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List of monastic houses in Berkshire facts for kids

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The following is a list of the monastic houses in Berkshire, England.


Alien houses are included, as are smaller establishments such as cells and notable monastic granges (particularly those with resident monks), and also camerae of the military orders of monks (Knights Templars and Knights Hospitaller). The numerous monastic hospitals per se are not included here unless at some time the foundation had, or was purported to have the status or function of an abbey, priory, friary or preceptory/commandery.

The name of the county is given where there is reference to an establishment in another county. Where the county has changed since the foundation's dissolution the modern county is given in parentheses, and in instances where the referenced foundation ceased to exist before the unification of England, the kingdom is given, followed by the modern county in parentheses.

Alien houses are included, as are smaller establishments such as cells and notable monastic granges (particularly those with resident monks), and also camerae of the military orders of monks (Knights Templars and Knights Hospitaller). Monastic hospitals are included where they had the status or function of an abbey, priory, friary or preceptor/commandery.

Abbreviations and key
Status of remains
Symbol Status
None Ruins
* Current monastic function
+ Current non-monastic ecclesiastic function (including remains incorporated into later structure)
^ Current non-ecclesiastic function (including remains incorporated into later structure) or redundant intact structure
$ Remains limited to earthworks etc.
# No identifiable trace of the monastic foundation remains
~ Exact site of monastic foundation unknown
Identification ambiguous or confused

Locations with names in italics indicate possible duplication (misidentification with another location) or non-existent foundations (either erroneous reference or proposed foundation never implemented) or ecclesiastical establishments with a monastic name but lacking actual monastic connection.

Trusteeship
EH English Heritage
LT Landmark Trust
NT National Trust



Foundation Image Communities & Provenance Formal Name or Dedication and alternative names References and location|
Ankerwycke Priory,
Wraysbury
Ruins of Ankerwyke Priory.jpg Benedictine nuns
founded c.1160 by Gilbert de Mountfitchet, Kt., Lord of Wyrardisbury and his son;
dissolved before 8 July 1536; granted to Lord Windsor 1538/9 then to Sir Thomas Smith 1550/1
ruins in grounds of Ankerwycke House
The Priory Church of Saint Mary Magdalene, Ankerwyke
____________________
Ankerwick Priory;
Ankerwyke Priory

51°26′37″N 0°33′26″W / 51.443643°N 0.557191°W / 51.443643; -0.557191 (Ankerwyke Priory)
Ascot Priory *,
Winkfield
Ascot Priory, Berks - geograph.org.uk - 331229.jpg Anglican nuns
founded 1861; extant
The Priory Church of Jesus Christ

51°25′00″N 0°42′20″W / 51.416652°N 0.705556°W / 51.416652; -0.705556 (Ascot Priory)
Bisham Abbey # Bisham-29Ag9-wyrd1.jpg Augustinian Canons Regular priory
founded 1337 by William Montacute;
built to the northeast of the site of the former Knights Templars' preceptory (see immediately below)
dissolved 1536
Benedictine monks
abbey
founded 1537 by Henry VIII;
the abbey incorporating parts of the former Knights Templars' structure;
(transferred from Chertsey, Surrey);
dissolved 1538; granted to Sir Edward Hoby c.1554;
extant preceptory & demolished priory/abbey site now headquarters of the National Sports Council
The Priory Church of the Jesus Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary, Bisham

The Abbey Church of the Holy Trinity, Bisham
____________________
Bustlesham Priory;


51°33′25″N 0°46′45″W / 51.557016°N 0.779225°W / 51.557016; -0.779225 (Bisham Abbey)
Bisham Preceptory # Knights Templar
founded before 1139 by Robert de Ferrers;
dissolved 1308–12;
Augustinian priory later founded to northeast of site (see immediately above);
extant preceptory & demolished priory/abbey site now headquarters of the National Sports Council


51°33′25″N 0°46′45″W / 51.557016°N 0.779225°W / 51.557016; -0.779225 (Bisham Preceptory)
Bradfield Abbey ~ monks
documented 1066
land granted by King Ine to Hean, Abbot of Abingdon, and Ceolswyth 688-90 to found a monastery; community included monks, status and site otherwise unknown


