1st Edition

The Medieval Chantry in England

By Julian M. Luxford Copyright 2012
    368 Pages
    by Routledge

    Chantries were religious institutions endowed with land, goods and money. At their heart was the performance of a daily mass for the spiritual benefit of their founders, and the souls of all faithful dead. To Church reformers, they exemplified some of medieval Catholicism’s most egregious errors; but to the orthodox they offered opportunities to influence what occurred in an unknowable afterlife. The eleven essays presented here lead the reader through the earliest manifestations of the chantry, the origins and development of ‘stone-cage’ chapels, royal patronage of commemorative art and architecture, the chantry in the late medieval parish, the provision of music and textiles, and a series of specific chantries created for William of Wykeham, Edmund Audley, Thomas Spring and Abbot Islip, to the eventual history and the cultural consequences of their suppression in the mid-16th century.

     

    CONTENTS

    PREFACE

    JOHN MCNEILL A Prehistory of the Chantry

    JULIAN LUXFORD The Origins and Development of the English ‘Stone-Cage’ Chantry Chapel

    ANTJE FEHRMANN English Royal Chantry Provision

    CLIVE BURGESS Chantries in the Parish

    ROGER BOWERS Liturgy and Music in the Role of the Chantry Priest

    KATE HEARD ‘Such stuff as dreams are made on’: Textiles and the Medieval Chantry

    ANNA EAVIS The Chantries of William of Wykeham

    CATHY OAKES In pursuit of heaven: The two Chantry Chapels of Bishop Edmund Audley at Hereford and Salisbury Cathedrals

    CHARLES TRACY Thomas Spring’s Chantry and Parclose at Lavenham, Suffolk.

    JOHN GOODALL The Jesus Chapel or Islip’s Chantry at Westminster Abbey

    PHILLIP LINDLEY ‘Pickpurse’ Purgatory, the Dissolution of the Chantries and the Suppression of Intercession for the Dead

    Biography

    Julian M Luxford is Professor at School of Art History, St Andrews University.