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Episcopal Visitation of Cathedrals in the Church of England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2008

Philip Barrett
Affiliation:
Sometime Rector of Campton and Otterbourne
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Abstract

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In December 1994 the Revd Philip LS Barrett BD MA FRHistS FSA, Rector of Compton and Otterbourne in the Diocese of Winchester, successfully submitted a dissertation to the University of Wales College of Cardiff for the degree of LLM in Canon Law, entitled ‘Episcopal Visitation of Cathedrals in the Church of England’. Philip Barrett, best known for his magisterial study, Barchester: English Cathedral Life in the Nineteenth Century (SPCK1993), died in 1998. The subject matter of this dissertation is of enduring importance and interest to those engaged in the life and work of cathedrals, and the Editor invited Canon Peter Atkinson, Chancellor of Chichester Cathedral, to repare it for publication in this Journal, so that the author's work might receive a wider circulation, but at a manageable length. In 1999 a new Cathedrals Measure was enacted, following upon the recommendations of the Howe Commission, published in the report Heritage and Renewal (Church House Publishing 1994). The author was able to refer to the report, but not to the Measure, or to the revision of each set of cathedral Statutes consequent upon that Measure. While this limits the usefulness of the author's work as a point of reference for the present law of cathedral visitations, its value as an historical introduction remains.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical Law Society 2006

References

1 I have reduced the dissertation by just over 50 per cent. I have tried to preserve the main thrust of the study, while dispensing with much of the illustration from particular instances. The reader will understand how much has been lost in the process; I can only refer the enquirer to the original copy kept by the University of Wales. (There is also a typescript in the Library of Chichester Cathedral). The historical background is obviously important, so I have retained the introductory chapter as far as the Reformation; something of the subsequent history of visitations is gathered from the pages that follow. I have regretfully jettisoned the appendix on metropolitical and royal visitations, and visitations Sede vacante. [PA]Google Scholar

2 Every word of the text that follows is the author's. I have only very slightly reordered the material for the purposes of readability. For instance, I have used the last paragraph of the introduction to conclude the whole article. I have kept all the substantial footnotes of the surviving text, but excised extensive references to now obsolete sets of cathedral Statutes. [PA]Google Scholar

3 In his introduction, Philip Barrett thanked Bishop Eric Kemp and Dr Norman Doe for their encouragement and advice; I am sure he would wish these acknowledgements to appear here. As one who knew Philip Barrett very slightly, I am glad to have a hand in bringing his work to a wider readership; and I am very grateful indeed to Mrs Irene Smale for re-typing the whole of the dissertation so that it could be electronically edited. [PA]Google Scholar

4 The author also refers extensively to the Care of Cathedrals Measure 1990. The Care of Cathedrals (Amendment) Measure received Royal Assent on 24 March 2005, but the author's treatment of this aspect of a bishop's visitatorial power is not substantially affected.Google Scholar

5 As far as I can tell, the impact of the 1999 Measure upon the conduct of visitations is not substantial, and any bishop contemplating a visitation of his cathedral will learn much from Philip Barrett's scholarship–and advice. [PA]Google Scholar

6 Frere, WH, Visitation Articles and Injunctions of the Period of the Reformation (London 1910), 1, 19.Google Scholar For further references to a letter of Pope Gregory I to a diocesan bishop in 592 and to the provisions of the 4th Council of Toledo in 633 and the 2nd Council of Braga in 752, cf Smith, PM, ‘Points of Law and Practice Concerning Ecclesiastical Visitations’, (1991) 2 Ecc LJ 189 at 190.Google Scholar

7 Cheney, CR, Episcopal Visitation of Monasteries in the 13th Century (Manchester 1931), 32.Google Scholar

8 The monastic chapters were: Canterbury, Carlisle, Durham, Ely, Norwich, Rochester, Winchester and Worcester. The secular chapters were: Chichester, Exeter, Hereford, Lichfield, Lincoln, St Paul's London, Salisbury, Wells and York. In addition, the Benedictine monasteries at Bath and Coventry had co-cathedral status with the secular chapters at Wells and Lichfield. All the monasteries were Benedictine, apart from Carlisle which was an Augustinian foundation.Google Scholar

