Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-p2v8j Total loading time: 0.001 Render date: 2024-06-05T12:40:45.927Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Northern Saints after the Reformation in the Writings Of Christopher Watson (d. 1580)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 January 2016

Margaret Harvey*
Affiliation:
Durham University

Extract

Regional identity in medieval Durham depended crucially on St Cuthbert. The property and privileges of the diocese were presented as possessions of an originally Celtic community which had carried the miraculously incorrupt body of the saint from Lindisfarne to a final home in Durham. Tradition added other holy abbots, bishops and kings, remembered as obedient to the Roman tradition after the Synod of Whitby in 664. The Durham story included the expulsion at the Conquest of married guardians of Cuthbert in favour of proper monks, a change corroborated by miracle stories and holy lives, such as that of Godric in the dependent cell of Finchale. Increasing possessions were given to the saint; miracle stories showed him punishing violators of his shrine. Relics, including the head of King Oswald and remains of Bede, linked the priory with these traditions. These ideas had penetrated the local identity; the notion of the Haliwerfolc, the community of the liberty of St Cuthbert, the lands belonging to the saint, remained strong in the late Middle Ages for people ‘between Tyne and Tees’. Nonetheless, in the 1570s Christopher Watson attempted a history which denigrated Cuthbert’s life and miracles and those of other Durham saints.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 2011

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Bonner, G., Rollason, D. and Stancliffe, C., eds, St Cuthbert, his Cult and his Community to A.D. 1200, (Woodbridge, 1989)Google Scholar; Symeon of Durham, Libellus de exordio atque procursu istius, hoc est Dunelmensis ecclesie, ed. and trans. Rollason, D. [hereafter LDE] (Oxford, 2000)Google Scholar, for edition and sources of main history; Rollason, D., ed., Symeon of Durham: Historian of Durham and the North (Stamford, 1998).Google Scholar

2 LDE, 172–5; 224–9; note 29 below.

3 LDE, index under ‘Cuthbert, assistance rendered, retribution inflicted’.

4 Liddy, C. D., The Bishopric of Durham in the Late Middle Ages: Lordship, Community and the Cult of St Cuthbert (Woodbridge, 2008), ch. 5, esp. 205.Google Scholar

5 ODNB, s.n. ‘Watson, Christopher (1545/6-1580/1)’; this contains no information about Watson’s Durham family or kin.

6 Headlam, A.W., ed., The Parish Register of St Oswald’s Church, Durham, Containing the Baptisms, Marriages and Burials from 1538–1751 (Durham, 1891), 5.Google Scholar

7 Durham, Cathedral Muniments [hereafter DCM], L/BB/I, fol. 10r; L/BB/2, fol. 9r, from 1557/8 to 1562.

8 , J. and Venn, A., Alumni Cantabrigenses, 10 vols (Cambridge, 1922-54), 1/4: 348.Google Scholar

9 For his schoolmastering, see Catechism, n. 10 below; he wrote his history in Grimstone Hall, home of William Cavendish: London, BL, MS, Cotton Vitellius C IX [hereafter Vitellius], fol. 93v (Cavendish is abbreviated in this manuscript as ‘Candys’). Richard Cavendish, William’s brother, produced verses for Watson: C. J. Wright, Sir Robert Cotton as Collector: Essays on an Early Stuart Courtier and his Legacy (London, 1997). 369; R. Surtees, The History and Antiquities of the County Palatine of Durham, 4 vols (London, 1816), 4: facing 170. On Richard Cavendish, see ODNB, s.n. ‘Cavendish, Richard (c. 1530–1601)’.

10 Watson, as author of Briefe Principles of Religion Collected for the Exercise of Youth and Simpler Sort of People (London, 1578), is called ‘de’ (i.e. deacon).

11 Kew, TNA, PROB 11/62, fols 393v-394r. I must thank Dr Paul Botley for showing me this. Watson’s children, listed in the will, are also given in London, BL, MS Cotton Titus A II [hereafter Titus], last folio.

