Roger Norreis

Roger Norreis[lower-alpha 1] (died between 1223 and 1225) was Abbot of Evesham in England. He was a controversial figure, installed in several offices against opposition. In his appointment to Evesham he was accused of immoral behaviour and failing to follow monastic rules. In 1202 Norreis became embroiled in a dispute with his monks and his episcopal superior the Bishop of Worcester; litigation and argumentation lasted until his deposition in 1213. He then was appointed prior of a subsidiary monastic house of Evesham but was deposed within months, then re-appointed to the office five years later.

Roger Norreis
Abbot of Evesham
ChurchEvesham Abbey
Appointed1190
Term ended1213
PredecessorAdam de Senlis
SuccessorRandulf
Orders
Consecration1190
Personal details
Diedbetween 1223 and 1225
BuriedPenwortham Priory

Norreis has been described by modern historians as being unsuited for the religious positions to which he was appointed and by one of being completely unsuitable to hold any kind of spiritual role. Nevertheless, even his most severe contemporary critic, Thomas of Marlborough, one of his own monks at Evesham, conceded that Norreis was energetic, entertaining, and enterprising; during his time as abbot of Evesham Abbey he managed to complete the crossing tower of the monastic church.

Roger Norreis died between 1223 and 1225.

Background and early career

Norreis was a native of northern England and his family was probably of Norse origin.[2][lower-alpha 2] He was a monk at Christ Church Priory, the cathedral chapter of Canterbury Cathedral;[3] when he became a monk is unknown.[2] In 1187 he was appointed treasurer of the priory,[4] and in that role was sent by the cathedral chapter to King Henry II of England to plead their case against Baldwin of Forde, the Archbishop of Canterbury.[2] The archbishop and his monks were in dispute over Baldwin's plan to found a collegiate church at Hackington in honour of Thomas Becket which most of the monks opposed because they feared it would diminish the prestige of their priory.[1]

Once Norreis reached the king he was converted to Baldwin's side, perhaps because of the latter's appointment of Norreis as the cellarer of Christ Church while the pair were at the king's court. The monks resisted this appointment, and in September they appealed to the papacy, arguing that the appointment was against the Benedictine Rule. They also captured and held Norreis in custody, telling anyone who enquired after him that he was sick. Norreis escaped in early 1188 by travelling through the sewer and fled to the safety of the archbishop, who was then at Otford. In a mocking reference to his escape route, Norreis was occasionally known as Roger Cloacarius or "Roger the Drain-Cleaner".[lower-alpha 3] Baldwin then tried to have Norreis installed as prior at Christ Church's dependent priory of St Martin's, Dover,[2] but the appointment was never confirmed.[6]

Prior and abbot

King Henry died on 6 July 1189 and his son Richard I was crowned on 3 September.[7] The succession of a new monarch eventually allowed a truce in the dispute between the Canterbury monks and their archbishop,[8] as Henry had been a supporter of the archbishop's scheme.[1] Before the truce could be hammered out, Baldwin appointed Norreis as prior of Christ Church in October 1189 as another move in the quarrel over the Hackington project.[1] In November the cathedral chapter secured a compromise that included the abandonment of the scheme and Norreis's dismissal from office.[1] The agreement came at a council held by Richard in late November 1189 at which the monks agreed to let the king settle the dispute over the Hackington project if the archbishop would withdraw Norreis's appointment.[9] Norreis's fellow monks considered him a traitor to their cause, and his reputation was that of someone with few morals. He was also known for ingratiating himself with those in power,[4] including the justiciar Geoffrey fitzPeter.[10] Many of the details concerning Norreis's career at Christ Church come from the works of Gervase of Canterbury, as well as the collection of letters known as the Epistolae Cantuarienses.[2]

