Event detail for site: Carmarthen1391: Burial rightsThe friary's popularity as a burial spot - and the donations and bequest that followed - brought it into conflict with the Augustinian Canons of the town whose prior controlled the old town. In 1391 John Tyssyngton, minister of the Franciscan Order, helped to resolve the dispute. Bibliographical sourcesPrinted sourcesEasterling, R.C., 'The Friars in Wales', Archaeologia Cambrensis, 6th series, 14 (1914) p. 334 Manning, A., 'Carmarthen Greyfriars: Carmarthen. The 1997 rescue excavations and watching brief on the site of the choir and area north of the friary. Unpublished report' (Unpublished Cambrian Archaeology Report: Llandeilo, 1998) p. 12 Williams, Howard, 'Remembering and forgetting the medieval dead: exploring death, memory and material culture in medieval archaeology', in Archaeologies of Remembrance: Death and Memory in Past Societies, ed. Howard Williams (New York, 2003) p. 244 Other events in the history of this sitepre 1282: Foundation - The actual date of the foundation is not known; nor is the identity of the founder. However the friary had been established by 1282 when William Valence was buried there. William had been murdered in an ambush by the Welsh near Llandeilo. [2 sources]
1284: Rights - Edward I visited Carmarthen in 1284 and conceded that the monks might have certain rights over a watercourse that fed the castle moats and a royal mill. [1 sources] 1340: Sanctuary - Three felons on the run claimed sanctuary in the friary which lay outside the town walls and was thus outside the jurisdiction of ‘New Carmarthen’. [1 sources] 1391: Burial rights - The friary's popularity as a burial spot - and the donations and bequest that followed - brought it into conflict with the Augustinian Canons of the town whose prior controlled the old town. [3 sources] 1394: Acquisition of land - The friars purchase land just north of the friary, perhaps to use as a graveyard given the popularity of the house as a burial site. [1 sources] 1411: A hostage - The friars evidently held against his will an eleven-year old boy, Henry, whose father, John Witberi, had seemingly handed him over to the friars of Essex, to exclude him from his inheritance. [2 sources] 1456: Burial - Edmund Tudor, father of Henry VII and founder of the Tudor dynasty was buried in the friary. [3 sources] 1525: Burial - Sir Rhys ap Thomas was a benefactor of a number of religious houses in Wales and was buried in the Franciscan friary in Carmarthen. [4 sources] c.1526: Burial - The Welsh bard, Tudor Aled, was buried at the friary. [1 sources] 1536: Proposed closure - Bishop Barlow of St David's proposed transferring his cathedral to the Franciscan friary in Carmarthen, to hurry along the reformation. [2 sources] 1538: Dissolution - The friary was surrendered in 1538. There were seemingly fourteen friars at that time. [1 sources] |
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