HOUSES OF AUSTIN CANONS
9. THE ABBEY OF MISSENDEN
The abbey of Missenden was founded in or
about the year 1133 by a certain William of
Missenden, (fn. 1) for Austin Canons following the
customs of the abbey of St. Nicholas at Arrouaise in Artois. This date is well established
by a concurrence of charters of confirmation;
from Pope Innocent II. in 1137 and Eugenius III. in 1145, and from Henry I. in 1133,
Stephen, and Henry II., (fn. 2) and the connection
with Arrouaise is equally well attested. (fn. 3) The
charters of Henry I. and Alexander of Lincoln
expressly state that there were at first but
seven canons in the house, and that they came
originally from the church of St. Mary 'de
Bosco (or de Nemore) de pago Terresino.' (fn. 4)
The Arrouasian reform of the Augustinian
order originated independently of that which
is connected with the name of St. Peter
Damian; it was begun in 1090 by three hermits, but not ruled by an abbot until 1124. (fn. 5)
During the time of Gervase, the first abbot,
the order seems to have increased, and several
houses were founded in England and Ireland,
amongst which we find Missenden and Nutley
in this county, Harrold in Bedfordshire,
Bourne in Lincolnshire. It was the Arrouasian custom to place new houses under an
abbot at once, (fn. 6) and not to keep them in the
position of cells to the parent abbey: with
the natural result that the Arrouasian Canons
tended to approximate more and more to
others who kept the rule of St. Augustine,
and after a while ceased to be distinguished
from them in any way. They never seem to
have been really an independent order with
special privileges, like the Premonstratensians:
and by the fifteenth century the Arrouasian
name, where it was still retained, was little
more than a convenient excuse for escaping
attendance at general chapters and other
ordinances of the regular life. (fn. 7)
All the best known names in the county of
Buckingham are found amongst the early
benefactors of Missenden Abbey: Richard de
Urvill the archdeacon, Walter Giffard, Walter
de Bolebec, Turstin Mantel, Manasser Danmartin, Simon de Gerardmoulin, Hugh de
Gurnay, Robert Mansel, the Turvilles and
Cheinduits, and many others. The house
was never among the greater abbeys of England, but it was fairly well endowed from the
beginning, and was one of the most important
monasteries in this county. The number of
canons was probably soon increased, and even
in the fifteenth century there were as many as
twenty. (fn. 8) It seems likely that a later William
of Missenden added to the original endowment in the thirteenth century, and so came
to be reckoned as founder, and this would explain the result of the inquisition made in
1332, which reported that the house was
founded as recently as 1293. (fn. 9) Yet another
William of Missenden in 1336 was buried in
the abbey with the honours of a founder (fn. 10) :
and perhaps these later benefactions obscured
the memory of the earlier ones.
At the end of the twelfth century the Abbot
of Missenden was proctor to the Abbot of
Arrouaise, and had to act for him in a difficulty which arose in connection with the
priory of Harrold in Bedfordshire. The
priors of this house had been nominated at
first by the Abbot of Arrouaise, without contradiction; but near the end of the twelfth
century, the nuns, under the leadership of a
certain brother 'B.' and Gila the prioress,
tried to escape from all subjection to the
parent abbey. They tried to get a privilege
from the pope for this purpose: the Abbot
of Arrouaise indeed alleged that they had
forged one, and was inclined at first to believe
that the Abbot of Missenden had aided and
abetted their plots; but he afterwards cleared
the latter of all blame. It was finally arranged
that the nuns should pay half a mark yearly
to the Abbot of Missenden and be free in
future of all subjection to Arrouaise. After
this agreement, which took place about the
year 1188, (fn. 11) there is no record of any further
connection between Missenden and Arrouaise.