Norreis was appointed to the abbacy of Evesham Abbey in 1190 and was blessed as abbot on 13 January 1190.[3] He owed his appointment to King Richard[2] and to Baldwin's attempts to make the dismissal from Christ Church look less like a defeat for the archbishop. Norreis also claimed that he received the office in return for unspecified services he rendered to Richard. There was no attempt at an election by the monks, a lack which went against canon law.[4] During his tenure of office, his monks accused him of fornication, excessive drinking, gluttony, setting up favourites, starving the monks, and appropriating monastic property for his own use.[10] A further offence was his habit of wearing secular clothing rather than the monastic habit prescribed by the Benedictine Rule.[2] All these charges come from one of his monks, the historian Thomas of Marlborough,[11] who wrote much of the history of Evesham known as the Chronicon Abbatiae de Evesham.[12] Thomas's account of Norreis's rule is biased against the abbot[11] and is a self-aggrandising account of how Thomas single-handedly triumphed over both his and his abbey's foes.[13] Norreis did manage some good for the abbey, as it was while he was abbot that the crossing tower of the monastic church was completed.[14]

Early in his tenure Norreis appears to have been somewhat circumspect and did not greatly annoy his monks. The change appears to have happened around 1195, when the monks are first recorded as appealing to higher authority. Because Evesham had traditionally claimed to be exempt from episcopal oversight by the see of Worcester, in which it was located, the monks could only appeal to the papacy or to a papal legate. Hubert Walter, the Archbishop of Canterbury after Baldwin, held a legateship for England until July 1195 and so the monks appealed to him. Walter forced Norreis to make some compromises with his subordinates, but the truce did not last long, and the monks once again complained of their treatment. They were visited by the new Bishop of Worcester John of Coutances some time between 1196 and 1198, but Norreis succeeded in avoiding any severe sanctions by offering gifts to the bishop. The monks again appealed to Walter in about 1200, but between the archbishop's preoccupation with political affairs and Norreis's promises to reform, no solid changes occurred.[10]

Dispute with Mauger and his monks

In 1202 the new Bishop of Worcester Mauger attempted to investigate Norreis's conduct, but under the leadership of Thomas of Marlborough the monastic community refused to allow the bishop to visit, claiming that Evesham was exempt from episcopal visitation and oversight.[15] According to Thomas, Norreis offered to renounce the abbey's claim to exemption in return for money, but the bishop refused. Norreis then fled the monastery, while the monks continued to refuse the bishop and were excommunicated, a sentence that Norreis was spared.[16] Between early September and mid-October the dispute was heard by three ecclesiastical tribunals; Mauger was supported by Eustace, Bishop of Ely, and Giles de Braose, Bishop of Hereford.[15] The monks and Norreis then made common cause, each vowing to stand by the other in resisting Mauger.[2] As well as these two cases, there was a dispute between the monks and the bishop over the ownership of some properties.[13] The monks and Norreis then obtained the right for their case to be heard by papal judge-delegates, but Mauger objected to the fact that the appointed judges were all Benedictine monks,[lower-alpha 4] and travelled to Rome to appeal.[15]

In 1203 Norreis, secure in his alliance with his own monks, once again began to exploit the monastery for his own profit and that of his family and friends. His monks became upset at this renewal of their exploitation and sent Thomas, along with other monks, to appropriate the harvest from some lands that had been given by Norreis to a non-member of the community. Norreis protested to King John and to Hubert Walter. Both the king and Walter summoned Thomas to appear before them separately and explain the actions of the monks. Thomas failed to persuade either man and nothing was done about Norreis's exactions and abuse of his monks.[17]

Norreis went to Rome in the company of Thomas of Marlborough shortly before 1205 to lay the abbey's case before the papacy. Thomas remained in Italy, but Norreis returned to England in the middle of 1205.[13] While in Rome, Norreis and Thomas borrowed 400 marks to finance the litigation at the papal curia.[18][lower-alpha 5] Norreis could not repay this sum and for a while was in danger of being imprisoned, but he managed to leave Rome without suffering the fate of one of his companions who was detained for the debt and died while imprisoned.[15] When Norreis made it back to England, Mauger excommunicated the abbot in April 1205.[2] The monks won a victory on the question of the abbey's exemption from episcopal visitation in 1206, but other elements of the quarrel remained unresolved, including that of the disputed churches.[13] Later that year the monks became so annoyed by Norreis's abuse that they abandoned the abbey and did not return until they secured the abbot's confirmation of their rights.[19]

