HOUSES OF AUGUSTINIAN CANONS
6. THE ABBEY OF ST. AUGUSTINE AT BRISTOL
The monastery of St. Augustine was founded
as a house of Augustinian canons by Robert
Fitzharding, (fn. 1) a rich citizen of Bristol. During
the civil war he supported the cause of the
Empress Matilda and her son, and in reward was
granted the lordship of Berkeley. (fn. 2) In 1142 he
resolved to found a religious house in his manor
of Billeswick. (fn. 3) The church and monastic
offices were six years in building. On 11 April,
1148, the church was dedicated by the bishops of
Worcester, Exeter, Llandaff, and St. Asaph, and
six canons from Wigmore entered into possession
of the new monastery. (fn. 4) The endowment consisted of the manors of Billeswick, Almondsbury, Horfield, Ashleworth, Cromhall, Leigh near
Bristol, Cerney, Fifhide, lands and tenements at
St. Katherine's of the fee of Portbury, at Arlingham, at Blakenford, rents in Bristol, the churches
of Tickenham, Were, Poulet, Portbury, Berkeley, Wotton, Cromhall, Beverstone, Ashleworth,
Almondsbury, Cheshull, Portishead, Langstone,
Rualach, and St. Nicholas, Bristol, the gift of
Robert Fitzharding and his sons. (fn. 5) As some of
the manors were held by Fitzharding of the crown
in chief, and were confirmed to the canons 'in
perpetual alms' by Henry, duke of Normandy,
he was reputed a founder of the house. (fn. 6) He
granted the canons a rental of 10 marks, and
promised another gift of equal value when he
came into his kingdom. (fn. 7) The monastery prospered greatly; before 1189 the canons had
received numerous other benefactions, including
the churches of Clevedon, Finemere, Halberton,
Grantendon, All Saints, Bristol, and in Wales
lands at Penarth and the church of Romeney. (fn. 8)
In or before the reign of Richard I they acquired
lands and several churches in Ireland. (fn. 9) Thus it
is clear that the monastery was liberally endowed,
and successive lords of Berkeley (fn. 10) showed themselves generous patrons of the foundation of their
ancestor, Robert Fitzharding, who died a canon
of the house. (fn. 11) However, its history is marked
by financial embarrassment and a lack of governance which led to internal dissensions.
The monastery was subject to the visitation of
the bishops of Worcester. In 1234 William of
Blois deposed Abbot David on account of his
quarrels with the convent. (fn. 12) One of the first
acts of his successor, William of Bradstone, was
to conclude an important agreement in 1234
with the mayor and commonalty of Bristol, by
which they acquired for nine marks sufficient
land on St. Augustine's Marsh to make a new
quay. (fn. 13) In the following year the abbot and
convent began to build the church of St. Augustine the Less for persons dwelling on their side
of the new quay. (fn. 14) Abbot Bradstone was compelled to resign after a visitation of the convent
by Walter Cantilupe, bishop of Worcester, in
1242. (fn. 15) His successor was William Longe, the
chamberlain of Keynsham. During his rule
there were lawsuits and disputes with the hospital
of St. Mark's, Billeswick, about rights of pasture
and of burial on the land between the two
houses. The question was finally settled by
Bishop Cantilupe in 1259. (fn. 16)
At his visitation in 1278 Bishop Giffard discovered that the monastery was in a most unsatisfactory state. (fn. 17) There was neglect in the
services; the abbot had not enough learning to
preach; the canons broke the rule of silence in
cloister, frater, and elsewhere, and indulged in
slanderous talk. They even feigned illness as an
excuse for drinking together in the farmery.
Discipline had broken down and the temporal
affairs were in great disorder. The abbot had too
large and extravagant a household, and by collusion with him the bailiffs evaded rendering
accounts of their manors. The bishop made a
vigorous effort to reform the house. He insisted
that the canons should keep the rule of silence,
and devote their time in the cloister to study and
meditation. They were only to go beyond the
precincts when urged by necessity, and then two
together, with the leave of the abbot or prior.
