December 1238 A.D. Cambridge Blackfriars,
Cambridge, Cambridgeshire—Dominian Friars; Founded c. 1238; Dissolved 1538; Granted to Edward Erlington & Humphrey
Metcalf, 1543; Emmanuel College, Cambridge
Built on Site, 1584
No author. “Medieval Priory.” Dominican
Priory of St. Michael the Archangel. N.d. http://www.blackfriarscambridge.org.uk/medieval-priory/. Accessed 12 Nov 2014.
The
Dominican friars opened some eighteen houses in major English towns during the
first twenty years after the arrival in England in 1221. The priory in
Cambridge, dedicated to the Holy Trinity, was founded either in or shortly
before 1238. In that year the King, Henry III, gave oak trees to help with its
construction.
The site
(now occupied by Emmanuel College), was out beyond the Barnwell gate, away
from what was then the town centre. The success of the early preaching mission
may be gauged by the friars’ piecemeal acquisition over the next few decades of
surrounding properties to create a site covering some ten acres. By 1296,
through the generous benefaction of Alice de Sanford, the Countess of Oxford,
the friars were able to enlarge greatly their original buildings.
Cambridge
was already a growing university centre of study and learning. A group of
scholars had moved to the town from Oxford in 1209, and in the early 1230s they
had found recognition both from the pope and the king. The latter had required
Cambridge students to be registered with recognised Masters, and in 1233 Pope
Gregory IX granted the Chancellor and his scholars the right not to be sued
outside the diocese of Ely.
Every
Dominican priory contained a ‘school’ where there were daily lectures on the
Bible for the friars, other interested clerics and lay people, but the
Cambridge Priory would interact with the nascent university to become a more
advanced theological school. By 1260, several friars were acknowledged lectors
in the university’s Theology Faculty. In perhaps 1314 the Cambridge Priory was
made into a ‘studium generale’ for the Order, one welcoming the brightest
student friars from different countries. It long continued in this role until
the house was dissolved by King Henry VIII in 1538.
The most
famous medieval Dominican to teach in Cambridge was probably Robert Holcot.
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