Raid on Souda Bay and Holy Jesus Hospital: Difference between pages

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[[Image:Front of Holy Jesus Hospital.jpg|thumb|300px|Front of the Holy Jesus Hospital by David Ord|thumb]]
{{Infobox Military Conflict
'''The Holy Jesus Hospital ''' is a museum in [[Newcastle Upon Tyne]], [[England]] and a tourist attraction that also serves as the basis of the Inner City Project of the National Trust
|conflict=Sinking of HMS York (1941)
<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-vh/w-visits/w-findaplace/w-holyjesushospital.htm |title=National Trust &#124; Holy Jesus Hospital |publisher=Nationaltrust.org.uk |date= |accessdate=2008-10-04}}</ref>. The Inner City Project takes people of ages 12-25 and over 50 out to the countryside in order to increase appreciation of the Cities natural surroundings.
|image=[[Image:York-Sirio.jpg|300px]]
The site of the building has had a 700 year history of helping the townspeople and this history is explained by the museum currently on the site. There was an Augustinian Friary on the site from the thirteenth century, and then a hospital or almshouse for housing retired freemen and then a soup kitchen in the nineteenth century before the site acquired its current function. The building is of interest architecturally because it still retains architectural elements from many previous centuries including a thirteenth century sacristy wall and 16th century fortifications connected with the King's Council of the North. <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-vh/w-visits/w-findaplace/w-holyjesushospital/w-holyjesushospital-seeanddo.htm |title=National Trust &#124; Holy Jesus Hospital &#124; What to see & do |publisher=Nationaltrust.org.uk |date= |accessdate=2008-10-04}}</ref>
|caption=HMS ''York'''s hull boarded by the Italian Torpedo Boat ''Sirio''
|partof=the [[Mediterranean Theater]] of [[World War II]]
|date=[[26 March]] [[1941]]
|place=[[Souda Bay]], [[Mediterranean Sea]]
|result=Italian victory
|combatant1={{flagicon|United Kingdom}} [[United Kingdom]]
|combatant2=[[Image:Flag of Italy (1861-1946) crowned.svg|25px]] [[Kingdom of Italy (1861-1946)|Italy]]
|commander1={{flagicon|United Kingdom|naval}}<br> Capt. Reginald Henry Portal, DSC, RN
|commander2=[[Image:Flag of Italy (1861-1946) crowned.svg|22px]]<br> Lieutenant Luigi Faggioni
|strength1=Fleet in harbour
|strength2=2 Destroyers<br>6 motor assault boats
|casualties1=1 [[heavy cruiser]] (disabled)<br>1 tanker (sunk)<br>1 tanker (heavily damaged)<br>1 cargo ship (sunk)<br> 2 killed
|casualties2=6 POW
|}}
{{FixBunching|mid}}
{{Campaignbox Mediterranean Naval WW2}}
{{FixBunching|end}}


== 1291 – 1539 Augustinian Friary ==
The '''sinking of HMS ''York''''' was the main consequence of an [[Regia Marina|Italian Navy]]'s small craft assault on [[Souda Bay]], [[Crete]], during the first hours of 26 March 1941.
In the 13th Century Newcastle Upon Tyne had a population of around 4000 and it was difficult for the four parish churches to care for the needs of such a large population.<ref name="baglee1">Baglee, Christopher. The Holy Jesus Hospital. A Short History. Northern History Booklet No 14. Page 5 </ref> The priests were expected to be educators, doctors and counsellors as well as meet the spiritual needs of their parishioners. Therefore in 1291 land was gifted by William Baron of Wark on Tweed to found an [[Augustinian]] Friary on the land on which the museum now stands. The Augustinian Friars were originally an order of hermits in Northern Italy whom [[Pope Alexander IV]] first congregated into a single body in 1256. The Order then spread to France and then to England after being invited by [[Richard de Clare, 6th Earl of Hertford]] to found [[Clare Priory]] in Suffolk by the river Stour.<ref name="davidsemporium1">{{cite web|url=http://www.davidsemporium.co.uk/st.marys/history5.html |title=History Of The Augustinian Order |publisher=Davidsemporium.co.uk |date= |accessdate=2008-10-04}}</ref> On 3rd September 1249 de Clare was able to get a writ of protection for the Friars from the King.<ref name="davidsemporium1"/> The brethren were clothed in black and observed the rule of St Augustine. Augustianian Friars had been in England since 1250 <ref name="british1">[http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=43329] British History Online </ref> and they helped by preaching and healing in the community. The Friary was also used as a lodgings house because it was on one of the main roads North. On the day that [[King Edward I]] passed through Newcastle in December 1299 the brethren each received 3s. 4d. In 1306 the King also granted the monastery additional lands to enlarge the burial ground.<ref name="british1"/> [[Richard II]] directed the bailiffs of the city to issue a proclamation against dumping waste near the site. Apparently some local people threw 'excrements, filth, and garbage, in a certain way that led near to the house of the Austin Friars, to their great annoyance and peril.' <ref name="british1"/> It is possible that the site was used by English Kings before its later use as a temporary seat for the Council of the North after the dissolution of the Monasteries. Henry Bourne, an 18th century historian of Newcastle Upon Tyne wrote of the site: 'the Kings of England since the Conquest, kept house in it, whence they came with an Army Royal against Scotland, and since the Suppression of the Monasteries, made a Magazine and Store-house for the North Parts.' <ref name="google1">[http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=B1wJAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA137&lpg=PA137&dq=holy+jesus+hospital+newcastle&source=web&ots=vIw1_NtUt2&sig=0-yRGQyKzYh3QR4hwqDjH5yMf28&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=7&ct=result#PPA136,M1] The History of Newcastle Upon Tyne: Or, The Ancient and Present State of that Town, Henry Bourne,Published by J. White, 1736, Original from Oxford University, Digitized 8 Aug 2007</ref>
Bourne also suggests that the use of the site as a religious center might predate the Friary. He wrote 'the same authority tells us also, that there was an ancient Religious House founded by the Kings of [[Northumberland]] and that several of them were buried here; but it cannot be true that they built any Thing for the St Austin Fryers, for they came not into England 'till long after the Conquest, in the year 1252.' <ref name="google1"/>