Corrections in chapter should be made without
respect of persons. The abbot was ordered to
have only a moderate household, consisting of
one or two chaplains and two or three squires.
Superfluous and useless persons were to be
removed from the household of the convent,
and the grainger, vendor of corn, and the porter
who collected the rents were to be deprived of
their offices. To ensure better financial management the bishop enjoined that the abbot
should appoint two canons as treasurers with the
consent of the greater part of the convent. The
treasurers should receive all the money of the
house, keep account of the same, and deliver by
tally to the abbot and obedientiars as much as
was needed for the use of the community. (fn. 18) All
obedientiars and bailiffs were bound to present
their accounts to be audited at the beginning of
the year. No corrodies might be sold without
the consent of the bishop. Two years later
as Abbot John de Marina was unable through
illness to attend to the government of his house,
Giffard sent his official, together with William le
Rous, a canon of Westbury, to do what they
deemed necessary for the honour of the convent. (fn. 19)
The abbot resigned soon afterwards. (fn. 20) In 1284
Giffard visited the house again and found that
under Abbot Hugh all was in good order, except
that the late abbot was living on one of the
convent manors, and that the house was burdened
with a debt of £300 because Bogo de Clare had
taken away a church worth £100 a year. (fn. 21) In
1285 the abbot complained to Edward I that,
being at Cardiff, he was seized and imprisoned
by Gilbert and Bogo de Clare, and the king
issued a commission for his release. (fn. 22) A compromise was effected. The abbot and convent
agreed to pay Bogo de Clare a hundred marks a
year for his life, and they recovered possession of
the churches of Romeney and St. Melan which
had previously been appropriated to them. (fn. 23) In the
same year the king intervened to restore the
financial stability of the house. He sent a
mandate to the constable of Bristol Castle,
directing him with the advice of the abbot, prior,
chamberlain, and older canons, to remove all
unnecessary members of the household, to retrench the expenditure, to depute one or two
canons to collect the revenues, and after providing
for the reasonable maintenance of the house to
apply the remainder to the payment of its great
debts. (fn. 24)
The rule of Abbot Knowle (1306-32) was
eventful. In 1307 the abbot and convent were
involved in a struggle with the prior of Worcester
over the right of visitation, which he claimed to
exercise during a vacancy of the see. (fn. 25) On
20 December the prior wrote stating his intention of visiting the monastery on 16 January,
and the abbot acknowledged his letter. Through
pressure of business the prior could not come in
person, but sent commissioners, who were not
admitted, and as they could get no reply of any
kind they excommunicated the abbot and convent. Appeals were made to the court of
Canterbury and to the papal curia. The abbot
successfully defended his conduct, for that occasion only, on the plea that the prior had not
come in person. (fn. 26)
The new choir was built in great part during
Knowle's abbacy. (fn. 27) Other works were also under
taken and the cost was a heavy charge upon the
revenues of the house. In 1311 the abbot and
convent petitioned Bishop Reynolds to appropriate the church of Wotton to their needs. (fn. 28)
They stated that the greater part of the church
was destroyed from the foundations on account
of its age and weakness, and that the rest
threatened ruin. They had already spent large
sums, and would be obliged to spend still more
on the new work. Hospitality in a port like
Bristol was a serious burden; owing to the persecution of powerful enemies their income had
been diminished by one-third for the last eighteen
years, (fn. 29) and they were heavily in debt. The
bishop sent a commissioner to inquire into the
matter, and he reported that the truth was well
known in Bristol. (fn. 30) Some years ago the poverty
of the house was so great that the canons, having
nothing to eat or drink, went out into the town
to borrow food or get it from charity. In 1313
the appropriation of Wotton was effected, and
about £30 was added to the revenues. (fn. 31) After
his visitation in 1320 Bishop Cobham expressed grave dissatisfaction. (fn. 32) He insisted that
the convent should give up keeping hounds, and
that the almoner should be removed from office
because his administration gave cause for scandal.
