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...
The papal penitentiary was the highest body in the later medieval Church concerned with matters of c...
This article looks at the fate of the former Templar estates in England. Despite the papal instructi...
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...
Medieval indulgences have long had a troubled public image, grounded in centuries of confessional di...
The early Tudor Court of Requests was closely attached to the king's person and his duty to provide ...
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 examines the link between grants of the king's peace in later medieval Scotland and the...
This dissertation provides a study of Henry VII's almshouse at Westminster Abbey from its foundation...
In this article, we argue that servants working for Count Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie (1622–1686) we...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>This project has sough...
There has been much recent examination of late medieval lay piety in order to understand the backgro...
The introduction of the angel and later the Tudor sovereign gold coins in the late 1400s became part...
The years between 1258 and 1276 comprise one of the most influential periods in the Middle Ages in B...
The papal penitentiary was the highest body in the later medieval Church concerned with matters of c...
This article looks at the fate of the former Templar estates in England. Despite the papal instructi...
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...
Medieval indulgences have long had a troubled public image, grounded in centuries of confessional di...
The early Tudor Court of Requests was closely attached to the king's person and his duty to provide ...
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 examines the link between grants of the king's peace in later medieval Scotland and the...
This dissertation provides a study of Henry VII's almshouse at Westminster Abbey from its foundation...
In this article, we argue that servants working for Count Magnus Gabriel De la Gardie (1622–1686) we...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>This project has sough...
There has been much recent examination of late medieval lay piety in order to understand the backgro...
The introduction of the angel and later the Tudor sovereign gold coins in the late 1400s became part...
The years between 1258 and 1276 comprise one of the most influential periods in the Middle Ages in B...
The papal penitentiary was the highest body in the later medieval Church concerned with matters of c...
This article looks at the fate of the former Templar estates in England. Despite the papal instructi...
From Tudor times until the early nineteenth century, church or charity briefs were officially issued...