== 1539 - Dissolution of the Monasteries ==
==Preliminary==
[[Image:Elizabeth I of England - coronation portrait.jpg |thumb|Elizabeth I decreed that the Kings Council of the North meet at the Friary site for 20 days of the year]]
On March 25, 1941 the Italian destroyers [[Sella class destroyer|''Crispi'']] and [[Sella class destroyer|''Sella'']]
In 1539 the Friary was seized by the crown along with 5 others in the area. At the time of its capture the Friary had seven brethren and three novices including the prior, Andrew Kell. <ref name="british1"/>
departed [[Leros]] island in the [[Aegean Sea|Aegean]] at night, each carrying 3 small (2-ton) MTM (''Motoscafo da turismo modificato'') motor assault boats of the [[Decima Flottiglia MAS]].<ref name=Borg>Borghese, page 77</ref>
The Monks and Nuns were pensioned and the friars received gratuities. Some took jobs as chantry priests or accommodation in Parish Livings. Those nuns who were of good birth returned to their families. The bells, lead plate and vestments were turned over to the crown. Most of the building and lands were sold to the lesser gentry, new nobility, and town merchants or to borough corporations. At the time of the Dissolution there was a prior, ten Friars and 3 novices. In 1537 [[Thomas Cromwell]] was asked if the Austin Friary site could be left intact after the dissolution to be used as Northern headquarters of the Kings [[Council of the North]] <ref> King's Council in the North by Rachel R Reid ISBN 0-7158-1126-6 </ref> when it was not sitting at York.It was rarely used for this purpose ([[Elizabeth I]] decreed that the council spend 20 days a year there). It appear that in 1551 the site was granted to John, Duke of Northumberland "as parcel of Tynemouth Monastry."<ref name="british1"/> In 1553, Richard Benson occurs as keeper of this house for the crown for a fee of 40s per annum. In the map of the City by [[John Speed]] in 1610, the site appears as 'Kings Manour.'<ref name="british1"/> It was much dilapidated by 1595. During the confused period of the civil war it passed into the hands of the Corporation. The area became known as Kings Manor which was a short lived counterpart to the famous King’s Manor at York. Military drills were performed by the townspeople at an area called the artillery ground.<ref name="british1"/> All that remains of the Friary is part of the sacristy wall though a model in the interpretation room gives a possible layout of some of the Friary buildings.


===The Tower ===
Air [[reconnaissance|recce]] had spotted a number of naval and auxiliary steamers at anchor in Souda Bay, Crete. Souda is a naturally protected harbor on the northwest coast of the island. It had been chosen as a target by the Decima months before because of the almost continuous Allied naval activity there.<ref name=Borg/>
[[Image:Tower of the Holy Jesus Hospital.jpg|thumb|The Tower]]
The Tower was constructed sometime between the Dissolution and the [[Union of the Crowns]] but the exact date is not known.It was probably constructed as a strong room to store munitions or provide a secure location if the city walls were breached. This turned the ground floor room into a lock up where troublesome citizens would be thrown until they came before the law to be punished. Much about the tower has changed. The wall to the right of the door is 13th Century while the dividing wall including the door is 18th Century.


== 1605 – 1646 Private ownership ==
Each MTM or ''Motoscafo da Turismo Modificato'' (nicknamed ''barchini'' or "little boats") carried a {{convert|300|kg}} explosive charge inside their [[bow (ship)|bow]].<ref>Sadkovich, page 25</ref>
In 1605 the tower and Friary buildings were given by [[James I of England]] to [[George Home, 1st Earl of Dunbar]]. In that same year Home was also made a Knight of the Garter and recieved his Earldom of Dunbar. Bourne quotes one of his sources as saying, 'a Scot did beg it (the Hospital) of King James; after that took the lead off it and sold it; but it was cast away before it came to it's market.' Also in that year Home consolidated all the lands given to him into a free Earldom, Lordship of Parliament and Barony of Dunbar. The site was one of many Home acquired under the patronage of the king including the Manor and Castle of Norlan and the Castle of St Andrews. Home died in Whitehall, London, in 1611 without a male heir and thus his Earldom and Barony became extinct. A Captain Dykes became the next owner of the land. The site disappears from the historical record until 1646 when it is recorded as being owned by the council.


