§ 18.
The order of Premonstratensians, known
from their white habit as white canons, was founded
by St Norbert at Prémontré, to the west of Laon,
about 1120. The canons followed the Augustinian
rule in the main, but their constitution shewed a
tendency to follow Cistercian models. The order was
centralised under the abbot of Prémontré, where the
general chapters were held, and was extended by the
Cistercian process of colonisation, each house sending
out its body of canons as the nucleus of a new abbey.
Lisques, a daughter of Prémontré, colonised Newhouse
abbey in north Lincolnshire in 1143. In 1147 Newhouse
founded a daughter house at Alnwick, and
between that time and 1212 founded ten other
abbeys. Of these Welbeck (1153) was responsible
for seven more between 1175 and 1218. In all there
were thirty-one abbeys of the order in England, not
counting two cells. Cistercian influence can be seen
in the constitution of each new house as an abbey, in
the choice of secluded sites for the houses of the
order, and in the principal dedication of most of its
churches to our Lady. Like other centralised orders,
the Premonstratensians were exempt from the jurisdiction
of the diocesan bishop; but the allegiance of
the English canons to Prémontré gradually slackened,
and the administration of their order in England
was delegated in course of time to a commissary.
In 1512 Julius
II exempted the English houses from
obedience to Prémontré and placed them under the
control of the abbot of Welbeck.