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Monastic Burials of Non-Patronal Lay Benefactors

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2009

Extract

Choice of place of burial in the Middle Ages was perhaps the most poignant indicator of belief in the efficacy of different sorts of religious intercession. Ariès concluded that the pre-modern response to death was public and communitarian, becoming only latterly private and individualistic. Most recent reconsiderations of notions of death and burial have concentrated on the early modern period. For this period, the distinction made by Ariès between modern, private, individualistic burial practices and earlier public, communitarian rites, has been revised, both in the sense that this change occurred earlier than Ariès would allow and that other influences were at work, in particular the formative consequences of the Reformation. Research into death and burial in the later Middle Ages has tended to confirm the communitarian nature of the rites surrounding death and burial. Burial in the high Middle Ages has been reviewed from a much more pragmatic rather than theoretical perspective, as a consequence of which the wholly communitarian picture depicted by Ariès has hardly been challenged. Presented here, however, is some modification to the Ariès thesis, supported by some very particular evidence, burials of lay persons who were not of patronal status, in religious houses, within the wider context of burial practices in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries in England.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1996

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References

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3 Burgess, C., ‘“For the increase of divine service”: chantries in the parish in late medieval Bristol’, this Journal xxxvi (1985), 4865Google Scholar, is an important contribution. Duffy, E., The stripping of the altars: traditional religion in England c. 1400–c. 1580, Harvard 1992, 301–76Google Scholar, summarises the extensive literature. Wood-Legh, K. L., Perpetual chantries in Britain, Cambridge 1965Google Scholar, emphasised the late medieval nature of this particular form of communitarian response to death. The ritual aspects of death and burial are interestingly elaborated by Finucane, R., ‘Sacred corpse, profane carrion: social ideals and death rituals in the later Middle Ages’, in Whaley, Mirrors of mortality, 4060Google Scholar. See also Boase, T. R., Death in the Middle Ages, London 1972Google Scholar.

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21 Cartulary of Worcester cathedral priory, 80–1, 128–9, 179, 207, nos 143, 243, 335, 394. Similarly, there appear to be no gifts for burial amongst the charters of Norwich cathedral priory: Charters of Norwich cathedral priory, pp. i–ii.

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27 For an example see below, p. 634 and n. 76

28 Again, I am grateful to Dr Harper-Bill for posing this question. The primary objective at the earlier time of association with saints and the religious is promoted by McLaughlin, Consorting with saints, passim; equally, the anticipated association might have been with the relics of some houses at an earlier time: White, S. D., Custom, kinship and gifts to saints: the laudatio parentum in western France, 1050–1150, Chapel Hill 1988, 26Google Scholar. The evidence seems to suggest that the earlier motive for burial amongst the religious was association with spiritual persons, and that intercession by the laity was not invited until later.

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71 Ibid. i. 35, no. 1, 62.

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78 Ibid. 75, no. 121 [1377].

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