Excerpts from the Visitation
Register of Eudes (in Latin, Odo) Rigaud, Archishop of Rouen, 1248-69
Note:
Eudes was born around 1200-10, and was consecrated Archbishop of Rouen
in March, 1248. He conducted numerous inspections, called
"visitations," of the religious houses and parish clergy in his
archdiocese in
Normandy. At a visitation, the archbishop examined the assembled
religious community openly, and also, when necessary, met
privately with individuals. At the end of a visitation the
archbishop gave orders, as needed, for correcting problems and
punishing individuals.
Source: Sydney M. Brown,
trans., The Register of
Eudes of Rouen, ed. Jeremiah F. O'Sullivan (New York and
London: Columbia University Press, 1964), pp. 2, 4, 12, 13, 16, 18, 19.
[Page 2]
[18 July 1248. At Montivilliers, a wealthy abbey of
Benedictine
nuns.] We visited the monastery and found everything in it to
be
in good condition.
[20 July 1248. At Jumièges, an abbey of Benedictine
monks.] We arrived at Jumièges and made a visitation
there. We found that Brother William of Beaunay and Brother
William of Bourg-Achard were ill-famed of the worst vice [sodomy];
we decreed that they be sent to other monasteries, there to expiate
their offenses. Likewise, we found that the subprior was a
disturbing element among the brothers; we decreed that he should be
removed altogether from the office of subprior.
[Page 4]
[31 July 1248. At Envermeu, a Benedictine priory dependent on
Bec.] At Envermeu. We visited the priory and found that
they have an income of four hundred pounds and more. They are
burdened with a debt of three hundred pounds. The prior keeps no
accounts of the condition of the house; we ordered him to cast [reckon
up] his accounts at least four times a year. Sometimes they
eat meat when it is not necessary; we ordered them to abstain from
eating meat.
[Page 12]
[13 September 1248. At Beaulieu, a priory of Augustinian
canons.] At Beaulieu. They have an income of four
hundred fifty pounds; they owe one hundred eighty pounds.
Everything is in good condition.
[Page 13]
[22 September 1248. At Ouville, a priory of Augustinian
canons.] We were at Ouville again. We found that the
prior wanders about when he ought to stay in the cloister, nor, indeed,
does he remain in the cloister one day in five; he does not follow the
rule of the monastery; he is a drunkard and of such shameful
drunkenness that, because of his inebriety, he sometimes lies out in
the fields; he attends festivities, drinking bouts, and banquets given
by lay folk; he is [sexually] incontinent, and his
relations with a certain woman in Grainville and with the lady of
Routot are subjects of scandal; there is also a certain Agnes in
Rouen. Item, Brother Geoffrey is ill famed of [i.e., is
notorious for his relations with] the wife of Walter of Ecaquelon,
who bore him a son. Item, the sources of income are not well
written down; we ordered that they should be better kept. Item,
we found that the prior, despite our predecessor's prohibition that he
should not undertake the execution of anyone's will, has undertaken
that of Dreux.
. . . Item, William, priest of Cailleville, was
convicted of drunkenness, and he confessed and swore in our presence
that if anything more be heard about him on this infamy, and if it be
worthy of belief, he will regard his parish as resigned from then
on. Item, the priest of St-Vaast-de-Dieppedale was convicted and
confessed that he was guilty of playing ball in public, in which game
one of the players was injured, and he swore to us that if he should be
convicted of this again he would regard his parish as resigned from
that time on. Item, the priest at Ermenouville was convicted of [sexual]
incontinence, and he confessed and swore to us that if any more of this
infamy be heard, and if it be worthy of credence, he would regard his
church as resigned.
[Page 16]
[13 October 1248.] [W]e visited the priory of
St-Martin [-Ouen?]-de-Gisors. We found that the monks, as of
custom, ate meat, were not accustomed to observe the rules of
fasting, wore unauthorized pelisses in violation of the Rule, and
slept on feather beds. We ordered them to keep the fasts, to put
away their unauthorized pelisses and feather beds, and to refrain from
eating meat. Only two monks were in residence. They have an
income of forty pounds of Paris; they owed nothing.
[Pages 18-19]
[4 January 1249. At the Benedictine abbey of
St-Armand-de-Rouen.] We visited the monastery of
St-Armand-de-Rouen, whre we found forty-one veiled nuns and six due to
take the veil. They make profession only when they receive the
archbishop's blessing. We ordered that when they had reached the
age for taking the vows, they should wait yet another year before
making profession. Sometimes they sing the Hours of the Blessed
Mary and the Suffrages [anthems and prayers to the saints, said
after Lauds and Vespers] with too much haste and jumbling of the
words; we enjoined them to sing these in such a way that those
beginning a verse should wait to hear the end of the preceding verse,
and those ending a verse should hear the commencement of the following
verse. . . There are three priests in perpetual residence. They [i.e.,
the nuns] confess five times a year. They do not keep the
rule of silence very well; we enjoined them to correct this. They
eat meat freely in the infirmary, to wit, three times a week. Sometimes
the healthy ones eat with the sick in the infirmary, two or three with
one sick sister. They have chemises [linen underwear,
forbidden by the Rule], use feather beds and sheets, and wear
cloaks of rabbits, hares, [civet] cats, and foxes; we utterly
forbade the use of rabbit skins. The nuns sleep cinctured and in
their chemises. [The Benedictine Rule required monks and nuns
to wear their cinctures (belts) at all times, and to sleep in their
habits.] Each nun receives a measure of wine, but more is
given to one than to another; we ordered that wine should be given to
each according to her needs and in equal measure, and if one of them
should without permission give a portion of her wine to another outside
the house she should be compelled by the abbess to go without wine the
next day. The monastery has debts amounting to two hundred pounds
and an income of one thousand pounds. The abbess does not give
detailed accounts to the community at large; we ordered her to cast her
accounts each quarter.