14. THE ABBEY OF OSENEY
In 1129 Robert d'Oilly the younger, at the
instigation of his wife Edith Forne, founded an
Augustinian priory in the island of Oseney,
lying immediately west of the castle of Oxford. (fn. 1)
By his foundation charter he gave them the
manor of Water Eaton, and all he had in the
island of Oseney, namely the southern half,
some rents in Oxford and other small possessions; but the chief endowment consisted of all
the churches which were in his hands, Watlington, Kidlington, Hook Norton, Weston-on-the-Green, Chastleton, with Claydon in Buckinghamshire, and Shenstone in Staffordshire. (fn. 2)
More valuable was the grant made in 1149 by
Henry d'Oilly his son, and John de St. John,
when they gave to Oseney the collegiate chapel
of St. George's, of which they were the patrons. (fn. 3)
Small donations followed in quick succession, so
that ultimately the house had property in more
than 120 localities, scattered over Oxfordshire,
Buckinghamshire, Berkshire, Gloucestershire,
Worcestershire, Warwickshire, Staffordshire,
Northamptonshire, with small possessions in
Herefordshire, Leicestershire, Norfolk, Suffolk,
Essex, Kent, Middlesex, and Bedfordshire. It
also had two churches in Ireland, Kiltevenan
and Balibrenan, with land in the neighbourhood,
of the gift of Roger of Worcester, and Richard
of Bristol.
During the twelfth century Oseney was much
occupied with a dispute about the church of
St. Mary Magdalen, Oxford, which was claimed
by the priory of St. Frideswide. The struggle
lasted from 1149 to 1200, and involved many
appeals to the pope, all the decisions being in
favour of Oseney. In the course of this, Oseney,
about 1154, was raised by the pope to the
rank of an abbey, having previously been, like
most Augustinian houses, a priory. (fn. 4)
During the next century the growing importance of Oxford was not without influence
on Oseney. With its extensive premises, close
to Oxford, yet shut off by the river, it was
found to be a convenient place for councils.
In 1222 a general council was held there
under Stephen Langton (fn. 5) ; in 1238 the Cardinal
Otho was staying there, when the scholars
attacked his retinue; (fn. 6) in 1252 even the Benedictines had a council at Oseney. (fn. 7)
The chartulary (fn. 8) of Oseney shows that between
the years 1220 and 1270 the abbey was doing
a large banking business, receiving from residents
in Oxford sums of money on deposit, sometimes over £100, to be repaid either on demand
or with a week's or fortnight's notice. Trustees and guardians were glad of an institution,
honest and financially sound, where money
could safely be left until it was wanted. The
abbey of course gave no interest, for that would
be un-Christian usury, but it was able to obtain
interest itself by investing the money in house
property in Oxford.
It cannot of course be proved that the money
was used in this way, but the charters of the
abbey, of which over a thousand are still preserved at Christ Church, Oxford, and 400 in
the Bodleian Library, show that it acquired
many houses in Oxford in the thirteenth century, and that, though nominally by gift, they
were often really by purchase. The Mortmain
Act, which made it difficult for monastic houses
to invest their savings profitably, put an end to
this, and by removing this inducement to thrift,
did much to bring about that indebtedness
which was the permanent state of so many
monasteries.
Oseney, the wealthiest of the houses of Oxfordshire, was also one of the best in discipline.
On no occasion do we hear of scandal in connexion with it, and rarely of anything that is
unsatisfactory. Certainly about the beginning
of the thirteenth century its reputation stood
high. When Waltham was founded in 1177,
Oseney supplied six canons out of sixteen, (fn. 9) and
in 1184 the abbot as well. (fn. 10) In 1213 when so
many religious houses, which had been vacant
during the interdict, were filled up, the heads of
four houses were taken from Oseney. (fn. 11) In 1225,
1230, and 1247, the priories of Newenham,
Chacombe and Ivychurch elected as their heads
canons of Oseney, (fn. 12) and so did the abbeys of
Dorchester and Owston in 1236: (fn. 13) and the step
taken by the abbot of Oseney in 1235, when he
joined the Friars Minors, would generally be
reckoned a sign of religious earnestness, though
Matthew Paris saw nothing in it but 'levity of
mind.' (fn. 14)
Unlike some large monasteries, Oseney had
no quarrels with neighbours about jurisdiction.
It claimed no right to interfere with the city or
university, and while these two were at bitter
enmity, Oseney was able to live on good terms
with both.
Some writers have assumed that Oseney was
a place of learning with important schools, and
the germ from which the university started.