== 1646 – 1825 The Hospital ==
The MTMs were specially equipped to make their way through obstacles such as [[torpedo nets]]; the pilot would steer the assault craft in a collision course at his target ship, and then would jump from his boat before impact and warhead detonation.<ref name=Green>Greene & Massignani, page 141</ref>
[[Image:Holy Jesus Hospital.JPG|thumb|Front of the Holy Jesus Hospital|border|Entrance to the Holy Jesus Hospital ]]
The Holy Jesus Hospital was built in 1681 by public subscription to house retired Freemen <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newcastle.gov.uk/vnev.nsf/allbykey/C899130CE9D8478480256F2B00374BFF?opendocument |title=Holy Jesus Hospital-National Trust |publisher=Newcastle.gov.uk |date= |accessdate=2008-10-04}}</ref>,<ref name="british2"> [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=43383] British History.ac.uk </ref> their widows or unmarried sons or daughters.<ref name="kendallcross1">{{cite web|url=http://www.kendallcross.co.uk/New_Pages/history.html |title=Historic Building Refurbishment |publisher=Kendallcross.co.uk |date= |accessdate=2008-10-04}}</ref> The hospital was commonly known by local people as the 'Freeman's Hospital' and the 'Town's Hospital' but on the 26th of March 1684 the building was incorporated by the name of the master, brethren, and sisters of the Hospital of the holy Jesus <ref name="british2"/> Shortly afterwards the founders bought a quay and garden, in the Close for £700 and an estate in Edderly, County Durham, for £1610, and another estate at Whittle, in Northumberland, for £1300 and the master and brethren of the hospital were settled across these properties.<ref name="british2"/> The building itself was constructed using brick construction which was then a relatively new method (brick was usually used as an infill for timber-framed buildings).<ref name="timmonet1"> [http://www.timmonet.co.uk/html/body_holy_jesus.htm] Timmonet Entry</ref> Indeed the structure is one of only two 17th century brick buildings in Newcastle-Upon Tyne, the other being nearby Alderman Fenwick’s House in Pilgrim Street.<ref name="kendallcross1"/> To be allocated a room one had to meet the committee’s criteria and once were admitted one had to abide by the master’s rules. It remained in use until 1937 when the new Hospital was built at Spital Towers. Strict rules governed the ‘inmates’ including being locked in their rooms at 9pm and having their doors unlocked again at 6am. There were no children allowed and the inmates were instructed to attend church each week and take the [[sacrament]]. Each year the residents would have been given a free suit of clothing, a measure of coal and if the charity allowed it some pocket money ([[Alms]].
The first master of the house was a man named Thomas Lewen, a merchant by trade.<ref name="british2"/> The master's seal had a cross engraved on it and bore the words "Sigillum Hospitalis Sancti Jesu in Novo Castro."<ref name="british2"/> The original allowance for the inmates of the hospital was 20 shillings per 'quarterly' while the master would get 30 shillings. On January 2, 1752, the council decreed that forty 'fothers' of coal be given to the hospital annually and, on December 18, 1769, the master was required to be paid £8, and each inmate sister £6 per annum.<ref name="british2"/> By the early 19th century this allowance had increased to £13 for each inmate per annum, for fothers of 'best Benwell' coals as well as providing clothing. In addition to this the inmates were required to see the Mayor at the Guildhall once each quarter where grievances would be heard.<ref name="british2"/> The inmates could also receive money from charities and this was often called escutcheon money.<ref name="british2"/>
In 1705 the inmates of the Newcastle House of Correction were commisioned to produce 'purple and grey cloth' for the uniforms of the widows of the Holy Jesus Hospital. <ref> [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=OnB-7ZcDKE0C&pg=PA184&lpg=PA184&dq=holy+jesus+hospital&source=web&ots=S7KScTzF4A&sig=KiwqAyRVJkpOiobR7Lw5QIWE9Hg&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=5&ct=result#PPA184,M1] Rogues, Thieves, and the Rule of Law: The Problem of Law Enforcement in North-east England, 1718-1800 By Gwenda Morgan, Peter Rushton Published by Routledge, 1998 ISBN 1857281160, 9781857281163 page 184</ref>
There is an inscription in Latin on the front on the building. Roughly translated it reads; [[Image:Plaque of Holy Jesus Hospital.jpg|left|thumb|Front of the Holy Jesus Hospital|border|Plaque celebrating the creation of the Hospital]] <br /> ''"Hospital for poor people by the expense of the citizens and leaders of Newcastle upon Tyne in the year of salvation 1683. Built by Timothy Robson, Mayor, John Squire Sheriff, but now only remains the three of Faith Hope and Charity, and the greatest of these is Charity."'' <ref name="timmonet1"/>
In 1646 the council allowed the Barber Surgeons to build their hall just east of the site: this agreement was given on the 15th March 1647. In 1648 the plot of land was leased to the barber surgeons on condition that they constructed their hall within two years and that part of the site was to be laid out as a garden for [[medicinal herbs]]. A second hall built in 1730 disappeared under the railway viaduct in the 1840s. The most aged claimants were preferred for placements at the Hospital and on the 22nd of March, 1779, the Mayor and common council of Newcastle ordered that several candidates produce certificates to prove their respective ages, to be filed in the town-clerk's office. <ref> [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=CPsVAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA527-IA1&dq=holy+jesus+hospital&client=firefox-a#PPA529,M1] A Descriptive and Historical Account of the Town and County of Newcastle Upon Tyne: Including the Borough of Gateshead, By Eneas Mackenzie
Published by Mackenzie and Dent, 1827, Original from Harvard University, Digitized 22 Feb 2008, page 529</ref>
{{clear}}


==The attack==
== 19th Century==
[[Image:Holy Jesus Hospital Roundabout View.jpg|right|thumb|Today the site is surrounded by modern constructions]]
While the modern site is heavily enclosed by modern constructions, particularly Swan House roundabout,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.timmonet.co.uk/html/body_holy_jesus.htm |title=Holy Jesus |publisher=Timmonet.co.uk |date= |accessdate=2008-10-04}}</ref> a report by the [[Institute of Historical Research]] in 1827 portrays a much more open space.
{{cquote|
This hospital is finely situated on a small eminence, which is ascended by steps from the Manor Chare. It faces the south, and is a good brick building, three stories high. The under story is adorned with piazzas, which are 91 feet in length, and make a very agreeable walk, a small field being in front, which is separated from the street by a low stone wall and a light iron paling. About the middle of the piazza is the entrance to the second and third stories, each of which has a light gallery that extends the whole length of the building. At the foot of the stairs is a poor-box, and the figure of Charity; and, opposite to the entrance, an ornamented fountain for the use of the hospital. This building contains 42 rooms, each 13 feet by 12 feet; and every room has a small coal-house in the back-yard. They are now all rendered more comfortable than formerly; and some of the magistrates occasionally visit the hospital, as was the practice in former times.
<ref name="british2"/>}}


