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228 THE HERALDRY OF YORK MINSTER.<br />

Clarentia meant the territory of which he was feudal chief, and which<br />

comprised not merely the castle in Suffolk and its dependants, but a<br />

large portion of the fairest lands south of the Trent. In addition to<br />

his fiefs in Wilts, Devon, Cambridge, and Kent, the founder of the family<br />

had thirty-eight lordships in Surrey, thirty-five in Essex, and ninety-five<br />

in Suffolk (Bury and West Suffolk Archceological Association, 1853, vol. i.).<br />

His grandson added to this the earldom of Hereford and extensive<br />

possessions in Wales. Indeed, when Gilbert the Red married Joane Plantagenet,<br />

there was scarcely a county in the breadth of England, south of<br />

the Trent, which did not own the influence of the great Clarensis.<br />

Those who owed obeisance or fealty to the mighty lord seneschal of<br />

Clare were called Clarencels ;<br />

and the extent and dignity of these vast<br />

possessions may be estimated from the fact that, there being two principal<br />

heralds Norroy King of Arms, i.e. of the north men, and Surroys King<br />

of Arms, i.e. of the south men the latter was changed to Clarencieux, or<br />

King of Arms of the Clarencels, probably at the time when the dukedom<br />

was granted and those vast possessions became absorbed into the personnel<br />

of the Crown.<br />

One member of this distinguished family was a member of our<br />

Minster, viz. Bogo de Clare, younger son of Richard de Clare, and brother<br />

of Gilbert de Clare, who married Joane of Acre. He was instituted Treasurer<br />

of the Minster September 28th, 1287, and died in 1294, during which time<br />

the building of the chapter-house was probably commenced, if not completed<br />

and I cannot help thinking that he was instrumental therein, if not<br />

;<br />

to be regarded as the actual founder thereof.<br />

According to our modern ideas, the records which are extant about<br />

him do not indicate a man of very high spirituality, and are rather inconsistent<br />

with our conception of a mediaeval ecclesiastic ;<br />

but it was a rough,<br />

if ready time, lacking generally the refinements which in our days seem<br />

inseparable from real religion, and when men, who were not absolutely<br />

absorbed in the cloisters, discharged many secular duties, not only political,<br />

but military.<br />

The chapter-house, too, seems identified<br />

with the secular rather than<br />

spiritual side of the great institution of York, and therefore likely to be<br />

the work of a man whose reputation<br />

is more closely connected with the<br />

former than the latter. And even if, as Canon Raine " says, he left an<br />

" evil name behind him," for that very reason he might have been anxious<br />

to do something in the way of benefiting the Church, which would be<br />

recognised as some sort of atonement for his excesses or shortcomings :<br />

or he may have bequeathed some part of the wealth which he had amassed,<br />

and which he could scarcely have exhausted on his own pleasures, for this<br />

purpose. At any rate, the chapter-house<br />

and vestibule windows contain

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