The bishop also ordered that an inquiry should
be made about one canon who was charged with
evil living, and another who was said to sow
discord among the brethren. He enjoined that
proper care should be taken of the sick in the
farmery, that a sufficient allowance of food
should be provided for the brethren, instead of
money to buy what they needed for themselves,
that the dorter should be roofed as quickly as
possible, and that the mass of the Virgin should
be celebrated with due solemnity. When Bishop
Wulstan de Bransford visited the house in 1339
he found, 'God be praised,' that its condition
was far more worthy of commendation than of
correction, but nevertheless he was constrained
to issue some injunctions. (fn. 33) It was unseemly
that the church should be ruinous (patere ruinis)
and he bade the sacrist see that a roof was put
on to it. He forbade the canons, both young
and old, to go out of the precincts without leave,
and insisted on regular attendance at divine
service. As reading without understanding
profited nothing, he said that the canons must
either speak Latin or French to each other. In
1341 the abbot secured exemption from attendance at Parliament. (fn. 34)
There is no exact evidence of the mortality
at St. Augustine's, when the Black Death visited
Bristol in 1349. When William Coke was
elected in 1353, the convent consisted of eighteen
canons, of whom fifteen were priests and three
subdeacons. (fn. 35) It is probable that several of them
died during the second visitation of the plague in
1361, for in 1363 Abbot Coke obtained a bull
from Urban V by which canons might be
ordained priests at the age of twenty-two. (fn. 36) In
1365 he resigned and was succeeded by Henry
Shellingford. On 1 April, 1366, Edward III
took the monastery under his special protection,
and entrusted the custody to Maurice of Berkeley
IV and three other commissioners. (fn. 37) He intervened because it was likely that the poverty of the
house would compel the canons to disperse. The
abbots had resorted to disastrous financial shifts.
They had sold corrodies to persons of evil life
who were then living within the precincts; they
had made bad bargains for the convent in the
leases which they had granted, and the expenses
of their households were excessive. The monastery was heavily in debt. The commissioners
were ordered to collect and receive all the
revenues, make sufficient allowance for the
canons and a moderate number of servants, apply
the residue to the payment of debts and remove
all suspected persons from the house. Five
years later, on 26 October, 1371, Edward III
wrote to William of Lynn, bishop of Worcester,
attributing the misfortunes of the monastery
to the misrule of Abbot Henry Shellingford. (fn. 38)
The king sent a mandate to the bishop to make
a personal visitation with the object of reforming
the house. At the same time the abbot, canons,
and servants were bidden to obey the bishop (fn. 39)
William of Lynn died in 1373, apparently without fulfilling the king's mandate. Walter Legh,
prior of Worcester, acted during the voidance of
the see, and in 1374 issued a series of injunctions
for the better government of the monastery, by
which the arbitrary power of the abbot was
limited. (fn. 40) It was provided that five of the elder
and more discreet canons should be elected to act
as the abbot's council for the transaction of the
important business of the house. The obedientiars
were to be chosen from among the members of
the council and bound to render an account of
their administration at least once a year. The
abbot was to appoint seven canons to have the
custody of the common seal. Two or three
canons should be chosen by the abbot and
council to act as receivers and treasurers, and
the revenues should be expended by order of the
abbot and council. Two other receivers were
to be appointed in like manner to keep the
moneys due from the spiritualities. The abbot
and council were to appoint the secular officers.
