The Register of Philip Repingdon, bishop of Lincoln from 1405 to 1419, is in two volumes, the Institutions and the Memoranda., both in the Lincolnshire Archives. The Memoranda volume contains the miscellaneous business of the see. The Memoranda gives a clear picture of diocesan administration and the state of religious life in the See of Lincoln between 1405 and 1420. The Memoranda lacks, perhaps, the richness of material found in earlier Episcopal registers, and in some respects it may be a little disappointing. The selection of entries was determined by the registrar; thus, much space is given to the transcription of formal and sometimes repetitive documents, and inevitably much that would be of greater interest to us is omitted. Despite its shortcomings and omissions, however, the Memoranda is a fascinating and valuable record of ecclesiastical administration and religious life, not only in the diocese of Lincoln but in the English Church as a whole in the early fifteenth century.
Adapted from the Introduction.
Adapted from the Introduction.
Volume 57 The Register of Bishop Philip Repingdon 1405-1419, Vol. I Memoranda 1405-1411
Editor Margaret Archer M.A. (Liverpool), B.Litt (Oxon) Lecturer in Medieval History, University of Birmingham
Date For year ending 31st August 1962
Publication Date 1963
Size 255 x 155 mm
Language Mainly Latin with some entries in Medieval French and English; with English commentary
Printer The Hereford Times Limited, Hereford
Content Editor’s Preface, 1 page
General Editor’s Preface, 1 page, noting that for financial reasons Volumes I & II have been published together and recording that the British Academy have given a grant of £100 to each volume and that the University of Birmingham had given a grant of £100 to Volume II.
Contents, 1 page
Notes Concerning the Method of Transcription, 3 pages
Principal Abbreviations Used in the Footnotes, 2 pages
Introduction, 37 pages
Memoranda 1405-1411, 209 pages
The Indexes are in Volume II
Description The Register of Philip Repingdon, bishop of Lincoln from 1405 to 1419, is in two volumes, the Institutions and the Memoranda., both in the Lincolnshire Archives. The Memoranda volume contains the miscellaneous business of the see. The Memoranda gives a clear picture of diocesan administration and the state of religious life in the See of Lincoln between 1405 and 1420. The Memoranda lacks, perhaps, the richness of material found in earlier Episcopal registers, and in some respects it may be a little disappointing. The selection of entries was determined by the registrar; thus, much space is given to the transcription of formal and sometimes repetitive documents, and inevitably much that would be of greater interest to us is omitted. Despite its shortcomings and omissions, however, the Memoranda is a fascinating and valuable record of ecclesiastical administration and religious life, not only in the diocese of Lincoln but in the English Church as a whole in the early fifteenth century.
Adapted from the Introduction.
Editor Margaret Archer M.A. (Liverpool), B.Litt (Oxon) Lecturer in Medieval History, University of Birmingham
Date For year ending 31st August 1962
Publication Date 1963
Size 255 x 155 mm
Language Mainly Latin with some entries in Medieval French and English; with English commentary
Printer The Hereford Times Limited, Hereford
Content Editor’s Preface, 1 page
General Editor’s Preface, 1 page, noting that for financial reasons Volumes I & II have been published together and recording that the British Academy have given a grant of £100 to each volume and that the University of Birmingham had given a grant of £100 to Volume II.
Contents, 1 page
Notes Concerning the Method of Transcription, 3 pages
Principal Abbreviations Used in the Footnotes, 2 pages
Introduction, 37 pages
Memoranda 1405-1411, 209 pages
The Indexes are in Volume II
Description The Register of Philip Repingdon, bishop of Lincoln from 1405 to 1419, is in two volumes, the Institutions and the Memoranda., both in the Lincolnshire Archives. The Memoranda volume contains the miscellaneous business of the see. The Memoranda gives a clear picture of diocesan administration and the state of religious life in the See of Lincoln between 1405 and 1420. The Memoranda lacks, perhaps, the richness of material found in earlier Episcopal registers, and in some respects it may be a little disappointing. The selection of entries was determined by the registrar; thus, much space is given to the transcription of formal and sometimes repetitive documents, and inevitably much that would be of greater interest to us is omitted. Despite its shortcomings and omissions, however, the Memoranda is a fascinating and valuable record of ecclesiastical administration and religious life, not only in the diocese of Lincoln but in the English Church as a whole in the early fifteenth century.
Adapted from the Introduction.