But this is to reverse the order of things; people
did not come to Oxford to study at Oseney, but
came to Oseney to study at Oxford. We hear
of no schools at Oseney, nor of any canon that
could claim to be a man of learning. It is true
that there is a chronicle, extending to 1289,
attributed by Bale to Thomas Wykes, one of
the canons; (fn. 15) but he must have acquired his
learning elsewhere; for among the deeds of
Oseney, preserved at Christ Church, Oxford, is
a grant of six cottages to Oseney by 'Thomas
de Wyke, rector ecclesie de Castre sancti
Edmundi,' and in 1270 the abbey made him a
grant (fn. 16) of one mark a year 'as long as he lives
in secular habit.' It was not until twelve years
later that he was admitted a canon, as he tells us
in his own chronicle. (fn. 17) Another record emanated from Oseney, called the Annals of Oseney.
Of this the earliest form is found in Cott. MS.
Vitell. E, xv, fol. 2-4, written by the earliest
scribe (i.e. 1196-8), being brief entries for the
years 1066 to about 1180. (fn. 18) These were afterwards slightly expanded from other writers and
were continued in a much fuller form to 1293.
Its authority therefore for the twelfth century
is very much better than has hitherto been
supposed.
The following were some of the privileges
granted to Oseney by various popes. Their
canons might receive orders from any catholic
bishop: (fn. 19) the prior and sub-prior could not be
compelled to act as judges-delegate in ecclesiastical cases: (fn. 20) the abbey might establish three or
four of the canons in any of its rectories; (fn. 21) but
this custom, if ever followed, was soon discarded,
Bibury in Gloucestershire and Kiltevenan in
Ireland being the only churches that were served
by canons; finally in 1481 the abbot was granted
leave to wear a mitre, and to confer minor orders
on the novices. (fn. 22) But one of the papal decisions
given in 1399 was much to be deplored. The
abbot had taken an oath to the canons to divulge
to the older canons the names of all creditors of
the monastery, never to borrow money without
their consent, to reveal where the goods of the
monastery had been pledged and what they were,
and to appoint the four 'officiarii' with the
counsel of the elder canons. These were certainly steps that would have conduced to good
government. But when the canons, on the pretext of this oath, maintained that the abbot had
no right to borrow money 'for the relief of the
monastery and to remunerate his friends,' the
pope, agreeing with the bishop of Lincoln, decided that he should be absolved from the oath,
cunningly extorted, and once more he was free
to borrow for the benefit of his friends. (fn. 23)
The honour of a seat in Parliament, unlike
the honour of a mitre, was not coveted by the
abbot. In 1341 he petitioned that as he held
no lands of the king by barony, he might not be
summoned to Parliament as had been the case
since 1319. (fn. 24) In 1345 he obtained exemption; (fn. 25)
but three years later we find him summoned
once more. (fn. 26)
At the visitation held in 1445 the convent
consisted of the abbot and twenty-six canons,
two of whom were absent, at Bibury and in
Ireland respectively. The state of the house
was quite satisfactory, the chief complaint being
that when the canons were ill in the infirmary
they were not supplied with light food, but had
the same as the hale. (fn. 27)
In February 1499 the bishop of Lincoln
made a visitation of Oseney. The abbey was in
debt and the buildings were out of repair; the
abbot was ordered not to spend more than 40
marks a year on clothes, food, and fire, until the
debts of the house were paid. He was to have but
one cook and one butler, being allowed for each
4 marks a year for wages, and 10d. a week for
maintenance. If he had other servants he must
pay them himself. He was to have the manor of
Medley for his residence. The prior and canons
were to be allowed not more than 18d. a week
for their diet and firing; and besides, every canon
in priest's orders was to have 40s. a year, those
in lower orders 26s. 8d. for stipend. No
strangers were to be invited to feasts (ad solacia)
at the expense of the abbey. No canon was to
be allowed to go into Oxford except for study or
reasonable cause. The prior was not to frequent
taverns and disreputable places. The temporals
of the abbey were to be administered by John
Awdeleye, bachelor of law. (fn. 28)
The records of visitations in 1518 and 1520
tell us that besides the abbot and six novices
there were nineteen canons, one of them being in
Ireland. The canons complain that the bishop
by excommunicating the abbot had brought
discredit on the house. One of the canons,
named Taunton, described as utterly irreligious
and unwilling to rise to mattins more than once
in a month, after he had been corrected many
times, had been banished to the property of the
monastery in Ireland; whereupon he fled to the
bishop of Lincoln. For this the abbot excommunicated him, and the bishop apparently in return
excommunicated the abbot. Another canon is described as utterly irreligious, a fomenter of strife,
one who threatened with a dagger those with
whom he disagreed. The debts of the house
were estimated by one canon at £500, by another
at £800, while the income was reckoned to be
£730. In 1520 it is recorded that one of the
canons had spoken contumelious words of the
bishop, saying 'that he caryd not a teide for his
malice.' Taunton, we find, was by that time
at Oseney and incarcerated, but the bishop showed
that he was not entirely satisfied with the state
of things, by adjourning his visitation for nine
months instead of dissolving or closing it. (fn. 29)
In 1524, when the abbot resigned, he was
allowed a pension of £60, his successor being
the prior of St. Frideswide's, which was at that
time in process of suppression. (fn. 30) In 1526 the
income of the abbey was only £586 gross,
£345 net, from which £63 had to be deducted
for the pension of the retired abbot; but in
1535 it is returned at £755, with a clear value
of £654. It may be concluded that for the subsidy of 1526 certain properties were exempt,
perhaps house property in Oxford.
