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Henry II as a Founder of Monasteries1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 March 2011

Elizabeth M. Hallam
Affiliation:
Assistant Keeper, Public Record Office, London

Extract

Gerald of Wales is primarily responsible for the generally accepted view of Henry II as a founder of monasteries. In his De Principis Instructione Liber he gives an account of the penance imposed on the king at Avranches in 1172 for his part in Becket's murder, and its commutation. Gerald reveals that instead of leading a Crusade to the Holy Land in person, and, we learn from other sources, maintaining two hundred knights there for a year at his own expense, Henry delayed for three years. He thus eventually gained from the pope a commutation to encompass the founding of three monasteries. These were, says Gerald, Waltham, where a group of holy secular canons were replaced with canons regular, Amesbury, where he violenter intrusit nuns from Fontevrault, and the third was probably Witham where a group of patient and holy men humbly bore hardship and the lack of a roof over their heads. ‘Sed quid attinet humana versutia contra divina consilia?’ asks Gerald. In a long passage he elaborates his theme that the Almighty will not be deceived by such a shamming, paltry, effort.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1977

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References

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page 119 note 10 A.D. Indre-et-Loire, h. 167. fol. 124.

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page 122 note 1 He gave a charter to the house c. 1178–83 which may have later been altered somewhat to suppress references to the founder, Renaud de Vou, and his disgraced brother, Etienne de Marçay, formerly seneschal of Anjou; Actes de Henri II, ii. 237–8; Becquet, J., ‘Le bullaire de L'Ordre de Grandmont’, Revue Mabillon, xlvi (1956), 91–2, no. 14Google Scholar; A.D. Maine-et-Lore G 870; Hallam, ‘Grandmont’, 175–6, 182–3 for a general confirmation from Richard I.

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page 122 note 3 Gaborit, ii. 432; Tours, Bibl. Mun. MS. 1217, fol. 64.

page 122 note 4 Actes de Henri II, i. 239–40, no. cxxxii; J. Levèsque, Annales Ordinis Grandmontis, Trier 1662, 112; L. Delisle, Examen de Treize Chartes de l'Ordre de Grammont, Caen 1854, no. 13.

page 122 note 5 Actes de Henri II, ii. 350–2, no. dccxxvii; A.D. Seine-Maritime, D. 230; Gallia Christiana, xi, 47; Gaborit, ii. 400; J. R. Gaborit, ‘Nôtre-Dame du Parc, prieuré Grandmonain de Rouen’, Bull. Soc. Nat. Ant. de France, Proceedings for 1970, 73–7.

page 122 note 6 A.D. Vendée, H. 190, printed in Hallam, ‘Grandmont’, 183–5, fig. 2.

page 122 note 7 Regula of St. Stephen in Migne, Patrologia Latina, cciv, 1137–62.

page 122 note 8 As shown in A.D. Maine-et-Loire, G. 870, fol. 3, printed in Hallam, ‘Grandmont’, 182–3; Giraldus, iv. 258, explains the system of lay-buyers.

page 122 note 9 Duclos, H., Histoire de Royaumont, sa Fondation par Saint Louis et son Influence sur la France, Paris 1867, i. passimGoogle Scholar; the situation is similar to that of the minority of Louis IX of France when he and his mother Blanche of Castile worked together in the foundation of the Cistercian abbey of Royaumont.

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page 123 note 2 Ed. Hilton, R. H., The Stoneleigh Leger-Book, Dugdale Soc. xxiv, Oxford 1960Google Scholar, from Warwickshire County record office, Stratford-on-Avon, unclass. MSS. no. 1.

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page 124 note 1 Regesta Regun, iii. 308–9, nos. 836–7.

page 124 note 2 Knowles and Hadcock, 125.

page 124 note 3 Gallia Christiana, xiv. 665–7; Regesta Regum, iii. 223–4, no. 607.

page 124 note 4 Gallia Christiana, xiv. 330 and inst. 85; Actes de Henri II, i. 448–9, no. ccc; B.N. MS. Lat. 10044, fols. 1–12.

page 124 note 5 Gallia Christiana, ii, 211.