12 Book I: Th’istorye of Duresme now furst published Anno 1574 by C. W. Deira-grantus [a play on his Durham and Cambridge connections]; Vitellius, fols 105r— 126r.

13 Vitellius, fol. 107v; the allusion was to the Parable of the Sower in Matt. 13: 24–30.

14 Vitellius, fol. 64r. Watson derived the ‘Irish’ legend of Cuthbert from Nova Legenda (London, 1516), called ‘Capgrave’ in the sixteenth century; ed. C. Horstman, 2 vols (Oxford, 1901), 1: 216–44.

15 Vitellius, fol. 68r.

16 Vitellius, fol. 74v.

17 Vitellius, fol. 84.

18 Vitellius, fol. 98v.

19 Vitellius, fol. 98r.

20 Ibid.

21 Vitellius, fol. 69r.

22 For this legend and miracles, see Reginald of Durham, Libellus de vita et miraculis sancti Godrici, heremitae de Finchale, ed. J. Stephenson, SS 20 (1847).

23 Vitellius, fol. 89r.

24 Vitellius, fol. 76v.

25 Quantin, J.-L., The Church of England and Christian Antiquity (Oxford, 2009), esp. 22–87.Google Scholar

26 Parish, H. L., Monks, Miracles and Magic: Reformation Representations of the Medieval Church (Abingdon, 2005)Google Scholar; Idem, ‘“Impudent and abhominable fictions”: Rewriting Saints’ Lives in the English Reformation’, SCJ 32 (2001), 45–65.

27 Marshall, P., The Catholic Priesthood and the English Reformation (Oxford, 1994), ch. 5, esp. 163–5, 173CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Parish, H. L., Clerical Marriage and the English Reformation: Precedent, Policy and Practice (Aldershot, 2000), 62–3, 138–60.Google Scholar

28 Duffy, E., The Stripping of the Altars: Traditional Religion in England c. 1400 – c. 1580 (New Haven, CT, 1992), 407–10, 450, 458, 568.Google Scholar

29 Harpsfield, N., Historia Anglicana ecclesiastica (Douai, 1622), 105.Google Scholar

30 Field, J., Durham Cathedral: Light of the North (London, 2006), 97–9.Google Scholar

31 Rites of Durham, ed. Fowler, J. T., SS 107 (1903), esp. 68–9, 77.Google Scholar

32 Till, B., York against Durham: The Guardianship of the Spritualities in the Diocese of Durham Sede Vacante, Borthwick Paper 84 (York, 1993), esp. 4–5, 6Google Scholar; for the arguments produced, see, e.g., Durham, UL, Archives and Special Collections [hereafter DUL, ASC], DDR/EJ/CCG/2/1, fols 143r-v.

33 For the whole Parker enterprise, with full bibliography, see T. Graham and A. G. Watson, The Recovery of the Past in Early Elizabethan England: Documents by John Bale and John Joscelyn from the Circle of Matthew Parker, Cambridge Bibliographical Society Monograph 13 (Cambridge, 1998).

34 ODNB, s.n. ‘Joscelin [Joscelyn], John (1529–1603)’; Graham and Watson, Recovery, 5–12.

35 Vitellius, fols 119r-v.

36 McKisack, M., Medieval History in the Tudor Age (Oxford, 1971), 44–5 Google Scholar; Parker, Matthew, De antiquitate Britannicae ecclesiae et privilegiis ecclesiae Cantuariensis (London, 1572)Google Scholar.

37 Including, in addition to the Durham histories, Cambridge, Emmanuel College, MS 85 (a Wycliffite tract on Roman ceremonies); Oxford, Bodl., MS Laud Misc. 207 (a Wycliffite version of Matthew and Mark’s Gospels), MS Digby 81 (a miscellaneous volume, showing an interest in the date of Easter); London, BL, MS Royal 18 B III (a Brut Chronicle), all with Watson’s notes or his name.