A Soup Kitchen was built in 1880 by public subscription and dispensed soup to the ‘deserving poor’ until 1891<ref name="journallive1">{{cite web|url=http://www.journallive.co.uk/lifestyle-news/food-and-drink-news/2008/02/15/how-does-a-127-year-old-recipe-for-soup-stand-up-today-61634-20479666/ |title=How does a 127-year-old recipe for soup stand up today? - JournalLive |publisher=Journallive.co.uk |date=Feb 15 2008
At 23:30, the one-pilot craft were released by the destroyers 10 miles off Souda. Once inside the bay, the six boats, under the command of Lieutenant Luigi Faggioni, pintpointed their targets: the [[heavy cruiser]] {{HMS|York|90|6}}, a large tanker (the Norwegian ''Pericles'' of 8,300 tons), another tanker and a cargo ship.<ref name=Green/>
At 4:46, two MTMs hit the ''York'' amidships, flooding her aft boilers and magazines. Two seamen were killed by the explosions.<ref>[http://www.naval-history.net/xDKCas1941-03MAR.htm#prof Naval-History.net: 26 March entry]</ref> The oiler ''Pericles'' was severely damaged and settled on the bottom, while the other tanker and the cargo ship were sunk according to Italian sources.<ref>Borghese, pp. 81-82</ref>
According to the British, the other ''barchini'' apparently missed their intended targets, and one of them ended stranded on the beach.<ref>Borghese, page 80</ref> The antiaircraft defences of the base opened fire randomly, believing that the base was under air attack.<ref>Borghese, page 82</ref>
by Alastair Gilmour, The Journal |accessdate=2008-10-04}}</ref>. The soup was not free: it cost half a pence per pint. People who had donated each had a number of tickets which they could give to those people who they believed qualified for the ration. The deserving poor in Victorian times were those unable to work during the winter months. Those individuals classed as undeserving were those poverty was deemed to be caused by indolence and [[alcoholism]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990CE0DC153AF934A2575AC0A963958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all |title=THE NATION; For the Poor, Defining Who Deserves What - New York Times |publisher=Query.nytimes.com |author=Kimberly J. Mclarin |date=Published: September 17, 1995 |accessdate=2008-10-04}}</ref>
A recent article has suggested that the soup provided by the Kitchen was highly nutritious. <ref name="journallive1"/> In 1881 the committee from the Discharged Prisoner’s Aid Society asked to use the building when it was not in use for discharged female convicts from the prison at Carliol Square (1828-1925) to do laundry work and the Society continued to use it for this purpose until the turn of the century.
From 1893 the building was leased to pork butcher F.G Thompson who made alterations to the building presumably to separate his business from the laundry and ex-convicts. Urwins Chemical Factory operated on the site from 1913 producing industrial and domestic chemicals and pharmaceuticals as well as filing first aid boxes until 1961 when they moved to Stepney bank in Ouseburn. In the Interwar Period the Council decided that the hospital was no longer fit to house people because of the stench caused by acid manufacture.<ref name="timmonet2"> [http://www.timmonet.co.uk/html/body_holy_jesus.htm] Timmonet Entry </ref> Therefore a new Hospital was built at Spital Tougues. Some of the building's original fixtures were moved to the new site at this time. <ref name="timmonet2"/>


== 1950 – 1973 The First Museum ==
==Aftermath==
In late 1960s the Museum Board was looking to have more museums in Newcastle and thought the Holy Jesus Hospital could be used. The restoration cost £67k and a new roof was needed. During the restoration some of the original fabric of the building such as door frames, doors and walls on the top floor were lost.In 1970 John George Joicey Museum opened. During this time the soup kitchens were joined to the Holy Jesus Hospital. The first floor rooms were used for teaching the history of Newcastle from the Roman period to the present date. There were period rooms illustrating living styles from the early Stuart to late Victorian periods. Much of the collection was donated by bequest by John George Joicey, a Gateshead businessman and owner of the mining company James Joicey & Co. ltd, and after whom the museum was named. Joicey was also a prominent donor to the [[Laing Art Gallery]]. The tower of the hospital had the Alnwick Armoury and the Shotley Bridge Sword makers displays on the first and second floors. The Shotley Bridge Sword makers were German swordmakers who settled in Shotley Bridge, Durham, in the 17th century. The soup kitchen was mainly used as a Victorian schoolroom children were dressed and taught as Victorian children would have been. There were also audio-visual presentations that illustrated the Tyne Flood of 1771 and the Great Fire of 1854. Part of the museum was devoted to the [[Northumberland Hussars]] and the 15th and 19th Regiments of the King's Royal Hussars.<ref> [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=S7XyMa-n5_YC&pg=PA342&lpg=PA342&dq=John+George+Joicey+Museum&source=web&ots=sws5MkwfOH&sig=J0VkZHBFy5J9q_jroCqEeRsI0Vo&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=9&ct=result]
All six of the Italian sailors, Luigi Faggioni, Alessio de Vito, Emilio Barberi, Angelo Cabrini, Tullio Tedeschi and Lino Beccati, were captured. The disabled ''York'' was later scuttled with demolition charges by her crew before the [[Battle of Crete|German capture of Crete]],<ref>Borghese, pp. 83-84</ref> while ''Pericles'', taken in tow by destroyers, sank on 14 April 1941 enroute to [[Alexandria]] amid a storm.<ref>[http://www.naval-history.net/xDKWW2-4104-31APR01.htm#prof Naval-History.net]</ref>
The Pleasures and Treasures of Britain: A Discerning Traveller's Companion, by David Kemp, Published by Dundurn Press Ltd., 1992
ISBN 1550021591, 9781550021592, page 342 </ref> The museums location combined with the City’s underpasses and roads system made access to the museum difficult and it was little visited.<ref name="northumbrianassociation1"> [http://www.northumbrianassociation.com/news_and_events/2004-08-05.html] Northumbrian Association </ref>
In 1973 the Museum closed and all artefacts were taken to the [[Discovery Museum]] on Blandford St. These included the effigy of a knight from the 15th Century that was found next to the sacristy wall outside the Tower.


