Mount Grace Priory

{{Short description|Carthusian house in North Yorkshire, England}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2018}}

{{Use British English|date=October 2018}}

{{Infobox monastery

| name = House of Mount Grace of Ingelby

| image = Mount Grace Priory 2015.jpg

| caption = Mount Grace Priory

| order = Carthusian

| mother =

| established = 1398

| disestablished = 1539

| diocese = York

| churches =

| founder = Thomas de Holand, Earl of Kent and Duke of Surrey

| dedication = House of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin and of St Nicholas

| people =

| location = East Harlsey, North Yorkshire, England

| coord = {{coord|54.380120|N|1.311077|W|display=inline,title|type:landmark_region:GB}}

| oscoor = {{gbmappingsmall|SE449985}}

| remains = church, cloister, inner court and earthworks

| public_access = yes (English Heritage)

}}

Mount Grace Priory is a monastery in the parish of East Harlsey, North Yorkshire, England. Set in woodlands within the North York Moors National Park, it is represented today by the best preserved and most accessible ruins among the nine houses of the Carthusian Order, which existed in England in the Middle Ages and were known as charterhouses.{{cite web |title=Mount Grace Priory – History and Stories |url=https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/visit/places/mount-grace-priory/history-and-stories/ |website=English Heritage |accessdate=1 October 2018}}

History

The Mount Grace Charterhouse was founded in 1398 by Thomas Holland, 1st Duke of Surrey, the son of King Richard II's half-brother Thomas, Earl of Kent. It was the last monastery established in Yorkshire, and one of the few founded anywhere in Britain in the period between the Black Death (1349–50) and the Reformation. It was a fairly small establishment, with space for a prior and a total of twenty-three monks.{{cite web |title=Mount Grace Priory (site plan) |url=https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/siteassets/home/visit/places-to-visit/mount-grace-priory/history/mount-grace-priory-phased-plan.pdf |website=English Heritage |accessdate=1 October 2018}}

The monastery consisted of a church and two cloisters. The Great Cloister, to the north of the church, had seventeen cells for monks ("choir monks") whilst the southern Lesser Cloister had six cells for the lay brothers.

Following the abdication and eventual murder of King Richard II, Holland and others of the king's supporters attempted to assassinate his recently crowned successor, Henry IV, at New Year, 1400, but were captured and executed. Holland's body was eventually recovered and, in 1412, re-buried in the charterhouse that he had founded. Orphaned by these events of its founder and bereft of the income that had been granted to it by Holland and King Richard, Mount Grace was obliged to depend upon royal largesse for its income for more than a decade.

File:Blason de la Chartreuse de Mount Grace (Angleterre).svg

Carthusian Priory

On its founding, Thomas Holland stipulated that the monks were to pray for the king, queen and several members of the royal family, and for himself and his heirs, and many others including John and Eleanor Ingelby. The prior of the Grande Chartreuse allowed him to nominate Robert Tredwye as the first rector (although the charter{{cite news|title=Manuscript in 'Ingilby Records'|url=http://ingilbyhistory.ripleycastle.co.uk/ingilby_4/INGILBY%20Records%20%28WYRO%29%20I.pdf|accessdate=29 December 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101116225357/http://ingilbyhistory.ripleycastle.co.uk/ingilby_4/INGILBY%20Records%20(WYRO)%20I.pdf|archive-date=16 November 2010|url-status=dead}} refers to him as the first prior) and to dedicate the priory to "the Blessed Virgin and Saint Nicholas".{{citation | author=Yorkshire Archaeological Society | year=1905 | title=Yorkshire archaeological journal, Volume 18 | publisher=The Association | page=254 }} He is attested in a medieval charter, created between 18 February and 20 April 1398, now held in the collection at Ripley Castle in Yorkshire.{{Cite web |url=http://ingilbyhistory.ripleycastle.co.uk/ingilby_4/INGILBY%20Records%20%28WYRO%29%20I.pdf |title=Manuscript in 'Ingilby Records' |access-date=2010-12-30 |archive-date=2010-11-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101116225357/http://ingilbyhistory.ripleycastle.co.uk/ingilby_4/INGILBY%20Records%20(WYRO)%20I.pdf |url-status=dead }} The charter brings the Priory into existence and calls for prayers to be said for King Richard II, members of the Duke of Surrey's family, and John and Ellen de Ingelby, and for masses to be said for various people including Thomas de Ingelby and Katherine his wife. The second part of the dedication lapsed and the priory became known as the House of the Assumption of the most Blessed Virgin in Mount Grace.{{cite book|chapter=Houses of Carthusian monks: Priory of Mount Grace'|title= A History of the County of York: Volume 3 |year=1974|pages= 192–193|chapter-url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=36258|accessdate= 29 December 2010}}

