Accounts of the Fraternity of St John

HRO: W/H1/204

mb 4 (9 February 1392/3–7 February 1393/4) (Necessary expenses)

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...In expensis dictorum custodum & iij ministrallorum in festis corporis Christi & Natiuitatis sancti Iohannis Baptiste vj s. In donis dictis ministrallis pro labore eorum in dictis festis .xl. d. In expensis alterius custodis equitantandis versus Romesey pro dictis ministrallis querendo .vj. d....

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  • Record Translation

    mb 4 (9 February 1392/3–7 February 1393/4) (Necessary expenses)

    ...In expenses for the said wardens and three minstrels on the feasts of Corpus Christi and the Nativity of St John the Baptist, 6s. In gifts to the said minstrels for their labour on the said feast, 40d. In expenses to the other wardens riding to Romsey to seek the said minstrels, 6d....

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  • Document Description

    Record title: Accounts of the Fraternity of St John
    Repository: HRO
    Shelfmark: W/H1/204
    Repository location: Winchester

    The fraternity of St John the Baptist was an organization which began as a guild of tailors but developed into an organization including the entire ruling elite of the city, its membership probably identical to the merchant guild's. The fraternity's activities focused on contributing to the care of the poor and sick of St John's Hospital and on celebrations of Corpus Christi and the Nativity of St John the Baptist. The office of warden of the fraternity was considered an important civic office and the warden was appointed by the mayor. The burghmote, the assembly of freemen, met three times a year in the hall of St John's Hospital, rather than in the guildhall, and in the fifteenth century the city's deeds and other records were kept in a chest there (Keene and Rumble, Survey of Medieval Winchester, vol 2, pts 2–3, pp 816–19).

    1390–1416; Latin; parchment; 10 membranes, attached at the top; 365–693mm x 196–270mm; numbered in a later hand; paper wrapper with title: 'Account Rolls of the Fraternity of St John the Baptist,' and list of the regnal years covered: 13–14, 15–16, 16–17, 17–18, 18–19, 21–2 Richard II, 3–4, 4–5, 12–13 Henry IV, 2–3 Henry V.

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