
The Accounts of the Guild of the Holy Trinity, Luton
1526/7-1546/7
Barbara Tearle(Editor)
Bedfordshire Historical Record Society (Publisher)
Published on 16. August 2012
Book
Hardback
380 pages
978-0-85155-078-7 (ISBN)
Description
Religious guilds or fraternities proliferated throughout England until their dissolution in the late 1540s, yet remarkably few of their records have survived.
Religious guilds or fraternities proliferated throughout England until their dissolution in the late 1540s, yet remarkably few of their records have survived. Amongst the survivals are the last twenty-one years of the accounts of the Luton Guild of the Holy Trinity, hitherto unpublished in full.
The accounts record several hundred transactions each year, including rents for the guild's properties, and expenditure on wages to priests and clerks and dirges sung for deceased members of the guild. Purchases of food, the cost of hiring cooks, kitchen helpers and utensils and expenditure on entertainment show what extraordinarily lavish provision was made for the annual feast. The quantity of building materials which was purchased for the guild`s properties suggests not only repairs but also modernisation and may be sufficient to attempt to reconstruct some of the houses.
The majority of `brothers and systers` of the guild were drawn from a radius of about twenty-five miles of Luton and included the towns and villages in neighbouring Hertfordshire and Buckinghamshire. A small, but noticeable, group were from London, Canterbury, Boston and Kendal. The guild was prosperous, well-connected and active, and its accounts provide an insight into daily life in mid-sixteenth-century south Bedfordshire and the surrounding area.
The book contains a complete transcription of the accounts and an introduction presenting an overview of the guild`s activities. It is fully indexed.
Religious guilds or fraternities proliferated throughout England until their dissolution in the late 1540s, yet remarkably few of their records have survived. Amongst the survivals are the last twenty-one years of the accounts of the Luton Guild of the Holy Trinity, hitherto unpublished in full.
The accounts record several hundred transactions each year, including rents for the guild's properties, and expenditure on wages to priests and clerks and dirges sung for deceased members of the guild. Purchases of food, the cost of hiring cooks, kitchen helpers and utensils and expenditure on entertainment show what extraordinarily lavish provision was made for the annual feast. The quantity of building materials which was purchased for the guild`s properties suggests not only repairs but also modernisation and may be sufficient to attempt to reconstruct some of the houses.
The majority of `brothers and systers` of the guild were drawn from a radius of about twenty-five miles of Luton and included the towns and villages in neighbouring Hertfordshire and Buckinghamshire. A small, but noticeable, group were from London, Canterbury, Boston and Kendal. The guild was prosperous, well-connected and active, and its accounts provide an insight into daily life in mid-sixteenth-century south Bedfordshire and the surrounding area.
The book contains a complete transcription of the accounts and an introduction presenting an overview of the guild`s activities. It is fully indexed.
Reviews / Votes
The Bedfordshire Historical Record Society and Barbara Tearle are to be congratulated for making widely available these fascinating accounts, which have been meticulously edited and well indexed. THE RICARDIANMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Woodbridge
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Product notice
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
9 colour, 2 line illus.
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Weight
1 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-85155-078-7 (9780851550787)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
08/2012
1st Edition
De Gruyter
€48.99
Available for download
Person
BARBARA TEARLE is a long-standing member of Bedfordshire Historical Record Society, previously its General Editor and the editor of the 2012 volume The Accounts of the Luton Guild of the Holy Trinity, 1526/7-1546/7. She is a retired librarian, most recently working in the Bodleian Law Library, Oxford.
Content
Introduction
Editorial method
Accounts from Michaelmas 1526 to Michaelmas 1527
Accounts from Michaelmas 1527 to Michaelmas 1528
Accounts from Michaelmas 1528 to Michaelmas 1529
Accounts from Michaelmas 1529 to Michaelmas 1530
Accounts from Michaelmas 1530 to Michaelmas 1531
Accounts from Michaelmas 1531 to Michaelmas 1532
Accounts from Michaelmas 1532 to Michaelmas 1533
Accounts from Michaelmas 1533 to Michaelmas 1534
Accounts from Michaelmas 1534 to Michaelmas 1535
Accounts from Michaelmas 1535 to Michaelmas 1536
Accounts from Michaelmas 1536 to Michaelmas 1537
Accounts from Michaelmas 1537 to Michaelmas 1538
Accounts from Michaelmas 1538 to Michaelmas 1539
Accounts from Michaelmas 1539 to Michaelmas 1540
Accounts from Michaelmas 1540 to Michaelmas 1541
Accounts from Michaelmas 1541 to Michaelmas 1542
Accounts from Michaelmas 1542 to Michaelmas 1543
Accounts from Michaelmas 1543 to Michaelmas 1544
Accounts from Michaelmas 1544 to Michaelmas 1545
Accounts from Michaelmas 1545 to Michaelmas 1547
Glossary of words and places
Bibliography
Editorial method
Accounts from Michaelmas 1526 to Michaelmas 1527
Accounts from Michaelmas 1527 to Michaelmas 1528
Accounts from Michaelmas 1528 to Michaelmas 1529
Accounts from Michaelmas 1529 to Michaelmas 1530
Accounts from Michaelmas 1530 to Michaelmas 1531
Accounts from Michaelmas 1531 to Michaelmas 1532
Accounts from Michaelmas 1532 to Michaelmas 1533
Accounts from Michaelmas 1533 to Michaelmas 1534
Accounts from Michaelmas 1534 to Michaelmas 1535
Accounts from Michaelmas 1535 to Michaelmas 1536
Accounts from Michaelmas 1536 to Michaelmas 1537
Accounts from Michaelmas 1537 to Michaelmas 1538
Accounts from Michaelmas 1538 to Michaelmas 1539
Accounts from Michaelmas 1539 to Michaelmas 1540
Accounts from Michaelmas 1540 to Michaelmas 1541
Accounts from Michaelmas 1541 to Michaelmas 1542
Accounts from Michaelmas 1542 to Michaelmas 1543
Accounts from Michaelmas 1543 to Michaelmas 1544
Accounts from Michaelmas 1544 to Michaelmas 1545
Accounts from Michaelmas 1545 to Michaelmas 1547
Glossary of words and places
Bibliography