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Canonsleigh Abbey

Coordinates: 50°56′53″N 3°19′46″W / 50.94806°N 3.32944°W / 50.94806; -3.32944
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gatehouse of Canonsleigh Abbey
Canonsleigh Abbey, ruins

Canonsleigh Abbey was an Augustinian priory in the parish of Burlescombe, Devon.

History

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It was founded in about 1170 by Walter de Claville,[1] lord of the manor of Burlescombe, for the Augustinian canons regular as the Priory of the Blessed Virgin Mary and Saint John the Evangelist. He appears to have been a descendant of Walter I de Claville (floruit 1086), one of the 52 Devon Domesday Book tenants-in-chief of King William the Conqueror, who had 32 landholdings in Devon.[2] The original Anglo-Saxon name of the site donated by Walter II, perhaps a sub-manor of Burlescombe, was "Leigh" (Domesday Book Leige[3]), which after the foundation of the Abbey became known as "Canons' Leigh"[4] and was Latinised by mediaeval scribes to Leigh Canonicorum (i.e. "Leigh of the canons"), now "Canonsleigh".

By 1284 the number of canons had declined to seven,[Declined from what figure? clarification needed] and these were evicted in 1285 when the widow Maud de Lacy, Countess of Gloucester(d.1289), formerly the wife of Richard de Clare, 6th Earl of Gloucester (d.1262), refounded the establishment as a nunnery as the Abbey Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Saint John the Evangelist and Saint Etheldreda. In 1286 the abbess was granted licence to hold weekly markets. It was not especially wealthy. The number of historical records that survive for this establishment is not large which limits a full knowledge of its history. However recent research by Atkinson has added much to its known history.[5]

Among the possessions of Canonsleigh Abbey was Netherton, Farway[6]

The Abbey was suppressed in 1539 during the Dissolution of the Monasteries. Of its later history, in September 1546 Sir Richard Grenville (c.1495-1550), of Stowe, Cornwall and Bideford, and Roger Blewett of Holcombe Rogus paid nearly £1,170 for the manors of Canonsleigh in Burlescombe and Tynyell in Landulph.[7]

The remains today consist of a small 15th-century gatehouse that has two large blocked arches and, to the east, further fragments that include ruined buildings, the remains of a reredorter and a possible south wall of the eastern range of buildings.[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Thorn, part 2, 24,15
  2. ^ Thorn, part 2, 24,15; Thorn chap.24, 1-32 lists all his Domesday Book landholdings
  3. ^ Thorn, part 2, 24,15
  4. ^ Thorn, Caroline & Frank, (eds.) Domesday Book, (Morris, John, gen.ed.) Vol. 9, Devon, Parts 1 & 2, Phillimore Press, Chichester, 1985, part 2 (notes) chap.24,15
  5. ^ Atkinson, Des (2015). "Canonsleigh Abbey: a Thriving Devon Nunnery?" (PDF). Ex Historia. 7: 1–36. ISSN 2041-0824.
  6. ^ Risdon, Tristram (d.1640), Survey of Devon, 1811 edition, London, 1811, with 1810 Additions, p.35
  7. ^ "GRENVILLE, Richard I (by 1495-1550), of Stowe in Kilkhampton, Cornw". History of Parliament. Retrieved 2 January 2020., quoting Letters & Papers of Henry VIII, x, xii, xiv, xvi, xxi
  8. ^ Cherry, Bridget & Pevsner, Nikolaus, The Buildings of England: Devon. Yale University Press, 2004. p. 243. ISBN 978-0-300-09596-8

Sources

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  • Anthony New, A Guide to the Abbeys of England And Wales, p104. Constable.
  • Henry Thorold, The Collins Guide to the Ruined Abbeys of England, Wales and Scotland, Harper Collins, 1985
  • Ordnance Survey, Monastic Britain, South Sheet, 2nd Edition.
  • The Cartulary of Canonsleigh Abbey (British Library Harleian MS 3660), London, Vera C.M. (Ed.), published in Devon & Cornwall Record Society Publications, new series, vol.8, London, 1965

Further reading

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50°56′53″N 3°19′46″W / 50.94806°N 3.32944°W / 50.94806; -3.32944