Reference code: GB-0033-DCD-Com.Cart.
Title: Durham Cathedral Archive: Communar's Cartulary
Dates of creation: late 15th century
Extent: 55 parchment leaves, with one modern flyleaf at each end.
Held by: Durham University Library, Archives and Special Collections
Origination: Durham Cathedral Priory
Language:
Latin
The Communar's deeds & Cartulary
Almost all the deeds relating to the estate administered by the monastic communar apparently survive. The reconstruction of the arrangement of the deeds, see below, leaves very few gaps that are not represented by extant original documents. On
the other hand no medieval repertory of the communar's deeds survives, and it was presumably for this reason that Canon Greenwell did not attempt to reconstruct the class, as he did with the almoner's, Finchale and sacrist's deeds; unlike those
deeds almost all the communar's deeds remain in the class Miscellaneous Charters, where they were listed in the mid-nineteenth century, very largely in a single block.
The deeds have suffered some damage since the beginning of the sixteenth century. This is clear when the originals are compared with the copies found in the communar's cartulary, for instance Misc. Chs 1964, 1980 and 2126. Such comparisons also
reveal, however, that the scribe of the cartulary made a significant number of errors in copying the originals; some of the more conspicuous are noted in the description of the cartulary.
The arrangement of the deeds seems to have been largely the work of the energetic archivist Thomas Swalwell, monk of Durham c.1483-1539: the references on the dorse of the documents and in the margins of the cartulary are in his distinctive hand,
apart from a small number of documents not classified as communar's deeds until the seventeenth century. Several groups of deeds had older numbers, see below, and an existing arrangement may lie behind the fact that some of the sections created by
Swalwell start with documents concerning older holdings; the fifth and eighth sections are examples. To a lesser extent traces of the same pattern are perhaps to be seen in the cartulary, but in general the order in which documents were copied into
the cartulary was somewhat haphazard, with, for instance, documents relating to Morton Tinmouth intervening, f.13v-14r, in the large block of ill-organized documents relating to property in the city of Durham, f.10r-49r.
The fact that the cartulary does not follow Swalwell's arrangement of the documents suggests that it was compiled before he made his arrangement; this is supported by the fact that his references were added to the original captions in the margins
of the cartulary. The latest document found in the cartulary is a lease dated 12 March 1477/8; the scribe of the cartulary was responsible for the great majority of entries for the period 1490-1499 in Priory Register V (f.9v-51v). Moreover, although
there is no reason to think that the cartulary is incomplete, it does not contain copies of all the documents that Swalwell classified as communar's deeds. While a significant proportion of those omitted are the counterparts of leases of communar's
property, other omissions lack any obvious rationale, and so it is possible that some documents were put with the communar's deeds after the cartulary had been compiled; examples may well be two documents (Misc.Ch. 2100-1) apparently relating to
Desborough (Northants.), whose endorsements reveal ignorance on the part of the fifteenth-century monastic archivist and Swalwell's belief that the property lay in Scotland.
The surviving identified deeds
(a) the current reference of each of the identified communar's deeds;
(b) the late medieval reference found on the dorse, or, where this is missing, the reference added in the margin beside the copy of the document in the communar's cartulary, or, in one or two cases, the reference that can be deduced from the
reconstruction of the arrangement of the deeds;
(c) a reference to the folio in the communar's cartulary on which a copy of the document is to be found, many being the references added on the dorse by Thomas Swalwell, here silently corrected in the small number of cases where they are in
error;
(d) an indication of when the first descriptive endorsement was put on the documents by a monastic archivist, except that this is left blank when the endorsement can be dated to the earlier fifteenth century, as is the case with most of the
documents; the abbrevation “T.S.” stands for Thomas Swalwell, and “P.D.” for post-Dissolution.
Part of the medieval archive of Durham Cathedral Priory placed in the care of Durham University by Durham Dean and Chapter in 1948.
Open for consultation.
Permission to make any published use of material from the collection must be sought in advance from Durham Cathedral Library (library@durhamcathedral.co.uk). The Library will assist where possible with identifying copyright owners, but
responsibility for ensuring copyright clearance rests with the user of the material.
Conspectus of contents:
f.1r-9r Cleatlam
f.10r-11r Durham, South Street
f.11r Durham, Crossgate
f.11r-13r Durham, South Street
f.13r-v Durham, Crossgate & Gilesgate
f.13v-14r Morton Tinmouth
f.14r-v Durham, Fleshergate
f.14v-15r Durham, Marketplace - Cornerbooth
f.15r-v Durham, Old Durham, etc.
f.15v Durham, Swaloppleys
f.15v-16r Durham, meadow beside the cemetery of St Thomas' chapel
f.16r Durham Durham, 2 burgages + meadow as f.15v-16r
f.16r-v Hett
f.16v-18r Newcastle
f.18r Durham, Old Borough field, Allergate
f.18v Durham, Framwellgate
f.18v-19r Durham, Crossgate
f.19r Durham, Crossgate garden
f.19r Durham, Crossgate meadow
f.19v Durham, Fleshergate
f.19v-20r Durham, Crossgate Slateracre
f.20r Durham, Old Borough land
f.20r-v Durham, South Street
f.20v Durham, South Street / Milburngate
f.21r Durham, Framwellgate gildhouse rent
f.21r Durham, South Street
f.21r-v Durham, Crossgate Paytefyncroft
f.21v-22r Durham, Crossgate 5 roods of land
f.22r-v Durham, Crossgate
f.22v-23r Durham, Crossgate Slateracre
f.23r Durham and Edmundbyers
f.23r-24r Durham, Crossgate
f.24v-25v Durham, Elvet: Swallopleys and Mountjoy
f.25v-26v Durham, Elvet barony
f.26v-27r Durham, Swallopleys
f.27r-28r Durham, Old Elvet
f.28r-32r Durham, Claypath
f.32r Durham, Gilesgate
f.32v-33v Durham, Claypath
f.33v Durham, Gilesgate
f.33v-34v Durham, Claypath
f.34r-35r Durham, meadow beside the cemetery of St Thomas' chapel
f.35r-37v Durham, Claypath
f.37v-39v Durham,Gilesgate
f.39v-41r Durham, North Bailey
f.41r-v Durham et al.
