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Malmesbury Abbey 670-1539

Patronage, Scholarship and Scandal

Tony McAleavy author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Boydell & Brewer Ltd

Published:5th Sep '23

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Malmesbury Abbey 670-1539 cover

Malmesbury Abbey was an institution of national significance throughout the Middle Ages and this book is the first full-length study of its history. Drawing upon particularly rich surviving documentary sources, it describes the monastery's evolution from the late seventh century to the Dissolution in 1539. The place was home to two particularly eminent writers: Aldhelm and William of Malmesbury. The Abbey had many royal connections. It housed the mausoleum of Æthelstan, first king of all England, and was effectively re-founded by King Edgar as part of an elite network of Benedictine communities intended to offer prayers on behalf of the royal house of Wessex. Queen Matilda, wife of Henry I, took a close interest in the monastery's affairs. Henry Plantagenet was present when a massacre took place in the Abbey church in 1153. In the 1320s the monks became caught up in the conflict between Edward II and his baronial opponents. The Abbey was also important architecturally. The church was completely rebuilt at the behest of Bishop Roger of Salisbury, chief minister of Henry I, and the surviving south porch contains some of the finest Romanesque sculpture in England. Previously neglected or unexamined sources are used extensively. The book reveals for the first time the identity of the Malmesbury monk who wrote the chronicle known as Eulogium Historiarum in the 1360s; his name was Thomas of Bromham and he envisaged a messianic role for the Black Prince. New light is shed on the extraordinary careers of abbots such as William of Colerne who transformed the Abbey's economic fortunes and John of Tintern who was accused of murder and arson. The turbulent final years of the Abbey's existence receive considerable attention, including an account of the spectacular breakdown in discipline in 1527 when Abbot Richard Camme was attacked by a gang of rebellious monks.

McAleavy has brought together the often fragmentary evidence from more than a thousand years for reconstructing a history. Judiciously and methodically he has relied upon archaeological reports, medieval narratives, and medieval and Tudor legal documents and court records. Ample footnotes and extensive bibliography will aid future historians of this important medieval monastery. * AMERICAN BENEDICTINE REVIEW *
This is an important contribution to the history of one of the more influential English Benedictine medieval houses whose complete history is now available to the general reader in a single volume which acknowledges the value of past published primary sources and the recent research of Rodney Thomson. * THE DOWNSIDE REVIEW *
McAleavy presents an engaging and judicious narrative of the monastery's fortunes and affairs, with a particular focus on its abbots, estates and intellectual life. * SEHEPUNKTE *

ISBN: 9781783277148

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 606g

298 pages