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106 THE HERALDRY OF YORK MINSTER.<br />

If so, they were certainly a distinguished generation, the head of the<br />

house, perhaps, more for evil deeds than good,<br />

for we are told that he<br />

with his wife's sister<br />

was a man of dreadful immorality, and had an intrigue<br />

Alyna, for which he was admonished by the Archbishop of York, and<br />

absolved " on condition that he pays one hundred marks to the fabric<br />

"of York Minster."*<br />

Two years later he was in more serious trouble with the King, for<br />

opening a cart belonging to the prioress of Walton, and carrying off seven<br />

nuns he found therein. Eventually he was sentenced for his excesses to<br />

a severe penance, viz., that every Friday in Lent, the Ember days, and<br />

Advent, for seven years, he is to fast on bread and small beer, and on<br />

Good Friday and the vigil of the Festival of All Saints to use only bread<br />

and water. He is to make a pilgrimage to the shrines of St. William of<br />

York, St. Thomas of Hereford, the Blessed Mary at Southwell, St. John of<br />

Beverley, and St. Wilfrid of Ripon, and is to be " fustigated seven times<br />

" before a procession in the church of York, in sola basna capucio deposito,"<br />

i.e. well stripped.f He seems, however, in spite of his peccadilloes, to have<br />

been exemplary in matters political and social, a firm supporter of the<br />

Earl of Lancaster. Probably for that reason he was excused from attending<br />

the Parliament of 1315, together with Walter Vavasour, Walter de Fauconberge,<br />

and others ;<br />

and to that exemption has been attributed the result of<br />

Bannockburn and the regal imbecility. In 1324 he was ordered for service<br />

in Germany, and died 1333 (Archceologm, xxxi. 224).<br />

Edmund de Mauley behaved so valiantly in the wars of Edward I.<br />

that Edward II. made him " Seneschallus hospitii,"<br />

i.e. steward of the<br />

household. In the 32nd year of the previous reign he had obtained a<br />

grant of the manor of Seton in Whitby-strand and in the fifth year of<br />

;<br />

Edward II. he was appointed governor of Bridgnorth, and also of the<br />

castle town and bar town of Bristol. Two years after, he had conferred<br />

on him for life the governorship of Cockermouth Castle, and in the next<br />

year " he was slain at the battle of Bannockburn," says Dugdale. Vincent<br />

uses the expression " submersus," J which probably means that he and his<br />

horse fell<br />

into one of the pits with which the Bruce had so craftily fortified<br />

his lines. Robert de Mauley seems also to have been under-sheriff of<br />

Roxburgh, or as he is described in "the further orders" already alluded<br />

to, "Viscount de Rokesburgh."<br />

We are also told concerning Peter, that when Sir Edmund de<br />

Mortimer, of Wigmore, was ordered to march against Rhys ap Meredyth<br />

in South Wales, this Peter was retained to serve with him, and provide<br />

ten horses "cooperti," i.e.<br />

completely armed in mail under their housings.<br />

They were to be one black with a white foot, valued at 60 marks, or<br />

* Fasti Ebor (Canon Raine), p. 383. t \Vheater. Archaologia xxxi., J p. 245, p. 243.

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