== 2000 The Inner City Project and the new Museum ==
The sinking of HMS ''York'' was the source of a controversy between the [[Regia Marina]] and the [[Luftwaffe]] over credit for her sinking.
The Holy Jesus Hospital has been the center of the National Trust’s Inner City Project. By August 2004 £800,000 had been spent on renovating the building.<ref name="northumbrianassociation1"/> Funds for the restoration of the site came from the [[Heritage Lottery Fund]] and the Tyne and Wear Partnership.<ref name="news1"> [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/tyne/3702278.stm] BBC news report </ref> The project been running since 1987 in the east end of Newcastle working with young people from 12-25 and with the over 50s, taking them out to the countryside. <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.newcastle.gov.uk/css.nsf/AllCSSWeb/F9D6E30C5590C42880256A8D002F88B9 |title=National Trust Inner City Project |publisher=Newcastle.gov.uk |date= |accessdate=2008-10-04}}</ref><ref name="northumbrianassociation1"/> The National Trust needed a central office to expand their work into other inner city areas, so a 25 year lease was negotiated with the council. The new museum on the site features touch screens and 3D models to help teach people about the site's history of helping the townspeople.<ref name="northumbrianassociation1"/><ref name="news1"/> In the book 'The Remains of Distant Times: Archaeology and the National Trust,' Priscilla Boniface criticizes what she believes to be the National Trust's lack of interest in operating in urban environments but praises the Inner City Project as a step towards rectifying this. She wrote 'It's occasional ventures - such as the Newcastle Inner City Project ... by their frequent mention in National Trust communications, merely serve to underline how few of their type the Trust has to call on for report.' She argues that although the aim of introducing town dwellers to the countryside is 'laudable,' 'the respectful and serious suggestion might be made, though, that a person or person's might be usefully employed also with the objective of raising National Trust people's understanding of and confidence in their ability to visit and enjoy, or at least encounter, the city.' <ref>[http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=MJylQnvpXQcC&pg=PA111&lpg=PA111&dq=national+trust+inner+city+project&source=web&ots=aqu62R4lff&sig=fIBpiOPHRUR5nilxYpAdUHC00fY&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=10&ct=result#PPA111,M1]
The matter was resolved by British war records and by the ship's own war log, captured by Italian naval officers who boarded the half-sunk cruiser.<ref>The Italians seized the following naval message from Captain Portal to his Chief Engineeering Officer: "Please take statements from all men who were in boiler and engine-rooms when the ship was struck on the 26th, also from any men who can bear witness as to the R.A.s who were lost, being in the engine room. I would like you also to make rough notes now, while events are fresh in your mind, of sequence of damage reports and appreciations as time went on. Also a log of events since we started pumping out. R.P." Borghese, page 83</ref>
The Remains of Distant Times: Archaeology and the National Trust
By David Morgan Evans, Peter Salway, David Thackray, National Trust (Great Britain) Contributor David Morgan Evans, Peter Salway, David ThackrayPublished by Boydell & Brewer, 1996 ISBN 0851156711, 9780851156712, page 111 </ref>


== Notable Visitors to the Site==
After the war, the hull of HMS ''York'' was towed to [[Bari]] and scrapped there by an Italian shipbreaker in March 1952.<ref>[http://www.naval-history.net/xGM-Chrono-06CA-York.htm#prof Naval-History.net]</ref>
[[Image:Margaret.tudor.jpg |thumb|Queen Margaret by Daniel Mytens]]


* Princess [[Margaret Tudor]] – daughter of Henry VII spent four days there in 1503 on her journey north to marry [[James IV of Scotland]] <ref>[http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=oZjM70x2vDYC&pg=PA101&dq=holy+jesus+hospital&lr=&sig=ACfU3U3TNjwJ4sk4dGDJZQ9-VLRQ-iZXzA#PPA101,M1] Northumberland Yesterday and To-Day, Jean F. Terry, Published by BiblioBazaar, LLC, 2007 ISBN 142644656X, page 101 </ref> (who died in 1513 at the [[Battle of Flodden]]).<ref>[http://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/usbiography/monarchs/jamesiv.html James IV Feature Page on Undiscovered Scotland<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
==Notes==
* [[Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk]] stayed there in 1560. As a result £67 was spent on materials and repairs: the walls were re-pointed, roof lead re-laid, gutters and broken windows repaired, a chimney rebuilt, dining chamber on the Great Hall enlarged, two doors cut through a wall and the construction of a new stone window. Materials purchased included 4000 bricks and a considerable amount of glass from [[Hartlepool]]. Norfolk was imprisoned just nine years later by Elizabeth I for plotting to marry [[Mary Queen of Scots]]. <ref> [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09764a.htm] Catholic Encyclopedia entry on Mary Queen of Scots </ref>
{{reflist}}
* [[Eric XIV of Sweden]] visited in 1561 for which the Great Hall was whitewashed and hung with borrowed tapestries for his visit. Eric was in England to pursue marriage negotiations with Elizabeth Tudor (who became Queen [[Elizabeth I]]). However, this mission was cancelled due to the death of Eric's father in 1560.
* The Percies of Alnwick visited the site on occasion.

== See also ==
* [[Augustinians]]
* [[Dissolution of the Monasteries]]
* [[Council of the North]]
* [[Blackfriars, Newcastle]]
* [[National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty]]
* [[The Discovery Museum]]
* [[Eric XIV of Sweden]]
* [[George Home, 1st Earl of Dunbar]]
* [[Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk]]
* [[Princess Margaret Tudor]]
* [[History of Newcastle upon Tyne]]


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}


== External Links ==
*"''Frogmen First Battles''" by retired U.S Captain William Schofield's book. ISBN 0-8283-2088-8
* [http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-vh/w-visits/w-findaplace/w-holyjesushospital.htm/ Entry on the National Trust Website]
*"''The Naval War in the Mediterranean, 1940-1943'' by Jack Greene & Alessandro Massignani, Chatam Publishing, London, 1998. ISBN 1861760574
* [http://www.journallive.co.uk/lifestyle-news/food-and-drink-news/2008/02/15/how-does-a-127-year-old-recipe-for-soup-stand-up-today-61634-20479666/ Article on the soup served at the Soup Kitchen]
*"''Sea Devils''" by J. Valerio Borghese, translated into English by James Cleugh, with introduction by the [[United States Naval Institute]] ISBN 1-55750-072-X
* [http://www.augustinians.org.uk/index.html/ Website of the British Order of St Augustine]
*''The Italian Navy in World War II'' by Marc'Antonio Bragadin, United States Naval Institute, Annapolis, 1957. ISBN 0405130317
*''The Italian Navy in World War II'' by Sadkovich, James, Greenwood Press, Westport, 1994. ISBN 031328797X

==External links==
*[http://www.regiamarina.net/xa_mas/sudabay/sudabay_us.htm "Attack to Suda Bay" - RegiaMarina.net ] {{en icon}}
*[http://uboat.net/allies/warships/ship/1187.html HMS York at Uboat.net]
*[http://www.naval-history.net/WW2RN09-194101.htm HMS York at Naval History.Net]


[[Category:Battle of the Mediterranean|Sinking of HMS York]]
[[Category:Naval battles involving the United Kingdom]]
[[category:1941 in Italy]]


[[Category:History museums]]
[[fr:Raid de la baie de La Sude]]
[[Category:Tyne and Wear Museums]]
[[Category:Visitor attractions in Newcastle upon Tyne]]
[[Category:Culture in Newcastle upon Tyne]]
[[Category:Buildings and structures in Newcastle upon Tyne]]

