Monastery information | |
---|---|
Order | Benedictine |
Established | c. 1100 |
Disestablished | c. 1440 |
Mother house | Lonlay-l'Abbaye, Normandy |
Dedicated to | St Andrew |
People | |
Founder(s) | William de Falaise |
Site | |
Location | Stogursey, Somerset, England |
Coordinates | 51°10′50″N3°08′30″W / 51.18065°N 3.14162°W Coordinates: 51°10′50″N3°08′30″W / 51.18065°N 3.14162°W |
Grid reference | ST203430 |
Visible remains | Church and dovecote |
Stogursey Priory, also called Stoke Courcy Priory or The Priory of St Andrew de Stoke, was a Benedictine alien priory dedicated to St Andrew at Stogursey in Somerset, England. [1] It was founded by William de Falaise, around 1100, to become a cell of Lonlay-l'Abbaye in Normandy. [2] [3] In around 1185 John de Courcy, its hereditary patron, founded the Priory of the Ards (Blackabbey) in County Down, Ireland, making an endowment of that estate to Stogursey Priory. [4] The priory church survives as the parish church, and contains some of the original Norman architecture. [5] [6] Many of the priory's muniments are held in the archives of Eton College, which King Henry VI endowed with the appurtenances when the house was dissolved in about 1440. [7]
Stogursey had a strategic location north-west of Bridgwater and about 4 miles west of the lower estuary of the river Parrett. [8] In late Anglo-Saxon times the place was known as Stoke, and was owned by Beorhtsige: by 1086, following the Norman Conquest, it was owned by William de Falaise, a Norman. [9] There is some question whether he, or rather a son of the same name, had recently married Geva, daughter of Serlo de Burci, and widow of Martin "de Wallis". [10]
William's and Geva's daughter, Emma de Falaise, was betrothed to William de Courcy (died c. 1114), dapifer to Henry I of England from 1100, and son of Richard de Courcy. King Henry's rise to power had begun in Domfront (Orne), 4 miles from Lonlay (Orne), where the Benedictine Abbey of St Mary at Lonlay had been founded around 1020 by William 'Princeps' de Bellême, representative of the powerful House of Bellême. Richard de Courcy had two sons, William (who inherited his English lands) and Robert, who inherited his father's lands in Normandy. Robert married Rohais, one of the daughters of Hugh de Grandmesnil. [11]
In 1090, in Normandy, Robert de Courcy and Hugh de Grandmesnil came into conflict with Robert of Bellême, 3rd Earl of Shrewsbury (great-grandson of William 'Princeps'), who sought to extend his power both in England and in Normandy. Winning the support of Robert Curthose in 1090, Robert de Bellême and the duke laid siege to de Courcy's castle at Courcy (in Calvados, Normandy). Robert and Hugh, for their part, appealed for help to King William Rufus, Duke Robert's brother, and on William's arrival in Normandy in February 1091 the siege was lifted. [11]
At their marriage, William de Courcy and Emma de Falaise received the manor of Stoke, which thus acquired the name of Stoke Courcy. [12] Stogursey Castle, a motte and bailey castle, was built of stone a little to the south of the settlement in the late 11th or early 12th century, and was the headmanor of the de Courcy barony in this neighbourhood. The foundation of the priory at Stogursey began with the grant, datable to c. 1100-1107, [6] of St Andrew's church by William de Falaise and Geva his wife to the church of St Mary at Lonlay. [4] By the early 12th century Lonlay was acquiring many endowments, while William de Bellême was in confrontation with Henry I of England both in his English and his French domains. "In consequence of this grant," (wrote John Collinson), "although inconsiderable in itself, a prior and convent were sent over to settle here as a cell of that house." [13]
The church of St Andrew, which now serves as the church of the borough of Stogursey, is at its core an edifice of distinction built around A.D. 1100. It was a cruciform structure with transepts converging at a high crossing with tower above, supported by four great columns and arches. These incorporate a series of ornately carved capitals directly comparable to examples in Normandy of the last decade of the 11th century, while also showing elements of late Anglo-Saxon style more typical of the English Romanesque. They therefore belong to, or slightly antedate, the foundation phase of c. 1100–07, made by sculptors experienced in those converging artistic idioms. There was no precise artistic connection with the sculpture workshops of Lonlay, suggesting (as may seem self-evident) that the impressive original structure was built before William de Falaise presented it to Lonlay. [6]
Its various subsequent endowments [4] and their strategic meaning were discussed by Greswell. [8] The borough itself appears to have grown up some decades later.
A famous descendant of William's and Emma's, John de Courcy, made himself virtual Prince of Ulster after conquering it in 1177. He captured the Counties of Antrim and Down, and held them until he was disgraced in 1204.
