Mainistir Thomáis Mairtíreach | |
![]() An Augustinian friar praying (Dutch painting by Gerard David, c. 1515) | |
Monastery information | |
---|---|
Full name | Abbey of St Thomas the Martyr |
Other names | Thomas Court |
Order | Augustinian Canons Regular Victorines |
Denomination | Pre-Reformation Catholic |
Established | 1177 |
Disestablished | 1539 |
Dedicated to | Thomas Becket |
Archdiocese | Dublin |
People | |
Founder(s) | William FitzAldelm |
Architecture | |
Style | Norman |
Site | |
Location | South Earl Street, Dublin |
Country | Ireland |
Coordinates | 53°20′29″N6°16′49″W / 53.341511°N 6.280387°W |
Visible remains | Walls, some floor surfaces in stone and tile, fragments of window tracery |
The Abbey of St Thomas the Martyr was a 12th-century Augustinian monastery located to the southwest of Dublin, Ireland, dedicated to Thomas Becket. [1]
The abbey was to the southwest of Dublin, outside the city walls. The cloister was located where modern Pimlico is, while the church was near to South Earl Street. [2]
The priory was founded in 1177 by William FitzAldelm on orders of Henry II, King of England, and named in honour of Thomas Becket, assassinated by Henry's knights in 1170. [3] [2]
The Abbey of St Thomas the Martyr was inhabited by Augustinian Canons Regular who followed the Victorine rule established in Paris. The first monks may have come over from Bristol's Augustinian Abbey. [4] Some sources say it was initially belonged to the Knights of Saint Thomas before passing over to the Augustinians. [5]
Henry's son John, Lord of Ireland and later King of England, was a benefactor of the abbey, granting it a tolboll (right to tax on all ale produced in Dublin). [4]
The abbey became very wealthy, due to its extensive lands in Meath and Kildare and its control of the southwest roads into Dublin. [2] It was responsible for maintaining the City Watercourse, a diversion of water from the River Dodder to the River Poddle. [6] [7] The Liberty of Thomas Court and Donore, one of the Liberties of Dublin, was founded in the late 12th century. [8]
Notable events in its lifetime:
In 1538 Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries of England, Wales and Ireland. At this time the Abbey of St. Thomas Court held 56 rectories, 2,197 acres (9 km2) of land, 67 houses, 47 messuages and 19 gardens. Most of the land was in Counties Meath and Kildare. These possessions were distributed among several people, of which Sir William Brabazon (an ancestor of the Earls of Meath) and Richard St. Leger were the major beneficiaries. [10] On 31 March 1545 Sir William Brabazon was granted the lands of the Abbey, with all jurisdictions, liberties, privileges, and so on. This grant was confirmed in 1609 to Edward Brabazon, 1st Baron Ardee, his son. [11]
The abbey's name was given to nearby Thomas Street. [12] An excavation of 1996–1997 exposed the south wall of the church, which extends east-west across the entire length of the site. The wall is over 2.75 m (9 ft 0 in) wide. A north-south wall was judged to mark the nave and chancel of the abbey church. Cobbled floor and tiled pavements were also found, as well as fragments of Dundry stone from a window. [13] The abbey's remains are preserved under local allotments. [14] A 2017 excavation on Thomas Street found a limestone double column base from the Abbey, and also a chamfered hood moulding of Dundry stone believed to be from the Abbey. [15]