The late medieval and early modern royal almoner for England and Wales was an important figure, a senior cleric best documented as a court preacher who was the crown’s religious and moral face; prominent holders included Wolsey and Lancelot Andrewes. The article begins by looking at the almoner’s appointment and functions at court, but it is mostly devoted to his interactions with Tudor and Stuart society at large. Indeed he had many public roles that are poorly understood. These included arbitrating, mediating, and directing the distribution of the forfeited goods of suicides found felo de se by coroners’ inquests, granted to successive almoners by the crown. The article looks at the almoner’s operations both in courts such as Star Chamber...
This article introduces a new source for assessing the distribution of wealth in early modern Englan...
Medieval indulgences have long had a troubled public image, grounded in centuries of confessional di...
From Tudor times until the early nineteenth century, church or charity briefs were officially issued...
The late medieval and early modern royal almoner for England and Wales was an important figure, a se...
This article examines the link between grants of the king's peace in later medieval Scotland and the...
In scholarly debate, the beneficiaries of the institution of sanctuary in medieval England are usual...
The article transcribes Thomas de Northfolk of Naburn's application to alienate under mortmain a ren...
This article uses letters of advice, outlining key principles of royal power, to explore how abbots ...
The introduction of the angel and later the Tudor sovereign gold coins in the late 1400s became part...
This article examines the case of Helen Arthur, a Catholic and Jacobite Irish woman who travelled w...
This article examines Edward III’s earldom creations of March 1337 and the endowments given to these...
This article studies the retirement arrangements known as corrodies, which could be purchased by lay...
As Nigel Goose and others have noted, early modern almshouses have received far less scholarly atten...
The early 16th century saw the rise of a wealthy middle class fueled by a new and expanding global t...
Building upon recent scholarship, this article presents a study of policy formation within the compo...
This article introduces a new source for assessing the distribution of wealth in early modern Englan...
Medieval indulgences have long had a troubled public image, grounded in centuries of confessional di...
From Tudor times until the early nineteenth century, church or charity briefs were officially issued...
The late medieval and early modern royal almoner for England and Wales was an important figure, a se...
This article examines the link between grants of the king's peace in later medieval Scotland and the...
In scholarly debate, the beneficiaries of the institution of sanctuary in medieval England are usual...
The article transcribes Thomas de Northfolk of Naburn's application to alienate under mortmain a ren...
This article uses letters of advice, outlining key principles of royal power, to explore how abbots ...
The introduction of the angel and later the Tudor sovereign gold coins in the late 1400s became part...
This article examines the case of Helen Arthur, a Catholic and Jacobite Irish woman who travelled w...
This article examines Edward III’s earldom creations of March 1337 and the endowments given to these...
This article studies the retirement arrangements known as corrodies, which could be purchased by lay...
As Nigel Goose and others have noted, early modern almshouses have received far less scholarly atten...
The early 16th century saw the rise of a wealthy middle class fueled by a new and expanding global t...
Building upon recent scholarship, this article presents a study of policy formation within the compo...
This article introduces a new source for assessing the distribution of wealth in early modern Englan...
Medieval indulgences have long had a troubled public image, grounded in centuries of confessional di...
From Tudor times until the early nineteenth century, church or charity briefs were officially issued...