The Cartulary and Charters of the Priory of Saints Peter and Paul, Ipswich
Part II: The Charters
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Published:20th Mar '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Edition of documents from an important medieval East Anglian ecclesiastical institution. The charters and other documents recorded in the thirteenth-century Cartulary of the Augustinian priory of Sts Peter and Paul, Ipswich, donated to the public library of Lexington, Kentucky, in 1806, and purchased for Ipswich Record Office in 1970, throw light on an institution whose early history was mostly shrouded in obscurity. They are an important source for the study both of the expansion of the priory estates and the consolidation of its holdings bythe gift or purchase of adjoining parcels of land in common fields, and a mine of information for the student of place-names. The charters presented here, with full explanatory notes, complement the contents of the priory'scartulary published in 2018. They illuminate the religious life of the priory, its community, spiritual rewards for its benefactors, steps taken to safeguard its assets, and the circumspection sometimes shown by the convent in itsdealings with the powerful.
The texts throughout are an invaluable source for students of palaeography, Latin and local history. Understanding the difference between cartularies and charters, the function they performed and interpretation of the evidence they provide allows a proper appreciation of their purpose. * THE LOCAL HISTORIAN *
Part II is a splendid work of dedicated scholarship, as is particularly evident from the trouble that David Allen has taken to locate and transcribe the documents, to establish plausible dates for the many undated ones and to make available succinct, detailed physical descriptions of each of the individual items. It has been handsomely produced by the Boydell Press. * ARCHIVES AND RECORDS *
[B]oth this and Allen's first volume on the priory make invaluable additions to a growing corpus. -- Proceedings of the SIAH
This Part II is a welcome addition to the range of charter publications already in circulation, and it will be a valuable reference text that will be studied for many years to come. It is of great benefit to have another resource that highlights the wealth of information charters contain. -- The Medieval Review (TMR)
Allen's work in bringing together and elucidating this large body of unedited charter material is eminently clear. The volumes are a boon to scholars of medieval and early modern Suffolk, and their contents are ripe for development by a historian in archival and documentary practices, pre- and post-Dissolution. * JOURNAL OF MEDIEVAL MONASTIC STUDIES *
ISBN: 9781783274949
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 506g
211 pages