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BULLETIN
OUR LADY OF THE ASSUMPTION
CARMELITE PROVINCE (serving England, Wales and Scotland)
MARCH 1999 30 No.1
I
.ng. It takes on it in the terms fuller form of
y, 3rd February
the Provincial
mnial elections sford. Fr. Piet
(re-elected) Ll (re-elected)
nan ,kin
.n final vows, 6
, encouraging to
rs coming from nember in Wales,
s with 5 members
titute, an event rn of the Friars
Institute! Brethren for the
25
spiritual and temporal help and encouragement given to us, and we assure them of our continued prayers for them. Jean Macaskill
THB CARMELITB HOUSB, NORWICH
In July this year, the Richard III Society are holding a memorial service in Norwich for Lady Eleanor Butler, who was buried in the Carmelite house there in 1468. She was the daughter of the Earl of Shrewsbury, sister of the Duchess of Norfolk, and the widow of Sir Thomas Butler. Her significance lies in the fact that, under king Richard III, it was claimed that she had made
a marriage precontract with king Edward IV, which rendered his two sons (the princes in the Tower), born later to Elizabeth Woodville, illegitimate.
The Norwich house was one of the most important in the mediaeval province, and, according to John Bale (who himself joined the house in 1506), it was founded when a small group of Carmelites from Burnham Norton travelled to Norwich and took over a building given to them by Philip Cowgate, "the son of Warin,
son of Adam Arnald." For legal purposes, Philip had given the house into the hands of William of Southfield, archdeacon of Norwich, and on 27th September 1257 a declaration was read in court whereby the property was entrusted to the Carmelites, but, it continued, "If the friars of Carmel there shall not inhabit the said messuage, or, after they have begun to inhabit it, shall leave it with the purpose of not dwelling there any longer, it shall revert to the said Philip and his heirs." From this
wording, it would seem that the Carmelites did not take up permanent residence until after this date.
The foundation in Norwich marked a turning point for the fortunes of the Carmelites in East Anglia. Burnham Norton, the earliest foundation in the area, was begun sometime between 1242 and 1247, but it was situated on the north coast of Norfolk, well away from any large towns. The move into Norwich signified a presence in one of the maj or towns in the country and a
flourishing commercial centre, especially for the East Anglian wool trade. The site given to the Carmelites was on the east of
26
the city, just across the river from the cathedral priory. This
was a marshy area and, because of the cattle that grazed there,
the nearby city gate and road were known as Cowgate.
Little is known about the early years of the community, but
they must have been well-accepted by the locals, as sometime
after 1260, an agreement was made with the Benedictine monks of
the cathedral, whereby the Carmelites under their prior, "Roger,"
agreed not to accept offerings from people in the local parishes
and to pass on any received to the cathedral. This agreement was re-made in 1376, when the community agreed to repay one quarter
of all burial offerings to the respective local parishes. The number in the community must have grown quickly for in the 1270s
and 1280s there were 30 friars there, and this total had risen
to approaching 50 in the 1320s. Such an increase clearly called
for more accommodation, and, from 1319 onwards, the community
acquired a series of extensions to their property. These enabled
the community to undertake a major building programme, and, on
the Feast of the Assumption 1343, the community took possession
of the new choir to their church, and, in 1344, John Paschal, the
Carmelite Bishop of Llandaff, consecrated the new cemetery. The
Black Death significantly affected the city, and it is claimed that 57,104 people died of the plague in the city. A prayer of
deliverance from the plague survives, which, it is said, was
compiled by the prior and community.