Revision as of 15:27, 10 October 2008

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The Holy Jesus Hospital is a museum in Newcastle Upon Tyne, England and a tourist attraction that also serves as the basis of the Inner City Project of the National Trust [1]. The Inner City Project takes people of ages 12-25 and over 50 out to the countryside in order to increase appreciation of the Cities natural surroundings. The site of the building has had a 700 year history of helping the townspeople and this history is explained by the museum currently on the site. There was an Augustinian Friary on the site from the thirteenth century, and then a hospital or almshouse for housing retired freemen and then a soup kitchen in the nineteenth century before the site acquired its current function. The building is of interest architecturally because it still retains architectural elements from many previous centuries including a thirteenth century sacristy wall and 16th century fortifications connected with the King's Council of the North. [2]

1291 – 1539 Augustinian Friary

In the 13th Century Newcastle Upon Tyne had a population of around 4000 and it was difficult for the four parish churches to care for the needs of such a large population.[3] The priests were expected to be educators, doctors and counsellors as well as meet the spiritual needs of their parishioners. Therefore in 1291 land was gifted by William Baron of Wark on Tweed to found an Augustinian Friary on the land on which the museum now stands. The Augustinian Friars were originally an order of hermits in Northern Italy whom Pope Alexander IV first congregated into a single body in 1256. The Order then spread to France and then to England after being invited by Richard de Clare, 6th Earl of Hertford to found Clare Priory in Suffolk by the river Stour.[4] On 3rd September 1249 de Clare was able to get a writ of protection for the Friars from the King.[4] The brethren were clothed in black and observed the rule of St Augustine. Augustianian Friars had been in England since 1250 [5] and they helped by preaching and healing in the community. The Friary was also used as a lodgings house because it was on one of the main roads North. On the day that King Edward I passed through Newcastle in December 1299 the brethren each received 3s. 4d. In 1306 the King also granted the monastery additional lands to enlarge the burial ground.[5] Richard II directed the bailiffs of the city to issue a proclamation against dumping waste near the site. Apparently some local people threw 'excrements, filth, and garbage, in a certain way that led near to the house of the Austin Friars, to their great annoyance and peril.' [5] It is possible that the site was used by English Kings before its later use as a temporary seat for the Council of the North after the dissolution of the Monasteries. Henry Bourne, an 18th century historian of Newcastle Upon Tyne wrote of the site: 'the Kings of England since the Conquest, kept house in it, whence they came with an Army Royal against Scotland, and since the Suppression of the Monasteries, made a Magazine and Store-house for the North Parts.' [6] Bourne also suggests that the use of the site as a religious center might predate the Friary. He wrote 'the same authority tells us also, that there was an ancient Religious House founded by the Kings of Northumberland and that several of them were buried here; but it cannot be true that they built any Thing for the St Austin Fryers, for they came not into England 'till long after the Conquest, in the year 1252.' [6]

1539 - Dissolution of the Monasteries

Elizabeth I decreed that the Kings Council of the North meet at the Friary site for 20 days of the year

In 1539 the Friary was seized by the crown along with 5 others in the area. At the time of its capture the Friary had seven brethren and three novices including the prior, Andrew Kell. [5] The Monks and Nuns were pensioned and the friars received gratuities. Some took jobs as chantry priests or accommodation in Parish Livings. Those nuns who were of good birth returned to their families. The bells, lead plate and vestments were turned over to the crown. Most of the building and lands were sold to the lesser gentry, new nobility, and town merchants or to borough corporations. At the time of the Dissolution there was a prior, ten Friars and 3 novices. In 1537 Thomas Cromwell was asked if the Austin Friary site could be left intact after the dissolution to be used as Northern headquarters of the Kings Council of the North [7] when it was not sitting at York.It was rarely used for this purpose (Elizabeth I decreed that the council spend 20 days a year there). It appear that in 1551 the site was granted to John, Duke of Northumberland "as parcel of Tynemouth Monastry."[5] In 1553, Richard Benson occurs as keeper of this house for the crown for a fee of 40s per annum. In the map of the City by John Speed in 1610, the site appears as 'Kings Manour.'[5] It was much dilapidated by 1595. During the confused period of the civil war it passed into the hands of the Corporation. The area became known as Kings Manor which was a short lived counterpart to the famous King’s Manor at York. Military drills were performed by the townspeople at an area called the artillery ground.[5] All that remains of the Friary is part of the sacristy wall though a model in the interpretation room gives a possible layout of some of the Friary buildings.

The Tower

The Tower

The Tower was constructed sometime between the Dissolution and the Union of the Crowns but the exact date is not known.It was probably constructed as a strong room to store munitions or provide a secure location if the city walls were breached. This turned the ground floor room into a lock up where troublesome citizens would be thrown until they came before the law to be punished. Much about the tower has changed. The wall to the right of the door is 13th Century while the dividing wall including the door is 18th Century.

1605 – 1646 Private ownership

In 1605 the tower and Friary buildings were given by James I of England to George Home, 1st Earl of Dunbar. In that same year Home was also made a Knight of the Garter and recieved his Earldom of Dunbar. Bourne quotes one of his sources as saying, 'a Scot did beg it (the Hospital) of King James; after that took the lead off it and sold it; but it was cast away before it came to it's market.' Also in that year Home consolidated all the lands given to him into a free Earldom, Lordship of Parliament and Barony of Dunbar. The site was one of many Home acquired under the patronage of the king including the Manor and Castle of Norlan and the Castle of St Andrews. Home died in Whitehall, London, in 1611 without a male heir and thus his Earldom and Barony became extinct. A Captain Dykes became the next owner of the land. The site disappears from the historical record until 1646 when it is recorded as being owned by the council.

