Once I was a clever boy learning the arts of Oxford... is a quotation from the verses written by Bishop Richard Fleming (c.1385-1431) for his tomb in Lincoln Cathedral. Fleming, the founder of Lincoln College in Oxford, is the subject of my research for a D. Phil., and, like me, a son of the West Riding. I have remarked in the past that I have a deeply meaningful on-going relationship with a dead fifteenth century bishop... it was Fleming who, in effect, enabled me to come to Oxford and to learn its arts, and for that I am immensely grateful.


Friday, 17 July 2026

Anglo-Danish rivalry in style and personal presentation in 1002


The Fake History Hunter has another worthwhile study on Substack about English attitudes to the Danish community in the country in the lead up to the St Brice’s Day massacre in on November 13th 1002. I have posted about this before because Oxford was one of the principal locations for the attack on the Danes, notably in 2011 in Massacre in Oxford and in 2021in Keeping it in the family
 
The author of the Fake History Hunter does an excellent job unpicking the narrative of the St Albans chronicler John of Wallingford, written some two centuries later, and showing how modern unthinking repetition or depiction reinforces an inaccurate understanding of the past.


Reading it I was reminded of Alcuin’s strictures about the long hair of the Northumbrian nobility and warriors in 793 following the sack of Lindisfarne. To Alcuin long hair was a sign of decadence, both personal and socially, and by implication had led to the success of the attack. It is a recurring theme with churchmen - in the post-Tridentine world Catholic clergy were very much ‘short-back-and-sides’ judging from the portraits on the priests on the English mission. I am sufficiently old to recall the horror produced in the 1960s by longer hair, let alone long hair, and, relevant to John of Wallingford, its association with sexual promiscuity. Things don’t change much.


Irish Curses


Substack has an insightful and lively illustrated post from Gillian Kenny about the long and colourful tradition of cursing in Ireland. Although just an introduction to five different styles of cursing by churchmen, nobles, poets and ordinary folk it is clearly based on academic research, and has a useful looking bibliography. It is also interesting in the way it shows how some at least of these customs persisted into the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.




Wednesday, 15 July 2026

A former Anglican reflects on his path to Rome


A friend recently shared with me an article from the Catholic journal The Lamp written by Dr Robin Ward who was until last year Principal of the Anglican clergy training college St Stephen’s House in Oxford, and who, earlier this year, was received as a Catholic.

I have known Dr Ward slightly for several years, having met him in my years at Pusey House. His article is, in effect, as he references in it, a short homage to St John Henry Newman’s Apologia pro vita sua and to Newman’s last months as an Anglican in the College he had established for himself and his friends at Littlemore. It was there that he was received into the Catholic Church in 1845.
 
Whilst only a summary of his spiritual journey it is also an insightful commentary on what has happened to the Church of England and Anglicanism in the past two generations. Thereby it also explains Dr Ward’s path to Rome. That is one that has been trodden, each in their individual way, by many others, including myself. He does along the way make a number of telling points about the current state of Anglicanism, including as it is found to be in contemporary Oxford. As a piece of writing it says a great deal in a small compass, and opens up new insights.

The article can be read online at Robin Ward*


Newman’s College,
Littlemore, Oxford

Image: Wikimedia

* I do know of another Anglo-Catholic church with a shrine to the infant of Prague - in the ‘biretta belt’ of the southern West Riding

Monday, 13 July 2026

The life of a Medieval English royal nun


I recently came upon an interesting, and indeed entertaining, account of the life of Mary, one of the daughters of King Edward I, who lived most of her life as a member of the community of nuns at Amesbury Priory in Wiltshire - although she travelled extensively and was not bound by rules of enclosure.


The Church of St Mary and St Melor
Amesbury

Image:visitwiltshire.co.uk


Amesbury was  house of nuns that was re-founded in 1177 by King Henry II . Legend had it that after the death of King Arthur Queen Guinevere had lived in retirement at the nunnery at Amesbury. Whatever the truth of that at a time when the Arthurian cycle was so popular and gaining extra dimensions in its retellings, not least around the court of the Angevin king, establishing a house for nuns, often of royal or aristocratic birth , and belonging to the Order of Fontevraud must have seemed very appropriate.