Nicholas Love, prior of Mount Grace, succeeded in creating a link between the priory and the Lancastrian administration, in part by submitting his "Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ" to Thomas Arundel, archbishop of Canterbury, Henry IV's chancellor, in support of the archbishop's campaign against Wycliffism, and by granting Arundel confraternity in the spiritual benefits of Mount Grace in exchange for his provision of material benefits. In 1410 the house was formally incorporated into the order, and Love named as fourth rector and first prior.{{cite web |url=http://www.york.ac.uk/media/library/documents/borthwick/MRB12.pdf |title=THE ARCHIVE OF BERMONDSEY ABBEY |accessdate=29 December 2010 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120214163515/http://www.york.ac.uk/media/library/documents/borthwick/MRB12.pdf |archivedate=14 February 2012 }} (But note the disparity with the original charter.)

File:MountGracePriory_Panorama.jpg

The house received a number of grants and charters:

  • In March 1399 Richard II granted the monks a charter of liberties and franchises in general terms, including the right to mine lead.
  • In May 1399, at the request of the Duke of Surrey, he gave them the alien priories of Hinckley in Leicestershire, Carisbrooke in the Isle of Wight, and Wareham in Dorset. They were also given, for as long as England and France were at war, lands belonging to the alien priory of Saint Mary of Lire, at Evreux, in Normandy.
  • When Wareham Priory was lost, soon after Henry's accession, the king granted the monks £100 a year from the Exchequer until they were able to get lands of equivalent value (£1,000) and a barrel of the 'better red wine of Gascony' to be received at Hull every Martinmas.
  • In 1412 Henry V confirmed the gift of Hinckley to support five monks, to pray for himself and Thomas Beaufort, Earl of Dorset.
  • In 1421 he gave the monks four further alien priories, Long Bennington, Minting and Hagh (Hough-on-the-Hill) in Lincolnshire, and Field Dalling in Norfolk, which redeemed the yearly grant of £100.

In 1439 the Priory asked parliament to confirm their title – the number of claimants to the estate meant that they dared not continue to build – and Henry VI did so in 1440. Following this, the gifts and income continued:

  • In 1456 Sir James and Lady Elizabeth Strangways of Harlsey Castle granted the priory the advowson of the church of Beighton, in Derbyshire.
  • In 1462 the king granted the manor of Atherstone, Warwickshire (part of the alien priory of Great Ogbourne in Wiltshire), for the relief of the poor.
  • In 1471 the king granted the Yorkshire manor of the alien priory of Begare in return for three daily masses being said for the king and the souls of his family (a practice known as frankalmoign) but in 1472 it was re-granted to Eton College, who had been previous holders of a grant.{{cite book|title=The Heads of Religious Houses: England and Wales, III. 1377–1540 |first= David M. |last=Smith |date= 13 March 2008 |publisher= Cambridge University Press |isbn= 9780521865081 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jjqMN2G8fGoC&q=Begare+Priory&pg=PA268| accessdate= 29 December 2010}}
  • In 1508 the Prior of Mount Grace leased the chapel of East Harlsey and manor of Bordelby to the Prior of Guisborough for fifty years of at a yearly rent of £8.
  • In 1522, in the will of Sir Thomas Strangways, a Lady Chapel at Mount Grace is mentioned and directions given for the priest who sang masses there.

Writings

Mount Grace became an important locus for the production and preservation of contemplative and devotional texts: among writers professed as monks there were John Norton and Richard Methley (the latter known for his Latin translations of The Cloud of Unknowing and of the anonymous English translation of Marguerite Porete's Mirror of Simple Souls). The only surviving manuscript of The Book of Margery Kempe also belonged to Mount Grace Charterhouse.{{cite news|last1=Flood|first1=Alison|title=Margery Kempe, the first English autobiographer, goes online|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/mar/20/margery-kempe-first-autobiographer-digitised-british-library|accessdate=16 June 2017|work=The Guardian|date=20 March 2014}}

Dissolution

The priory was closed in 1539 during the dissolution of the monasteries by Henry VIII. Some of the monks had (in 1534) attempted to avoid taking the oath of supremacy but, after they were imprisoned, the last prior, John Wilson, handed the keys over to Henry VIII's representatives. The site then passed into private ownership.{{cite web |title=History of Mount Grace Priory |url=https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/visit/places/mount-grace-priory/history-and-stories/history/ |website=English Heritage |accessdate=1 October 2018}}

Mount Grace was valued at £382 5s. 11½d. gross (£323 2s. 10½d. net) which included £104 6s. 8d. from spiritualities in Lincolnshire, £164 from lands outside Yorkshire and the rest from its home county of Yorkshire. In December 1539 the brothers were awarded pensions totalling £195 – £60 plus the house and chapel called the Mount for the prior, £7 for each of eight priests and small sums for eighteen.

