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This large and important register of the diocese of Lincoln
includes institutions and promotions of heads of religious houses
for the archdeaconries of Stow, Bedford, Leicester, Huntingdon,
Buckingham and Oxford. Calendared in English with full transcripts
and English summaries of unusual entries.
This is the sixth of eight volumes containing the record of the
institutions performed in the archdeaconry of Lincoln by Oliver
Sutton, bishop of Lincoln from 1280 to 1299. As a scholar he
appears to have been competent rather than distinguished; but he
was a thoroughly good man, a trained canonist who was determined to
uphold the law, and an administrator at once efficient and humane.
For nearly twenty years he devoted himself almost completely to his
diocese, ruling it with unending patience and a determined sense of
justice. Among other fascinating details, his register describes
incidents in the course of which clerks were maltreated and
sometimes killed, rights of sanctuary violated and churches
desecrated by bloodshed.
This is the sixth of eight volumes containing the record of the
institutions performed in the archdeaconry of Lincoln by Oliver
Sutton, bishop of Lincoln from 1280 to 1299. As a scholar he
appears to have been competent rather than distinguished; but he
was a thoroughly good man, a trained canonist who was determined to
uphold the law, and an administrator at once efficient and humane.
For nearly twenty years he devoted himself almost completely to his
diocese, ruling it with unending patience and a determined sense of
justice. Among other fascinating details, his register describes
incidents in the course of which clerks were maltreated and
sometimes killed, rights of sanctuary violated and churches
desecrated by bloodshed.
This is the sixth of eight volumes containing the record of the
institutions performed in the archdeaconry of Lincoln by Oliver
Sutton, bishop of Lincoln from 1280 to 1299. As a scholar he
appears to have been competent rather than distinguished; but he
was a thoroughly good man, a trained canonist who was determined to
uphold the law, and an administrator at once efficient and humane.
For nearly twenty years he devoted himself almost completely to his
diocese, ruling it with unending patience and a determined sense of
justice. Among other fascinating details, his register describes
incidents in the course of which clerks were maltreated and
sometimes killed, rights of sanctuary violated and churches
desecrated by bloodshed.
Bishop Sutton's ordination-lists, in common with the rest of his
register, were kept on rolls for the first ten years of his
episcopate. None of these rolls has survived, and the records
therefore begin with the Whitsun ordinations of the eleventh year
of Sutton's episcopate (which ran from May 19, 1290, to May 18,
1291) and continue until his death on November 13, 1299.
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