The Mediæval Hospitals of England by Rotha Mary Clay
3. _The Friars_
647 words | Chapter 91
By word and deed, St. Francis preached the duty of serving lepers. “He
appointed that the friars of his Order, dispersed in various parts of
the world, should for the love of Christ diligently attend the lepers
wherever they could be found. They followed this injunction with the
greatest promptitude.”[132] In England, however, it would appear
that there was not that close association between [p210] friars and
hospitals which existed in Italy. Led by national reformers, the work
of tending lazars had long been carried on. The great majority of
refuges for them were founded between 1084 and 1224 before the brethren
arrived in this country. Speaking of the friars’ labours, Green says
that “their first work lay in the noisome lazar-houses,” and Brewer
alludes to “their training for the leper-hospitals,” but there seems to
be little or no definite record of such service in this country. There
were, however, many individual outcasts, who had not the comfort of the
hospital, and to these the new-comers may have ministered.
A few hospitals—not for lepers—were indeed appropriated to the
Mendicant Orders, or served by them. The association is of the
slightest, and usually of short duration. Thus the Bamburgh spital had
probably disappeared when Richard II gave its chapel to the Friars
Preachers, “in part remuneration for a cross made from the wood of the
Holy Cross presented by them to the king” (1382). The Crutched Friars
once had some connection with Holy Cross, Colchester. The relation
between hospitals and the Bethlehemite and Maturin Orders was closer,
and dated from the friars’ first century of work. St. Mary of Bethlehem
in London was founded upon land belonging to that community, members
of which were its original officials. Deeds of 1348 call them “the
Order of the Knighthood of St. Mary of Bethlehem”; possibly the link
with the Holy Land led them to adopt this military title. Maturin or
Trinitarian houses were more akin to the infirmary and pilgrim-hostel
than were any other friaries; one-third of their revenue was spent
in relieving local poor. Their houses (often called “hospitals”) are
[p211] not included in the present volume, save when they were not
merely friaries. For example, Stephen, Archdeacon of Wilts, who was
rector and patron of Easton Royal, founded there a house for indigent
travellers (1246).[133] The master was a Trinitarian brother, but he
was presented by the patron, to whom he and the other priests owed
obedience; in 1287 the same man was minister of Easton and of the
house of St. Mary Magdalene by Hertford. St. Laurence’s, Crediton, was
served by the Hounslow Maturin convent. The almsmen of God’s House,
Donnington, worshipped in the adjacent Trinitarian Chapel.
* * * * *
To recapitulate: the hospital was a semi-independent institution,
subject to royal and episcopal control in matters of constitution,
jurisdiction and finance, yet less trammelled in organization than most
religious houses. It formed a part of the parochial system, and had
also links of one kind and another with monastic life.
FOOTNOTES:
[118] Chron. & Mem., 72, _Reg. Malmes._ i. 232.
[119] Pat. 25 Edw. I, pt. ii. m. 11; Rolls of Parl. I, 239_b_.
[120] Nicolson and Burn, _Antiq. of Westmorland_, ed. 1777, i. 574.
[121] J. Smyth, _Lives of Berkeleys_, i. 70.
[122] Pat. 15 Edw. III, pt. i. m. 14.
[123] Chron. and Mem., 33, i. 147. ii. 7.
[124] Owen and Blakeway, _Hist. of Shrewsbury_, 1825, ii. p. 257.
[125] Chron. and Mem., 97, p. 173.
[126] Chetham Soc. F. R. Raines, _Lancashire Chantries_.
[127] Pat. 22 Edw. I, m. 3.
[128] Close 32 Edw. I, m. 2 _d_.
[129] Cal. Pap. Reg. vol. v. p. 489.
[130] Close 14 Edw. III, m. 13.
[131] Pat. 37 Hen. III, m. 17.
[132] Chron. & Mem. 4. _Monumenta Franciscana_, vol. i. p. xxv., from
“Mirror.”
[133] Chron. and Mem., 97, pp. 301–6.
[p212]
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