John, Abbot of Vale Royal

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John was Abbot of Vale Royal Abbey, Cheshire, between 1405 and 1411, [1] and although his abbacy seems to have been largely free of the local disorder that had plagued those of his predecessors, the Abbey appears to have been taken in to King Henry IV's hands on at least two occasions (in 1405 and 1408). [2] [note 1]

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Notes

  1. Almost nothing is known of Vale Royal Abbey or the activities of its Abbots for the first decade or so of the fifteenth century. Most of the major texts (for example, the Victoria County History, George Ormerod's The History of the County Palatine of Cheshire, Edward Baines' The History of the County Palatine of Lancashire, and even the Abbey's own Ledger book chronicle) skip from around the end of Stephen's abbacy to that of Henry Arrowsmith or Thomas Kirkham. [2] [3] [4] [5]

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A man of most beautiful appearance, as regards externals...and in good works also he fought a good fight for Christ, for he used a hair shirt to conquer the flesh, and by this discipline subdued it to the spirit. He rarely or never ate meat.

John of Hoo was an early fourteenth-century Abbot of Vale Royal Abbey, Cheshire. His abbacy was from around 1308–09 to 1314–15.

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Vale Royal Abbey is a medieval abbey, and later a country house, located in Whitegate, between Northwich and Winsford in Cheshire, England. During its 278-year period of operation, it had at least 21 abbots.

References

  1. Knowles & Smith 2008, p. 341.
  2. 1 2 V. C. H. 1980, pp. 156–65.
  3. Ormerod 1819, p. 72.
  4. Baines 1836, pp. 378–79.
  5. Brownbill 1914, pp. 20–23.

Bibliography