38 Vitellius, fols 107v-108r.

39 His main manuscript covered the period from 635 to 1152, to ‘Sancta Barbara the bishoppe of Durham’. Titus (a Symeon manuscript of LDE with Coldingham and Graystanes among other items), has the rubric ‘Liber de statu Lindisfarnensis id est Dunelmensis ecclesie’; it includes a continuation ‘Tribus dehinc annis’: LDE, xxxi.

40 Historiae Dunelmensis Scriptores Tres, ed. J. Raine, SS 9 (1839), 2–156, is the printed version of Geoffrey, Robert and ‘Chambre’, which are continuations of Symeon and which occur in this order in some MSS of Symeon. All Symeon MSS are described in Rollason’s edition of LDE. Titus has notes and personal material.

41 His notes are in part III of BL, MS Cotton Vespasian A VI; see LDE, xxxiii-iv.

42 Vitellius, fol. 93r. Scriptores Tres, 31, shows where Geoffrey ended.

43 Watson referred to Foxe’s work as ‘History Ecclesiastical’: Vitellius, fol. 66, citing ‘first tome, padge 165’; for other references, see fols 68, 69r-v, 70r-v; 89r-v, 92r-v. For editions of Foxe’s work, see J. Roberts, ‘Bibliographical Aspects of John Foxe’, in D. Loades, ed., John Foxe and the English Reformation (Aldershot, 1997), 36–51, esp. 46–8; D. Loades, ed., John Foxe: An Historical Perspective (Aldershot, 1999), Introduction. References to Foxe also in Titus, fols 10v, 39, 86, 87, 90, 114.

44 J. Bale, The Actes … of the Englyshe Votaryes, various editions between 1546 and 1560; cf. Vitellius, fols 86r, 94r.

45 The Works of John Jewel, Bishop of Salisbury, ed. J. Ayre, 4 vols, PS (London, 1844–50), 3: 150–206, esp. 163–6; Jenkins, G. W., John Jewel and the English National Church (Aldershot, 2006), esp. chs 2, 3.Google Scholar

46 Works of Jewel, ed. Ayre, 1: 81–552.

47 Lavater, Ludwig, Of Ghosts and Spirites Walking by Nyght, trans. Harrison, Robert (London, 1572), cf. Vitellius, fol. 81r.Google Scholar

48 Titus, fols 35r, 37r, 131r; Calfhill, James, An Aunsere to the Treatise of the Crosse (London, 1564); ed. Gibbings, R., PS (London, 1846).Google Scholar

49 Kesselring, K.J., The Northern Rebellion of 1569: Faith, Politics and Protest in Elizabethan England (Basingstoke, 2007), esp. 124–5.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

50 Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office, Elizabeth I, 5: 1569–72 (London, 1976), no. 728.

51 Kesselring, Northern Rebellion, 126–30.

52 The Hystories of the Most Famous and Worthy Chronographer, Polybius …, Englished by C. W. (London, 1568); cf. H. B. Lathrop, Translations from the Classics into English from Caxton to Chapman (New York, 1932, repr. 1968), 187–8.

53 See McKisack, Medieval History, 105–11, for Hall.

54 Vitellius, fols 102r-v.

55 Kesselring, Northern Rebellion, index under ‘Westmorland (sixth earl of)’.

56 See above, n. 22.

57 Rites, ed. Fowler, 26–7.

58 Dobsons Drie Bobbes: A Story of Sixteenth Century Durham, ed. E. A. Horsman (London, 1955), 83.

59 Vitellius, fols 106v—107r; part verbatim, part summary from The Works of James Pilkington. B.D., ed. J. Scholefield, PS (Cambridge, 1842), 16–17.

60 Vitellius, fol. 84v.

61 Vitellius, fol. 63rNova Legenda, ed. Horstman, 2: 29–33.

62 Nova Legenda, ed. Horstman, 2: 102–4.

63 For his great-grandfather (Richardson), see Vitellius, fol. 89v; Records of the Borough of Crossgate, Durham, 1312–1531, ed. R. Britnell, SS 212 (2008), index, esp. no.493*.