The dissolution of Mount Grace, and life in the priory in the preceding years, is vividly reimagined by Lucy Beckett in her 1986 novel The Time Before You Die.

Daily life

Unlike monks of other orders, who live in common, the Carthusians—to this day—live as hermits, each occupying his own cell (more like a small house), and coming together only for the nocturnal liturgical hours, and on Sundays and feast-days, in the church; the other hours are sung by each monk separately in his cell. Except for the singing of the liturgy and conversation "on grave subjects" during a weekly three-hour exercise walk, Carthusians are silent, and their diet is strictly vegetarian.{{cite news |last1=Howse |first1=Christopher |title=Masterpiece of silence |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/personal-view/3641013/Masterpiece-of-silence.html |accessdate=22 November 2018 |work=The Telegraph |date=29 June 2007}}

The monks at Mount Grace were very conscious of hygiene and sanitation; included in the reconstructed cell is a reconstructed latrine and visitors are able to investigate the ditches used as sewage systems.{{cite book |last1=Greene |first1=J Patrick |title=Medieval monasteries |date=2005 |publisher=Continuum |location=London |isbn=0-8264-7885-9 |pages=25–26}}

Post-dissolution

After the dissolution, the ruins of the guest-house of the priory were incorporated into Mount Grace House: a seventeenth-century manor—a rare building of the Commonwealth period— built by Thomas Lascelles,{{cite news|work=BBC News |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/york/hi/people_and_places/history/newsid_8472000/8472876.stm |title=Arts and Crafts revival for Mount Grace Priory | accessdate= 29 December 2010}} later converted into an important example of the Arts and Crafts movement. The Manor House at the priory was decorated in Arts and Crafts style under the ownership of the ironmaster Sir Isaac Lowthian Bell.

Present day

File:Mount Grace Priory, Reconstructed Monk's Cell - geograph.org.uk - 4305741.jpg

The property is owned by the National Trust and under the care of English Heritage.{{cite web |title=Explore Mount Grace Priory |url=https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/mount-grace-priory/features/explore-mount-grace-priory |website=National Trust |accessdate=1 October 2018}}

Visitors today can see the layout of the whole monastery, including one reconstructed monk's cell, together with the typically small Carthusian church and the later house. There is also a museum on the site detailing the history of the priory.

English Heritage lets the Prior's Lodge as a holiday cottage.{{cite web |title=Prior's Lodge, Mount Grace Priory |url=https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/visit/holiday-cottages/find-a-holiday-cottage/priors-lodge/ |website=English Heritage |accessdate=1 October 2018}}

Priors and rectors of Mount Grace

The Houses of Carthusian monks: Priory of Mount Grace lists a number of the priors of the house, together with the years they are known to have held office. It might not be correct, as the first two entries could be rectors not priors; nor is it complete as (for example) Carthusian records show Nicholas Love or Luff to be the first prior and fourth rector. The list is:

  1. Robert Tredwye or Tredewy, 1398
  2. Edmund, occurs 1399
  3. Nicholas Luff, occurs 1413, 1415, 1416 (Period of office ends in 1417 according to other sources.{{cite report|at=Note 8 |type=Typescript |title=List of Obiits of the Carthusians of the English Houses|url=http://nq.oxfordjournals.org/content/early/2010/07/07/notesj.gjq059.full.pdf |accessdate= 30 December 2010}}{{dead link|date=May 2021|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}})
  4. Robert Layton, occurs 1421
  5. Thomas Lockington – Prior from 1421 to 1447 (given in "The typescript List of Obiits of the Carthusians of the English Houses") ("The Houses of Carthusian Monks..." shows "Thomas, occurs 1428" and "Thomas Lockington, occurs 1436, 1437, 1439" as separate entries.)
  6. Robert, occurs 1449, 1454
  7. Robert Leke, occurs 1469, 1473
  8. Thomas, occurs 1475, 1476
  9. Thomas, occurs 1497
  10. Henry Eccleston, occurs 1501, 1506
  11. John, occurs 1527–8, 1531–2
  12. William (?) Fletcher, occurs 1532–3
  13. John Wilson, occurs 1537–8

See also

References

;Notes

{{Reflist}}

;Bibliography

  • Sargent, Michael G., ed., 2005: "Nicholas Love. The Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ: A Full Critical Edition, based on Cambridge University Library MSS Additional 6578 and 6686, with Introduction, Notes and Glossary." Exeter, UK: University of Exeter Press. ({{ISBN|0 85989 740 0}})