With the question of the episcopal exemption decided in Evesham's favour, the alliance between Norreis and his monks dissolved. The monks again complained of their abbot's behaviour to the new papal legate, John of Sancta Maria.[15] The legate ordered an investigation, the result being a written agreement between the two parties.[20] Norreis gave gifts to the legate's nephew,[15] refused to sign the agreement,[20] and took revenge on his opponents by expelling Thomas of Marlborough and his allies from the monastery.[15] Thirty monks followed Thomas into exile, and Norreis pursued them with soldiers who were defeated by the monks.[20] A compromise was eventually reached, Norreis agreeing that the revenues of the abbey would be split with the monks, that officials of the abbey would be appointed by the abbot but with the advice and consent of the monks, and that the abbot would not admit or expel monks without taking the counsel of his monks nor dispose of the monastic property without the consent of his subordinates.[20][lower-alpha 6] Although the issue of the monks' support was temporarily solved, the issue of the disputed properties between Mauger and the monastery continued. Norreis appears to have been willing to compromise with the bishop, but the monks refused.[15][lower-alpha 7]

The dispute between Norreis and his monks dragged on for years. The interdict of 1207–1213 caused further delays, but when it was lifted in 1213 the case against Norreis was finally heard.[15] A papal legate visited the abbey and found that the monks were lacking in food,[lower-alpha 8] clothes, and other necessities. The liturgy was not being performed according to the monastic rule because the monks lacked the proper clothing. Charity to the poor had ceased, the monastic buildings were dilapidated,[23] and the monks were forced to beg for their needs.[24] The legate found that the abbot was living well, wearing non-monastic clothes, and enjoying the company of young women in his dwelling, while his monks suffered.[23] Norreis was deposed from the abbacy[15] by the papal legate in 1213.[23]

Later life and death

On 27 November 1213 Norreis was appointed the prior of Penwortham Priory, a dependent priory of Evesham,[25] partly to compensate him for the loss of the abbacy[15] and partly to keep him from abandoning monastic life entirely.[2] Norreis was deposed five months later owing to his continued bad morals and behaviour[25] and again went to Rome in a bid to be restored to office. On this occasion he was unable to secure his reinstatement,[2] but in 1218 or 1219 he was restored to Penwortham[25] through the influence of the papal legate Pandulf Verraccio.[2] Norreis died on 16 July[26] or 19 July,[2] but there is disagreement over the year of his death.[2][26] The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography states that he died in 1223,[2] but the editors of Heads of Religious Houses: England and Wales, 940–1216 state he died in either 1224 or 1225.[26] He was buried at Penwortham.[2]

Thomas of Marlborough, who knew Norreis, wrote that he was "everywhere condemned as the manifest enemy of God".[5] More modern writers echo the sentiment. John Moorman described Norreis as a man "totally unsuited to the delicate and responsible task of ruling over a company of men and directing the affairs of a wealthy corporation".[23] David Knowles, a historian of English monasticism, wrote that Norreis was "utterly unworthy to hold spiritual office of any kind", and that Baldwin's appointment of him as prior at Christ Church "must always remain a dark stain on the archbishop's reputation".[4] Knowles also noted that he was "a man of great practical ability".[27] Even Thomas of Marlborough noted that Norreis was energetic, entertaining, and full of enterprise.[10]

Notes

  1. Sometimes known as Roger Norreys[1] or Roger Norris.[2]
  2. He was occasionally referred to as "from the North".[2]
  3. The monks also punned on his escape, stating that "Roger Norreis, who, since he was not necessary to us, exited, filthy, by the sewer",[5] playing on the Latin word for sewer, necessaria.[2]
  4. They were abbots of Malmesbury Abbey, Abingdon Abbey, and Eynsham Abbey.[15]
  5. 100 livres of silver went to the pope and a further 100 livres to the cardinals.[18]
  6. This compromise was eventually confirmed by Pope Innocent III in 1216.[20]
  7. The case of the properties went into abeyance for several years and was not finally decided until 1248.[15]
  8. The monks chose to deprive themselves of food so that their servants might be fed,[21] stating in the Chronicon that "without them [the servants] we cannot live".[22]

