Holy Trinity Guild Accounts

Wisbech and Fenland Museum: Guild of the Holy Trinity in Wisbech 1379–1547 & Corporation Records 1564–1566

p 41 (9 June–1 June) (Expenses on the principal day)

...

In primis solutum in expensis vltimo Anno ad exequias x d. In j quarterio frumenti vj s. In multura & pistura xij d. In vj dossenis seruisie viij s. In potu iiij d. In ij vitulis vj s. In v agnellis vj s. iiij s. vij d. In ij dossenis aucarum iij s. viij d. In cibacione earum Aucarum xvj d. In iiij dossenis pullorum gallinorum iij s. iiij d. In Ouis x d. In butiro ij d. In lacte & quacco x d. In j quarterio mellis iij d. In diuersis speciebus iij s. iij d. In aceto & Sale ij d. In stipendio Nicholai maunger mynstrelli iij s. iiij d. In stipendio Thome Picard Coci ij s. In lixis & giratore veruum xij d. In ffocali xvj d.

Summa xlviij s. iij d.

...

  • Record Translation

    p 41 (9 June–1 June)

    ...

    First paid in expenses last year for the obsequies, 10d; on one quarter of grain, 6s; on milling and baking, 12d; on six dozen of ale, 8s; on drink, 4d; on two calves, 6s; on five lambs, 4s 7d; on two dozen geese, 3s 8d; on feed for those geese, 16d; on four dozen chicken pullets, 3s 4d; on eggs, 10d; on butter, 2d; on milk and cream, 10d; on one quart of honey, 3d; on various spices, 3s 3d; on vinegar and salt, 2d; on the minstrel, Nicholas Maunger's stipend, 3s 4d; on the cook, Thomas Picard's stipend, 2s; on the servants and the turnspit, 12d; on fuel, 16d.

    In total 48s 3d.

    ...

  • Glossed Terms
    • potus, -us n m drink, here weak ale as distinct from ceruisia
  • Endnote

    The accounts record payments for the guild dinner, 9 June 1476.

  • Document Description

    Record title: Holy Trinity Guild Accounts
    Repository: Wisbech and Fenland Museum
    Shelfmark: Guild of the Holy Trinity in Wisbech 1379–1547 & Corporation Records 1564–1566
    Repository location: Wisbech

    The guild of the Holy Trinity of Wisbech was one of three guilds with a presence in the village of Leverington; the other two were the guilds of St Mary and of St John. Holy Trinity was the largest and most important of the guilds, with a consistent membership of fifty-six to sixty-seven members, both men and women; it first appears in accounts in 1379, but entries there indicate it had existed for some time prior (VCH: Cambridgeshire, vol 4, pp 186–97, British History Online, https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/cambs/vol4/pp186-197). Holy Trinity was incorporated in 1453; after its dissolution in 1566, the guild's estates were taken over by the Corporation and thus preserved (VCH: Cambridgeshire, vol 4, pp 255-6, British History Online, https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/cambs/vol4/pp255-256). Records of the guildhall begin in 1423, but it is likely that it was in existence before then; its site cannot be definitively identified (VCH: Cambridgeshire, vol 4, pp 255–6, British History Online, https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/cambs/vol4/pp255-256). As Frederic Gardiner observes, 'the Trinity Guild is believed to have met in a primitive building, with thatched roof, supposed to have stood on the site of the present Grammar School, but its locality is not known with certainty' (Frederic John Gardiner, History of Wisbech and Neighbourhood, During the Fifty Years – 1848–1898 (London, 1898), 90–1).

    1379–1547, 1564–6; Latin and English; paper; iv + 139 + i; 414 mm x 301 mm; 18th-c. pagination; leaves extensively reconstructed, mounted into paper frames with some gauze reinforcement; late 18th-c. marbled paper binding with leather spine and front label and corner reinforcements, title on spine: 'Guld of Holy Trinity Wisbech 1379 – Annis Multis Intermissis – 1547, Records of the Corporation 1564 – 1566.'

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