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You are here: Home / Publications / Rotuli Roberti Grosseteste Episcopi Lincolniensis A.D. MCCXXXV-MCCLIII necnon Rotulus Henrici de Lexington Episcopi Lincolniensis A.D. MCCLIV-MCCLIX
Volume 11

Rotuli Roberti Grosseteste Episcopi Lincolniensis A.D. MCCXXXV-MCCLIII necnon Rotulus Henrici de Lexington Episcopi Lincolniensis A.D. MCCLIV-MCCLIX

21 October 2011 by

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LRS-Vol-11
The rolls relate almost entirely to the routine work which went on in the diocese. They are primarily records of institutions to benefices, and in this lies their chief interest, but incidentally other useful and important information can be gleaned. In the record of an institution the parish is named, its patron, and the person instituted together with the official by whom a previous “inquisition” had been made. At this time the diocese extended from the Thames to the Humber, and it comprised eight counties – a sixth of the kingdom. Today five Bishops rule where the early Bishops of Lincoln were supreme. The archdeaconries of Leicester and Northampton (this latter including also the county of Rutland) are now the diocese of Peterborough, which on its foundation in 1541 received Northampton, Leicester being transferred to it in 1837. Oxford became a bishop’s see in 1543, at first for Oxfordshire only, Buckinghamshire and Berkshire were added in 1837; while Bedfordshire and Huntingdonshire were joined to Ely also in 1837. That part of Hertfordshire which appears in Grossteste’s Roll as in the archdeaconry of Huntingdon is part of the modern diocese of St. Albans.
Adapted from the Introduction to the volume.
LRS-Vol-11
Volume 11 Rotuli Roberti Grosseteste Episcopi Lincolniensis A.D. MCCXXXV-MCCLIII necnon Rotulus Henrici de Lexington Episcopi Lincolniensis A.D. MCCLIV-MCCLIX
The Rolls and Abstracts of Robert Grossteste 1235-1253 and Henry Lexington, Bishops of Lincoln, 1254-1259
Editor F.N. Davis, B.A., B.Litt., Rector of Crowell and Chaplain of Thame Park, Oxfordshire
Date For the year ending 30th September 1915
Publication Date 1914
Size 255 x 155 mm
Language Latin with brief paragraph headings in English
Printer Issued by W.K. Morton & Sons Ltd., 27 High Street, Horncastle
Content Contents, 1 page
Corrigenda, 1 page
Introduction, 9 pages
Itinerary of Robert Grossteste, 3 pages
Institutions by Robert Grossteste, 507 pages
Archdeaconry of Lincoln
Archdeaconry of Stow
Archdeaconry of Northampton
Archdeaconry of Huntingdon
Archdeaconry of Buckingham
Archdeaconry of Leicester
Archdeaconry of Oxford
Institutions by Henry de Lexington in the Archdeaconry of Huntingdon, 6 pages
Privileges of the Cathedral Church of Lincoln, 5 pages
Index, 39 pages
Description The rolls relate almost entirely to the routine work which went on in the diocese. They are primarily records of institutions to benefices, and in this lies their chief interest, but incidentally other useful and important information can be gleaned. In the record of an institution the parish is named, its patron, and the person instituted together with the official by whom a previous “inquisition” had been made. At this time the diocese extended from the Thames to the Humber, and it comprised eight counties – a sixth of the kingdom. Today five Bishops rule where the early Bishops of Lincoln were supreme. The archdeaconries of Leicester and Northampton (this latter including also the county of Rutland) are now the diocese of Peterborough, which on its foundation in 1541 received Northampton, Leicester being transferred to it in 1837. Oxford became a bishop’s see in 1543, at first for Oxfordshire only, Buckinghamshire and Berkshire were added in 1837; while Bedfordshire and Huntingdonshire were joined to Ely also in 1837. That part of Hertfordshire which appears in Grossteste’s Roll as in the archdeaconry of Huntingdon is part of the modern diocese of St. Albans.
Adapted from the Introduction to the volume.
LRS-Vol-11
Purchase from Boydell & Brewer

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Lincoln Record Society is a registered charity, number 513433