Provision was also made for the supply of better
bread and ale, and of sufficient meat and fish,
also for the care of the sick in the farmery. The
secular clerks, who sang in the Lady chapel,
were to have their maintenance, 'as was accustomed of old time.' Order was thus restored,
and the monastery prospered under the rule of
Abbots Cernay and Daubeney (1388-1428). In
1398 Boniface IX granted the right of wearing
a mitre to Abbot Daubeney and his successors. (fn. 41)
In 1399 the revenues did not exceed 800 marks, (fn. 42)
and the abbot and convent obtained papal bulls
enabling them to appropriate the perpetual
vicarages of St. Nicholas, (fn. 43) Bristol, and of the
parish church of Berkeley, (fn. 44) valued together at
45 marks, with leave to serve the churches by a
canon or a fit priest of their appointment. Much
rebuilding on the manors of the convent went
on during the abbacy of Walter Newbery, (fn. 45) but
dissensions again broke out, (fn. 46) and in 1451 he was
deposed and one of the canons named Thomas
Sutton usurped his office. For five years Sutton
wasted the goods of the house and sold quit rents
for money to defend his position. He was
expelled, and Walter Newbery restored to office
by Thomas Bourchier, archbishop of Canterbury,
in 1456; Sutton appealed to the pope in vain. (fn. 47)
During the next eighty years the history of the
convent was untroubled and the abbot and
canons concentrated their attention on the care
of the fabric of their church, on new monastic
offices and the rebuilding of houses and granges
on their manors. (fn. 48) In 1491 the convent consisted of seventeen canons, of whom eight were
novices. (fn. 49) The vicar of St. Augustine the Less
was paid to teach the younger canons and other
boys in the grammar school within the abbey. (fn. 50)
The clear income of the monastery amounted to
£667 5s. 5d., the expenditure to £488 10s. 4½d.
In 1498 the number of canons had increased to
twenty-four. (fn. 51) Abbot Newland was keenly
interested in the history of the monastery. In
or about 1489 he compiled and translated into
English a chronicle of the abbots of Bristol and
of the lords of Berkeley, which is known as
'Abbot Newland's Roll.' (fn. 52)
'Full much convenient it thinketh me,' he wrote,
'that all religious men know by name their foundators
and special benefactors for whom they ought most
devoutly to pray for, which for the love of God and
in perpetual alms have given and procured to be given
unto them great possessions and liberties. And for
this cause moved I the foresaid John Newland Abbot
for my more larger knowledge and information of my
brethren canons present.' (fn. 53)
Dissensions, which lasted for some years, broke
out between the monastery and town in 1515.
The cause of the first dispute is obscure. Fox,
bishop of Winchester, who intervened, suggested to
Wolsey that as it was a perilous matter he should
send for some of the canons and order them 'after
his wisdom,' or appoint a commission; 'and
that three young fools which sue for voices in the
choir, though they be not in sacris, shall be
expelled.' (fn. 54) During the rule of Abbot Somerset
(1526-33), two choristers refused to pay the
'King's silver,' and their goods were distrained
by the collectors. (fn. 55) The abbot arrested the
officers, the mayor and commonalty imprisoned
the servants of the convent. The abbot, 'with
a riotous company,' attempted to force the prison
but failed. The matter was finally referred
to arbitration, and the award was that the
choristers should pay their taxes; that the prisoners of both parties should be released; that
the mayor and council should attend service in
the college as usual; and that the abbot and his
successors, 'in token of submission for their contempt,' should thenceforth, upon Easter Day, in
the afternoon, and on the Monday in the forenoon, meet or wait for them at the door of the
grammar school at Froom Gate, and bear them
company to the college.
In 1534 the abbot and eighteen canons subscribed to the royal supremacy. (fn. 56) In the following year the house was visited, under the royal
commission to Cromwell, by Richard Layton,
who gave the abbot the irritating injunctions
framed by his master. (fn. 57) Shortly afterwards the
abbot wrote to Cromwell, pleading for some
relaxation. (fn. 58) He desired licence for himself, for
his health's sake, to walk to his manor places
near Bristol, and also within the green and
canons' marsh adjacent to the precincts. He
prayed for himself and his brethren that, if they
kept away from the town, they might walk
three or four together, juniors with seniors, about
the hills and fields, to refresh their minds and to
'laxe their veynes,' whereby they might be more
apt for the service of God night and day.