Drs. Tregonwell and Layton visited Oseney
in September, 1535, and gave injunctions that no
canon should leave the precincts for any cause.
Against these orders the abbot, John Burton,
protested to Cromwell, pointing out that he
could not receive his rents nor see to the repairs
of his manors, and adding that Oseney stood
very low and in a wet situation, 'and I was
brought up in wholesome ground of the King's
College, sometime called the monastery of
St. Frideswide,' so that if he were obliged to
remain continuously at Oseney his life would
no doubt be shortened. (fn. 31)
In January, 1537, we find the abbots of Oseney
and Eynsham accused of speaking 'obtrectuous'
words against the king, (fn. 32) but it was only the wild
invention of a crazy talebearer, John Parkyns. (fn. 33)
In November, 1539, the abbey was surrendered into the king's hand, the abbot being
Robert King, suffragan of Lincoln, and afterwards first bishop of Oxford. As he was a
Cistercian monk, and abbot of Thame, (fn. 34) he
must have been temporarily appointed, with his
elevation to the bishopric in view.
Abbots of Oseney (fn. 35)
Ralf, (fn. 36) prior 1129, died 1138 (fn. 37)
Wygod, prior until about 1154, then abbot;
died 1168 (fn. 38)
Edward, elected 1168; died 1184 (fn. 39)
Hugh, elected 1184; died 1205 (fn. 40)
Clement, elected 1205; died 1221 (fn. 41)
Richard de Gray, elected 1221; (fn. 42) died 1229 (fn. 43)
John de Reading, elected 1229; resigned
1235 (fn. 44)
John de Leche, elected 1235; resigned
1249 (fn. 45)
Adam de Berners, elected 1249; died
1254 (fn. 46)
Richard de Appeltre, elected 1254; resigned
about 31 December, 1267 (fn. 47)
William de Suttone, elected January, 1268;
died 1285 (fn. 48)
Roger de Coventry, elected 1285; (fn. 49) died
1297
John de Bibury, elected 1297; (fn. 50) resigned
1317
John de Oseneye, elected 1317; (fn. 51) died
1330
Thomas de Cudelington, elected 1330; (fn. 52)
died 1373
John Bokeland, elected 1373; (fn. 53) died 1404
William Wendover, elected 1404; (fn. 54) resigned
1430
Thomas Hooknorton, elected 1430; (fn. 55) died
1452
John Walton, elected 1452; (fn. 56) resigned 1472
Richard Leyceter, elected 1472 (fn. 57)
Robert Oseney, elected 25 November, 1485; (fn. 58)
resigned 1505
William Barton, elected 28 November, 1505; (fn. 59)
resigned 1524
John Burton, elected 1524; (fn. 60) died 1537 (fn. 61)
Robert King, elected 1537; (fn. 62) surrendered
1539
The twelfth-century seal is a pointed oval,
the Virgin with crown and nimbus, half-length
under the round-headed arch of a church,
with central tower, and side aisles; in the hands
a scroll inscribed:—
EGO MATER MI-E (Misericordie). (fn. 63)
+ SIGILLE ECCLESIE SBE MARIE DE
OSENEIA
There is a later seal, made in the time of
Abbot Roger de Coventry (1285-97), when
the Jews had counterfeited the old seal. (fn. 64)
Pointed oval: the Virgin, with crown, seated in
an elegant canopied niche, with trefoiled arch,
crocketed, with buttresses and pinnacle at the
sides; on the left knee the Child with cruciform
nimbus, in her right hand a round object.
(Along the plinth of the niche the inscription:
DE OXONIA, nearly obliterated). In base, under
a round-headed arch, with an arcade on each
side, an ox passant guardant, in allusion to the city
of Oxford, adjacent to the abbey. (fn. 65) Legend:—
SIGILLVM ABBATIS ET CONVENTUS ECCLESIE
SANCTE MARIE DE OSENEYA
The seal of Abbot Hugh (1184-1205),
found on a deed at New College, Oxford,
is a pointed oval, the full-length figure of an
abbot, a pastoral staff with the head turning inwards, in the right hand, an open book in the
left. Legend:—
SIGILLVM HVGONIS DEI [GR]ACIA ABBATIS
OSENEIE.