1646 – 1825 The Hospital

Entrance to the Holy Jesus Hospital

The Holy Jesus Hospital was built in 1681 by public subscription to house retired Freemen [8],[9] their widows or unmarried sons or daughters.[10] The hospital was commonly known by local people as the 'Freeman's Hospital' and the 'Town's Hospital' but on the 26th of March 1684 the building was incorporated by the name of the master, brethren, and sisters of the Hospital of the holy Jesus [9] Shortly afterwards the founders bought a quay and garden, in the Close for £700 and an estate in Edderly, County Durham, for £1610, and another estate at Whittle, in Northumberland, for £1300 and the master and brethren of the hospital were settled across these properties.[9] The building itself was constructed using brick construction which was then a relatively new method (brick was usually used as an infill for timber-framed buildings).[11] Indeed the structure is one of only two 17th century brick buildings in Newcastle-Upon Tyne, the other being nearby Alderman Fenwick’s House in Pilgrim Street.[10] To be allocated a room one had to meet the committee’s criteria and once were admitted one had to abide by the master’s rules. It remained in use until 1937 when the new Hospital was built at Spital Towers. Strict rules governed the ‘inmates’ including being locked in their rooms at 9pm and having their doors unlocked again at 6am. There were no children allowed and the inmates were instructed to attend church each week and take the sacrament. Each year the residents would have been given a free suit of clothing, a measure of coal and if the charity allowed it some pocket money (Alms. The first master of the house was a man named Thomas Lewen, a merchant by trade.[9] The master's seal had a cross engraved on it and bore the words "Sigillum Hospitalis Sancti Jesu in Novo Castro."[9] The original allowance for the inmates of the hospital was 20 shillings per 'quarterly' while the master would get 30 shillings. On January 2, 1752, the council decreed that forty 'fothers' of coal be given to the hospital annually and, on December 18, 1769, the master was required to be paid £8, and each inmate sister £6 per annum.[9] By the early 19th century this allowance had increased to £13 for each inmate per annum, for fothers of 'best Benwell' coals as well as providing clothing. In addition to this the inmates were required to see the Mayor at the Guildhall once each quarter where grievances would be heard.[9] The inmates could also receive money from charities and this was often called escutcheon money.[9] In 1705 the inmates of the Newcastle House of Correction were commisioned to produce 'purple and grey cloth' for the uniforms of the widows of the Holy Jesus Hospital. [12]

There is an inscription in Latin on the front on the building. Roughly translated it reads;

Plaque celebrating the creation of the Hospital


"Hospital for poor people by the expense of the citizens and leaders of Newcastle upon Tyne in the year of salvation 1683. Built by Timothy Robson, Mayor, John Squire Sheriff, but now only remains the three of Faith Hope and Charity, and the greatest of these is Charity." [11]

In 1646 the council allowed the Barber Surgeons to build their hall just east of the site: this agreement was given on the 15th March 1647. In 1648 the plot of land was leased to the barber surgeons on condition that they constructed their hall within two years and that part of the site was to be laid out as a garden for medicinal herbs. A second hall built in 1730 disappeared under the railway viaduct in the 1840s. The most aged claimants were preferred for placements at the Hospital and on the 22nd of March, 1779, the Mayor and common council of Newcastle ordered that several candidates produce certificates to prove their respective ages, to be filed in the town-clerk's office. [13]

19th Century

Today the site is surrounded by modern constructions

While the modern site is heavily enclosed by modern constructions, particularly Swan House roundabout,[14] a report by the Institute of Historical Research in 1827 portrays a much more open space.

This hospital is finely situated on a small eminence, which is ascended by steps from the Manor Chare. It faces the south, and is a good brick building, three stories high. The under story is adorned with piazzas, which are 91 feet in length, and make a very agreeable walk, a small field being in front, which is separated from the street by a low stone wall and a light iron paling. About the middle of the piazza is the entrance to the second and third stories, each of which has a light gallery that extends the whole length of the building. At the foot of the stairs is a poor-box, and the figure of Charity; and, opposite to the entrance, an ornamented fountain for the use of the hospital. This building contains 42 rooms, each 13 feet by 12 feet; and every room has a small coal-house in the back-yard. They are now all rendered more comfortable than formerly; and some of the magistrates occasionally visit the hospital, as was the practice in former times. [9]

A Soup Kitchen was built in 1880 by public subscription and dispensed soup to the ‘deserving poor’ until 1891[15]. The soup was not free: it cost half a pence per pint. People who had donated each had a number of tickets which they could give to those people who they believed qualified for the ration. The deserving poor in Victorian times were those unable to work during the winter months. Those individuals classed as undeserving were those poverty was deemed to be caused by indolence and alcoholism.[16] A recent article has suggested that the soup provided by the Kitchen was highly nutritious. [15] In 1881 the committee from the Discharged Prisoner’s Aid Society asked to use the building when it was not in use for discharged female convicts from the prison at Carliol Square (1828-1925) to do laundry work and the Society continued to use it for this purpose until the turn of the century. From 1893 the building was leased to pork butcher F.G Thompson who made alterations to the building presumably to separate his business from the laundry and ex-convicts. Urwins Chemical Factory operated on the site from 1913 producing industrial and domestic chemicals and pharmaceuticals as well as filing first aid boxes until 1961 when they moved to Stepney bank in Ouseburn. In the Interwar Period the Council decided that the hospital was no longer fit to house people because of the stench caused by acid manufacture.[17] Therefore a new Hospital was built at Spital Tougues. Some of the building's original fixtures were moved to the new site at this time. [17]

1950 – 1973 The First Museum

In late 1960s the Museum Board was looking to have more museums in Newcastle and thought the Holy Jesus Hospital could be used. The restoration cost £67k and a new roof was needed. During the restoration some of the original fabric of the building such as door frames, doors and walls on the top floor were lost.In 1970 John George Joicey Museum opened. During this time the soup kitchens were joined to the Holy Jesus Hospital. The first floor rooms were used for teaching the history of Newcastle from the Roman period to the present date. There were period rooms illustrating living styles from the early Stuart to late Victorian periods. Much of the collection was donated by bequest by John George Joicey, a Gateshead businessman and owner of the mining company James Joicey & Co. ltd, and after whom the museum was named. Joicey was also a prominent donor to the Laing Art Gallery. The tower of the hospital had the Alnwick Armoury and the Shotley Bridge Sword makers displays on the first and second floors. The Shotley Bridge Sword makers were German swordmakers who settled in Shotley Bridge, Durham, in the 17th century. The soup kitchen was mainly used as a Victorian schoolroom children were dressed and taught as Victorian children would have been. There were also audio-visual presentations that illustrated the Tyne Flood of 1771 and the Great Fire of 1854. Part of the museum was devoted to the Northumberland Hussars and the 15th and 19th Regiments of the King's Royal Hussars.[18] The museums location combined with the City’s underpasses and roads system made access to the museum difficult and it was little visited.[19] In 1973 the Museum closed and all artefacts were taken to the Discovery Museum on Blandford St. These included the effigy of a knight from the 15th Century that was found next to the sacristy wall outside the Tower.