This house is mentioned early in the thirteenth century in connection with a few suits
of no great importance; in two of these the
abbot was convicted of putting forward unwarrantable claims. In 1225 he appeared
against Hubert de Burgh the justiciar, and
brought forward a charter from Walter de
Penn, which granted to him the advowson of
Oulton Church in Norfolk, but Hubert was
successful in proving that Walter never had
any right to make the gift, and the abbot was
fined in consequence. (fn. 12) In 1231 the abbot
was successful in proving his claim to the
chapel of Muswell, (fn. 13) but in 1245 he was again
convicted of wrongfully exacting a pension
from the rector of Taplow. (fn. 14)
We hear from the chronicler of Dunstable
that the convent of Missenden suffered some
kind of persecution from Ralf Brito, the king's
treasurer, before 1232, but no details are
given. (fn. 15) In 1239 Isabel, the wife of Gilbert
de Clare, Earl of Gloucester, desired that a
part of her body should be buried in this
abbey. (fn. 16) The Close Rolls of the reign of Edward I. show the abbots to have been somewhat involved in debt at this time. (fn. 17) And towards the close of the thirteenth century the
abbey seems to have fallen into great poverty,
for in 1281 Henry Huse and Walter de Agmodesham were appointed to take it under the
king's special protection for four years, as it was
in danger of dispersion and ruin by murrain
among sheep and horses, failure of crops, and
accumulation of debts, (fn. 18) and in 1286 a similar
order was issued to Master William de Luda,
king's clerk, for a period of time unnamed. (fn. 19) In
1276 Abbot William of London received 50
marks from the king to establish a chantry in the
conventual church for the soul of Hugh de
Sandford, in whose family the patronage of
the house had been for some years. (fn. 20) It was
probably soon after this that the second William of Missenden became a benefactor of the
abbey.
The abbots of the fourteenth century were
generally of families well known in the county:
two of the Marshalls of Missenden held this
office, and in 1340 a brother of Thomas De la
Mare, afterwards Abbot of St. Albans, ruled
the abbey of Missenden for a short time. In
1361 Ralf Marshall earned for his house a
most undesirable notoriety: he was convicted
of falsifying the coinage of the realm in his
manor at Lee, and condemned to be drawn,
hanged and quartered. He was afterwards
pardoned, (fn. 21) and the sentence commuted to a
term of imprisonment, first in the castle of
Nottingham, and afterwards in the monastery
of Bourne. (fn. 22) About 1369 however he returned again to Missenden, (fn. 23) which had been
ruled by the prior in the meanwhile, (fn. 24) and
died in his London house in 1374.
There was another abbot, Robert Risborough, who brought much discredit and
trouble upon the house during the reign of
Edward IV. His name occurs in connection
with leases and other transactions of a formal
character as early as 1448 (fn. 25) ; but at the beginning of the new reign, in June 1462, he
appealed to the king for protection against
the prior and canons of his monastery, who
were summoned to appear in Chancery and
give sureties that they would not injure him
or set fire to his house. (fn. 26) It is evident however that this order was given hastily and without sufficient inquiry, for in July of the same
year Robert Risborough was deprived of his
office by the vote of the whole convent for
simony and other crimes of which he had been
convicted, and Henry Honor of Missenden
was elected in his place. (fn. 27) The process of
deprivation and election was duly and formally reported by the prior to the Bishop of
Lincoln, and both were confirmed by the
Archbishop of Canterbury, (fn. 28) so for a while
Henry Honor was able to maintain his position
quietly. But about the year 1469 Robert
appealed to Thomas Rotherham, then Bishop
of Rochester and Chancellor of the kingdom,
and managed so to present his case that the
Chancellor, though he had really no jurisdiction in the matter, reinstated him and imprisoned Henry Honor for three years in the
Fleet. In 1471, when Rotherham became
Bishop of Lincoln, and seemed likely to go
into the matter more carefully, Robert thought
it wiser to resign, on condition that the canons
would allow him the manor and church of
Great Kimble for his maintenance. So
Henry Honor again became abbot: but after
five years Robert made another attempt to
regain his old place. He complained to the
king that he had been wrongfully deposed by
George Neville, late Archbishop of York, for
