‘All the kings of the earth shall praise you, O Lord’ (Psalm 138: 4) … a depiction of King Charles I in Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Edinburgh (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Patrick Comerford
In the Calendar of the Church, we are in Ordinary Time, and today is a lesser festival recalling Saint Benedict of Nursia, Abbot of Monte Cassino and the Father of Western monasticism (11 July 2022). Later this morning, I hope to attend the Parish Eucharist in the Church of Saint Mary and Saint Giles in Stony Stratford. Before today begins, I am taking some time this morning to continue my reflections drawing on the Psalms.
In my blog, I am reflecting each morning in this Prayer Diary in these ways:
1, Short reflections on a psalm or psalms;
2, reading the psalm or psalms;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary.
Psalm 138:
Psalm 138 is the first psalm in the final Davidic collection of psalms, Psalm 138 to Psalm 145, which are specifically attributed to David in their opening verses. However, some commentators say Psalm 138 was written as an expression of thankfulness after the return from exile in Babylon.
In the slightly different numbering system in the Greek Septuagint and the Latin Vulgate, this is Psalm 137. Its name in Latin is Confitebor tibi Domine in toto corde meo.
Psalm 138 thanks God for his steadfast, enduring love and for his care for his faithful followers. When he calls upon God, God not only answers him but gives him a new calling or makes him more confident spiritually: ‘you increased my strength of soul’ (verse 3).
The psalmist then sings a hymn of praise. All the rulers of the earth shall praise God, who cares for the lowly but distances himself from the proud and haughty.
The psalmist’s faith in God is strengthened, and he grows in his trust in God, knowing God’s love endures for ever.
‘Though I walk in the midst of trouble, you preserve me against the wrath of my enemies’ (Psalm 138: 7) … a gargoyle at Lichfield Cathedral (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)
Psalm 138 (NRSVA):
Of David.
1 I give you thanks, O Lord, with my whole heart;
before the gods I sing your praise;
2 I bow down towards your holy temple
and give thanks to your name for your steadfast love and your faithfulness;
for you have exalted your name and your word
above everything.
3 On the day I called, you answered me,
you increased my strength of soul.
4 All the kings of the earth shall praise you, O Lord,
for they have heard the words of your mouth.
5 They shall sing of the ways of the Lord,
for great is the glory of the Lord.
6 For though the Lord is high, he regards the lowly;
but the haughty he perceives from far away.
7 Though I walk in the midst of trouble,
you preserve me against the wrath of my enemies;
you stretch out your hand,
and your right hand delivers me.
8 The Lord will fulfil his purpose for me;
your steadfast love, O Lord, endures for ever.
Do not forsake the work of your hands.
Today’s Prayer:
The theme in the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel) this week is ‘Partners in Mission.’ It was introduced yesterday.
Monday 11 July 2022 (World Population Day):
The USPG Prayer Diary invites us to pray today in these words:
We pray for everyone living today, in the knowledge that we are all made in God’s image..
Yesterday’s reflection
Continued tomorrow
Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible: Anglicised Edition copyright © 1989, 1995, National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide. http://nrsvbibles.org
11 July 2022
Finding a Comberford
property in a lost parish
in Cheapside, London
Pancras Lane and the site of Saint Pancras Soper Lane (Photograph: Bashereyre, CCL/Wikipedia)
Patrick Comerford
Two of us have been to London five or six times in recent weeks, but I still have to visit the site of Saint Pancras Church, Soper Lane, a church in Cheapside that was destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666 and never rebuilt.
This long-lost Saint Pancras should not be confused with either Old Saint Pancras or New Saint Pancras, two churches I have visited and written about in recent weeks.
This Saint Pancras Church and Soper Lane are of interest to me because in the early 16th century Thomas Comberford briefly owned part of the Lee Estate, associated with both a former Lord Mayor of London and with the Church of Saint Stephen Walbrook, which two of us visited earlier this summer.
Saint Pancras, Soper Lane, was a parish church in the Ward of Cheap. The church was of mediaeval origin, and was first built in the 12th century. The church was a small building, with a tower containing five bells, and there was a chapel on the north side.
The patronage of the church belonged to the prior and chapter of Christ Church, Canterbury, until 1365, when they granted it to the Archbishop of Canterbury. The vicarage stood on the corner of Pancras Lane and Queen Street.