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page 124 note 8 Howden, ii. 118; Gesta Henrici, i. 134–5; P.R. 24 Henry 11, 19.

page 125 note 1 Gesta Henrici, i. 173–4.

page 125 note 2 Gesta Henrici, i. 316–7.

page 125 note 5 King's Works, i. 88–9.

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page 125 note 7 Gallia Christiana, xi. 941; Regesta Regum, iii. 61, no. 168.

page 125 note 8 E.g. Actes de Henri II, i. 243, no. cxxxv (1156–60); ii. 416–7, no. dcclxiv (1185–9).

page 126 note 1 Gallia Christiana, xi. 758; Regesta Regum, iii. 304–5, nos. 824–6; Talabardon, C., ‘Les premiers chartes de Silly-en-Gouffern’, Bull. Soc. Hisl. et Arch, de L'Orne, xci (1973), 58Google Scholar; Henry may also have been an important patron of St. Augustine's, Bristol, before he became king: Regesta Regum, iii. 47, no. 126, and Knowles and Hadcock, op. cit., 150.

page 126 note 2 Monasticon, vi (i). 473–5; P.R. 10 Henry 11, 15; 11 Henry 11, 86.

page 126 note 3 PR 10 Henry 11, 15; P.R. 11 Henry 11, 86.

page 126 note 4 Pevsner, Notts, 114–5.

page 126 note 5 In Yorks; Knowles and Hadcock, 262; W. Dugdale, Monasticon Anglicanum, ii London 1656, 98.

page 126 note 6 PR 25 Henry 11. 56–7, shows an increase in an existing grant to the canons from the county issues, ‘pro servicio capelle de Clarendon’; VCH, Wilts, iii. 289; Monasticon, vi (i), 416.

page 126 note 7 Knowles and Hadcock, 177, 181; Monasticon, vi (ii), 1028–9; VCH, Lincs, ii. 170.

page 126 note 8 Knowles and Hadcock, 365; Westlake, H., Hornchurch Priory, a Kalendar of Documents in the Possession of… New College, Oxford, London 1923, 29, no. 78Google Scholar; 40–1, no. 146; 45, no. 168.

page 126 note 9 VCH, Essex, ii. 188; Knowles and Hadcock, 376; Pevsner, Essex, 292.

page 126 note 10 VCH, Derby, ii. 84; Knowles and Hadcock, 35.

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page 128 note 3 Lees, B. A., Records of the Templars in England in the Twelfth Century, the Inquest of 1185, Brit. Acad. ix, London 1935, lxxxviGoogle Scholar; Monasticon, vi(ii). 821.

page 128 note 4 P.R.O. E 163/1/1A; C 47/12/5; Lees, 142–3; Marshall, G., ‘The church of the Knights Templar at Garway’, Trans. Woolhope Club, xxvi (19271929), 86101.Google Scholar

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page 128 note 6 Ed. Sweetman, H. S., Calendar of Documents Relating to Ireland, HMSO, London 18751886, i. 13, no. 85.Google Scholar

page 128 note 7 Knowles and Hadcock, 304; Harris, H. J., ‘The Knights Hopitaller in Hereford’, Trans. Woolhope Club, xxxi (19421945), 132–40.Google Scholar

page 129 note 1 Knowles and Hadcock, 302; ed. Weaver, F. W., A Cartulary of Buckland Priory, 1152–1432, Som. Rec. Soc. xxv (1909), 16, nos. 1, 3, 7.Google Scholar

page 129 note 2 Gallia Christiana, xi. 239–44; Monasticon, vi(ii). 1100.

page 129 note 3 Gallagher, P., ‘The Monastery of Mortemer-en-Lyons in the Twelfth Century, its History and Cartulary’, Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Nôtre-Dame, 1970, 719Google Scholar; B.N. MS. Lat. 18369, fols. 3–4.