no other cause than sympathy with the Lancastrian party, and a writ was issued to the
sheriff for his restoration. But in a very short
time the king, probably through Rotherham,
who had now become Archbishop of York,
found out the true facts of the case and ordered Henry to be confirmed in his office and
protected him from further molestation. (fn. 29)
Mandates were issued to the Bishop of Lincoln and the rector of Ashridge to see this
final sentence carried into effect. (fn. 30)
Henry Honor was abbot from this time
almost until the beginning of the reign of
Henry VIII. During the last few years before the dissolution the number of canons
diminished, and the monastic buildings were
allowed to fall out of repair. (fn. 31) In 1530 besides
the abbot there was a prior, a vicar, a chanter
and sub-chanter, a kitchener, a refectorian,
and a sacrist, besides another canon and five
novices. (fn. 32) The Acknowledgment of Supremacy was signed by John Fox and thirteen
canons in 1535 (fn. 33) ; the final surrender was
made by John Otwell in 1538. (fn. 34) The abbot
received a pension of £50, and the canons
annuities ranging from £5 to £7, or else benefices in the gift of the monastery. (fn. 35) Four of
them besides the abbot were still alive and
drawing their pensions in 1552. (fn. 36)
We have unusually full information as to the
internal history of this house, which serves to
illustrate a point of interest. There is a
modern theory that one chief cause of the degeneracy of the religious houses in England
before the dissolution was the exemption of
so many among them from episcopal visitation; but this is not supported by any solid
basis of facts, and, like some other theories as
to the comparative advantage of great and
little monasteries, is built rather upon a
general idea of what ought to have happened
than upon what actually did happen. The
whole Augustinian order was subject at all
times to episcopal jurisdiction, and none of
its abbeys or priories ever obtained any exemptions: the episcopal registers survive to
witness that the bishops did visit them continually; and yet it was this order which was
solemnly warned of the 'impending ruin of
all religion' among them in 1518—a warning
uttered not by their enemies, but by their true
friend, Cardinal Wolsey, who did his best to
help them in the work of reformation. (fn. 37) Of
course not all the Augustinian houses were
degenerate: some have a quite satisfactory
record even at the end (fn. 38) ; but Missenden was
not one of these. Nevertheless its failure was
in no sense due to lack of episcopal supervision.
The Abbot of Missenden was one of those
deposed by Bishop Grosstête in his severe
and searching visitation of 1236 (fn. 39) ; whether
for maladministration or for more serious
faults does not appear; but indeed the house
seems from first to last to have been singularly
unfortunate in its abbots. There is an interesting letter of Grosstête to the monks of
Missenden, giving them advice as to the election of a new superior in 1240, and speaking
of the qualifications to be desired in one who
was to bear rule in a house of religion. (fn. 40)
Bishop Sutton had occasion twice to write to
the abbot and convent to receive back apostate
but repentant canons. (fn. 41) It does not appear
that in his time there was any laxity in the
house, but rather the reverse: for a certain
novice cut his own throat in 1297 for fear of
discipline. (fn. 42) The monastery was visited in
1338 by order of Bishop Burghersh, (fn. 43) and in
1343 an inquiry was made into its rights and
liberties by Bishop Bek. (fn. 44) There was another
inquiry made in 1347 to see which of the
monks were trying to impede the election of
John of Abingdon (fn. 45) ; and again in 1348 the
bishop had to intervene and collate an abbot
after a lapse of six months. (fn. 46) In 1361 the
scandals connected with Abbot Ralf Marshall's attainder brought the house under the
notice of Bishop Gynwell, who had to appoint
the prior to rule the house for a time. (fn. 47) In
1369, when Ralf Marshall returned, he found
his position a difficult one, and perhaps tried
to enforce his authority by rough measures,
for some of the canons complained to the
bishop. A commission was sent in 1370 to
inquire into their grievances, and the abbot
was ordered to take no proceedings against
those who had complained (fn. 48) ; but in 1372
there was a fresh commission which suggests
that the monks and not the abbot were the
aggressors. (fn. 49)
Bishop Gray visited the abbey between
1431 and 1436, but found no special laxity.