Angevin family patronage was directed towards the mother house at Fontevraud, which became the burial place of King Henry II and Queen Eleanor of Aquitaine, their second son King Richard I, their daughter-in-law Queen Isabella and their daughter Joanna Queen of Sicily and later Countess of Toulouse as well as, almost a century later, of the heart of King Henry III.

It was the widow of the  last-named monarch Queen Eleanor of Provence elected to live a life of pious retirement at Amesbury alongside the community, and accompanied by two of her granddaughters, of whom Mary was one. 

The article I initially saw was from ArcheoHistories on X and can be read at ArchaeoHistories

Wikipedia has a detailed account of the medieval priory and several of its royal and aristocratic members at Amesbury_Priory

This gives more about Mary’s life, and that of her relatives whilst at Amesbury or the mother house of Fontevraud.

There is also a Wikipedia article about the parish church, whose relationship to the monastic buildings remains unclear, in that it may have been both the church for the townspeople and also served as the chapel for the clerical community who also served the altar in the monastery. This article can be found at Church_of_St_Mary_and_St_Melor,_Amesbury

The church at Amesbury 
This is from the side where the vanished monastic buildings stood

Image:stannesgate.com

I have only visited Amesbury once, but my sense on that occasion, was very much that this was more than a typical parochial structure and that it gave the impression of having served as a monastic church.

Murray and Blue has an article about the monastery at THE LOST PRIORY OF AMESBURY

The History Jar also has an article, with illustrations, about the history of the surviving church which can be seen at Amesbury Abbey and Priory

Saturday, 11 July 2026

Yesteryear in Parliament

 
As we come to the end of the Parliamentary session it is time to look back at what was achieved, at the pointers to new ways of doing things, of a change of personnel at the top in government, at who did well and who didn’t, at where we go from here ….. no, dear reader I am not talking about the current situation at Westminster - too boring - but rather the assessment one can make about Westminster on this day 650 years ago in 1376 as the Good Parliament came to an end.

Parliament had commenced on April 28th and this had been the longest session to date. In the course of the meeting the Commons had for the first time elected a permanent Speaker in Sir Peter de la Mare, rather than having one MP speaking to the Crown and Lords on a one-off basis, they had raised many instances of what they saw as corruption and inefficiency in government, had invented a new procedure in impeachmentto bring those responsible to trial whereby the Commons corporately brought charges against suspects who were tried before the Lords, and when convicted, stripped of office, they had voiced their fears about the succession to the throne, and now they were going home without voting any taxation.

If in the popular imagination and memory this was the Good Parliament its successor early the following year whereby the government tried to undo some of its actions and got a vote of taxation was remembered as the Bad Parliament. Sir Peter, as first Speaker, for his pains also became the first holder of the office to be imprisoned. 

Nonetheless the Good Parliament had broken new ground, with the Commons showing real independence,  establishing a greater sense of corporate identity through the Speakership, and in the impeachment procedure had found a means of bringing ministers to book.
 

King Edward III

Image: luminarium.org

The background to this was that King Edward III was failing, and indeed died a year later, his eldest son the Prince of Wales was in failing health and was to die during the Parliament on June 8th, and was not a king/in-waiting, and his and heir, Richard was not yet ten.


The tomb effigy of King Edward III in Westminster Abbey

Image: akg-images/ Erich Lessing

The opposition to the demands of the Commons was led by the king’s next surviving son, John Duke of Lancaster. This made him unpopular and led to unfounded rumours that he sought the throne for himself.


John, Duke of Lancaster

Image: Wikipedia from a portrait belonging to his direct descendant the Duke of Beaufort

Impeachment was probably used as a corporate charge to protect individual MPs from legislation which protected nobles from such charges by one person. 
In the 1388 and 1397 Parliamentary moves against firstly King Richard II’s ministers and secondly against his opponents a different process of appeal was used.

