Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Dedication
- Editors’ Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- Norman Scarfe: An Appreciation
- Domesday Herrings
- Searching for Salvation in Anglo-Norman East Anglia
- ‘On the Threshold of Eternity’: Care for the Sick in East Anglian Monasteries
- The Parson’s Glebe: Stable, Expanding or Shrinking?
- Suffolk Churches in the Later Middle Ages: The Evidence of Wills
- Sir John Fastolf and the Land Market: An Enquiry of the Early 1430s regarding Purchasable Property
- Sir Philip Bothe of Shrubland: The Last of a Distinguished Line Builds in Commemoration
- A First Stirring of Suffolk Archaeology?
- Concept and Compromise: Sir Nicholas Bacon and the Building of Stiffkey Hall
- Shrubland before Barry: A House and its Landscape 1660–1880
- Garden Canals in Suffolk
- Estate Stewards in Woodland High Suffolk 1690–1880
- A Journal of a Tour through Suffolk, Norfolk, Lincolnshire and Yorkshire in the Summer of 1741
- Thomas Gainsborough as an Ipswich Musician, a Collector of Prints and a Caricaturist
- Ipswich Museum Moralities in the 1840s and 1850s
- John Cordy Jeaffreson (1831–1901) and the Ipswich Borough Records
- The Caen Controversy
- Select Bibliography of the Writings of Norman Scarfe
Searching for Salvation in Anglo-Norman East Anglia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Dedication
- Editors’ Preface
- List of Abbreviations
- Norman Scarfe: An Appreciation
- Domesday Herrings
- Searching for Salvation in Anglo-Norman East Anglia
- ‘On the Threshold of Eternity’: Care for the Sick in East Anglian Monasteries
- The Parson’s Glebe: Stable, Expanding or Shrinking?
- Suffolk Churches in the Later Middle Ages: The Evidence of Wills
- Sir John Fastolf and the Land Market: An Enquiry of the Early 1430s regarding Purchasable Property
- Sir Philip Bothe of Shrubland: The Last of a Distinguished Line Builds in Commemoration
- A First Stirring of Suffolk Archaeology?
- Concept and Compromise: Sir Nicholas Bacon and the Building of Stiffkey Hall
- Shrubland before Barry: A House and its Landscape 1660–1880
- Garden Canals in Suffolk
- Estate Stewards in Woodland High Suffolk 1690–1880
- A Journal of a Tour through Suffolk, Norfolk, Lincolnshire and Yorkshire in the Summer of 1741
- Thomas Gainsborough as an Ipswich Musician, a Collector of Prints and a Caricaturist
- Ipswich Museum Moralities in the 1840s and 1850s
- John Cordy Jeaffreson (1831–1901) and the Ipswich Borough Records
- The Caen Controversy
- Select Bibliography of the Writings of Norman Scarfe
Summary
IN 1992 Dr Eamon Duffy, in a remarkable book, described and analysed the vibrant traditional religious culture of England at the close of the middle ages, and very much of his evidence was drawn from East Anglia. This paper is an attempt, on an infinitely smaller scale, at a reconstruction of the religious climate of the region in the century and a half after the Norman Conquest. The task is hampered by the complete lack of various categories of evidence which provide valuable information on the period prior to the Reformation. There are no churchwardens’ accounts, no devotional texts aimed at the laity, and above all no wills, which in their thousands have been so valuable in reconstructing the religious sentiments of late medieval English men and women. The pious investment which resulted in the great rebuilding of East Anglian churches in the perpendicular style between the 1370s and the 1520s brought about the destruction of by far the greater part of the region's twelfth-century romanesque heritage – it is symbolic that at Blythburgh there stands one of the finest of fifteenth-century parish churches, while almost nothing remains of the small Augustinian Priory which in an earlier age had attracted so many donations from the neighbourhood. What survive in profusion, however, are charters: grants and confirmations, usually of land or rent, sometimes of rights and privileges, in effect title deeds. In the earliest years of the twelfth century these are rare and precious, written in the name only of those at the apex of society. By the mid-thirteenth century they are relatively common, recording the gifts even of peasants and shopkeepers. Charters can to some extent act as a source analagous to late medieval wills as a window on lay piety, especially before the 1180s when the devotional phrases of earlier deeds of gift were giving way to legalistic common form. By using these, supplemented by chronicles and miracle collections, it may be possible to appreciate something of this earlier world just as, to employ an architectural analogy, one passes from the perpendicular exterior of Wymondham abbey to the glories of the priory's romanesque nave.
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- East Anglia's HistoryStudies in Honour of Norman Scarfe, pp. 19 - 40Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2002