9 Smith 194.Google Scholar

10 Ibid 194.

11 Cheney 33; Smith 194.Google Scholar

12 Smith 194; cf Cheney 35.Google Scholar

13 Cheney 35.Google Scholar

14 Moorman, JRH, A History of The Franciscan Order From Its Origins to The Year 1517 (Oxford 1968) 98.Google Scholar

15 Moorman, JRH, The Franciscans in England (London 1974) 52.Google Scholar The most recent study of Grosseteste is Southern, RW, Robert Grosseteste–The Growth of an English Mind in Mediaeval Europe (2nd edition, Oxford 1992).Google Scholar An older one is Callus, DA (ed), Robert Grosseteste, Scholar and Bishop (Oxford 1955).Google Scholar

16 Southern 259. For Grosseteste's own account of his purpose in visitation, cf Southern 258.Google Scholar

17 Luard, HR (ed), Roberti Grosseteste epistolæ (Rolls Series, London) Ep 127 for Grosseteste's quarrel with his chapter,Google Scholarcf Srawley, JH, ‘Grosseteste's Administration of the Diocese of Lincoln’, in DA Callus (ed) 171–177;Google ScholarSrawley, JH, Robert Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln 1235–1253 (Lincoln 1966) 1819;Google Scholar and Owen, D (ed) A History of Lincoln Minster (Cambridge 1994) 157158.Google Scholar

18 Srawley (1966) 18.Google Scholar

22 For the text, cf Bradshaw, H and Wordsworth, CStatutes of Lincoln Cathedral (Cambridge 1892) I 315319; cf Srawley (1966) 18–19.Google Scholar

23 This award has been described as, ‘a turning-point in the relations of bishops and secular chapters in England’.Google Scholar (Edwards, KThe English Secular Cathedrals in the Middle Ages (2nd edManchester 1967) 129).Google Scholar The most recent discussion is in Crosby, EUBishop and Chapter in 12th Century England (Cambridge 1994) 310312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

24 Eg Frere I 82.Google Scholar

25 Cheney, 35 135: cf Sext III, xx I, paragraph 6.Google Scholar

26 Bradshaw and Wordsworth II cl.Google Scholar

27 Frere I 75; Wordsworth, C and Macleane, D, Statutes and Customs of the Cathedral Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Salisbury (London 1915) 96101, 282–307.Google Scholar

28 Bannister, ATThe Cathedral Church of Hereford (London 1924) 176180; Frere, I 79; Edwards 132–133.Google Scholar

29 Frere I 79, 109–110; cf Deedes, C (ed), Episcopal Register of Robert Rede 1397–1415 (2 vols, 19081910) I 6970, 98–127; II 363–373.Google Scholar

30 Frere I 79; Edwards 131. Edwards comments that at Chichester, ‘the bishop's powers during visitation became much wider than those of most English bishops’.Google Scholar

31 Frere I 78.Google Scholar

32 Edwards 129 n 5. For Grandisson's injunctions following his visitation in 1328, cf Frere I 116–117.Google Scholar

33 Frere I 76. For the details collected at this time from other cathedrals about visitations, cf ibid 170–171. There were controversies at Lichfield about attempted visitations in 1322–4 and 1357–9. There is some evidence for visitations c 1350 and in 1397 (Edwards 132).

34 Frere I 77.Google Scholar

35 Frere I 77–78; Edwards 131.Google Scholar

36 Frere I, 75–76; Edwards 129–130; Dobson, RB,Google Scholar The Later Middle Ages, 1215–1500 in Aylmer, GE and Cant, R (eds) A History of York Minster (Oxford 1977) 8384.Google Scholar

37 Cheney 60; Churchill, IJCanterbury Administration (2 vols London 1933) I 134.Google Scholar

38 Cheney 60–61.Google Scholar

39 Ibid 67.

40 Ibid 68–69; Dobson, RB, Durham Priory 1400–1450 (Cambridge 1973) 220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