The number of monks seem to have been insufficient at this time for the due performance
of the divine office: they were to be increased
as soon as possible, and certain of the conventual buildings were to be repaired. (fn. 50)
In the time of Robert Risborough, if the
abbot was unworthy of his office, public
opinion in the monastery was certainly against
him, though the prior and canons were obliged to wait until he could be canonically
deposed, and the credit of the house restored
by a better appointment. It may fairly be
supposed that Henry Honor, who was elected
in Robert's place, was chosen because he upheld a higher standard of religious observance.
It was probably during his long term of office
that the Sloane chartulary (fn. 51) was compiled,
though it contains some entries of later date.
It is a curious book, in which leases and royal
writs are mixed up indiscriminately with
scraps of general information of all kinds—a
table of the kings of England, the way to find
Easter and to understand the signs of the
weather; lists of Christian virtues, deadly
sins and colours for painting; prescriptions
for divers diseases containing such strange ingredients as 'oil of black snails' and 'marrow
of horse bones,' with the exorcisms for the
falling sickness and the fever; the ten commandments in English and many rhymed
adages and rules for the conduct of life generally. (fn. 52)
At the beginning of the sixteenth century
the discipline of the house became sadly lax,
and the visitation of Atwater in 1518 reveals
a very unsatisfactory state of affairs. The
bishop noticed that licences to go into the
town were much too readily granted to the
canons. These he ordered to be restricted in
future to cases of necessity. The refectory
was to be repaired, and until it was ready the
abbot must appoint some other place where
the canons could eat together and hear the
Rule read. The infirmary was to be put in
order, and five at least among the canons must
in future be priests. They were to have a
proper place where they could receive their
friends two or three times in the year. There
was a monk from another house living here
who was non utilis monasterio. Richard
Gynger, a novice, was too prone to ease and
gave neither his time nor his attention to
heavenly things; he must occupy himself
laudably. There was want of care too even
in the appointments of the conventual church.
The bishop found it necessary to order a lamp
to be alight continually before the Blessed
Sacrament. The very servants of the monastery were insolent and abusive to the canons,
and refused to attend to their needs. (fn. 53)
In the lists of those who abjured and did
penance in 1521 for heresy, Foxe names a
canon of Missenden. (fn. 54) It is by no means improbable at such a time, when the monastery
was in such complete disorder.
There was worse to come. The visitations
of Longland in 1530 and 1531 revealed mischief of a still more serious kind. In 1530 (fn. 55) it
was complained that the abbot, John Fox, was
wholly under the influence of a secular, John
Compton, who cut down trees and did as he
pleased with the goods of the monastery. The
prior was remiss in correction, and did not set
an example of regular attendance at the
divine office. The buildings were all out of
repair, and the house £60 in debt. The
abbot had no book or rental to show his lands,
and did not know what his possessions really
were. The gate between the nave and choir
of the conventual church was never closed, so
that seculars could enter the choir at their
will. No lessons from Holy Scripture were
read in the refectory. One canon, John Slythurst, was accused by three or four of his
brethren not merely of being 'verbose, of
elate mind, and a sower of dissension,' but of
the crime condemned beyond all others in
Holy Scripture; and the late abbot, William
Honor, had shared his guilt.
It was a terrible indictment, and the
bishop's commissary, Thomas Jackman, met
it with stringent regulations. John Slythurst was to be kept apart from all the brethren, in the custody of the abbot and prior;
he was never to go out of his cell without a
licence from the bishop, and no one was to be
admitted to see him except those who came
for the good of his soul. No boys were to be
allowed in the dormitory or any part of the
monastery on any account whatever: if the
prior were to infringe this rule he was to be
put on bread and water. For the rest, it
seemed best to report the whole case to the
bishop, and Longland was not the man to
treat it lightly. (fn. 56) In June 1531 he visited the
house in person. More searching inquiries
elicited from the abbot himself a more complete confession. He was evidently a man of
feeble character, not a hardened sinner, but
incapable of standing against any strong temptation. His sister was living in the monastery as brasiatrix, and he had dismissed her
daughter from the house because of her evil
conversation; yet his own life had not been
wholly pure. He owned also that he had
squandered the goods of the monastery.