As a legal mechanism impeachment re-emerged in 1450, and then not again until 1640, had a fair amount of use under the Restoration and in the eighteenth century. It was last used in 1806, when Lord Dundas was acquitted by the Lords. An attempt to use it against Palmerston in 1848 did not get sufficient votes in the Commons. Some experts doubt if it still is part of the living legal tradition, but in 2019 there was talk by some of seeking to impeach Boris Johnson over his bungled prorogation of Parliament. That would have been fun, the Queen’s evil councillor brought to account at the bar of the Lords. Alas it was not to be.

The development of the concept of Parliamentary responsibility made it otiose here, but in Congressional systems in the Americas, such as the US and Brazil with systems based on the separation of powers it had retained its vitality as a potential check on those in power.

Our sources for these events are the formal records of the Parliament Rolls with their official recording l of new legislation and the other records of the Crown in the Chancery rolls. 

Chronicles give some details as reported back to their compilers for this and meetings well into the fifteenth century. 

Not until 1461 do we have a fragment of the Lords Journal of proceedings m, though this was presumably not an innovation and those for the Commons do not survive until 1547. 

What make our understanding of the Good Parliament so much better is the lengthy account of what went on in the debates in the Commons preserved in the Anonimalle Chronicle of the abbey of St Mary at York which includes a detailed account written by someone who was there in the Commons. There is a note at The First Political Pamphlet? The Unsolved Case of the Anonymous Account of the Good Parliament of 1376 about who or what that source may have been. 


The ruins of  St Mary’s Abbey York

Image: TripAdvisor

The complete text of the account of the events in the Good Parliament can be read in Translation of the Anonimalle Chronicle

The Commons had no permanent home until 1547 when they were given St Stephen’s Chapel where they sat until the fire of 1834.

In1376 they were assigned the great Chapter House of Westminster Abbey whilst the Lords met in the adjoining royal palace - as indeed they still do.



The Chapter House of Westminster Abbey
The original tiled floor is covered to prevent damage

Image: Wikimedia

The knights of the shires, two for each, irrespective of size - think of the US Senate - sat on the benches around the wall. The wall against which they sat was just about to be decorated with a cycle of paintings of the Apocalypse and Last Judgment that took from 1375 until 1404 to complete, and still survives substantially intact today.

The members for the cities and towns had to sit on the wonderful heraldic tiled floor which still survives, which indicates a definite hierarchy. No green leather benches.

There is a well-illustrated account of the Chapter Housr and its architecture and art at The Chapter House Westminster Abbey, and Pyx Chamber

When an MP wished to address the Commons they spoke from the central lectern used by the monks for their Benedictine devotions and governance. Had the Commons stayed in the Chapter House that might have remained the English practice as in other European and American assemblies. In England the descive change came in 1547 when the government assigned the Chapel of St Stephen in the Palace of Westminster to the Commons. The Speaker sat where the altar had been, the MPs occupying the choir stalls, facing each other. How much this led to what has been a basic English and British model of a two party system, His Majesty’s Government and His Majesty’s Opposition facing one another two swords length apart is not entirely clear, but the physical reality of where they met and the natural tendency to seek out and sit with allies shaped future political patterns.



Friday, 10 July 2026

After Écône


Over a week has passed since the SSPX episcopal consecrations at Écône and the publication by the Vatican of the anticipated decree of excommunication and statement that SSPX is now deemed to be schismatic.

A lot of heat and light has been generated - the latter showing up divisions in the fabric of the Church - yet with little true illumination.

The pre-existing stand-off continues, now with added force and bitterness, and no visible positive way forward on a path of reconciliation. It appears to be a case of full steam ahead looking neither to left or right. 

The following selection of links and thoughts are an attempt to share some of the more insightful and challenging comments and commentary I have come across in recent days.



Those who stress their adhesion to the Vatican policy, such as a number of readers commenting on The Pillar website, lay great stress on the virtue of obedience to the See of Peter as a central component of Catholic life and practice. I saw a video made by Jacob Rees  Mogg, who having stressed that on liturgical matters he had great sympathy with SSPX then turned to the matter of obedience. Here he said that whilst Pope Francis was alive one should never, by reason of obedience, criticise him as he was the Supreme Pontiff, but once he was dead it was fine to say it had been a disastrous pontificate ….., which seems to me to be an extreme case of confusing respect for the office with that ( or its lack )
for the individual who holds it. It also strikes me  as being unhistorical, and reflecting a mid- to late nineteenth century Ultamontanism.

