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1413. 14 Kal. Sept. St. Anthony's without the walls of Florence. (f. 3.) |
To William Meyler, clerk, of the diocese of Cloyne. Rehabilitation etc. as below. He formerly had papal dispensation as the son of a priest and an unmarried woman (i) to be promoted to all, even holy orders and hold a benefice even with cure, after which he had himself tonsured and obtained the perpetual vicarage of Kilmadonok in the said diocese; (ii) to hold another benefice with or without cure compatible with the said first benefice and to resign them, once only, for purpose of exchange, and hold instead two mutually compatible benefices, after which he obtained by authority of the ordinary the precentorship of Cloyne, a non-major dignity with cure; holding in ignorance of the law the said vicarage, whose value does not exceed 3 marks, for more than six years without having himself ordained priest and without having obtained dispensation for the purpose, and holding the said precentroship, whose value does not exceed 1 mark, for about six months together with the said vicarage, as he still does, and receiving the fruits of the vicarage only, which fruits he has, however, consumed usefully, being at the time engaged in the study of letters. He is rehabilitated, has remission of fruits received, but is to resign vicarage and precentorship. Sedes apostolica. |
Ibid. |
To the bishop of Aosta (Augusten.), and the chancellor and Thomas Ohealghy, canon, of Cloyne. Mandate, recapitulating the preceding, to collate and assign to the above William Meyler, whose father [John] is archdeacon of Cloyne, after he has made the above resignations, the deanery of Cloyne, an elective major dignity with cure, value not exceeding 14 marks, void by the deprivation, made by Richard, archbishop of Cashel, in course of metropolitical visitation, of Eugenius Ofelan, and reserved to the pope under his late reservation of all major dignities in cathedral churches, void and to become void [Ottenthal, Reg. Canc. Apost., John XXIII, No. 3.] William is hereby dispensed to hold the deanery. Vite etc. |
1413. 14 Kal. Oct. St. Anthony's, etc. (f. 15.) |
To Lora de Anglia, of Lisbon (Lore de Anglia mulieri Ulixbonensi). Licence to her—who has lived for more than ten years in the city and diocese of Lisbon, and has had children out of wedlock—to enter a nun's monastery of the Cistercian or Benedictine order, willing to receive her, take the habit and make her profession, have voice in chapter, and hold any offices, etc. and dignities, even that of abbess. Justis et honestis. (De mandato.) |
3 Kal. Oct. St. Anthony's, etc. (f. 41.) |
Relaxation, during ten years, of seven years and seven quarantines of enjoined penance to penitents who on the Nativity of St. Mary the Virgin, SS. Peter and Paul, St. Laurence the Martyr and St. Mark the Evangelist, and during the octaves of the first three; and of a hundred days to those who during the said octaves visit and give alms for the conservation of the church of the monastery of Humberstayn of the order of Tiron (ordinis Sancti Benedicti Turonen.) in the diocese of Lincoln. Unix. [Christifid.] etc. Licet is. |
Ibid. |
The like, during the same period, substituting the Annunciation, Easter, Whitsuntide and Michaelmas, for the church of the Cistercian monastery of Louth Park (de Parcolude) in the same diocese. Unix. etc. Licet is. |
16 Kal. Nov. St. Anthony's, etc. (f. 48.) |
To Michael de la Feyll, perpetual vicar of St. Peter's, Dunboyng, in the diocese of Meath. Dispensation to him, who is a bachelor of canon law, to hold for life with the said vicarage one other benefice with cure [or otherwise incompatible], even if it be a dignity, elective, but not major nor principal respectively, personatus or office, in a metropolitan, cathedral or collegiate church, and [such dignity] have cure (curata fuerit), and to resign both as often as seems good to him, simply or for exchange. Vite etc. |
7 Id. Sept. St. Anthony's, etc. (f. 66d.) |
Relaxation, during ten years, of seven years and seven quarantines of enjoined penance to penitents who on the six feasts of our Lord, Whitsuntide, and four of St. Mary the Virgin, the Nativity of St. John Baptist, SS. Peter and Paul, St. Catherine, St. Swithun (Sancte Swythyne), and the dedication of the altar, and on All Saints, and during the octaves of certain of them and the six days of Whitsun week; and of a hundred days to those who during the said octaves and days visit the altar of St. Catherine in the parish church of St. Swithun, Est Grenestede, in the diocese of Chichester. Univ. Christifid. etc. Splendor paterne. |
14 Kal. Sept. St. Anthony's, etc. (f. 67.) |
