Hampshire, Winchester, 1489–90

Winchester College Bursars' Accounts

Winchester College Archives: 22153

mb [4d] (26 September–26 September) (External expenses)

...

Et in dat' ministrall' domini Episcopi Wintoniensis venient' ad Collegium xxjo die decembris xx d.... Et in datis ministrall' domini de Arundell venient' ad collegium, xx d./...

mb [5d]

...Et in datis Ministrallis domini Regis venientibus ad Collegium ffesto Sancti Petri Aprili iij s. iiij d....

...

  • Footnotes
    • Episcopi Wintoniensis: Peter Courtenay (c 1432–92), bishop of Winchester (1487–92)
    • Sancti … Aprili: ie, St Peter of Verona (c 1200–52)
  • Record Translation

    mb [4d] (26 September–26 September) (External expenses)

    ...

    And as gifts/a gift to minstrels/a minstrel of the lord bishop of Winchester coming to the college 21 December, 20d.... And in payment to minstrels/a minstrel of the lord of Arundel coming to the college, 20d....

    mb [5d]

    ...And as gifts to minstrels of the lord king coming to the college on the feast of St Peter in April, 3s 4d....

    ...

  • Glossed Terms
    • Wintoniensis, -is n f of Winchester; Wyntoniensis, -is
  • Document Description

    Record title: Winchester College Bursars' Accounts
    Repository: Winchester College Archives
    Shelfmark: 22153
    Repository location: Winchester

    The bursars' accounts were kept annually by the two bursars, one of whom was elected each year and served as the junior bursar, becoming senior bursar the following year. Their accounts included all the college finances, beginning with receipts from the rents of manors and estates owned by the college. Expenses are divided into sections: chapel, hall, kitchen, pantry, stable, and garden; stipends to chaplains, scholars, and others; external expenses and gifts (the last two the sections where payments to entertainers were normally entered). The rolls have paper wrappers, some of which contain notes made by later bursars. The account year varies considerably but most often runs roughly from Michaelmas to Michaelmas.

    1489–90; Latin; parchment; 8 membranes, attached serially; 700–40mm x 275–80mm; unnumbered.

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