page 129 note 4 Brooke, C. N. L., ‘Princes and Kings as patrons of Monasteries, Normandy and England’, Il Monachesimo e la Riforma Ecclesiastica, 1049–1122, La Mendola, 1968, Milan, 1971, 136–44 for Henry I's monastic patronageGoogle Scholar; Kemp, Reading Abbey, 43–8.

page 129 note 5 Knowles and Hadcock, 353.

page 129 note 6 Knowles and Hadcock, 116–7; Regesta Regum, iii. 294–5, no. 800; iii. 76, no. 207.

page 129 note 7 Knowles and Hadcock, 407; Regesta Regum, iii. 365–7, nos. 989–94.

page 129 note 8 Warren, 218–9; William of Newburgh, Historia Rerum Anglicanum, ed. Howlett, R. in Chronicles of the Reigns of Stephen, Henry II and Richard I, RS., London 18841885, i. 103Google Scholar, comments on Henry's resumption of land at the beginning of his reign.

page 130 note 1 Pacaut, M., Louis VII et son Royaume, Paris 1964, 120–2.Google Scholar

page 130 note 2 Hallam, Aspects, 195–9.

page 130 note 3 Ibid., 354–9.

page 130 note 4 Baldwin, J. R., ‘Philip-Augustus and the Norman Church’, French Historical Studies, vi (1969), 130CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and ed. Delisle, L., Cartulaire Normand …, in Mem. Soc. Ant. Normandie, xvi, Caen 1825, passim.Google Scholar

page 130 note 5 Gallia Christiana, x. 1503; A.N. LL 1469; Duby, G., Le Dimanche de Bouvines, Paris 1973, 178–81.Google Scholar

page 130 note 6 Gallia Christiana, xii. 236 and inst. 35–6, 41–2; and e.g. St. Jean-Baptiste-de-Nemours, Gallia Christiana, xii. inst. 50.

page 130 note 7 Knowles and Hadcock, 74, 154, 119, 65 and above, 129 nn. 2–7.

page 130 note 8 Knowles and Hadcock, 115; ed. J. Andrieux, Cartulaire de L'Abbaye de Bonport, Evreux 1862, Introduction. Richard also founded e.g. Premonstratensian Lieu-Dieu-en-Jard and Benedictine Gourfailles in the Vendée, and John a number of small hospitals in England as Count of Mortain; e.g. St. Lawrence's, Bristol, c. 1199; Knowles and Hadcock, 347.

page 131 note 1 Appleby follows Giraldus in considering them parsimonious, and Brown and Colvin, generous; see above, 113 n. 2, 114 nn. 2–3.

page 131 note 2 Ramsey, J. H., A History of the Revenues of the Kings of England, 1066–1399, Oxford 1925, i. 191.Google Scholar This work is more useful for indicating fluctuations in revenue than for providing anything approaching accurate totals. The totals for lands and pensions is calculated from the pipe rolls, but the sums allowed for lands probably represent the nominal value as in the ancient farm rather than any ‘real’ value.

page 131 note 3 Ramsey, i. 363; ii. 86, 88–9; King's Works, i. 109, 155–7, 248–57; Knoop, D. and Jones, G. P., ‘The first three years in the building of Vale Royal Abbey, 1278–1280’, Trans. Quatuor Coronati Lodge, xliv (1931), 547.Google Scholar

page 131 note 4 Palma, L., ‘La poverta nell’ “ordo” di Grandmont’, Aevum, xlviii (1974), 270–87Google Scholar; above, 122 nn. 7–8.

page 132 note 1 C. N. L. Brooke, ‘Princes and Kings’, 138–40.

page 132 note 2 The pattern of the creation of large numbers of monastic foundations by an ageing king is by no means standard; e.g. Henry III of England and Louis IX of France founded most of their religious houses early in their reigns; Hallam, Aspects, Appendix i, 377–81.

page 132 note 3 Foreville, 15–16.

page 132 note 4 Warren, 135.

page 132 note 5 Gervase of Canterbury, Opera, ed. Stubbs, W., RS., London 18791880, i. 248–9Google Scholar; Gesta Henrici, i. 72.