'Further,' he added, 'we desire to have some
poor honest woman to keep us if any pestyfer
plague or distress of sickness do fall amongst us.'
In 1536 the Irish possessions of the monastery
were confiscated under a statute of 3 Ric. II
concerning the lands of absentees, although the
abbot and convent had hitherto been licensed to
hold them. (fn. 59) On 9 December, 1539, the royal
commissioners arrived to receive the surrender. (fn. 60)
The abbot secured a pension of £80 a year, and
eleven canons received sums varying from £8 to
£6. Wages were paid to forty-six officers
and servants. The custody of the church,
houses, and buildings was entrusted to Mannyng,
the king's farmer, until His Majesty's pleasure
was further known.
The clear yearly value of the property in
1539 was £692 2s. 7d. (fn. 61)
Abbots of St. Augustine, Bristol (fn. 62)
Richard, 1148
John, 1186
David, 1216
William of Bradstone, 1234
William Longe, 1242
Richard of Malmesbury, 1264
John de Marina, 1275
Hugh of Dadington, 1280 (fn. 63)
James Barry, 1294
Edmund Knowle, 1306
John Snowe, 1332
Ralph Asch, 1341
William Coke, 1353
Henry Shellingford, 1365
John Cernay, 1388
John Daubeney, 1393
Walter Newbery, 1428, deposed 1451
Thomas Sutton, 1451
Walter Newbery, restored 1456
William Hunt, 1472
John Newland, 1481
Robert Elyot, 1515
John Somerset, 1526
William Burton, 1533
Morgan ap Gwilliam, 1537
Deans of Bristol
William Snow, last prior of Bradenstoke, 1542
John Whiteheare, or Whythere, 1551
George Carew, 1552, deprived 1553
Henry Joliffe, 1554, deprived 1558
George Carew, restored 1559, resigned in
1570, on being made dean of Exeter
John Sprint, archdeacon of Wilts 1571
Anthony Watson, 1590. In 1596 he was
made bishop of Chichester, but held the deanery
in commendam until 1597
Simon Robson, 1598
Edward Chetwynd, 1617
Mathew Nicholas, 1639. Dean of St. Paul's,
Lond., 1660
Henry Glemham, 1660. Bishop of St. Asaph,
1667
Richard Towgood, 1667
Samuel Crossman, 1683
Richard Thompson, 1684
William Levett, 1685
George Royse, 1694
Robert Boothe, 1708
Samuel Creswick, 1730. Dean of Wells,
1739
Thomas Chamberlayne, 1739
William Warburton, 1757. Bishop of Gloucester, 1759
Samuel Squire, 1760
Francis Ayscough, 1761
Cutts Barton, 1763
John Hallam, 1781. Appointed Canon of
Windsor, 1775
Charles Peter Layard, 1800
Bowyer Edward Sparke, 1803
John Parsons, 1810
Henry Beeke, 1813
Thomas Musgrave, nominated 1837. Promoted to see of Hereford, 1837
John Lamb, 1837, ob. 1850
Gilbert Elliott, 1850
Francis Pigou, 1891
A seal of the fourteenth century represents the
priory church with two saints, an archbishop on
the left and a bishop on the right, in doorways;
in base, under a niche on the left, a bishop
with pastoral staff; under a similar niche on the
right, a destroyed subject; in the field over the
roof, two estoiles and as many sprigs of foliage. (fn. 64)
The legend is—
SIGILLE . CO . . . A . . . STOLIA(?)
An abbot's seal of the twelfth century represents the abbot, full-length, with vestments,
partly embroidered: in the left hand a pastoral
staff, in the right hand a book.
The legend is—
SIGILL' . IOH'IS . ABBATIS : IBĪ . AUG: DE .
B . . ISC(?)