41 The priory's scribe wrote in the Liber Albus: ‘His clerks and ours discussed a certain new constitution, which the Pope had recently put forth, respecting the entrance of a bishop for making a visitation. And since it was doubted whether that decretal was common or special, general or local, the Prior made protest that he would admit him on that occasion with two clerks and one notary, always, however, saving our composition if that constitution was not general. The Bishop made a like protest’.Google Scholar (Wilson, JMThe Worcester Liber Albus London 1920, 36; cf Cheney 69).Google Scholar

42 Cheney 71.Google Scholar

43 Knowles, D, The Religious Orders in England (Cambridge 1962) I 104.Google Scholar

44 Carter, EHStudies In Norwich Cathedral History (Norwich 1935) 331.Google Scholar

45 Evans, SJA ‘Ely Chapter Ordinances and Visitation Records 1241–1515’, Camden Miscellany vol xvii London 1940 (Camden Society, 3rd series, vol lxiv) vi (cf Cheney 14).Google Scholar

46 Dobson 220, 231.Google Scholar

47 Ibid 231; cf Harbottle, B ‘Bishop Hatfield's Visitation of Durham Priory 1354’, Bishop Richard of Bury visited in 1337 and there were only five more visitations before 1408.Google Scholar

48 Dobson 232.Google Scholar

49 Ibid 233.

50 Ibid 235. For the meaning of comperta cf below p 274. For Le Covenit cf Crosby 150–151.

51 Dobson 235.Google Scholar

52 Ibid 236.

53 Sextus 3 xx 1; Boyd v Phillpotts (1874) LR 4 A & E 297 at 320, 341, Ct of Arches; Phillpotts v Boyd (1875) LR 6 PC 435 at 450, 456; Gibson Codex II 957;Google ScholarPhillimore, Ecclesiastical Law (2nd edn) (London 1895) II 10451046;Google ScholarSmith, 203. Canon, C 17 para 2, recognises the jurisdiction of each archbishop ‘to correct and supply the defects of other bishops, and, during the time of his metropolitical visitation, jurisdiction as Ordinary’. Canon C 18 para 4 similarly recognises the right of diocesan bishops to hold visitations. The purpose of visitations, according to Canon G 5 para 1 is, ‘for the edifying and well-governing of Christ's flock…for the supply of such things as are lacking and the correction of such things as are amiss’.Google Scholar

54 Cf Withers v Dean and Chapter of Exeter (1611) Appeals to Delegates, no 15 (PP 1867–8 lvii 112).Google Scholar

55 Cf Phillpotts v Boyd (1875) LR 6 PC 435 at 450 per Lord Hatherley: ‘It is equally certain, that as to some matters, at all events the bishop, visiting his dean and chapter as ordinary, would have power to make orders binding upon the dean and chapter, subject to an appeal to the higher Ecclesiastical Tribunals’. For further cases, cf Smith 204 n 170.Google Scholar

56 R v Dean and Chapter of Chester (1850) 15 QB 513 at 519.Google Scholar

57 Green v Rutherforth (1750) 1 Ves Sen 465 at 472; cf also Philips v Bury (1694) Holt KB 715 at 724.Google Scholar

58 ‘The Crown is clearly represented as the founder of the church and donor of the statutes, and the whole tenor of the statutes is indicative of a quasi-private corporation. In each cathedral, the bishop is specially appointed visitor to supervise that particular foundation and to see that it observes its own rules…There is therefore no material distinction to be drawn between the visitor of an eleemosynary corporation and the local visitor of a cathedral of Henry VII's foundation, and this means that the courts have been able to use freely, decisions concerning the jurisdiction in one kind of foundation as authority in determining the powers in the other’.Google Scholar (Smith, PM, ‘The Exclusive Jurisdiction of the University Visitor’, Law Quarterly Review, vol 97, 10 1981, 610 at 610–611;Google Scholarcf idem ‘Points of Law’, (1991) 2 Ecc LJ 189 at 204. The Henrician statutes for both Peterborough and Carlisle expressly recognised the bishop's ordinary jurisdiction in addition to his jurisdiction under the statutes.Google Scholar (Falkner and Thompson xlvi). For a general account of the jurisdiction of a visitor, cf Halsbury's Laws of England (4th edition, London 1975), vol 5 paras 872–879.Google Scholar