By contrast the SSPX would say they are obedient to the immutable legacy of Catholic teaching and that too many of the faithful are being disobedient in the way they live and indeed profess their faith. At this stage the matter of “necessity” in consecrating new bishops and ignoring the Pope becomes an expression of obedience to Tradition as the Society understands it, not as the Holy See does. 

Some who talk of obedience do not appear to say anything seemingly about liturgical abuse, the obviously ‘hot button’ issue with SSPX, or with contemporary deviations from mainstream doctrine post Vatican II.

The question as to the validity of the excommunications and designation of SSPX clergy as schismatic has become a significant talking point.

Life Site News has a perhaps predictably trenchant article about the matter at Leo XIV can’t excommunicate the SSPX or its bishops – here’s why

The respected Italian commentator on the Vatican Roberto de Mattei has an article which can be accessed at The Situation Regarding the SSPX Episcopal Consecrations of July 1, 2026

The Canadian traditionalist broadcaster Kennedy Hall has two articles which investigate whether the Vatican response actually accords with the Code of Canon Law. These can be accessed at The Formula That Failed: Why Tucho’s Note Does Not Excommunicate You and at Tucho Has Leo in a Real Bind

He also has a response to the comments on his video site made by the well known US conservative Catholic commentator Dr Taylor Marshall at A Consideration of Marshall’s Arguments Contra-SSPX: Part One

Fr Clément Barré has a lengthy article which is reproduced on Rorate Cæli on the ambiguity around SSPX as an institution within the Church. It can be read at The SSPX's Ecclesiology of Substitution: Part of the Whole, or a new Whole? — And the Problem with a Crisis that Never Ends.

 Rorate Cæli also has a very useful article by Serre Verweij which tries to put the present stalemate in a wider context and to suggest how the situation may develop. This can be read at Rome and the Econe Consecrations: a Dispassionate Analysis of What is at Stake

The questions the article raises about whether SSPX have waited, or moved during last years Sede vacante is an interesting one.

A lot of the coverage suggests that the wrong people were the Vatican representatives in the discussions earlier this year with SSPX, and that different people might have yielded a different result. 

I will say again that I think it is to be regretted that no agreement was reached when Pope Benedict XVI initiated a new dialogue in the early years of his papacy.


If stalemate is seemingly the current situation between the Holy See and SSPX there are encouraging signs with the calls for the relaxation or, better still, removal of Traditiones Custodes from leading figures in the hierarchy, from senior Cardinals downwards.

I am rather tempted to put together a post about the history of Papal excommunications over the last millennium and to share that with my readers.

Images: Wikipedia

Death in Angola in 1976


This post is not concerned the usual type of things I write about, but I trust readers will indulge me.

It is a link to an article I wrote almost ten years ago about the fate of a group of British and American mercenaries who were captured and tried in Angola in 1976. Four of them were executed by firing squad in the football stadium in Luanda on this day fifty years ago. The trial and its aftermath caught my interest at the time and I researched the story years later for this blog.

I was surprised and gratified that some of the families if the men involved found it, and indeed found it a means of contacting others.

The unamended blog can be viewed at Judicial Murder Forty Years on

Wikipedia has an account of the case at Luanda_Trial

Wednesday, 8 July 2026

English cities and towns in 1377


Ian Wright from Brilliant Maps has a map and accompanying notes drawing upon on the evidence contained in the records of the first of the Poll Taxes, that of 1377. The information is then used to calculate the population and relative ranking of English cities and towns in the year King Edward III died and was succeeded by his grandson King Richard II.

Such tables of relative size are quite common in books on economic history and historical geography but I suspect are not that well known to the wider reading public, so sharing this map and the statistics seems to be a good idea. 


The tax was a uniform levy of 4d a head for adults and teenagers. A single groat, valued at 4d would be the sum paid for an individual or in a mixture of pennies and half-groats or the fractions of a silver penny.


A groat issued under King Edward III in the years 1369 to 1377, and minted in London at the Tower

Image:MedievalCoin on Reddit