For a brief time in the 1510s and 1520s, Thomas Comberford owned a number of properties in Saint Pancras Parish. In recent weeks I have been trying to identify both this Thomas Comberford and the properties he seems to have owned for a brief time in this part of London.
Thomas Comberford seems to have succeeded to these properties following the death of Thomas Fyscher or Fisher. Comberford’s property in the area had passed through a number of families from the Middle Ages on.
Eventually, these properties passed to Sir Richard Lee or Leigh, who was twice Lord Mayor of London, in 1460 and 1469. Lee died on 4 March 1472, and was buried at Saint Stephen Walbrook.
His widow Lettice Lee, who made her will in 1477 – although it was not proved until 1489 – described herself as a citizen and freewoman (libera femina) of London, when she left the tenements in Soper Lane and Popkirtle Lane in Saint Pancras parish, and other properties, to the rector and churchwardens of Saint Stephen Walbrook, to find a chaplain to say Mass for the souls of herself and her husband, parents, and children, with a stipend of £7 a year.
Some of the rents, charges, and repairs of Lee’s estate in Saint Pancras parish survive in the parish records of Saint Stephen Walbrook from 1504 to 1548. In 1504 Thomas Fyssher, mercer, held the property at £9 rent, which he paid to successive churchwardens, by varying amounts, until 1511. Part of that rent was paid for Sir Richard Lee’s Mass requests, including £7 a year paid to their chantry priest. Some of the rentals were also used to pay for repairs to the properties.
Saint Stephen Walbrook received some of the rents from the properties owned by Thomas Comberford … Soper Lane was west of Walbrook (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)
Fysher appears to have been paying the £9 rent for a number of shops and houses together, and in 1512 or 1513 asked for allowance for several that were empty. He said that one shop had been empty for 10 years and another had been empty for five years, and he blamed this on the failure of the parish to repair the properties.
He also claimed that he had surrendered his lease, with five years remaining, on the churchwardens’ promise to repair the tenements, but they had spent only £7 in repairs. Fysher may have stopped paying his rent, and in 1513 the parish calculated that he owed £34 in arrears, but reduced this to £20, to be paid at £2 yearly, on his promise to pay the rent also.
The records are too scanty to say whether the parish undertook repairs at this period or not. But this seems to be the property that passed to Thomas Comberford within a short time.
Thomas Comberford paid £6. 15s. for three quarters’ rent in 1518-1519 and £9 for the whole year in 1519-1520. Repairs totalling over £10 were carried out in 1520 in ‘Master Lee’s lands’ in Saint Pancras parish. These included tiling, and paving the kitchen in Thomas Comberford’s house, repairs to a great oven and hearth in the tallow-chandler’s house, for which Comberford seems to have paid and been reimbursed, and making a lead gutter in the house of another of Comberford’s tenants, and a pipe in Sawnder Brown’s house.
The requiem Masses continued to be said and the chantry charges continued to be paid, and Thomas Culpeper, overseer of Thomas Fisher’s goods, paid £2 for Fisher’s debt.
Thomas Comberford disappears from the records of the parish soon after. He seems to be the same person as Thomas Comberford (1472-1532) of Comberford, a member of the Guild of Saint Mary and Saint John the Baptist, Lichfield, and a progressive farmer who, between 1511 and 1513, enclosed much of the land in the common fields around Comberford. In 1514, he secured full rights over the manor of Wigginton and lands in Wigginton, Hopwas, Coton, Comberford and Tamworth. He also acquired the manor of Watford, north of Daventry in Northamptonshire.
In 1519-1520, he served as Escheator of Staffordshire, the lawyer responsible for property lapsing to the crown or the lord of a manor when the owner died without heirs.
When Thomas Comberford died on 6 January 1532, his estates included the Manor of Wigginton with lands in Wigginton, Hopwas, Coton, Comberford and Tamworth; the Manor of Comberford; the right to hold a fair in Tamworth twice a year; the rights of fishery for a 2½-mile stretch along the River Tame from Lady Bridge, marking the boundary between the Staffordshire and Warwickshire parts of Tamworth, to Hopwas Bridge, and the right to keep six swans in the river.
Thomas Comberford’s wife Dorothea Fitzherbert was a sister of the Revd Dr Thomas Fitzherbert, Precentor of Lichfield Cathedral, and the Revd Canon William Fitzherbert, Chancellor of Lichfield Cathedral, while her younger sister Alice was Abbess of Polesworth Abbey, near Tamworth.
