Showing posts with label Dissolution of the Monasteries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dissolution of the Monasteries. Show all posts

Saturday, 7 October 2023

Pershore Abbey revisited


Passing through Pershore recently we stopped to have a look at the abbey. The first time I visited this building was in 2010 and here's what I had to say in a blogpost about this "ugly duckling" of a building.

"The church is the former abbey at Pershore in Worcestershire. This building, originally an Anglo-Saxon foundation, rebuilt c.1100, and extended in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, was severely reduced in size at the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1539. The monastic outbuildings were destroyed and the nave and Lady Chapel were taken down completely. The north transept subsequently collapsed and in 1686 the crossing tower had to have supports constructed on that side. An east apse (shown in the photograph) was built in 1847. There was a general restoration in 1862-5 and in the early twentieth century when two massive flying buttresses (dated 1913) were placed against the tower to help to hold it in position (see smaller photograph)."


 You might want to click the link to the 2010 post to find out more and make more sense of the above. 

photo © T. Boughen     Camera: Nikon Z 5

Sunday, 4 October 2020

Inside Llanthony Priory


When, between 1536 and 1541, Henry VIII ordered the Dissolution of the Monasteries, their properties and lands were sold with the funds raised becoming the crown's. Buildings were deliberately pulled down and damaged so that they could not be used for their old purposes. A few remained undamaged, particularly those that were given cathedral status. Some were allowed to keep a portion of the building so that it could be used as a parish church. In practical terms many of the monasteries became quarries with people using the stone to build or extend their own properties.


Llanthony Priory changed owners down the centuries with some of the building being adapted as accomodation. Today that portion is a small hotel and, unusually, the building as a whole remains in private ownership. Both photographs include a glimpse of a part that is currently still in use.

photo © T. Boughen     Camera: Lumix FZ1000 2

Monday, 25 June 2018

Tintern Abbey shadows

Tintern Abbey was the second  foundation by the Cistercians in Britain and the first in Wales. Like all the abbeys of this order it was built in what would have been a remote location - in this case, the valley of the River Wye. The structure was founded in 1131. Its present, ruinous state came about through Henry VIII's dissolution of the monasteries in 1536. The early proponents of the Romantic Movement were moved by its battered skeletal form alongside the river, overlooked on both sides by heavily wooded slopes.

photo © T. Boughen     Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10