Roger Palmer, the refectorar, who had piously
complained of the want of lectures in Holy
Scripture at the last visitation, was a very
different character: not the victim of temptation, but one who deliberately broke his
vows. He had been seen more than once at
midnight coming out of a house in the village (fn. 57)
in doublet and jerkin, with a sword by his
side, and this he confessed to be true.
The bishop ordered that the abbot should
be suspended from his office until further
notice, and the charge of the monastery was
committed to John Otwell, afterwards abbot.
Roger Palmer was to be kept under lock and
key. The injunctions finally delivered to the
whole convent were written in 'vulgar English,' that the canons might have no excuse,
and might not say they could not understand
what was desired of them. The injunctions
are of the usual nature and relate to the due
observance of the rule of the order, particularly that a learned man in grammar should be
appointed to teach the canons and young
priests; that the doors from the church into
the quire and cloister and the door of the
Lady Chapel be kept locked; that no canon
should have a key of the cloister door leading
into the fields, and that the door only be
opened at such times 'as the covent shalbe
licensed to goo into the feldes to sport togydre'; that the buildings, especially the
belfry, be repaired; that they be more
sparing in their board till the house be in a
better state, and that the abbot should no
more suffer his kinsfolk 'to hang upon the
monasteryes charge as they have done';
whereas it was found at the late visitation that
John Compton 'ruleth thabbot' and 'cutteth
down trees,' that he meddle not further till
'he doth use himself uprightly'; that the
brethren are not to wear 'garded or welted
hose or stuffed codpese or jerkyn or any other
shorte or courtely fashioned garment,' and
that Dom John Slithwise be committed to
prison till 'ye knowe our further mynde.' (fn. 58)
John Fox died some time between 1535 and
1538, and Otwell became abbot de jure as
well as de facto, but he had little opportunity
of reforming the house before its dissolution. (fn. 59)
He lived till 1552, and was married some time
before that date; so was Thomas Bernard,
the kitchener, who had the vicarage of Little
Missenden assigned to him by way of pension.
Three other canons living in 1552 remained
unmarried: Roger Palmer was one of them. (fn. 60)
It may perhaps be considered a point of
generosity in the king and his agents, that
pensions were dealt out so impartially to
guilty and innocent alike; but it was a
strangely undiscriminating zeal for reform
which set John Slythurst free from penitential
discipline, and promoted him to a benefice
with cure of souls. (fn. 61)
The original endowment of the abbey included the demesne land at Great Missenden
with other parcels of land in the counties of
Buckingham, Oxford and Huntingdon, as well
as the churches of Great Missenden, Great
Kimble, Chalfont St. Peter, Weston Turville
and its chapels, in Bucks; Glatton and Aldbury, Hunts; Caversfield and Shiplake,
Oxon; Swynford, Radenhall and Porlaine. (fn. 62)
The temporalia of the abbey in 1291 (fn. 63)
amounted to £60 5s. 5d., and included lands
in Bucks, Oxon, Herts, and London; the
manor of Peterley was added not long after. (fn. 64)
In 1284 the abbot held only one knight's
fee in Great Kimble with four acres besides (fn. 65) ;
in 1302 (fn. 66) the same; in 1316 half the vill of
Broughton and Holcutt with one third of
Great Kimble (fn. 67) ; in 1346 one fee in Great
Kimble and a small part of Little Kimble. (fn. 68)
The Valor Ecclesiasticus gives for this abbey
