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The Boy-Bishop's Glovemaker
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The Boy-Bishop’s Glovemaker
Michael Jecks began his series of medieval West Country mysteries after thirteen ‘interesting’ years in the computer industry. He finds writing considerably more secure, and much more fun as well, leaving him plenty of time to indulge his fascination with Devon’s medieval history!
His nine previous novels featuring Sir Baldwin Furnshill and Bailiff Simon Puttock, most recently SQUIRE THROWLEIGH’S HEIR, BELLADONNA AT BELSTONE and THE TRAITOR OF ST GILES, are all available from Headline.
Michael and his wife and daughter live in northern Dartmoor.
Acclaim for Michael Jecks’ previous mysteries:
‘Jecks has a real knack of bringing to life the medieval era of the West Country’
Shots
‘Absorbing’
Birmingham Post
‘Girt about with a goodly helping of period authenticity’
Oxford Times
‘Jecks’ knowledge of medieval history is impressive and is used here to good effect’
Crime Time
‘Jecks draws his characters with a craftsman’s hand, evokes atmosphere with the touch of an old master and keeps you wriggling on the hook of suspense as skilfully as Christie at her best’
Northern Echo
Also by Michael Jecks
The Last Templar
The Merchant’s Partner
A Moorland Hanging
The Crediton Killings
The Abbott’s Gibbet
The Leper’s Return
Squire Throwleigh’s Heir
Belladonna at Belstone
The Traitor of St. Giles
The Tournament of Blood
The Sticklepath Strangler
The Devil’s Acolyte
The Oath
King’s Gold
Templar’s Acre
City of Fiends
First published in 2000 by Headline Books Publishing
This edition published in Great Britain in 2013 by Simon & Schuster UK Ltd
A CBS COMPANY
Copyright © 2012 by Michael Jecks
This book is copyright under the Berne Convention.
No reproduction without permission.
All rights reserved.
The right of Michael Jecks to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.
Simon & Schuster UK Ltd
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Simon & Schuster Australia, Sydney
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A CIP catalogue copy for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN: 978-1-47112-629-1
eBook ISBN: 978-1-47112-630-7
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either a product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead, events or locales, is entirely coincidental.
For Spike, Cathy, Jordan and Kristen, because without their help (and printer) I’d never have got started.
It’s also for Fred Storm, the Blues Brother who lives on.
Acknowledgements
I have to thank too many people for their help in researching this book for me to be able to list them all, but some stand out for their specific assistance:
My wife Jane, who patiently proofread this like so many of my other books, and pointed out all the little details I’d missed.
Margaret Cash, who has helped me greatly with this work. I have her to thank for the translation (from Latin) of Grandisson’s Regulations for the Boy-Bishop which appears on page xi.
The librarians at the Devon and Exeter Institution, who scratched their heads doubtfully when I asked about ancient maps, ancient pictures, ancient names, and especially, ancient ceremonies. Yet each time they were able to recall specific documents or books, and if they couldn’t give me the references directly, they always managed to point me in the direction of the authors or works which could.
The people of North Dartmoor who have gone out of their way to make my research fun, who have given me fresh ideas for my stories, and who still take me to see new places where horrible things could have happened!
Glossary
Annuellar
Sometimes also called Annivellars in Exeter, these were the priests who served the Chantries. They were appointed by the Dean and Chapter of the Cathedral to service a specific Chantry and to participate in the choral services along with other minor clergy. Annuellars were paid by an annual stipend and lived alone in rented chambers in the Close. They were paid some £2-£4 each year, from which they had to pay rent and buy their own food. Some had private means.
Canon
There were twenty-four Canons in Exeter, men who had chosen to live together bound by the Church’s rules. They controlled the income of the Cathedral in common and mostly lived in the Close in their own houses. The more senior Canons were also expected to look after a Secondary and a Chorister, providing them with meals and offering other patronage.
Chantry
A popular way for people to protect their souls was to found a Chantry. This was a Mass held at set times or days to pray for the founder’s soul. The Mass itself was the Chantry, although prayers for members of the founder’s family were sometimes added. Chantries could be expensive since they often involved funding an altar, chapel, or part of a church, as well as sufficient money to pay for priests to service it. Exeter had many such Chantries.
Chapter
Exeter Cathedral had a large Chapter comprising twenty-four Canons. This body was ruled by the Dignitories. Among the Canons were the Archbishops of Barnstaple, Cornwall, Exeter and Totnes. Only the Dignitories possessed separate endowments.
Choir
The full body of men who served the Cathedral, comprising the Chapter and the Minor Clergy. However, the area of the Cathedral in which their stalls were placed was also termed the ‘choir’ of the church.
Choristers
To assist with the singing there were fourteen Choristers, who were appointed by the Precentor and held their posts until their voices broke.