Around 1183–84, he granted to the Priory of St. Andrews in Stogursey "ten carucates of land and all its appurtenances in the Country of Lart or The Ardes", in County Down, Ireland. [14] [15] Before 1204 the Benedictine Priory of St. Andrew's in the Ards was built at a location two miles north of Ballyhalbert in the Ards Peninsula. Over the years this priory came to be known as Black Abbey, the colour of the clothes worn by the monks, so distinguishing it from the Cistercian house of Grey Abbey nearby (which stands on the northeastern shores of Strangford Lough). Blackabbey was therefore initially founded as a cell of Stogursey Priory which was itself a cell of Lonlay. Hamilton distinguished the adoption of Blackabbey directly as a cell of Lonlay to the time of de Courcy's successor, Hugh de Lacy: it was, at any rate, referred to as "a certain priory or cell named 'Prioratus S. Andreae en le Arde, in Ultonia'" when, in around 1350, the Priory of St Mary of Lonlay effectively dissolved it and assigned it with all its lands to Richard FitzRalph, Archbishop of Armagh, and his successors. [14] [16]
The priory of Stogursey dwindled over the years and was repeatedly taken into the king's hands, at one time let to one of the burgesses, Johannes Bakeler (the town's MP). [1] It was appropriated by the Crown around 1441 and Henry VI presented the endowments of Stogursey to "the College of the Blessed Mary of Eton beside Windsor" (Eton College) which he had founded in 1440. [17] [18]
Today virtually nothing remains of the abbey, apart from the Church of St Andrew itself (a splendid if somewhat over-restored survival, which also serves the village), and the dovecote. The church has been designated by English Heritage as a grade I listed building. [19] The site may overlie an earlier Saxon establishment, and is one of the largest in West Somerset. The church retains elements of the Norman architecture (notably in the tower and transepts): the footings of the original apsidal ends to the transepts and chancels have been investigated. [1] The round medieval thatched dovecote was rebuilt in 1925, though the steps are still original. [20]
Sir John de Courcy (1150–1219) was an Anglo-Norman knight who arrived in Ireland in 1176. From then until his expulsion in 1204, he conquered a considerable territory, endowed religious establishments, built abbeys for both the Benedictines and the Cistercians and built strongholds at Dundrum Castle in County Down and Carrickfergus Castle in County Antrim.
Stogursey is the name of a small village and civil parish in the Quantock Hills in Somerset, England. It is situated 3 miles (4.8 km) from Nether Stowey, and 8 miles (12.9 km) west of Bridgwater. The village is situated near the Bristol Channel, which bounds the parish on the north.
Robert fitz Martin was a knight from Devon whose father, Martin de Turribus, was the first Norman Lord of Kemes, in what had previously been the Dyfed part of Deheubarth. Fitz Martin inherited the Lordship of Kemes from his father, and founded St Dogmaels Abbey c. 1118. He was the first of the FitzMartin line. His descendants continued to hold lands in England and Wales until the 14th century.
Richard de Courcy was a Norman nobleman and landholder in England.
The Priory of St. Andrews of the Ards (Blackabbey) was a Benedictine Abbey in County Down, Ireland. It was founded by John de Courcy as a daughter-house of the alien Benedictine Priory at Stogursey in Somerset, England. As Stogursey Priory was itself a cell of Lonlay-l'Abbaye in Normandy, Blackabbey also became affiliated to that house. In around 1356 the Blackabbey, with all its lands, was effectively dissolved and assigned by Lonlay to Richard FitzRalph, Archbishop of Armagh and his successors, under whom it continued.
The Church of St Andrew in Stogursey, Somerset, England dates from the early 12th century and has been designated as a Grade I listed building.
William I de Moyon, 1st feudal baron of Dunster in Somerset, was seigneur of Moyon in Normandy and became Sheriff of Somerset in 1086. He founded the English de Mohun family in the Westcountry. Recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as a tenant-in-chief of William the Conqueror holding a number of manors in Somerset with caput at Dunster Castle.
Carisbrooke Priory was an alien priory, a dependency of Lyre Abbey in Normandy. The priory was situated on rising ground on the outskirts of Carisbrooke close to Newport on the Isle of Wight. This priory was dissolved in around 1415.
Goldcliff Priory was a Benedictine monastery in Goldcliff, Newport, South Wales, founded in 1113 by Robert de Chandos and subject to the Abbey of Bec in Normandy. The priory was situated on the site now occupied by Hill Farm, to the south of the current farmhouse, on the prominent knoll of high ground next to the sea. As late as the 1950s Hando remarked that outlines of buildings which were probably part of the priory could still be seen in grass patterns or crop marks at certain times of the year. By the 1970s the only remaining physical remnant of the priory was to be found as part of a cellar in the farm house.
Cowick is a suburb of the City of Exeter in Devon. Historically it was a manor situated in the parish of St Thomas, Exeter, within the hundred of Wonford. It was formerly the site of a Benedictine monastery.
Modbury Priory was a Benedictine priory in the parish of Modbury, Devon, England, established before 1129 which was one of the longest surviving alien priories in England, most of which were suppressed in 1414. It was located close to the present parish church of St George in the town of Modbury, but its exact location is unclear.
Brimpsfield Priory was a Benedictine monastic foundation in Brimpsfield, Gloucestershire, England, a cell or grange of the Abbey of Saint-Wandrille in Normandy. It was almost certainly founded between 1086 and 1100 by a member of the Giffard family, as lords of Brimpsfield, and was endowed with the demesne and advowson of the church.
Blakenham Priory was an estate in monastic ownership in the late Middle Ages, located at Great Blakenham in Suffolk, England.
William de Falaise, also called William of Falaise, was a Norman from Falaise, Duchy of Normandy, today in the Calvados department in the Lower Normandy region of north-western France. He became feudal baron of Stogursey in Somerset and also held manors in Devon.
William de Courcy, feudal baron of Stoke Courcy in Somerset, was an Anglo-Norman nobleman.
William de Courcy was an Anglo-Norman nobleman and baron.
William de Courcy was an Anglo-Norman nobleman and baron.
Sibyl of Falaise was a kinswoman of King Henry I of England. She was possibly his illegitimate daughter or a niece, as the sources are unclear. Another possibility is that she may have been more distantly related to him instead. She married and had at least one daughter, although her husband's other children may possibly be her offspring also. Through her daughter, Sibyl was the grandmother of Reginald fitzUrse, one of the murderers of Thomas Becket.
Stoke-by-Clare Priory was a Benedictine monastery in Stoke-by-Clare, in Suffolk, an alien priory, dependent on Bec Abbey, in Normandy. Reinstituted in 1124, the Priory was suppressed in 1415.