Ever come across corrodies? It's a rather antique word that only surfaces sometimes in books about monasteries. Historians nowadays tend to give them a bad press. So what are corrodies about?
It 's when a monastic foundation agrees to provide stuff ( e.g.food, drink, accommodation, victuals, clothing, ) to an individual ( the corrodian)
-who has donated land,
-or as a reward for work done for the monastery,
-or for cash furnished by that individual,
-or for one of the Royal employees by command of the King.
Therefore there are several types of corrody. The first ones involved landowners who decided to sign over parts of their land to the monastery in return for agreed provisions. This could be a good insurance in times of political unrest especially if you were getting old. This might mean regular food, beer, or accommodation in or near the monastery. The monastery should welcome this additional property as a good investment for the future. So far so good for both sides. A monastery might want to reward a member of staff after years of service and therefore grant the person a corrody. This might mean a room in the monastic precinct or nearby, plus regular meals, drink and other benefits - i.e. like a retirement home.
In tough economic times monasteries began to grant corrodies to individuals for quick money. However if they granted a corrody to someone who lived ten years this would be a drain on resources. There was risk involved. How much should a monastery charge for a corrody? The risks involved encouraged monasteries to live beyond their means. How could their infrastructure cope? Kitchens had to be stocked and extra meals provided. Shoes, clothing bought. Sounds like a supermarket. It must have become like a business rather than just a place to provide for its own trusty valued former servants. This involved risk because there was no guarantee how long the individual might live and the agreement might also include his family. Short term gain to meet debts became long term burdens.See Corrody examples 1 and 2 for the kind of stuff that monasteries agreed to provide.
Then there monasteries where the King might demand a corrody for one of his old retainers. Kings believed that this was their right in monasteries which were Royal foundations.e.g.in 1325 a Royal huntsman maimed on a hunt in the New Forest was sent to Buckfast. Such Royal impositions might also include grooms or servants. see Corrody example 3.
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Gatehouse of Thornton Abbey |
A corrody was a deal between the monastery and the individual and the provisions and length did vary. Usually it was made in perpetuity. We can also think of it as a payment in lieu of money, although in some cases a monastic employee corrodian might get a mix of provisions and monetary allowance. Often it included a standard food allowance of daily bread and ale plus 2 dishes of cooked food a day and might also have pittances like cheese included in the deal. Sometimes monastic servants would already have had food and drink and other benefits as part of their "wages."
Some sources
Bottomley, F. Abbey explorer’s guide (Otley, 1995)
Burton, J. Monastic and religious Orders in Britain, 100-1300 (Cambridge, 1994)
Cook, G.H. English monasteries in the Middle Ages (London, 1961)
Crossley, F.H. The English abbey 3rd ed, (London,1949)
Greene, J.P. Medieval monasteries (Leicester, 1992)
Harvey, B. Living and dying in England 110-1540 the monastic experience. (Oxford, 1993)
Kerr, J. Life in the Medieval cloister (London, 2009)
Williams, D.H. The Cistercians in the early Middle Ages (1998)