Custors
These were the custodians of the buildings, furnishings and gates. In the Cathedral, four Custors looked after lights, ornaments and vestments under the supervision of a sub-Treasurer. Similarly other Custors rang the bells and kept order.
Dignitories
This was the ruling body of the Cathedral. It comprised the Treasurer, Chancellor, Precentor and, at the head, the Dean.
Minor Clergy
There were four groups which are lumped together as Minor Clergy: the Vicars Choral, the Secondaries, the Choristers and the Annuellars. During the early 1300s there were some twenty-four Vicars, twelve Secondaries and fourteen Choristers. The Minor Clergy had a pleasant, sociable life. They had more personal freedom than a monk or friar, not to mention the potential for enjoying the varied amusements available in a city.
Minor Officers
Many of the routine tasks were undertaken by independent clergy with no other employment. They included the Custors, various administrative clerks, the Bailiff of the City, who collected rents, and the Succentor.
Punctators
These behaved like school prefects, noting down who had (or rather had not) attended services. The Vicars, Annuellars and Secondaries were supposed to attend all services unless ill, on pilgrimage, or granted special leave of absence, and Punctators kept records, checking off those who arrived against their lists.
Rulers
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br /> At special ceremonies, those which the Canons couldn’t be expected to remember since they only happened once a year, Rulers would be positioned in front of the choir on revolving stools. They would prompt the choir, singing the first notes of each part of the service to remind the rest of the order of service.
Secondaries
These were appointed by the Dean himself. Generally they were adolescents and youths aged between seventeen and twenty-four. Several were admitted at puberty because they were Choristers whose voices had broken. Sadly it seems that many failed to gain higher offices and remained tonsured clerks or acolytes in order to keep open the opportunity of some form of career in their adulthood.
Succentor
This man was responsible for the music and the rituals within the Cathedral. He controlled which songs and prayers would be used.
Vicars Choral
Originally the Vicars were personal servants for the Canons, and thus there were twenty-four, one to match each Canon. Each was appointed by his own Canon, to whom he rendered personal services in exchange for benefits. He had lodgings in the Canon’s house, meals at his table, and accompanied his Canon to the Cathedral. In 1300 they were paid some £2-£3 per annum in cash, but of course lived with free board and lodging.
The Regulations for the Boy-Bishop at Exeter
Cathedral after Bishop Grandisson c. 1330
(translated from the Latin by Margaret Cash)
To the Mayor and Commonality of the City of Exeter
1. No wine or cake should be made available on the eve of St Thomas the Apostle at Kalandarhay.
2. No breakfast shall be made on the Feast Day of St Thomas the Apostle in the room of the Chorister-Bishop, but the Bishop together with the Choristers and servants of the Canons at the house of their master, as they are accustomed on other days.
3. Distribution of gloves within the Close shall be done by two or three of the Choir, and in the city and its vicinity by two, three or four from the servants of the Canons of the Master Bishop, according to the discretion of the said master.
4. The Bishop shall give no regard to his brother Choristers on Holy Innocents’ Day.
5. None shall be called to lunch on Holy Innocents’ Day, at the expense of the Bishop, at the house of his master, unless they be special friends of the said Bishop, and then not beyond the number of six persons. The Bishop shall pay to his Canon master, should he wish to receive it, four pence for whatever lunch is taken. And the Bishop shall consider himself content with his master’s service.
6. On Holy Innocents’ Day there shall be prepared and arranged a pennyweight of bread, a pottle with a narrow neck, and two or three pennyweights of meat or one of cheese and butter, to be carried to the Bishop’s room and carried by the Bishop and his brother Choristers, and he shall go down to the Priory of St Nicholas, provided that the expense of the said breakfast shall not exceed the sum of four or six pennies.
7. It is ordered that the said Bishop and his crosier, on the days after the said feast of the Holy Innocents, shall use dancing and leisure like the rest of the Choristers; and that afterwards they shall not run about through the church nor other places with the gloves, except when the County Court or Sessions of the Peace of Exeter is held, or certain respectable outsiders happen to approach the church or house of any Canon within the aforesaid precinct. And this with the licence of the Precentor or Succentor or the Clerk of the Chapel of St Mary.
Item, that the offering of money to the Bishop on Holy Innocents’ Day shall be counted openly within the church before a clerk of the treasury or other respectable priest of the Choir and then shall be offered by one of the Bishop’s friends.
Cast of Characters
Sir Baldwin de Furnshill
Keeper of the King’s Peace of Crediton in Devon, Sir Baldwin was once a Knight Templar, but after the destruction of his Order he managed to return to his ancestral home. He is known to be an astute investigator of crimes.
Lady Jeanne Furnshill
The widow of a coarse and brutal knight, Jeanne finally married Sir Baldwin earlier in the year after a protracted wooing.
Edgar
Sir Baldwin’s servant was once his Sergeant in the Knights Templar. When the Order was destroyed he chose to remain at his knight’s side and became Sir Baldwin’s trusted steward.
