Monasticon Anglicanum: or, the history of the ancient abbies, monasteries, hospitals, cathedral and collegiate churches, with their dependencies, in England and Wales. Also of all such Scotch, Irish, and French monasteries as in any manner relate to those in England ... Illustrated with the original cuts of the cathedral and collegiate churches, and habits of the religious and military orders / First publish'd in Latin by Sir William Dugdale ... To which are now added, exact catalogues of the bishops of the several dioceses, to the year 1717. The whole corrected, and supplied with many useful additions, by an eminent hand.
- William Dugdale
- Date:
- 1718
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Monasticon Anglicanum: or, the history of the ancient abbies, monasteries, hospitals, cathedral and collegiate churches, with their dependencies, in England and Wales. Also of all such Scotch, Irish, and French monasteries as in any manner relate to those in England ... Illustrated with the original cuts of the cathedral and collegiate churches, and habits of the religious and military orders / First publish'd in Latin by Sir William Dugdale ... To which are now added, exact catalogues of the bishops of the several dioceses, to the year 1717. The whole corrected, and supplied with many useful additions, by an eminent hand. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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![Cathedral oh u R c » «■ - m3&T<* [?rir5oUhSS^'‘by a1 depoiW ioo Marks, according to the Regulation °t &s^«£n&3 be dc lr * a Refidentiaries of or. Paul are efieinarv other Cathedral or Colleg.ate ; d if hev di Sy are to reftore all they have re- ceivdoPthe Church , nor are they to ferve any T _i hut onlv Ti.s us Christ and St. Paul, lh ^Lntnriesare to be prefent at the divine Service UcMen a -es a e 1 ^ of >he Princ]„a, m. m St I ««Is, at High Mats, or Veipers Jto and Lands, ™ ^ t<?Come to the Chotr and <::on’Pj, ' h ;a w;tji Pomp, but Rdigioufiy ’d Gravdv On Sundays andftolemn Fell,vale, they muft all endeavour to be prefent a. all,he d, ViTn?h* Abfencecfthe Bilhop, the Dean .a to fup- vk his Place, and the Refidentiaries are to bow to ply his U . QUtj and not to go out of lunt comip service is done, without juft Caufe the Choir uUtbesei There is to be no vain Tallin'the Choir, not Laughing; but they are to /land uptight in Et S [2‘reto to the dile Worlhip, obferving f«H Ceftures and Ceremonies as have been deliver ? n fro n heir Predeceffors. No ftrange Singers clou,n Xined into the Choir to Sing, without Surplices^ In Prcceflions they are to walk with their Ives on the Ground, and not to talk with Lay-men m'v rambl’d When fummon’d to the Chapter, lh y'JrPrel V io appear. In the Chapter .here - tolleno Clamour, ^‘angling, *{»«£*«**£ Sun undeceitt; but what is decided by the Dean, and a Majority, is to W done. ^ ^ ^ Abfence, a o „ rde'kfrv is‘ro correa and punilh what has been Refidenmiy, w to corre ^ The Refiden- S6livn. «» r Church, their Families to be Modeft and no Women to go into their Houfes , W theVare to he punifti’d by the Dean, ft they have ‘ r r ■ • e tt ti”iliaritv with Women, and the , SntPtorean k^ofCham.y;h-ft when he“epkve® others, the Anfwer be made to him, DoBor, cure ttyfelf. „ - r tuP T)ean The Chantries that ate in the Gift ot theUean x° nomoree to°do wkhh£* norto have any Powj o- ™ him When any Benefices in the Gftt ot the Dean and Chapter are vacant, they are to be con- Llean ana c> P Th Dean 1S to have the Privilege,'when'^hi^Turn conies, « bellow two rhantnes and two Benefices one after another. When Refidenmiy, or the Dean himfdf, happens tn he abfent a whole Quarter from the Cnoir, he is to be depriv’d of his Right of conferring Chantr ies or Benefices, Every Residentiary to aik Leave ol the Dean to go out of the City, and he to take care m iSppen to be between tU Dean, and one, or all the the Refidentiaries, the Bilhop to decide the fame. DugJ The Refidentiaries are to love and obey the Dean. To/, Every Refidentiary being prefent, trom the Be-p.?J oinning to the End, at one of the lour Hours above- mention’d, ftiall receive ot the Chamberlain 13 Pence for his daily Distribution, to be paid daily or weekly ; and every Day he is not prefent, he fhall mifs that Contribution, and then thole 13 1 ence ftiall be diftributed among the Refidentiaries who were prefent. But on the Feftivals of W. / W, the «. 1- dentiary who is prefent at the divine Office, ftiall over and above the 13 Pence receive 5 Thus all the Daily Diftribution to every Refiden¬ tiary for the whole is 20 1 ounds ; befides every Re¬ fidentiary who is prefent at one of the Hours lor two Months in the Quarter, ftiall over and above the i - Pence receive 5 Pounds a Quarter, which is 20 Pounds a Year more. But if he is hot prefent, as above, any Quarter, he ftiall lofe the Diftribution, and that Portion ftiall be laid up in the Treafury of the Church. If he be abfent from the Choir a^ whole Quarter, he ftiall be reputed as no Residentiary, un- lTs the Abfence be on account of Sickneis, or Bult- nefs of the Church. TheDean’s Portion is tobe double on all Accounts, that is 2 Shillings and 21 ence every Day he is prefent at one of the tour Hours, and the like at the quarterly Portions. The Refidentiaries to have no other Allowances but as above, except Pittances, and the Obits they are prefent at. All other Money to be laid up for the ufe of the Church. r, t No Refidentiary to be an Officer of the Church in Temporal Affairs, as Receiver Chamberlain, tfV. The general Receiver to be an honeft Perform that will obey the Dean and Chapter. This Colleftor to receive all Monies, and quarterly to pay the lame to the Dean, and he within three Days to put it into the Cheft with three Keys. There ftiall be particular Receivers in the City under the general Receiver. Workmen to be appointed to view all Tenements m the City, and to report what Repairs they want, tha the fame may be made.. n The Chamberlain of the Church to provide all Neceffaries for the divine Service, to receive and pav the due Penfions at the proper Time- The Pan tier and Clerk thereof to receive from the Farmers good and wholfome Wheat, as alfo provide Meal, and fupervife and reckon weekly with the Kftkcr» The Steward of the Courts once a Tear to go through all the Patrimony of St. Paul withithe Re¬ ceiver General and to keep his Courts, the Au¬ ditor faithfully to examine all Accounts. 1 he Dean, either in Perfon, or by his Deputy, once m three Years to vifitall Manors in tne Country and Hou es in the City, to fee how the Patrimony of St Paul is kept up. No Farm to be let to a Refidentiary. Woods and Marfties never to be Sold, unlefs m very urgent Neceflity. Thefe Statutes never to be dil- F C T h e's t a t u t e s made by Cardinality, have little in them more than what has been faid above, being moftlv directed to the Servants for keeping the Church and things belonging to it clean and in good Order ringing the Bells, their Attendance at the Doors’; and this in particular, that ^ey wefe to Re¬ ceive but 3 Pence for digging a rich Man s Grave, 2 Pence for an indifferent Perfon, and a lenny for Child.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b30455856_0564.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)