59 R v Bishop of Chester (1747) 1 Wm Bl 22, 1 Wils 206; Philips v Bury (1694) Holt KB 715 at 726–727; Whiston v Dean and Chapter of Rochester (1849) 7 Hare 532; R v Dean and Chapter of Chester (1850) 15 QB 513; Boyd v Phillpotts (1874) LR 4A & E 297 at 335–336, Ct of Arches; cf Smith, PM, ‘Points of Law’ (1991) 2 Ecc LJ 204.Google Scholar

60 Philips v Bury (1694) Holt KB 715 at 720; Attorney-General v Talbot (1748) 3 Atk 662 at 674; Whiston v Dean and Chapter of Rochester (1849) 7 Hare 532; R v Dean and Chapter of Chester (1850) 15 QB 513; R v Dean and Chapter of Rochester (1851) 17 QB 1.Google Scholar

61 Cathedrals Measure 1931 (21 & 22 George 5, c7); Cathedrals Measure 1963 (No 2), s 6.Google Scholar

62 A good example is the account of Bishop William Gray's visitation at Lincoln in 1432 (Thompson, AH (ed) Visitation of Religious Houses in the Diocese of Lincoln (London 1915) I 128145.Google Scholar Thompson's summary of the procedure is valuable (ibid ix–xiii).

63 Dobson 235.Google Scholar

64 Cheney 95–99. Frere (op cit I, 111) makes a good distinction between injunctions which are orders given for the enforcement of what is already enforceable, constitutions which are new diocesan regulations approved by a diocesan synod of clergy and statutes which are new regulations for a cathedral proposed with the consent of the chapter.Google Scholar

65 Phillimore, II, 1050. A recent example of this was at Bishop Eric Kemp's general visitation at Chichester in 1978. The bishop's charge was given in two parts, on 3 November 1978 and 22 March 1979. At the end of the first part he stressed that, ‘The inhibition contained in the citation read earlier means that until the visitation is concluded and the inhibition relaxed they (the Administrative Chapter) must take no action on any matters covered by the Visitation without my knowledge and consent’. For earlier examples at Chichester, cf the inhibition issued by Bishop Francis Hare in 1733 (West Sussex Record Office, Cap 1/1/2, 189) and the citation issued by Bishop Bell for his visitation in 1948 (West Sussex Record Office, Cap 1/7/3). For details of the manner of issuing citations in Chichester in the eighteenth century, cf West Sussex Record Office Cap 1/1/2, 219.Google Scholar

66 For details of the ‘Forme of the Visitation of the Cathedral Church of Chichester’ drawn up for Bishop Waddington's visitation in 1727, cf West Sussex Record Office, Cap 1/1/2, 174. John Wordsworth's visitation at Salisbury in 1888 is a good example of the procedures used in the late nineteenth century (cf Wordsworth and Macleane, 467–492).Google Scholar

67 West Sussex Record Office, Cap 1/1/2, 164–165.Google Scholar

68 Visitation of the Cathedral Church of St Mary the Virgin, Blackburn, by Alan, Lord Bishop of Blackburn, November 1991, s1.4.Google Scholar

69 Diocese of Salisbury: Visitation of the Cathedral Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Salisbury: the Bishop's Charge, by John, Bishop of Salisbury, 14 October 1991, 1.Google Scholar

70 Phillimore notes that ‘the practice seems to have varied as to appointing a civilian as commissary or as assessor. Bishop Gibson chose an assessor. Sometimes also two commissaries have been appointed’. (Phillimore, I, 169n).Google Scholar

71 The Church of England (Miscellaneous Provisions) Measure 1976 (no 3) relieves bishops of the necessity of holding visitations at regular intervals. It may be doubted whether this was a wise reform.Google Scholar