64 For Christopher’s grandmother, see n. 69 below.

65 Durham, Cathedral Library, Hunter MS 32A, fols 60v—62r, a deposition from 1577. See also DCM, Dean and Chapter Register 2, fols 197r-v Dean and Chapter Register 3, fol. 81v.

66 Register, ed. Headlam, 25; for his will, see Wills and Inventories from the Registry at Durham, ed. J. C. Hodgson et al., SS 112 (1906), 84–5. See also DCM, Dean and Chapter Register 1, fols 168v-169r.

67 For John Watson, junior, see History of Newcastle and Gateshead, ed. R Welford, 3 vols (London, 1887), 3: 37; Extracts from the Records of the Merchant Adventurers of Newcastle upon Tyne, ed. J. R. Boyle and F. W Dendy, SS 93 (1895), 93 n.; DCM, Dean and Chapter Register 2, fol. 227.

68 William is mentioned as being at Cambridge in Roger’s will (n. 69 below); for his being a pensioner at Christ’s 1560, see Venn and Venn, Alumni, 4/1: 350. The Clergy of the Church of England Database (CCED) 1540–1835, <http://www.theclergydatabase>, ID 74706, accessed 27 April 2009, mentions William Watson as a schoolmaster with Walter Harlakenden at Tunstall in Kent in 1579. A Mr Harlakindon was another guardian in Christopher’s will.

69 Watson, Roger, Bell, alias, The Durham Liber Vitae, ed. D. and Rollason, L., 3 vols (London, 2007), 3: 423Google Scholar, C. 1329. This replaces all biographical material for Durham monks. See also A. I. Doyle, ‘Further Monastic Books’, The Durham Philobiblion, 1.7 (May 1952), 45–8. I thank Dr Doyle for all his help. For the will, see DUL, ASC, DPR 1/2/2, fols 17v—18r. See also The Royal Visitation of 1559, ed. C.J. Kitching, SS 187 (1975), 22–7, 28.

70 Marcombe, D., ‘The Dean and Chapter of Durham, 1558–1603’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Durham, 1973), 165.Google Scholar

71 For the will, see n. 69 above.

72 Vitellius, fols 103r-v

73 Vitellius, fol. 93r (1573).

74 ODNB, s.n. ‘Watson, Anthony (d. 1605)’; for Anthony’s will, see Surtees, Durham, 3: 83 n.

75 Liber Vitae, ed. D. and L. Rollason, 3: 432, C 1369, under Maurice. For his will, see DUL, ASC, DPR 1/2/4, fol. 49v.

76 Depositions and Other Ecclesiastical Proceedings from the Courts of Durham Extending from 1311 to the Reign of Elizabeth, ed. J. Raine, SS 21 (1845), 147.

77 For John senior’s will, see n. 66 above; for Anthony’s, n. 74.

78 Crosby, B., ‘The Choral Foundation of Durham Cathedral 1350 — c. 1650’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Durham, 1992)Google Scholar, Appendix VI, 129. 79

79 Register, ed. Headlam, 50.

80 Depositions, ed. Raine, 133, 152–3.

81 Durham, County Record Office, D/Sa/L 20.2, fols 1–15.

82 Marcombe, ‘Dean and Chapter’, 181; Unpublished Documents Relating to the English Martyrs, 1: 1584–1603, ed. J. H. Pollen, Catholic Record Society, Record Series 5 (1908), 125–8, 220–1.

83 Morris, J., The Troubles of Our Catholic Forefathers Related by Themselves, 3rd series (London, 1875), 183, 192Google Scholar; Unpublished Documents, ed. Pollen, 239.

84 Marcombe, ‘Dean and Chapter’, 181; Calendar of State Papers, Domestic Series, Elizabeth, 1595–97, ed. M. E. A. Green (London, 1869), 183.

85 Vitellius, fol. 108v.

86 Vitellius, fol. 104v.

87 Ibid.

88 Parish, Monks, Miracles, 92–105.

89 Vitellius, fols 69r, 72r, 72r-v.