The Parish of Saint Pancras in Cheapside was small but had some wealthy residents, and the church received various benefactions. The church was presented with a monument commemorating Elizabeth I by Thomas Chapman in 1617. The renovation of the building in 1621 was financed by a group of benefactors, including Chapman, and a porch was added in 1624, paid for by Chapman’s son.
Along with the majority of churches in the City, the Church of Saint Pancras, Soper Lane, was destroyed in the Great Fire of London in September 1666 and was not rebuilt. he site is now a small open space marked with a blue plaque in what is now named Pancras Lane. The parsonage house on the corner of Pancras Lane and Queen Street was leased out for 40 years at an annual rent of £2, in 1670. Soper Lane was rebuilt after the Great Fire, and was renamed Queen Street in honour of Catherine of Braganza, wife of Charles II.
The parish was united with those of Saint Mary-le-Bow and All Hallows, Honey Lane. The rebuilt Saint Mary-le-Bow served as the church for the united parishes, and the site of Saint Pancras was retained as a graveyard.
Today, the parish forms part of the United Parishes of Saint Mary-le-Bow with Saint Pancras Soper Lane, All Hallows Honey Lane, All Hallows Bread Street, Saint Augustine with Saint Faith under Saint Paul’s, Saint John-the-Evangelist Watling Street and Saint Mildred Bread Street with Saint Margaret Moyses.
One of the churchwardens of this combined parish is the warden for Saint Pancras Soper Lane.
Saint Mary-le-Bow … the parish now incorporates the former Saint Pancras, Soper Lane (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
Patrick Comerford
Two of us have been to London five or six times in recent weeks, but I still have to visit the site of Saint Pancras Church, Soper Lane, a church in Cheapside that was destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666 and never rebuilt.
This long-lost Saint Pancras should not be confused with either Old Saint Pancras or New Saint Pancras, two churches I have visited and written about in recent weeks.
This Saint Pancras Church and Soper Lane are of interest to me because in the early 16th century Thomas Comberford briefly owned part of the Lee Estate, associated with both a former Lord Mayor of London and with the Church of Saint Stephen Walbrook, which two of us visited earlier this summer.
Saint Pancras, Soper Lane, was a parish church in the Ward of Cheap. The church was of mediaeval origin, and was first built in the 12th century. The church was a small building, with a tower containing five bells, and there was a chapel on the north side.
The patronage of the church belonged to the prior and chapter of Christ Church, Canterbury, until 1365, when they granted it to the Archbishop of Canterbury. The vicarage stood on the corner of Pancras Lane and Queen Street.
For a brief time in the 1510s and 1520s, Thomas Comberford owned a number of properties in Saint Pancras Parish. In recent weeks I have been trying to identify both this Thomas Comberford and the properties he seems to have owned for a brief time in this part of London.
Thomas Comberford seems to have succeeded to these properties following the death of Thomas Fyscher or Fisher. Comberford’s property in the area had passed through a number of families from the Middle Ages on.
Eventually, these properties passed to Sir Richard Lee or Leigh, who was twice Lord Mayor of London, in 1460 and 1469. Lee died on 4 March 1472, and was buried at Saint Stephen Walbrook.
His widow Lettice Lee, who made her will in 1477 – although it was not proved until 1489 – described herself as a citizen and freewoman (libera femina) of London, when she left the tenements in Soper Lane and Popkirtle Lane in Saint Pancras parish, and other properties, to the rector and churchwardens of Saint Stephen Walbrook, to find a chaplain to say Mass for the souls of herself and her husband, parents, and children, with a stipend of £7 a year.
Some of the rents, charges, and repairs of Lee’s estate in Saint Pancras parish survive in the parish records of Saint Stephen Walbrook from 1504 to 1548. In 1504 Thomas Fyssher, mercer, held the property at £9 rent, which he paid to successive churchwardens, by varying amounts, until 1511. Part of that rent was paid for Sir Richard Lee’s Mass requests, including £7 a year paid to their chantry priest. Some of the rentals were also used to pay for repairs to the properties.
Saint Stephen Walbrook received some of the rents from the properties owned by Thomas Comberford … Soper Lane was west of Walbrook (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)
Fysher appears to have been paying the £9 rent for a number of shops and houses together, and in 1512 or 1513 asked for allowance for several that were empty. He said that one shop had been empty for 10 years and another had been empty for five years, and he blamed this on the failure of the parish to repair the properties.