72 For evidence on oath at visitations, cf Coulton, GG, Five Centuries of Religion (Cambridge 1927), 480485; for the oath at Chichester in the 17th and 18th centuries, cf West Sussex Record Office, Cap 1/1/2 pp 116, 157, 174.Google Scholar

73 At Carlisle a distinction is made between those mentioned in the statutes and others employed in the service of the cathedral. (Carlisle statutes, st I s 6).Google Scholar

74 Canterbury statutes, st XXXIX, s 2. The Canterbury and Winchester statutes regarding visitations are derived from differing translations of a virtually common Latin original. (cf Jenkins, C (ed) The Statutes of the Cathedral and Metropolitical Church of Christ, Canterbury (Canterbury 1925), 8893; Goodman and Hutton, 78–82.Google Scholar

75 The Bishop of Winchester has entrusted to him as visitor the ‘charge of this Cathedral Church…and as such he is commanded and entreated diligently to secure that the praises of God shall be constantly celebrated morning and evening in the aforesaid Church; that the most beautiful fabric both without and within, as the dignity of the place doth demand, shall before all else whatsoever be preserved not only from all decay but even from defect, and from time to time, as often as the occasion may require, shall be put in good repair; lastly that all members of the aforesaid Church shall perform their proper duties soberly and devoutly in brotherly love’ (Ibid st I).

76 Truro statutes st I s 6 (2).Google Scholar

77 Ibid st I s 8.

78 R v Bishop of Chester (1747) 1 Wm B1 22 at 25–6.Google Scholar

79 Dean and Chapter of Chester v Bishop of Chester (1902) 87 LT 618 HL.Google Scholar

80 (1902) 87 LT at 619. Lord Davey, agreeing with him, said: ‘The master of the school has ceased to owe any duties to the Dean and Chapter, and is not in any sense whatsoever a ‘minister’ or officer of the cathedral church…if the present master is not a minister or officer of the cathedral, the bishop, as visitor, has no jurisdiction over him, and no jurisdiction to entertain his claim to the place in the cathedral which was attached to the headmaster of the cathedral school as a minister or officer of the church by the statutes’. (87 LT at 621).Google Scholar

81 Cf Jasper, RCD, George Bell, Bishop of Chichester (London 1967) 356359.Google Scholar In his charge he said that it was fitting ‘that I should address myself above all other things to the principal question of the purpose of our Cathedral and how that purpose may be better served in these days’ (Bell, GKAThe Function of Chichester Cathedral (Hove 1948) 3.Google Scholar [Barrett, Philip has further described this visitation in ‘The Visitation of the Cathedral’, article posthumously published in Bell of Chichester, edited Paul, Foster (Otter Memorial Paper 17, Chichester 2004) pp 5166. -PA]Google Scholar

82 GKA Bell 33.Google Scholar

83 Ibid 11–12, 33.

84 Ibid 33.

85 Ibid 33; cf pp 17–23. He directed that the librarian and the communar should always be different persons, to accord with the statutes.

86 Ibid 23–32.

87 Chichester Capitular Records (West Sussex Record Office, Cap 1/7/3).Google Scholar

88 Ibid 16.

89 Cf Bishop Eric Kemp: ‘A bishop can require the dean and chapter of his cathedral to observe its statutes and the general law of the Church. He can advise and recommend but he has no power to direct them how to administer the cathedral and the institutions attached to it, nor has anybody else, so long as they act in accordance with the statutes’. [This is quoted from s 3 of the charge of Bishop Kemp's special visitation of the Prebendal School (the Chichester Cathedral choir school), in 1981. In the original dissertation Philip Barrett considers this visitation at some length, and thanks Bishop Kemp for a sight of his visitation charge.–PA].Google Scholar