Fortunately for the Carmelites, around this time a number
of knights joined the Order, and one of them, Hugh Dowdale,
became a noted benefactor to the Norwich community. In 1351 he
was made a participant in the spiritual benefits of the Norwich
community, as he had given "£100 towards the cost of a new
dormitory, a set of vestments worth £22, a censer, two phials and
a basin of silver worth £7, a stone gate worth 10(?) marks and
... begun and completed at his own cost the south aisle of the
church." The major part of the buildings must have been largely
completed soon after, as provincial chapters were held in Norwich
in 1353, 1360, and 1377. However, the new church was not finally
dedicated until 1382. William of Worcester, who visited it in
1479, records that the cloister, which ran alongside the choir
of the church, wa He measured the wa
door to the choi:
which was 23 pacee
46 paces long anc
church are preser"
Our Lady on the s
Holy Cross, in whi
was also an altar
south side and a 1
"at the high alt.
church, notably tl
and St. Gataian.
By this time
group in the En
complaints were ~
region dominated t
than their share
latter complaint
allowed to proce'
solution chosen w
centred on Lond
distinction in
provincial chapte forward for the,
take effect, but t
the other cOllllllil
distinctions shot
whereas the Londo:
Norwich had only f
overall effect wa:
host a provincial
student being sen
house provided th,
brighter students
Norwich's im
that the prior-g
l
·1 priory. This grazed there,
lte.
community, but
I, as sometime
ctine monks of
>rior, "Roger," local parishes
agreement was lay one quarter
parishes. The )r in the 1270s
otal had risen
clearly called
the community
. These enabled
rramme, and, on
:ook possession
b.n Paschal, the , cemetery. The
! it is claimed :yo A prayer of
: is said, was
time a number
Hugh Dowdale,
:y. In 1351 he
of the Norwich
cost of a new
two phials and .0 (?) marks and
h aisle of the
re been largely
held in Norwich
~as not finally
visited it in
rside the choir
27
of the church, was 35 yards (60 paces) long on the south side. He measured the walking space under the belfry tower, between the
door to the choir and the door (called Parclose) to the nave
which was 23 paces long and the nave of the church which measured
46 paces long and 36 paces wide. Some other details about the
church are preserved in wills or bequests; there was a chapel to
Our Lady on the south side and another chapel dedicated to the Holy Cross, in which were statues to Our Lady and St. Anne. There
was also an altar to St. Gratian, a statue to St. Lawrence on the south side and a light which burned before the statue of Our Lady
"at the high altar end." A number of local gilds met in the
church, notably those of St, Mary (the candlemakers), St. Barbara and St. Gataian.
By this time the Carmelites of East Anglia were the main
group in the English province, and, from the early 1300s, complaints were made about the way in which Carmelites from this
region dominated the offices in the province and also gained more
than their share of doctorates at Oxford and Cambridge. The
latter complaint arose because only one Carmelite each year was
allowed to proceed to the doctorate at each University. The
solution chosen was to divide the province into 4 distinctions,
centred on London, Oxford, Norwich and York, with each
distinction in turn providing the provincial, hosting the
provincial chapter (a notable expense), and sending a student
forward for the doctorate. The first provision never seemed to
take effect, but the East Anglian contingent cleverly traded off
the other commitments to their advantage. In theory, the
distinctions should have been of equal size, but, in fact,
whereas the London and Oxford distinctions had ten houses each,
Norwich had only five, and the York distinction had fourteen. The
overall effect was that, although the Norwich communities had to
host a provincial chapter more often, the chances of a Norwich
student being sent for a doctorate were much higher. The Norwich
house provided the theology studiurn for the distinction, and the
brighter students from the other houses went there. Norwich's importance as a centre is illustrated by the fact
that the prior-general visited the house in 1384-5 and made
28
certain important announcements there. Thomas Netter is recorded as lecturing to the students there in the early 1400s, and the
Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Arundell, stopped at the house there when visiting Norwich in 1401. The community furnished many
talented and illustrious persons, provincials, theologians, and diplomats, among whom was Walter Disse, chaplain to John of Gaunt
and a papal legate.
The house was also noted for its spiritual life. William
Southfield, who achieved a reputation for holiness, lived there in the early 1400s, and Margery Kemp in her Autobiography
mentions going to him for spiritual advice. Attached to the
house, there appears to have been an anchorite's cell, and Emma
Stapleton is recorded as coming to live there in 1421, but sadly
she died the following year. Soon afterwards, the cell was
occupied by the Carmelite, Thomas Scrope, who spent over twenty
years in seclusion before emerging at the request of the Pope and
travelling to Rome to be consecrated Bishop of Dromore in 1450.
