Today, I wanted to share with you some of my favourite Abbeys that I have been too.
Enjoy!
Rievaulx
Abbey
(North
Yorkshire)
"Everywhere peace, everywhere serenity, and a
marvellous freedom from the tumult of the world..."
St Aelred on Rievaulx.
Impressive, isn't it?
In 1132, twelve, Clairvaux monks came to Rievaulx. This was
to be the start of something very big. Rievaulx became one of the wealthiest
monasteries in Medieval England.
Rievaulx
had a very famous Abbot ~ Abbot Aelred. He was a renowned author and preacher, and
this attracted a steady flow of monks to the Abbey. He died in 1167. But even
without his presence, Rievaulx continued
to be a vibrant and busy Abbey.
Unfortunately, Rievaulx fell victim to Henry VIII, Dissolution of the Monasteries.
Easby
Abbey
(North
Yorkshire)
Founded in
1152, Easby, like many other Abbeys, was demolished during Henry VIII, Dissolution of the Monasteries.
Unfortunately, this is going to be a common theme for this post.
I really
liked Easby, It was a rather wet day when we visited the Abbey, and we found to
our delight that we had the ruins all to ourselves.
Whitby Abbey
(North Yorkshire)
Whitby the
"Goth" capital of Britain ~ thanks to Bram Strokes, Dracula.
Whitby
Abbey suffered severe damage in 1914 when it was hit by German naval shelling.
On top of that, years of rain and high winds, has taken its toll on this
beautiful Abbey.
It was
pouring down with rain the day we visited Whitby, but that did not take away
the beauty of the place, and with views like this, it is easy to understand why
Whitby attracts so many visitors and has been such an inspiration for artists
over the years.
Lindisfarne Priory
(Northumberland)
I know, not quite an Abbey,
but Lindisfarne Priory was one of the most important sites of early
Christianity in England. It is also one of my favourite places to visit.
Oswald, King of
Northumberland, summoned Aidan (an Irish monk from Iona) to be bishop of his
kingdom in AD 635. Oswald granted Aidan and his followers a small tidal island
called Lindisfarne.
Lindisfarne's most notable Bishop was a monk called
Cuthbert. Cuthbert joined the monastery at Lindisfarne sometime in the 670s. He
tried to impose Roman religious
practices rather than Irish ones. This was met with grave opposition. Cuthbert
decided to remove himself from the monastery and became a hermit. At first, he
decided that a small island just a stone's throw away from the priory would do
(having seen the island I did wonder what was going through his head at the
time, it is really tiny), Cuthbert then removed himself to a more remote island
of Inner Farne!
Cuthbert was made Bishop in
685.
On 8th June
703, the unthinkable happened...
"Pagans have desecrated God’s
sanctuary, shed the blood of saints around the altar, laid waste the house of
our hope and trampled the bodies of saints like dung in the streets … What
assurance can the churches of Britain have, if St Cuthbert and so great a
company of saints do not defend their own?"
Alcuin, a York scholar
working at the court of King Charlemagne in Francia.
The Vikings
first significant attack in Western Europe occurred at Lindisfarne and the
rest, as they say, is history.
The priory
was closed, during Henry VIII, Dissolution
of the Monasteries in 1537.
Jedburgh
Abbey
(The
Scottish Borders)
Founded by David I in 1138, Jedbury Abbey is an Augustinians Abbey. Jedbury started life as a priory but was raised to the status of monastery in c.1147.
Alexander III of Scotland married Yolande, daughter of the Compte de Dreux, in 1285 at the Abbey.
Being in the borders, Jedbury Abbey had its fair share of dramas. In 1296, the Abbot of Jedburgh swore fealty to Edward I of England. The Abbey was pillaged in 1297 by the English as a retribution to their defeat at Stirling by William Wallace. Robert the Bruce was a patron of the Abbey during his reign. The English once again pillaged the Abbey in 1346 after the Scottish defeat at The Battle of Neville's Cross. Like the Bruce, David II of Scotland was also a patron of the Abbey. The Earl of Warwick caused more trouble for the Abbey in 1410, 1416 and again in 1464. The Earl of Surrey set the Abbey and the town on fire in 1523, and so it continued... It is amazing there is anything of the Abbey left standing. If walls could talk then, Jedbury Abbey could certainly tell a story or two.
I really liked Jedbury, and the history of the place is fascinating. Well worth checking out.
Melrose
Abbey
(The Scottish
Borders)
Founded by
Saint Aidan of Lindisfarne. Melrose Abbey was the first Cistercian abbey in Scotland.
It is said that it took around ten years to build. At its peak, Melrose Abbey was the home of 100 monks.
Being in
the borders meant that Melrose was in the firing-line the same as Jedbury Abbey
was.
Interesting
fact ~ Robert the Bruce's heart is said to be buried in the church.
I adore
Melrose Abbey. Is is such a beautiful, tranquil place and it is easy to imagine
what the Abbey must have been like in its heyday.
Glastonbury
Abbey
(Somerset)
In the 7th Century, the Saxons (who had converted to Christianity) conquered the ancient Kingdom of Somerset, and so it began...
It was said that Glastonbury Abbey was the burial place of King Arthur and Guinevere ( an elaborate story told by pragmatic monks, it turns out).
Glastonbury Abbey was caught up in Henry VIII Dissolution of the Monasteries, which should come as no surprise. In 1536 there were over 800 monasteries, nunneries and friaries in Britain. By 1541, thanks to Henry VIII, there were none.
Cleeve
Abbey
(Somerset)
This is such a beautiful
Abbey and there is so much to explore, we spent a whole day here.
Lacock
Abbey
(Wiltshire)
Founded in
1229 by Lady Ela the Countess of Salisbury. Lacock Abbey saw its first
Augustinian nuns veiled in 1232. Lacock flourished during the Middle Ages and then
came along, that is right, you guessed it, Henry VIII. Henry sold the Abbey to
Sir William Sharington for £783. Sir William demolished the abbey church and
converted the abbey into a house.
The Abbey has been
used as a location for many films, Harry
Potter and The Other Boleyn Girl,
to name but a few.
And there we have it. Some of my favourite Abbeys.
No comments:
Post a Comment