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A commentary on the records employed for the Clergy of the Church of
England Database 1540–1835 relating to the Diocese of Chichester
Diocese page | Bishops list | Sources list | Location list | Source essay | Jurisdiction list |
Introduction
The bulk of the surviving records relating to the diocesan administration of the
diocese
of Chichester are held in the West Sussex Record Office, Chichester.
Contact details:
Except where otherwise indicated, all the records discussed are held at the West
Sussex Record Office.
- 1540 to 1660 (Reformation to Restoration)
- 1660 to 1754 (from the Restoration to the commencement of the episcopate
of Sir William Ashburnham in 1754).
- 1754 to 1835 (from the appointment of Sir William Ashburnham as bishop to
the end of the period covered by the Database).
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1540 to 1660 (Reformation to Restoration)
In preparation.
In preparation.
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In preparation.
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In preparation.
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Records of the
dean and chapter
of Chichester cathedral
In preparation.
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1660-1754 (from the Restoration to the commencement of the episcopate of
Sir William Ashburnham in 1754).
In preparation.
In preparation.
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In preparation.
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In preparation.
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Visitation
records and other clerical lists
In preparation.
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Records of the
dean and chapter
of Chichester cathedral
In preparation.
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From 1754 to 1835 (from the appointment of Sir William Ashburnham as bishop
to the end of the period covered by the database).
The modern records of Chichester have an unusual configuration. There is no
episcopal register surviving after 1792. But it seems highly likely that, given the close
relationship between the surviving register and the subscription books from the diocese, that
the practice of maintaining the register simply lapsed, the subscription books thereafter
fulfilling the same role in the Diocesan Registry. It was not until after the end of the
Database period, under Bishop Ashurst Gilbert in the 1840s, that the use of printed forms for
subscriptions seems to have made the duplication seem less necessary and the register was
resumed.
Only one register survives this period,
WSRO, Ep.I/1/11, the register for Bishop Sir William
Ashburnham (1754 to 1798), containing events from 1753 to 13th January 1792. All the relevant
clerical events have been extracted. It contains both appointments to procure livings and to
cathedral offices. A few resignations are also included.
If as we believe, the register is constructed from the subscription books in this diocese,
it is striking to note that the dates of the subscriptions from the events recorded in the
register those also recorded in the subscription book of the same events. This is encouraging
for the use of the subscription books when no register survives. Sometimes the subscription
books appear to be called more detail of the event than the registered in the period to which
they overlap, example indicating not just a vacancy, but a promotion is the cause of a cleric
leaving a position.
In view of this, we have adopted a rather unusual entry strategy for this period of the
history of the diocese of Chichester. The research assistant entering data was asked to work
with both the register and relevant subscription books open at once, and, while treating the
register as the main source, to add any additional data omitted from the register found in the
subscription books.
The subscription books used for this process, were
WSRO, Ep.I/3/7, covering the years from Ashburnham's
appointment to 12 December 1772,
WSRO, Ep.I/3/8
(27 January 1773 to 3 February 1787), and
WSRO, Ep.I/3/9
(21 February 1787 to 15 December 1800). Once the period covered by the register came to an end
(on fo. 61 of
Ep.I/3/9), the researcher was asked to continue entering all
records relating to appointments found in the subscription book, which took them well into the
episcopate of John Buckner (1798–1824).
WSRO, Ep.I/3/10, covering 1 January 1801 to 17 December
1814, was then used to recover appointments, followed by WSRO,
Ep.I/3/11, covering events between 6 January 1815 and 20
February 1829, thus covering the first part of the episcopate of Robert James Carr (1824–31).
WSRO, Ep.I/3/12, in contrast to its predecessors, is a
subscription book confined solely to recording the subscriptions of incumbents, taking the
records down to the end of the period covered by the database, and thus covering the first
part of Edward Maltby's episcopate.
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In the period for which there is a register,
WSRO, Ep.I/1/11
has only a limited number of licensing records, thirty-seven in all, including perpetual
curacies, a single licence to preach and several schoolmasters. There are only a few
licensings of stipendiary curates, mostly lined as events to their ordination. All these have
been extracted.
The main subscription books from the same period do not offer a great deal more, but what
they do have is captured in the same way as described for the appointments above in relation
to
WSRO, Ep.I/3/7–9. From 1792 onwards,
Ep.I/3/9
provides another thirty-seven licensing events up to 15 December 1800. However,
WSRO, Ep.I/3/10
provides evidence for some 170 stipendiary curates and nine schoolmasters in the next fourteen
years, a much healthier figure if still not particularly reassuring, while
WSRO, Ep.I/3/11
sees the coverage drop once more, this recording only thirty-four licensing events between
1815 and 1829, with no collective licensings at ordinations recorded after 1820 and the
distinction between stipendiary and perpetual curates not being made very clear.
The explanation of this poor coverage is that the diocese maintained a separate series of
curates’ subscription books from 1815, which include subscriptions not only from stipendiary
curates, but perpetual curates, gaol chaplains, and schoolmasters. This archival sequence is
not repeated in any other diocese in the database. As a prequel,
WSRO, Ep.I/4/1, maintained by Daniel Hollingsbury as
commissary, covers the Lewis archdeaconry from 6 April 1799 to 1821, and contains nineteen
records; but
WSRO, Ep.I/4/2, covering the whole diocese (including the
dean’s peculiar) for the period January 1815 to November 1830, contains some 200 records,
while
WSRO, Ep.I/4/3, which runs from 15 June 1829 takes us up to
the end of the period covered by the database with a further 113 records. These subscription
books seem to stand in for the more normal sequence of bound copies of curates licenses found
in most dioceses from about 1813 onwards. However, from 1833 such a bound volume does exist,
WSRO, Ep.I/68/6, and has been entered up until the 31
December 1835.
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Clergy lists
No clergy lists for the whole diocese have been entered from this period.
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As in the case of appointments, the most striking feature here is the absence of
registers for most of the period.
WSRO, Ep.I/1/11
contains records of ordinations of varying levels of detail; educational details, for example,
hvae not always been recorded. As with appointments, the researcher was asked to keep the
contemporary subscription books (WSRO, Ep.I/3/7–9)
open while entering these details and to add in any additional material that they contained.
Once the register petered out,
Ep.I/3/9
became the main source, containing better records with regard to education than the register.
WSRO, Ep.I/3/10–11
continued the story down to 1829. Thereafter the diocese maintained separate ordination
subscription books. Only the first of these was required for the period of the database:
WSRO, Ep.I/4a/1
covering 8 February 1829 to December 1862, beyond the end of Database period.
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Records of peculiar jurisdictions
Some of the records already discussed cover the dean of Chichester’s peculiar –
the curates’ subscription books (Ep.I/4/2–3),
for example.
WSRO, Ep.III/1/2/1–9
are subscriptions for presentations in the period 1746–1833, and there are two letters of
institution in
WSRO, Ep.III/14/2. More will no doubt be recovered from the
Chapter archives. For South Malling, the names of clergy recorded in the deanery’s
liber cleri
were entered at five-yearly intervals from
WSRO, Ep.V/8/7–8. Records for the other peculiars under the
jurisdiction of the archbishop of Canterbury will be uploaded with the modern Canterbury
material.
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Records of the Dean and Chapter of Chichester
The records of the dean and chapter have not yet been surveyed for the Clergy
Database.
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