During his time as a recluse, Scrope translated Felip Ribot's,
De Institutione into English and wrote three of his four
historical works on the Order. He served as a suffragan in the
diocese for many years before retiring in 1479 to spend his last years as rector of Lowestoft, where he died in 1491. In 1465, a
brother, John Castleacre, is recorded as living in the cell, and bequests were made in 1494 and 1510 to an unnamed anchorite.
In 1450, John Kenninghale was responsible for building a new
library in the house and later, c.1496, under prior Thomas
Waterpitt the buildings were repaired as they had become
seriously dilapidated. In a move which indicated the changing
pattern of patronage in the city, the provincial chapter, being
held at Burnham Norton in 1486, granted the title of patrons to
the mayor, alderman, and citizens of Norwich. The city responded
in 1498 with a grant of exemption from tolls and customs for all
the friars' property, whether carried by land or water.
The house was suppressed by the king's commissioners
probably in November 1538, but not before a certain John Pratte
had presented himself while the community were at dinner and
claimed that he had the chancellor, Thomas Cromwell's commission
to suppress th. I Pratte ended \;
placard admittj
the pillory an,
Apart frol
parish priest j
the reformed d(
the cathedral.
faith under ql.
College, Cambrj
Richard Copsey,
Stefano Pos.
Venerabile Mi
This is a 1
last substanti, the Discalced (
Observance has
to go back to 1
Presentation's to understandir
Michael We
the Order in L(
and was callel
province: nov:
provincial. He
1677. He died c with the title
of his life.
His writir works those cor
the Land of Car
Introduction tc
has an append
originally pub]
er is recorded l400s, and the :i at the house furnished many 301ogians, and ) John of Gaunt
life. William
5, lived there Autobiography
tached to the cell, and Emma 421, but sadly the cell was
nt over twenty )f the Pope and omore in 1450. Felip Ribot's,
of his four ffragan in the spend his last 91. In 1465, a I the cell, and ! anchori te . building a new
prior Thomas :y had become i the changing
chapter, being of patrons to
city responded ustoms for all water.
commissioners in John Pratte at dinner and
l's commission
29
to suppress the house. The prior saw through his pretence, and I Pratte ended up by being paraded through the streets with a
placard admitting his crime and then having both ears nailed to the pillory and cut off.
Apart from John Bale, who left the community to become a parish priest in 1536, another Carmelite, John Barret, embraced the reformed doctrines and was appointed to a teaching post in the cathedral. Some of Barret's notebooks and his declaration of faith under queen Blizabeth are preserved in Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. Richard Copsey, O. Carm.
SUMMARY OF
Stefano Possanzini. La dottrina e la mistica mariana del
Venerabile Michele di sant Agostino, carmelitano. Rome. 1998
This is a much-needed study of Michael of St. Augustine; the
last substantial treatment of his life and teaching was that of the Discalced Carmelite, Valentino Macca, in 1982. The Ancient Observance has shown little interest in this figure, and we have to go back to 1926 to Gabriel Wessels' edition of Timothy of the Presentation's Life of Michael for the last major contribution to understanding his life and thought.
Michael was born on 15th April 1621 in Brussels and entered the Order in Louvain in 1637. He was ordained a priest in 1645
and was called on to fill various offices in the Belgian province: novice master, prior, definitor and assistant provincial. He was elected prior provincial in 1656, 1667 and 1677. He died on 2nd February 1684 and is honoured by the Order with the title of ·Venerable" as an indication of the sanctity
of his life. His writings are in both Latin and Flemish, and among his
works those considered most significant are his Introduction to
the Land of Carmel (1659), a Pious Life in Christ (1661) and the Introduction to the Mystical Life (1671). It is the latter that has an appendix entitled the • Mariform and Marian Life", originally published in 1669 in Flemish.