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The Prior of England, "My Lord of Saint John's," given precedence before all lay barons, was an important figure in English life. Like the rest of the Order, the Grand Priory of England received a great accession of wealth and property when the Templars were suppressed in 1312. In Scotland the Commander of Torphichen, the "Lord of Saint Johns" sat in Parliament until 1563. The heir of the last commander still sits in Parliament as Lord Torphichen. In 1380, a Prior of England, Robert Hales, became Treasurer to Richard II. His poll tax proved unpopular, provoking the Peasants' Revolt in 1381. Clerkenwell was burned and Robert was executed with the Archbishop of Canterbury by an angry mob.
In 1527, the Grand Master named Henry VIII "Protector of the Religion," the title the Sovereign's predecessor had accepted. But royal favour was not to survive the winds of the Reformation, and Henry dissolved the Grand Priory in 1540. Several prominent knights of Malta were executed between 1539 and 1541 for denying the Royal Supremacy: Thomas Dingley, Adrian Fortescue, and David Gunston. William Salisbury and John Forest died in prison. Queen Mary revived the English Langue in 1557, and Clerkenwell was restored under the Grand Prior Thomas Tresham. The Virgin Queen was less sympathetic. In 1559, Elizabeth dismembered the Priory and seized its lands and assets. Today, the gatehouse of the old Priory of Clerkenwell is the seat of the Most Venerable Order of St. John of Jerusalem in the British Realm, which purchased it during the nineteenth century. In 1963, the Order of Malta and the Venerable Order (the latter was founded by Royal Charter in 1888) signed a joint declaration of recognition and cooperation, though there exists no historical connection between the two orders. Despite the Reformation and the consequent dissolution of the Grand Priory of England, there were always English, Scots or Irish knights of Malta. Until the end of the eighteenth century, most of the Englishmen and Irishmen tended to join the Italian Langue, while Scots usually joined the French Langues. Titular Grand Priors were appointed, together with titular Priors of Ireland and Bailiffs of Egle. The Order was not without recusant knights, but the last titular Grand Prior of England, Girolamo Laparelli, died in 1815. Edward VII received the honorary cross of a Bailiff Grand Cross of the Order of Malta in 1882; he wore it during a visit to Malta after his accession to the throne. The Sub Priory of the Blessed Adrian Fortescue was founded in 1972, with Lord Robert Crichton-Stuart as Regent. Subsequent Regents included Andrew Bertie (the Order's Grand Master from 1988 to 2008), Viscount Furness, the Earl of Gainsborough, and the present Grand Master, Matthew Festing. In 1993, the Grand Priory of England was restored after being in abeyance for nearly 450 years except for titular Grand Priors. The Grand Prior of England is Frà Fredrik Crichton-Stuart, who in 2008 succeeded Frà
Matthew Festing, presently Prince Grand Master of the Order. Frà Frederik is the fifty-sixth in succession to Frà
Walter, who was made Prior in 1144. The Grand Priory's ecclesiastical seat is the Church of St. John of Jerusalem in St. John's Wood, London. |
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