Page:VCH Norfolk 2.djvu/506

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

A HISTORY OF NORFOLK for admission and institution as prior of St. Mary's, Sporle, whereof the superior was the Benedictine abbot of St. Florent, by Saumur, a subject of France. The priory is described as being vacant by the death of John Codes, the late prior, and in the king's gift on account of the war with France.* This priory was dissolved at the general sup- pression of the alien houses, decreed by the Parlia- ment held at Leicester in 1424. In 1428 the spiritualities of the suppressed priory were valued at £2,2 6s., and the temporalities at 8s. bd. It was assigned for life as part of the dower of Joan, queen-dowager of Henry VI, and soon after her death was granted, in 1 440, by Henry IV to- wards the endowment of his college at Eton. This grant was confirmed by Edward IV in 1462.^ Priors of Sporle John,' temp. Henry II Alan Make,^ appointed 1334 Thomas Eliot,' resigned 1345 John de Braidesdale,^ appointed 1345 William de Leke,^ appointed 1349 John Godes,* appointed 1 36 1 William Sporle,^ appointed 1379 Thomas de Methewold,^" appointed 1385 121, THE PRIORY OF TOFT MONKS" Robert de Bellomonte, earl of Meulan in Normandy, and of Leicester in England, granted to the abbey of Pr^aux in Normandy, in the time of William Rufus, the manor of Toft, with the tithe of ' Cerlentone ' and ' Posteberics,' and the churches of those two towns, for the souls of King William and Maud his queen, and for the weal and prosperity of his son William, king of the English, and for the souls of his own parents, Roger and Adelina, and for himself and his brother Henry, and all his predecessors. The gift was allowed and confirmed by King William at Whitsuntide, when he held his court in his new hall at Wesminster.'^ In the reign of Henry I, the earl renewed his gift of the manor of Toft with its appendages, adding sac and soc, tol and team, and infangen- theofe and exemption from all exaction of dues. ' Cal. of Pat. 2 Rich. II, pt. ii, m. 24. ' Pat. I Edw. IV, pt. iii, m. 24. ' Blomefield, Hist. o/Norf.

  • Pat. 8 Edw. Ill, pt. ii.'m. 32.

' Norw. Epis. Reg. iv, 52. * Ibid. ' Ibid, iv, 97. « Ibid, v, 56. ' Pat. 2 Ric. II, pt. ii, m. 24. '"Ibid. m. 35. " Blomefield, Hist. 0/ Nor/, viii, 61-3 ; Dugdale, Mon. 1927 ; Taylor, Ini^ex Monasticus, 9. "Round, Cal. Doc. France, , ill. Blomefield, followed by others, wrongly assigns the date of this gift to the reign of Henry I. '^ Ibid, i, 112. 464 Henry II granted a charter of confirmation of their English possessions to the abbey of Prcaux,. including the gift of Roger de Bellomonte of the tithes of Cherlinton and the manor of Toft.'* Edward I in 1285 confirmed previous grants to the abbey, and added thereto the advowson of the churches of St. Margaret Toft, and St. Mary Haddiscoe, with other advowsons in other counties, and various lands.'* Two or three monks were placed here from the abbey at an early date, to look after this part of their English property, and to conduct divine service, their superior being termed prior. At the beginning of the reign of Edward I the prior of Tofts was prosecuted at the hundred court for obstructing the king's highway.'^ The taxation roll of 1291 gives the annual value of the rents, mill, etc. at Toft pertaining to the abbey of Prcaux as ^^40 165. io|</." An extent of the lands and tenements of the abbey of Prcaux ' in villa de Monkstoft,' taken in 1325, estimated the capital messuage with fruits and herbs in the gardens, 300 acres of land, of which 86 were enclosed, and nine acres of meadow, of the annual value of j^39 in. 2d. The abbot of Preaux had also two parts of the tithes of the church of Toft Monks worth ^13 65. 8^. a year.'* Another inventory of 1337 returns the issue ofthemanorat;r39 13;. 5(^.,and values the abbot's property at Toft at ;^77 17^. d., these sums being distributed over the furniture of the hall, ' Dispenserie,' chamber, kitchen, larder, bake- house, &c.'^ Considering the small size of this alien cell it is not surprising that very little history attaches to it beyond the records of its frequent seizure into the king's hands during wars with France, but in 1200 we find the prior of Toft acting with the abbots of Holm and St. Edmunds in deciding the claims of Honorius to the arch- deacony of Richmond, and in 1327 the prior of Toft was acting as proctor in England for the abbot of Pr&ux. In that capacity he presented in March to the church of Spettisbury, Dorset, but the king directed the bishop of Salisbury to ignore the presentation until the courts had de- cided whether the vacancy had occurred before the date of February when Edward III had restored the advowsons, etc. of alien men of religion, which had been seized by the late king during the wars with France.'*' When the war with France was in progress ia 1390, Lewis de Clifford had the licence of the crown to acquire for life, with remainder to his son, the manor of Toft and other possessions of " Chart. 13 Edw. I. m. 21, ^o6(), fer inspex ; cited Dugdale, Mon. vi, 1027. " Ibid. " Hund. R. (Rec. Com ), i, 540. " Pope Nich. Tax. (Rec. Com.), 1 14. ■'Add. MS. 6164, fol 133. " Chanc. Misc. bdle. 18, file 4, No. 13. Close, I Edw. Ill, pt. i, m. 9.