Citations

  1. Knowles Monastic Order pp. 319–322
  2. Sayers "Norreis, Roger" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  3. Knowles, et al. Heads of Religious Houses p. 48
  4. Knowles Monastic Order p. 332
  5. Quoted in Sayers "Norreis, Roger" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  6. Knowles, et al. Heads of Religious Houses p. 88
  7. Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology p. 36
  8. Gillingham Richard I pp. 110–111
  9. Turner and Heiser Reign of Richard Lionheart p. 94
  10. Knowles Monastic Order pp. 333–334
  11. Boureau "How Law Came to the Monks" Past & Present p. 43
  12. Boureau "How Law Came to the Monks" Past & Present p. 29
  13. Boureau "How Law Came to the Monks" Past & Present pp. 34–35
  14. Cox "Evesham Abbey" Journal of the British Archaeological Association p. 24
  15. Knowles Monastic Order pp. 335–342
  16. Boureau "How Law Came to the Monks" Past & Present pp. 45–46
  17. Boureau "How Law Came to the Monks" Past & Present pp. 53–54
  18. Boureau "How Law Came to the Monks" Past & Present p. 52
  19. Gransden "Separation of Portions" English Historical Review p. 389
  20. Gransden "Democratic Movement" Journal of Ecclesiastical History pp. 27–28
  21. Moorman Church Life in England p. 266
  22. Quoted in Moorman Church Life in England p. 266
  23. Moorman Church Life in England pp. 251–252
  24. Moorman Church Life in England p. 305 footnote 3
  25. Knowles, et al. Heads of Religious Houses p. 94
  26. Knowles, et al. Heads of Religious Houses p. 261
  27. Knowles Monastic Order p. 333
gollark: I think I have good reasons right here.
gollark: Too bad.
gollark: Can maybe, should no.
gollark: It was *posted publicly on github*.
gollark: I mean, worth personally, probably not.

References

  • Boureau, Alain (May 2000). "How Law Came to the Monks: The Use of Law in English Society at the Beginning of the Thirteenth Century". Past & Present. 167: 29–74. doi:10.1093/past/167.1.29. JSTOR 651253.
  • Cox, David (2012). "Evesham Abbey: The Romanesque Church". Journal of the British Archaeological Association. 163: 24–71. doi:10.1179/174767010x12747977921001.
  • Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I. (1996). Handbook of British Chronology (Third revised ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-56350-X.
  • Gillingham, John (1999). Richard I. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-07912-5.
  • Gransden, Antonia (January 1975). "A Democratic Movement in the Abbey of Bury St. Edmunds in the late Twelfth and early Thirteenth Centuries". The Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 26 (1): 25–39. doi:10.1017/S0022046900060292.
  • Gransden, Antonia (April 2004). "The Separation of Portions between Abbot and Convent at Bury St Edmunds: The Decisive Years, 1278–1281". The English Historical Review. 119 (481): 374–406. doi:10.1093/ehr/119.481.373. JSTOR 3490234.
  • Knowles, David (1976). The Monastic Order in England: A History of its Development from the Times of St. Dunstan to the Fourth Lateran Council, 940–1216 (Second reprint ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-05479-6.
  • Knowles, David; London, Vera C. M.; Brooke, Christopher (2001). The Heads of Religious Houses, England and Wales, 940–1216 (Second ed.). Cambridge. UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-80452-3.
  • Moorman, John R. H. (1955). Church Life in England in the Thirteenth Century (Revised ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. OCLC 213820968.
  • Sayers, Jane E. (2004). "Norreis, Roger (d. 1223)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/20283. Retrieved 31 March 2012. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  • Turner, Ralph V.; Heiser, Richard R. (2000). The Reign of Richard Lionheart: Ruler of the Angevin Empire 1189–1199. The Medieval World. Harlow, UK: Longman. ISBN 0-582-25660-7.
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Adam de Senlis
Abbot of Evesham
1190–1213
Succeeded by
Randulf

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