Page:VCH Norfolk 2.djvu/482

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

A HISTORY OF NORFOLK last, surrendered to the king and was dissolved on 27 January, 1554. To the surrender two si<;natures are attached, namely those of John Heithe, master of ' Goddeshouse,' and John Burwyll.i 72. THE HOSPITAL OF HORNING At the head of the causeway going down from Horning to the abbey of Holm St. Benet, stood the hospital of St. James, of which there are still considerable remains. It was founded early in the reign of Henry III, and its govern- ment was under the direction of the almoner of the abbey. - 73• THE HOSPITAL OF ICKBURGH In the reign of Edward I William Barentun granted to Henry Scharping and his heirs, for the health of his soul and the souls of his parents, 145 acres of land, and a fair on St. Lawrence's Day, for the maintenance of a chaplain to celebrate in the chapel of St. Mary of ' Newbrigge.' This chapel stood on the north side of the River Wissey, in the parish of Ickburgh, by a bridge that led to Mundford. This considerable grant was confirmed in 1323 by John, son of William Scharping, cousin and heir of Henry, at which time there was in con- junction with this chapel of St. Mary a leper hospital for a master and brethren.' A lazar-house, dedicated to St. Mary and St. Lawrence, was, in all probability, in exist- ence long before the founding of the chantry in the adjoining chapel in the reign of Edward I. The patronage of this house and chapel was transferred by John Scharping to John de la Bokele, who in 1373 became a considerable benefactor to the extent of upwards of 59 acres of land with other rights and privileges.* Pope Gregory XII in 1409 granted to this lazar-house exemption from tithes for all their lands. The bull was addressed to the master and brethren of the ' domus leprosorum de Novo Ponte de Ykeburgh.' ^ This privilege of exemption from tithes was confirmed by Pope Nicholas V in 1449, by which date the rule of the house had apparently been conferred on the Friars Eremite, or Austin Friars. This latter bull was addressed to the master, wardens and ' fratribus heremitis domus olim leprosorum de Novo Ponte de Ykeburgh.' In this case, however, it seems scarcely possible that ' fratribus heremitis ' can be understood as implying the Austin Friars, for they were a men- ' Dtp. Keeper's Rep. viii, App. 2, 23. ' Cott. MS. Cilba E, ii, 67 ; Blomefield, o/Norf. xi, 56. ' BJomefield, His/. o/Norf. ii, 239-40.

  • Ibid. ' Norw. Epis. Reg. xi, 269.

' Ibid. Hist. dicant order, and incapable of holding property such as belonged to this house. The confusion that caused this equivocal ex- pression to find a place in a papal bull (or its transcript) and which has led writers to make mention of a priory of Austin Friars at this place, probably arose from the fact that there was an old hermitage attached to this bridire. The hermit of ' Newbrigge,' Ickburgh, was doubtless, as elsewhere, responsible for the re- pairs of the bridge and its 'causeys,' and sought alms from travellers for the purpose, undertaking to pray for a safe journey. In course of time, during the first half of the fifteenth century, the office of bridge hermit be- came united to that of chantry chaplain of the hospital. Leprosy was extinct in the neighbour- hood, and therefore the duty of the inmates in general became connected with the wayfarers using the route which led them over the bridge from Suffolk into Norfolk. Hence, as seems probable, came the somewhat misleading phrase- ology of the bull of 1449, wherein they are termed ' hermit brethren,' which did not imply in this instance any kind of friars. The diocesan registers of the fifteenth century record several institutions to the joint office of ' hermit and chaplain of Newbrigge,' as is ex- pressed in each appointment. Richard was in- stituted as hermit and chaplain in 1446 ; John Batti a few years later ; William Dane in 1481; John Canon in the time of Henry VII ; and John Lyster in the days of Henry VIII.' John Lyster, hermit, by will of the year 1526, left his body to be buried in the neigh- bouring church of Mundford, bequeathing 16 acres of land and the West Close to that parish — an impossibility if he had been any kind of friar.' The Valor Ecclesiasticus enters the annual value of what the commissioners termed the Free Chapel of ' Newbrigge ' as only ^^3 Js. This estimate, however, could merely have applied to some special part of the endowment of the chapel, as separate from the house or hospital. In 1548 the whole estates were annexed by the crown and sold for ;^900 to Osbert Montford of Feltwell and Thomas Gawdv of Shotesham.' 74. THE HOSPITAL OF LANGWADE At Langwade Cross, the boundary between the parishes of Oxburgh and Cley, there used to stand a hospital for lepers of early foundation. Thomas Salmon, chaplain of Oxburgh, left 6^. to the lazars of Langwade in 1380.* ' Norw. Epis. Reg. ' Lib. Atmore, fol. 19. ' Tanner, Notitia, Norf. xlviii. '° Blomefield, Hist. o/Norf. vi, 181. 440