530, (fn. 70) resigned
1532-3. (fn. 71)
John Palmer, elected 1532-3, (fn. 72) the last
abbot. (fn. 73)
The seal (fn. 74) of the abbey taken from a brass
matrix in the possession of St. John's College,
Cambridge, measures 17/8 in. In a carved
niche with pinnacled canopy and balustrade the
Virgin is seated crowned, with the infant Jesus
standing on her left knee, holding in her right
hand a sceptre with three flowering branches.
On each side is a penthouse containing three
monks. Legend:
SIG' COMUNE MONASTERII BEATE MARIE DE
TILTEYE