90 Wordsworth and Macleane 16–37.Google Scholar

91 Edwards 12; for the research of Dr Diana Greenway into this matter, cf Crosby, EU, 336–339.Google Scholar

92 Ibid 19–20.

93 Ibid 23.

94 Ibid 115–116.

95 Ibid 117–119.

96 Bradshaw and Wordsworth, I 83; II clxxii–clxxxviii; III 233.Google Scholar

97 Ibid I 147, 149, 151; II 182–186, 187–228, 259–267; 366–495.

98 Cf Owen (ed) 159–163. In the current Lincoln statutes, st I, s 6, a decision made by the visitor following a question or dispute arising from the interpretation of the constitution or statutes is still ‘technically called a Laudum or Award’.Google Scholar For a note on the meaning of Laudum, cf Benson, EWThe Cathedral: its necessary place in the life and work of the Church (London 1878) n 16.Google Scholar

99 Kitchin, GW and Madge, FTDocuments relating to the foundation of the Chapter of Windsor, 1541–7 (London 1889) 143, 164.Google Scholar Interpreters other than the bishop were also found at Chester (Archbishop of York), Ely, Gloucester, Bristol, Rochester and Worcester (Archbishop of Canterbury), and Peterborough (Lord Chancellor) (Smith, PM, ‘Exclusive Jurisdiction’ at 613 n 31).Google Scholar

100 Goodman and Hutton, 80–81. The Marian statutes at Durham recognised the bishop as statutorum declarator (Falkner and Thompson, lx–lxi).Google Scholar

101 Jebb, J and Phillott, HWThe Statutes of the Cathedral Church of Hereford (Hereford 1882) 104107.Google Scholar

102 Smith, Exclusive Jurisdiction, at 613. The case of R v Dean and Chapter of Chester (1850) 15 QB 513 at 519 specifically recognises a visitor's power ‘upon appeal to him, to restore a person to an office on the foundation’. For the background, cf above pp 272–274. The codes of cathedral statutes drawn up in the 1960s all provide for the bishop to be the interpreter of the statutes.Google Scholar

103 This obliges the administrative bodies of cathedrals to seek the advice of their own fabric committee and to obtain the approval of the Cathedrals Fabric Commission for England for any works ‘which would materially affect the architectural, archaeological, artistic or historic character of the cathedral church, or any building within the precinct of the cathedral church which is for the time being used for ecclesiastical purposes, or the immediate setting of the cathedral church, or any archaeological remains within the precinct of the cathedral church, or for the sale, loan or other disposal of any object the property of which is vested in the chapter of the cathedral church, being an object of architectural, archaeological, artistic, or historic interest, or for the permanent addition to the cathedral church of any object which would materially affect the architectural, archaeological, artistic, or historical character of the cathedral church’.Google Scholar

104 Care of Cathedrals (Supplementary Provisions) Measure 1994 s 2(1).Google Scholar

105 Ibid s 2(1).

106 Ibid s 2(2).

107 Ibid s 2(3).

108 Ibid s 2(4). The provision in s 2(3) is made ‘without prejudice to any rule of law as to the effect of episcopal visitation’.

109 Ibid s 3(1), (2).

110 Ibid s 3(3).

111 Ibid s 3(4).

112 Ibid s 3(5), (6).

113 Ibid s 4(1). Under s 4(2) the Church Commissioners may pay the costs or expenses of such proceedings.

114 Ibid s 5(1), (3).

115 Ibid s 5(2).

116 Ibid s 6(1).

117 Ibid s 6(3).

118 Ibid s 6(4), (6). Such an order shall not be made if the contravention took place more than six years previously (s 6(5)), unless relevant facts have been deliberately concealed from the bishop. (s 6(7)).

119 Ibid s 6(9).

120 Ibid s 6(10).

121 Care of Cathedrals (Supplementary Provisions) Measure 1994 ss 7, 8, Schedule.Google Scholar

122 For a further discussion of this MeasureGoogle Scholar, cf Report by the Ecclesiastical Commitee upon the Care of Cathedrals (Supplementary Provisions) Measure (Ecclesiastical Committee 206th Report, HL Paper 27-II; HC 250, London 1994).Google Scholar

123 Heritage and Renewal 66–7.Google Scholar

124 Cf Picarda, HThe Law and Practice Relating to Charities (London 1977) 429431 for details of the procedure.Google Scholar