Simon Puttock
An old friend of Sir Baldwin’s, Simon is Bailiff to the Warden of the Stannaries, based in Lydford. He and Baldwin have often investigated crimes together.
Ralph
The glover from Correstrete, Ralph was a cheerful, generous soul, whose murder has shocked the whole city. Especially since it appears to have been committed by his own apprentice.
Elias
Scarcely into his twenties, the horrified Elias has been arrested for the murder of his master, Ralph.
Mary Skinner
Elias’s girlfriend, the daughter of a baker.
Henry
One of the Choristers, Henry has been elected to become the boy-Bishop when the Cathedral celebrates the Feast of the Holy Innocents.
Luke Soth
The leading Chorister, Luke had expected to be elected to the bishopric and was hurt and offended when his companions chose Henry instead.
Adam
One of the many Secondaries in the Cathedral, Adam is waiting for a suitable position to appear so that he can be promoted from his minor clerical jobs.
Gervase
As Succentor, Gervase is responsible for the Choristers. The boys must be taught how to sing, but likewise they have to learn Latin, reading and writing.
Stephen
The Canon responsible for the Treasury, Stephen is also responsible for Luke and Adam, both of whom dine at his table.
Peter Golloc
A young Secondary who works in the Treasury and lives with Jolinde Bolle.
Jolinde Bolle
Although Jolinde showed some promise as a Chorister, he has fallen prey to the attractions of the city, especially those of a young woman.
Claricia Cornisshe
A serving woman in one of the taverns and Jolinde’s girlfriend.
Vincent le Berwe
Vincent is a successful merchant who owns several properties and makes a good living from his trading. He has recently been elevated to one of the more senior posts in the city, that of Receiver.
Hawisia le Berwe
Vincent’s wife, a bright young woman who is proud of his success.
Nicholas Karvinel
A merchant and associate of Vincent. He also knew Ralph well and took over much of his business when Ralph died.
Juliana Karvinel
The wife of Nicholas, a woman from Winchester.
John Coppe
Often to be found begging by the Fissand Gate, Coppe was crippled during a sea-fight.
Sir Thomas of Exmouth
Once an honourable knight, Sir Thomas has lost everything and now leads a small band of outlaws not far from Exeter.
Jen of Whyteslegh
When Sir Thomas first met Jen he was very taken with her. Later, when her parents died, she agreed to live with him.
Hob of Whyteslegh
Born witless, all through his life Hob has been looked down upon, and he has no regrets about leaving the vill where he was born. Now he lives with Sir Thomas and Jen.
Roger de Gidleigh As Coroner, Roger must investigate any sudden deaths.
William de Lappeford
The Bailiff of the City, reporting to the Coroner.
Author’s Note
When I first began writing, I read Pleasures and Pastimes in Medieval England by Compton Reeves, and was struck by the insights it gave. One in particular caught my fancy: his description of a medieval Christmas. I was fascinated by it, and decided there and then that one day, I would write a mystery story set at Christmas-time.
The aspect which intrigued me most was the curious detail of the boy-Bishop. Only later did I realise that Exeter Cathed
ral annually elected a boy-Bishop – and as soon as I realised that, I knew I had to incorporate one into my story. At last, five years later, here he is.
There appears to be a direct link between the boy-Bishops of the Middle Ages and the Roman celebration of Saturnalia. This was a strange feast during which everything became topsy-turvy; social and moral constraints went by-the-by.
Boy-Bishops existed all over the country. Cathedrals, canonical churches and colleges had their own customs but were generally consistent: the boy would have been elected by his fellow Choristers on 21 December, Feast Day of St Thomas the Apostle, and would come into his bishopric at some time after Christmas, usually ending with the last service on Holy Innocents’ Day, 28 December.
In Exeter the boy-Bishop took control at the last service on 27 December, and held power for twenty-four hours. During his reign he would have a fabulous time compared with normal: a Chorister in those days normally spent long hours singing in a draughty, cold cathedral, and even longer hours sitting learning Latin or writing. There would have been few breaks, and none designed for play.
Instead, on this one day, he would take breakfast with his Canon – a meal to which he could invite his friends – afterwards marching in procession to St Nicholas’s Priory near the river, where the Prior would give him a sum of money and more food. Following this, he would be able to wander about the city with his friends and participate in all sorts of mayhem. As Nicholas Orme says in his excellent book Exeter Cathedral As It Was 1050-1550, 28 December was one day when the clergy could relax. Sometimes things went a bit too far – or at least, Bishop Grandisson certainly thought so because he wrote scathingly of Canons whose minds were off in the marketplace, the street or even still in bed while their bodies were present in church. Orme points out that, just as modern-day office workers enjoy Christmas parties with the associated revelry, drinking and (if only in the minds of the hopeful) casual sex, clerical staff in the early 1300s could also let their hair down for a short period each year.