a clear revenue of £261 14s. 6d., including the
churches of Great Missenden, Great Kimble,
Chalfont St. Peter, Caversfield, Shiplake and
Glatton. (fn. 69) The Ministers' Accounts amount
to £240 11s. 4½d., including the manors of
Great Kimble, Hughenden, and Little Missenden. (fn. 70)
Abbots of Missenden
Daniel, (fn. 71) first abbot, occurs 1133 and 1145
Peter, (fn. 72) occurs about 1163
Adam, (fn. 73) occurs 1198 and 1206
William, (fn. 74) occurs 1217
Martin, (fn. 75) occurs 1219, deposed 1236
Robert, (fn. 76) elected 1236, resigned 1240
Roger of Gilsburgh, (fn. 77) elected 1240, occurs
till 1248
Simon of London, (fn. 78) elected 1258, resigned
1262
Geoffrey de Welpesle, (fn. 79) elected 1262, resigned 1268
William of London, (fn. 80) elected 1268, occurs
till 1278
Matthew of Tring, (fn. 81) died 1306
Richard Marshall, (fn. 82) elected 1306, died 1323
Robert of Kimble, (fn. 83) elected 1323, resigned
1339
William Delamere, (fn. 84) elected 1339, died
1340
Henry of Buckingham, (fn. 85) elected 1340
John of Abingdon, (fn. 86) elected 1347, died 1348
William of Bradley, (fn. 87) elected 1348, resigned 1356
Ralf Marshall, (fn. 88) elected 1356, died 1374
William of Thenford, (fn. 89) elected 1374, died
1384
John Marsh, (fn. 90) elected 1384, died 1398
Richard Meer, (fn. 91) elected 1398
Robert Risborough, (fn. 92) occurs 1448, deposed
1462
Henry Honor (fn. 93) or Missenden, elected 1462,
occurs till 1503
William Smith, (fn. 94) died 1521
William Honor, (fn. 95) elected 1521, died 1528
John Fox, (fn. 96) elected 1528, occurs 1535
John Otwell, (fn. 97) last abbot, surrendered 1538
Dark green, pointed oval seal of the twelfth
century attached to a charter of Abbot Martin and the convent of Missenden. (fn. 98) The
impression is a very fine one, and represents
the Blessed Virgin with crown seated on a
throne with carved ends, in her lap the Holy
Child with cruciform nimbus. In her right
hand she holds a sceptre fleur-de-lizé, in her
left hand a staff which is surmounted by a
bird. Her feet are resting on an ornamental
footboard. Legend: +SIGILLV IBARIE
DE ME[SSENDEN]A.
A seal of similar description is attached to
a charter of about 1240, (fn. 99) the impression is less
perfect, and much of the legend wanting.
Attached to the same charter is the seal of
Abbot Roger de Aylesbury, (fn. 100) dark green,
pointed oval, representing the abbot standing
on a carved corbel, in his right hand a pastoral
staff, in his left hand a book. In the field on
the left an estoile, on the right a crescent.Legend: +SIGILL' ROGERI . A . . . DE .
MESSENDENE.
A mottled green seal, the impression of
which is very imperfect, but similar to the
first seal, and the legend wanting, is attached
by a woven cord of red silk strands to a deed
of 1242 exhibited in the British Museum. (fn. 101)
To the same document is also attached by
another cord of red silk strands the seal of
Abbot Roger as described above. (fn. 102)
A red pointed oval seal of the fifteenth century, (fn. 103) attached to the Acknowledgment of
Supremacy, 1534, represents the Blessed Virgin
with crown seated in a canopied niche, in her
right hand the Holy Child with nimbus, in her
left hand a sceptre. In the field on each side,
three trees, one above, two below. In base,
under an arch, an abbot and three monks in
adoration. Legend: S' CŌĒ. AGGIS. ZZ. CŌUET'
MONAST' . BEATE . MARIE. DE. MISSYNDEN.
An oval seal of Abbot William, taken
from a cast in the British Museum, (fn. 104) represents the Blessed Virgin standing in a canopied niche with tabernacle work at the sides,
the Child on her right arm, in her left hand a
sceptre fleur-de-lizé or flowering branch.
The legend is indistinct: . . . de . . .
enden.