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The Abbey of St. Albans from 1300 to the dissolution of the monasteries cover

The Abbey of St. Albans from 1300 to the dissolution of the monasteries

Chapter 8: LIST OF THE ABBOTS OF ST. ALBAN’S FROM 1291 TO 1539.
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About This Book

An historical study traces the abbey's trajectory from internal reform to suppression, first describing a fourteenth-century revival of discipline and financial reorganization under successive abbots and the continuation of literary and hospitable traditions, then examining economic pressures—papal and royal exactions, estate management—and the fifteenth-century spiritual and institutional decline that made dissolution inevitable. It presents an economic sketch, a chapter on decaying monastic spirit, an appendix with a later abbot's account, and reference lists of abbots and chief authorities.

John de Berkhamstede 1291–1302.
John de Maryns 1302–1308.
Hugh de Eversdon 1308–1326.
Richard de Wallingford 1326–1335.
Michael de Mentmore 1335–1349.
Thomas de la Mare 1349–1396.
John Moote 1396–1401.
William Heyworth 1401–1420.
John Whethamstede 1420–1440.
John Stoke 1440–1452.
John Whethamstede (2) 1452–1464.
William Albon 1464–1476.
William Wallingford 1476–1491(?).
John Ramrygge 1492–1521.
Thomas Wolsey 1521–1530.
Robert Catton 1530–1538.
Richard Boreman (Stevynache) 1538–1539.