f.41v-42r Durham, Dryburnhouse al. Bowdale manor, Claypath, North Bailey
f.42r-47r Durham, North Bailey
f.47r-48r Durham, South Bailey
f.48v-49r Codesley
f.49v-50r Edmundbyers, and Durham Framwellgate
f.50r-v Kirk Merrington, and Ferryhill
f.50v-53r Hett
f.53r Tursdale
f.53v-54v Moorsley
f.54v-55v Rainton
f.55v Eryom mill rent
Digitised version available online
A negative microfilm is available at PGFilm 125
G.R.C. Davis,
Medieval Cartularies of Great Britain (1958), no. 344.
f.i Tipped to f.i verso late 14th century
Former binding-liner, made from a single leaf of a service-book, containing a three-part musical setting of
Gloria in excelsis troped with
Spiritus et alme.
Size: 395 x 265mm
Described in Brian Crosby,
A Catalogue of Durham Cathedral Music Manuscripts, (Oxford 1986), p.9-10.
Image and bibliography available on the Digital Image Archive of Medieval Music website at www.diamm.ac.uk.
Digitised version
f.1-55 f.1r
“Euidencie concernentes Officium Communiarii Dunelm”, written as a heading across the top.
Digitised version f.13v 27 June 16 Edward IV [1476]
Grant by Robert Bell and Alice his wife to Thomas Steyll chaplain and Edmund Bell of one toft and one croft and 7 acres of land and meadow
in Morton Tinmouth granted to Robert and Alice by John Tod lately of Bolam.
Dated: Morton Tinmouth.
Added marginal number: [1a Comm.] 44.
Digitised version f.13v 7 April 16 Edward IV [1476]
Grant by John Tod lately of Bolam to Robert Bell and Alice his wife of one toft and one croft and 7 acres of land and meadow in Morton Tinmouth.
Added marginal number: [1a Comm.] 42.
Digitised version f.14r 7 April 16 Edward IV [1476]
Appointment by John Tod lately of Bolam of Richard Alwent esquire and William Burton as his attornies to deliver seisin to Robert Bell and
Alice his wife of one toft one croft and 7 acres of land and meadow in Morton Tinmouth.
Added marginal number: [1a Comm.] 43.
Digitised version f.14r-v 12 May 1465
Lease by Richard [Bell] prior and the convent of Durham to William Cornforth of Durham mercer of one burgage in Fleshergate Durham, 8 ells long and 6 ells wide, between the
Cornerbooth [Marketplace] on the north and one burgage of the Trinity chantry on the south, for 79 years from next Pentecost, at 8s. a year.
Dated: Durham.
Added marginal number: 37".
Digitised version f.23v Thursday after St Gregory the pope, 1295 [15 March 1296]
Quit-claim by Thomas Blagrys to John of Howden and Margaret his wife to an annual rent of 3s which they used to pay to him for a burgage which Thomas
of Pontefract formerly held of him in Crossgate in Durham.
Witnesses: Thomas son of William son of Hugh and others.
Dated: Durham.
Was [6a Comm.] 6
Digitised version f.52r-v 23 August 1322
Licence (indented) by William de Hett for a grant in free alms by John de Cotom chaplain to the prior and convent of Durham of 1 acre of land on Brerilawe in Hett field bought from
Christiana de Kellow and held of William.
Dated: Durham.
Added marginal number: 13 [cf. 2a Comm. ?]
Variant form of
Misc.Ch. 2112, f.16
r-
v.
Digitised version f.52v 10 April 1342
Grant by John son of Richard of Mainsforth clerk to the prior and convent of Durham of all his goods in Hett.
Dated: Durham.
Added marginal number: [2a Comm.] 9.
Digitised version f.54r
Quit-claim for a sum by Walter Casse son of Roger de Moreslaw to Walter de Espicer son of Adam de Espicer of Durham and Agnes daughter of John de Scolakley his
wife of all land in Moorsley with a toft and a croft granted to Agnes by Walter's uncle Alan.
Witnesses: Robert of Quarrington reeve of Durham; William Daudre; Ranulf reeve of Moorsley.
No added marginal number, but cf. 2a Comm.
Digitised version f.54v-55r
Grant in free alms by John Busces of Rainton to the prior and convent of Durham for their “communa” of 8 acres in Rainton (specified).
Witnesses: Richard de Harpin, Roger de Eppelyngdon and Walter de Ludworth, knights; William de Laton.
Added marginal number: [2a Comm.] 19.
Digitised version f.55r-v
Grant in free alms by John Busches of Rainton to the prior and convent of Durham for their “communa” of 12 acres and 1 toft in Rainton (specified).
Witnesses: Richard de Harpin, Roger de Epplyngden, Walter de Ludworth, knights; William de Laton.
Added marginal number: [2a Comm.] 20.
Digitised version