- Adam of Usk
Adam of Usk ( _cy. Adda o Frynbuga) (c. 1352 – 1430) was a Welsh priest, canonist, and late medieval historian and chronicler.
Patronage
Born at
Usk in what is nowMonmouthshire , southeastWales , Adam received the patronage ofEdmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March , who inherited the Lordship of Usk (Brynbuga) through his wife Philippa. Mortimer encouraged and enabled Adam to eventually study atOxford , where he obtained his doctorate and becameextraordinarius in Canon law.Adam settled at
Oxford University as a teacher of law. Here by his own admission he was involved in armed struggle of 1388 and 1389 between the Northerners and the Southerners, which included the Welsh.Adam left Oxford and practiced his profession for seven years as an advocate in the archiepiscopal court of
Canterbury , 1390-1397, sitting on the Parliament of 1397 and in 1399 accompanied the Archbishop and Bolingbroke's army on the march fromBristol toChester . These experiences and the connection withThomas Arundel shaped his views thereafter, he was hostile in his chronicle to Richard II.He was a member of the commission appointed to find secure legal grounds for the deposition of King Richard II and met with the King during his captivity in the
Tower of London .Adam was rewarded for his part in Richard II's surrender, imprisonment and fall with the living of
Kemsing and Seal, and later with aprebend in the church of Bangor. These nicely supplemented his professional legal income and status. However one living, his title to the prebend of Llandygwydd inCardiganshire given under the college of Abergwili, was to be contested by one Walter Jakes alias Ampney, who had obtained it by exchange in 1399. The two were in anaffray , inWestminster , in November 1400, which resulted in charges being brought against Adam and his company, for highway robbery. The outcome is unknown, however it didn't immediately limit his legal activities, he continued as a lawyer.Adam held strong devotion to Saint Teilo (associated with Llandaff Cathedral) and to Saint (presumably the Apostle) Thomas of India (whose cult had been vitalised by Dominican missions in Asia).
Rome
However, he forfeited the King's favour and was either effectively banished or chose to leave England, with the sanction of the Crown, having begged for the Kings Pardon for the Westminster misdeed, which was granted in January 1403, for
Rome in February 1402. Here Adam realised he could impress other influential people. Once in Rome he metPope Boniface IX andPope Innocent VII , both of whom were sufficiently impressed to offer him English Bishophrics in 1404 and later he was successively nominated to the sees ofHereford andSt. David's , but was unable to obtain possession of either. The Avignon Pope Benedict XIII also nominated him to Llandaff.Events outside his influence or control took over. The rebellion of
Owain Glyndŵr was enveloping Wales and focusing attention from England. In the summer of 1405 riots swept Rome, driving the Pope from the city in August, stranding Adam and leaving him far from home, separated from patronage and exacerbated by Adams own dangerous illness, suffered probably as a result. Adam left Rome in June 1406, making his way toBruges . Here he attended closely to events in Wales and England and again developed his legal work, inFrance andFlanders this time. He listened to the plans ofHenry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland to overthrow King Henry IV, but adroitly avoided any implication, involvement or commitment to either side.In 1408 Adam was ready to return to Wales, landed at
Barmouth , and hoped to secure the Lordship of Powis, then held by Edward Cherleton - whose first wife's dower had included the Lordship of Usk. Adam lived under Cherleton's protection for some years at this period, as a poorChaplain atWelshpool .Legacy
In March 1411 Adam was granted a royal Pardon which should have signalled his return to influence. However in 1414 Thomas Arundel died and a major patrons influence was removed. Adam spent the rest of his life and career in relative obscurity and died in early 1430. He is buried in the priory church at
Usk , where his epitaph composed in Welsh "cywydd " metre can still be seen. His Will is also preserved. In it he makes bequests toLlandaff Cathedral and to friaries in Newport and Cardiff as well as to individual persons bearing Welsh names. He makes a legacy to his executor and one to a relative, one Edward ab Adam, quite a telling gift; Adam's own copy ofRanulf Higdon 's Polychronicon, maybe his own inspiration as a young boy. With it he must have left the material that formed his chronicle to 1421, which twenty years later was put in manuscript form.This chronicle is his major legacy, providing contemporary detail on events in Wales, England and abroad and an insight into the life of an educated man moving through important spheres of influence at the time. He met Kings and Popes, chronicles the Peasants' Revolt (the chronicle opens with a description of Jack Straw) and Emperor Manuel II's Christmas visit to Richard II, lived in various cities and towns but was often on the move (observant of phenomena from his youth Adam is struck by the beauty of the Lake of Lucerne and the quality of Beaune wine, but draws a pessimist conclusion from the night-time behaviour of Rome's canine population) offering a useful interpretation of the history of his times. The chronicle throws particular light on the Glyndŵr revolt.The interest of the content is generally far superior to the Latinity of the work.
His Latin
chronicle of English history from 1377 to 1421, edited byEdward Thompson for the Royal Society of Literature, as "Chronicon Adæ de Usk" (London, 1876).ee also
*
Gerald of Wales
*Geoffrey of Monmouth References
*catholic
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