2000 The Inner City Project and the new Museum

The Holy Jesus Hospital has been the center of the National Trust’s Inner City Project. By August 2004 £800,000 had been spent on renovating the building.[19] Funds for the restoration of the site came from the Heritage Lottery Fund and the Tyne and Wear Partnership.[20] The project been running since 1987 in the east end of Newcastle working with young people from 12-25 and with the over 50s, taking them out to the countryside. [21][19] The National Trust needed a central office to expand their work into other inner city areas, so a 25 year lease was negotiated with the council. The new museum on the site features touch screens and 3D models to help teach people about the site's history of helping the townspeople.[19][20] In the book 'The Remains of Distant Times: Archaeology and the National Trust,' Priscilla Boniface criticizes what she believes to be the National Trust's lack of interest in operating in urban environments but praises the Inner City Project as a step towards rectifying this. She wrote 'It's occasional ventures - such as the Newcastle Inner City Project ... by their frequent mention in National Trust communications, merely serve to underline how few of their type the Trust has to call on for report.' She argues that although the aim of introducing town dwellers to the countryside is 'laudable,' 'the respectful and serious suggestion might be made, though, that a person or person's might be usefully employed also with the objective of raising National Trust people's understanding of and confidence in their ability to visit and enjoy, or at least encounter, the city.' [22]

Notable Visitors to the Site

File:Margaret.tudor.jpg
Queen Margaret by Daniel Mytens
  • Princess Margaret Tudor – daughter of Henry VII spent four days there in 1503 on her journey north to marry James IV of Scotland [23] (who died in 1513 at the Battle of Flodden).[24]
  • Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk stayed there in 1560. As a result £67 was spent on materials and repairs: the walls were re-pointed, roof lead re-laid, gutters and broken windows repaired, a chimney rebuilt, dining chamber on the Great Hall enlarged, two doors cut through a wall and the construction of a new stone window. Materials purchased included 4000 bricks and a considerable amount of glass from Hartlepool. Norfolk was imprisoned just nine years later by Elizabeth I for plotting to marry Mary Queen of Scots. [25]
  • Eric XIV of Sweden visited in 1561 for which the Great Hall was whitewashed and hung with borrowed tapestries for his visit. Eric was in England to pursue marriage negotiations with Elizabeth Tudor (who became Queen Elizabeth I). However, this mission was cancelled due to the death of Eric's father in 1560.
  • The Percies of Alnwick visited the site on occasion.

See also

References

  1. ^ "National Trust | Holy Jesus Hospital". Nationaltrust.org.uk. Retrieved 2008-10-04.
  2. ^ "National Trust | Holy Jesus Hospital | What to see & do". Nationaltrust.org.uk. Retrieved 2008-10-04.
  3. ^ Baglee, Christopher. The Holy Jesus Hospital. A Short History. Northern History Booklet No 14. Page 5
  4. ^ a b "History Of The Augustinian Order". Davidsemporium.co.uk. Retrieved 2008-10-04.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g [1] British History Online
  6. ^ a b [2] The History of Newcastle Upon Tyne: Or, The Ancient and Present State of that Town, Henry Bourne,Published by J. White, 1736, Original from Oxford University, Digitized 8 Aug 2007
  7. ^ King's Council in the North by Rachel R Reid ISBN 0-7158-1126-6
  8. ^ "Holy Jesus Hospital-National Trust". Newcastle.gov.uk. Retrieved 2008-10-04.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i [3] British History.ac.uk
  10. ^ a b "Historic Building Refurbishment". Kendallcross.co.uk. Retrieved 2008-10-04.
  11. ^ a b [4] Timmonet Entry
  12. ^ [5] Rogues, Thieves, and the Rule of Law: The Problem of Law Enforcement in North-east England, 1718-1800 By Gwenda Morgan, Peter Rushton Published by Routledge, 1998 ISBN 1857281160, 9781857281163 page 184
  13. ^ [6] A Descriptive and Historical Account of the Town and County of Newcastle Upon Tyne: Including the Borough of Gateshead, By Eneas Mackenzie Published by Mackenzie and Dent, 1827, Original from Harvard University, Digitized 22 Feb 2008, page 529
  14. ^ "Holy Jesus". Timmonet.co.uk. Retrieved 2008-10-04.
  15. ^ a b "How does a 127-year-old recipe for soup stand up today? - JournalLive". Journallive.co.uk. Feb 15 2008 by Alastair Gilmour, The Journal. Retrieved 2008-10-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); horizontal tab character in |date= at position 13 (help)
  16. ^ Kimberly J. Mclarin (Published: September 17, 1995). "THE NATION; For the Poor, Defining Who Deserves What - New York Times". Query.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2008-10-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  17. ^ a b [7] Timmonet Entry
  18. ^ [8] The Pleasures and Treasures of Britain: A Discerning Traveller's Companion, by David Kemp, Published by Dundurn Press Ltd., 1992 ISBN 1550021591, 9781550021592, page 342
  19. ^ a b c d [9] Northumbrian Association
  20. ^ a b [10] BBC news report
  21. ^ "National Trust Inner City Project". Newcastle.gov.uk. Retrieved 2008-10-04.
  22. ^ [11] The Remains of Distant Times: Archaeology and the National Trust By David Morgan Evans, Peter Salway, David Thackray, National Trust (Great Britain) Contributor David Morgan Evans, Peter Salway, David ThackrayPublished by Boydell & Brewer, 1996 ISBN 0851156711, 9780851156712, page 111
  23. ^ [12] Northumberland Yesterday and To-Day, Jean F. Terry, Published by BiblioBazaar, LLC, 2007 ISBN 142644656X, page 101
  24. ^ James IV Feature Page on Undiscovered Scotland
  25. ^ [13] Catholic Encyclopedia entry on Mary Queen of Scots

External Links