He also claimed that he had surrendered his lease, with five years remaining, on the churchwardens’ promise to repair the tenements, but they had spent only £7 in repairs. Fysher may have stopped paying his rent, and in 1513 the parish calculated that he owed £34 in arrears, but reduced this to £20, to be paid at £2 yearly, on his promise to pay the rent also.
The records are too scanty to say whether the parish undertook repairs at this period or not. But this seems to be the property that passed to Thomas Comberford within a short time.
Thomas Comberford paid £6. 15s. for three quarters’ rent in 1518-1519 and £9 for the whole year in 1519-1520. Repairs totalling over £10 were carried out in 1520 in ‘Master Lee’s lands’ in Saint Pancras parish. These included tiling, and paving the kitchen in Thomas Comberford’s house, repairs to a great oven and hearth in the tallow-chandler’s house, for which Comberford seems to have paid and been reimbursed, and making a lead gutter in the house of another of Comberford’s tenants, and a pipe in Sawnder Brown’s house.
The requiem Masses continued to be said and the chantry charges continued to be paid, and Thomas Culpeper, overseer of Thomas Fisher’s goods, paid £2 for Fisher’s debt.
Thomas Comberford disappears from the records of the parish soon after. He seems to be the same person as Thomas Comberford (1472-1532) of Comberford, a member of the Guild of Saint Mary and Saint John the Baptist, Lichfield, and a progressive farmer who, between 1511 and 1513, enclosed much of the land in the common fields around Comberford. In 1514, he secured full rights over the manor of Wigginton and lands in Wigginton, Hopwas, Coton, Comberford and Tamworth. He also acquired the manor of Watford, north of Daventry in Northamptonshire.
In 1519-1520, he served as Escheator of Staffordshire, the lawyer responsible for property lapsing to the crown or the lord of a manor when the owner died without heirs.
When Thomas Comberford died on 6 January 1532, his estates included the Manor of Wigginton with lands in Wigginton, Hopwas, Coton, Comberford and Tamworth; the Manor of Comberford; the right to hold a fair in Tamworth twice a year; the rights of fishery for a 2½-mile stretch along the River Tame from Lady Bridge, marking the boundary between the Staffordshire and Warwickshire parts of Tamworth, to Hopwas Bridge, and the right to keep six swans in the river.
Thomas Comberford’s wife Dorothea Fitzherbert was a sister of the Revd Dr Thomas Fitzherbert, Precentor of Lichfield Cathedral, and the Revd Canon William Fitzherbert, Chancellor of Lichfield Cathedral, while her younger sister Alice was Abbess of Polesworth Abbey, near Tamworth.
The Parish of Saint Pancras in Cheapside was small but had some wealthy residents, and the church received various benefactions. The church was presented with a monument commemorating Elizabeth I by Thomas Chapman in 1617. The renovation of the building in 1621 was financed by a group of benefactors, including Chapman, and a porch was added in 1624, paid for by Chapman’s son.
Along with the majority of churches in the City, the Church of Saint Pancras, Soper Lane, was destroyed in the Great Fire of London in September 1666 and was not rebuilt. he site is now a small open space marked with a blue plaque in what is now named Pancras Lane. The parsonage house on the corner of Pancras Lane and Queen Street was leased out for 40 years at an annual rent of £2, in 1670. Soper Lane was rebuilt after the Great Fire, and was renamed Queen Street in honour of Catherine of Braganza, wife of Charles II.
The parish was united with those of Saint Mary-le-Bow and All Hallows, Honey Lane. The rebuilt Saint Mary-le-Bow served as the church for the united parishes, and the site of Saint Pancras was retained as a graveyard.
Today, the parish forms part of the United Parishes of Saint Mary-le-Bow with Saint Pancras Soper Lane, All Hallows Honey Lane, All Hallows Bread Street, Saint Augustine with Saint Faith under Saint Paul’s, Saint John-the-Evangelist Watling Street and Saint Mildred Bread Street with Saint Margaret Moyses.
One of the churchwardens of this combined parish is the warden for Saint Pancras Soper Lane.
Saint Mary-le-Bow … the parish now incorporates the former Saint Pancras, Soper Lane (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)
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