Exemplification, at the petition of Nemeas Ohenrachtaich, canon of Clogher, who needs them for the confirmation of his right in Ireland, of the following two of the constitutions made lately in the Council of Pisa and confirmed by Alexander V (i) Item, electiones, postulaciones. (ii) Item, ut unione et pace. [Concil. Pisan., Sessio xx, in Labbe, Concil., ed. Mansi, vol. xxvi (Venice, 1784), col. 1236.]. The pope hereby wills and decrees that the present exemplifications shall have full force wherever they be exhibited. Ad fut. rei mem. Cum a nobis petitur. |
1413. 17 Kal. [Oct.] St. Anthony's, etc. (f. 70.) |
Confirmation, at the petition of John Prophete, dean of York, of the confirmation by archbishop Henry of certain statutes put forth by the late Robert (corrected in the margin from Richard) de Pykeringe, dean, and the chapter about the visitation, belonging to the dean and chapter, of churches etc. and ecclesiastical persons. Exemplification is given of the sealed letters Unix. Sancte. Norerit universitas restra, of archbishop Henry, dated in his lodging at London, by Westminister, 17 Nov. 1411, the fifth year of his translation, stating that he has inspected a certain statute put forth by the late R[obert de Pykeringe], sometime dean, and the chapter, and giving exemplification of the same. The statute, In dei nomine, relates that on 16 Aug. 1325 there assembled in the chapter, in person, Master R[obert] de Pykeringe, dean, Master R[obert] de Kippillingham (i.e. Rippillingham), chancellor, John de Warenna, Richard de Haveringe, R[ichard] de Cestre, the prior of Exeldessim (i.e. Hexham), R.de Grimm, John Giffard, Walter de Yarewelle, Robert de Waloyns, and W[illiam] de la Mare, and, by proctor, Richard de Clare, Henry (sic) de Stamten (sic), the prior of St. Oswald's, [Nostel,] Adam de Blida, Henry de Cliff, Simon de Monteacuto, Thomas de Cherleton, Gilbert de la Bruer, and Richard de Baldok, canons of York, and that on the morrow they put forth the following statutes, (i) when dignities, prebends, offices or farms have to be visited by the dean and chapter, the dean shall come with 19 horses and the canon associated with him on behalf of the chapter with 5, making 24 horses in all, and that in each place to be visited by them honourable procuration shall be made for their horses, retinue (familia) and conveyances (evecturis) in food, drink and other necessaries, or else 46s. 8d. shall be taken for their procuration, provided that the dignity etc. amount to 40 marks, minor dignities etc. being united for purpose of visitation until their total value reaches the above sum, and the procuration from them being in proportion to their value; (ii) when a dignity etc. has more than one church annexed, with inhabitants, not easily visited in one day, each shall be visited separately and shall pay its own procuration, if the portion to be visited amounts to 50 marks, if not, it shall be united with other minor ones, as in the preceding article. [Bradshaw and Wordsworth, Lincoln Cathedral Statutes, ii. 126.] Ad perp. rei mem. Illis que pro relevamine. (De mandato.) |
17 Kal. Oct. St. Anthony's, etc. (f. 71.) |
Confirmation, at the petition of John Prophete, dean of York, of the confirmation by archbishop Henry of certain statutes put forth with common consent of the chapter, by the late Roger, dean, Geoffrey, precentor, Walter, archdeacon of Est Riding, John Romanus and Robert de Wyntonia, canons of York, about the personal residence of the canons and the daily distribution among those only who are in residence. Exemplification is given [not of the archbishop's letters, but only] of the said statute In nomine patris etc., dated on St. Valentine's day, 1221, drawn up by Master Roger, dean, and the others named above. It ordains that four persons, namely the dean,
precentor (cantor), chancellor and treasurer shall be resident, that archdeacons, who are canons [and] who are bound by their office to visit churches etc. shall reside three months, and that simple canons shall reside continuously at least half the year, or a fourth in each half of the year. The daily distribution shall be made among residents only, and equally without distinction of persons, 6d. being given daily to each resident, 12d. on a feast of nine lessons, 2s. on double feasts, for the purpose of which distribution residents shall be understood to mean those who pass the night and dwell in the city near (circa) the church, serve the church, and are present at least at matins, unless hindered by manifest cause. If in one week a canon be absent for one or two nights, there shall be no penalty, provided that it be not habitual. On the days when canons enter and leave the city they shall receive their daily distribution. What remains after making the said distributions shall be de communa, or shall be equally distributed on Whitsunday or on Martinmas among residents only. Canons studying or teaching theology shall receive the whole of their portions. Only those canons shall receive commons (communam) who have already personally and continuously resided half a year. [Bradshaw and Wordsworth, op. cit. ii. p. 105.] Ad perp. rei mem. Illis que pro relevamine. (De mandato.) |