COLLEGES
18. THE COLLEGE OF CLIFTON
Sir Gervase Clifton in 1349 obtained licence
to give eleven messuages and certain lands in
Clifton and Stanton on the Wold, with the
advowson of the latter, to three chaplains celebrating divine service in the church of Clifton
by Nottingham, for the good estate of Sir Gervase
and of Isabel his wife. (fn. 1)
His great-great-grandson, Sir Robert Clifton,
began in 1476 to change this three-fold chantry
into a small collegiate establishment, increasing
the endowments and causing it to be dedicated to
the Holy Trinity. The three priests had a mansion in common, and the senior was termed the
warden. Sir Robert died in 1478, and the
founding of the college was concluded by his
son Sir Gervase, an esquire of the body to
Edward IV and a knight of the Bath at the
coronation of Richard III. (fn. 2)
Sir Gervase assigned certain lands to Lenton
Priory on condition that they paid £10 a year to
the warden of Clifton College to celebrate for
his soul and for the soul of William Booth, late
Archbishop of York. Sir Robert had married
Alice sister to the archbishop. This £10 is
entered among the annual outgoings of the
priory at the time of the Valor of 1534. (fn. 3) The
clear annual value of the college was at this time
entered as £20 2s. 6d.; of which sum the warden,
John Fynnes, had £6 13s. 4d., and the two fellows or chantry priests (John Hemsell and Thomas
Rusby) £6 each. (fn. 4)
The suppression commissioners of 1547-8
returned the annual value as £21 5s. 10d. The
same warden and priests were resident. (fn. 5)
Footnotes
| 1 |
Thoroton, Notts. i, 105-6. |
| 2 |
Ibid. 106-7. |
| 3 |
Valor Eccl. (Rec. Com.), v, 149. |
| 4 |
Ibid. v, 167. |
| 5 |
Coll. and Chant. Cert. Notts. xxxvii. |