Bradley Priory ~ Benedictine monks
dependent on Abingdon Abbey (Oxfordshire)
manor, described in 1547 as 'lately a priory';
status and site otherwise unknown

51°26′38″N 1°08′17″W / 51.4438905°N 1.1379486°W / 51.4438905; -1.1379486 (Bradley Priory (approx. loc.)) (approx)
Bromhall Priory #,
Sunningdale
Benedictine nuns
daughter house of Chertsey, Surrey;
founded before 1200 by Edward, the Black Prince;
accidentally burnt 1462;
dissolved 1521 when the last prioress died and the remaining sisters left;
given to St John's College, Cambridge
remains destroyed or incorporated into farm buildings
The Priory Church of Saint Margaret, Bromhall
____________________
Broomhall Priory


51°23′23″N 0°37′42″W / 51.3896194°N 0.6282806°W / 51.3896194; -0.6282806 (Bromhall Priory (approx. loc.)) (approx)
Cold Ash Centre * Franciscan Friars Minor and sisters
Novitiate house for the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary founded 1930s; extant
The Cold Ash Centre

51°25′22″N 1°15′21″W / 51.4227009°N 1.2559283°W / 51.4227009; -1.2559283 (Cold Ash Friary)
Cookham Abbey ~ probable double monastery
founded before 726; granted to Canterbury by Æthelbald of Mercia;
confiscated by Offa and Coenwulf;
restored before 798; granted by Archbishop Æthelheard to Cynethryth, an abbess;
site now occupied by parochial church


51°33′40″N 0°42′27″W / 51.5611263°N 0.7075506°W / 51.5611263; -0.7075506 (Cookham Abbey (supposed loc.)) (supposed)
Donnington Friary ^ Crouched Friars
founded before 1404 (1392/3), land granted by Sir Richard Abberbury to the London Friary c.1376;
dissolved 1538 (recorded at suppression as Trinitarian, later corrected to Crossed Friars);
site now occupied by country house named 'The Priory'
Donington Friary

51°24′53″N 1°19′52″W / 51.414588°N 1.331057°W / 51.414588; -1.331057 (Donnington Friary)
Douai Abbey *,
Woolhampton
Douai Abbey, geograph.jpg Benedictine monks
(community founded at Douai, Belgium, 1615)
removed from Douai 1903; extant
The Abbey Church of Saint Edmund, King and Martyr, Upper Woolhampton

51°24′31″N 1°10′17″W / 51.408715°N 1.171454°W / 51.408715; -1.171454 (Douai Abbey)
Greenham Preceptory ~ Knights Hospitaller
founded c.1180 (1199) on estates granted by Matilda Countess of Clare and Gervase Paynell;
last preceptor d. 1442;
made part of the estate of the prior of England by the grand master of Rhodes 1445
dissolved 1540;
briefly restored under Queen Mary


51°24′03″N 1°19′10″W / 51.400946°N 1.319561°W / 51.400946; -1.319561 (Greenham Preceptory (approx. loc.)) (approx)
Hurley Priory + St Mary's Church, Hurley - geograph.org.uk - 595442.jpg Benedictine monks
founded before 1087 (1065) granted by Godfrey de Magna Villa (Mandeville) to the Benedictines of Westminster to found a cell;
dissolved 1536; granted to Leonard Chamberleyn c.1544
nave of church now in parochial use
The Priory Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Hurley

51°33′03″N 0°48′31″W / 51.550922°N 0.808549°W / 51.550922; -0.808549 (Hurley Priory)
Kintbury Abbey # possible Saxon abbey, minuter or oratory
founded before 931, not mentioned in Domesday survey;
land granted to Fontevrault Benedictine nuns and brothers 1147 by Robert Le Bossu to found a monastery;
transferred to new site at Nuneaton, Warwickshire 1155;
planned refoundation probably never established
Saint Mary

51°23′30″N 1°27′19″W / 51.391735°N 1.4552164°W / 51.391735; -1.4552164 (Kintbury Priory (approx. loc.)) (approx)
Poughley Priory ^ Augustinian Canons Regular
founded c.1160 by Ralph de Chaddleworth;
dissolved 1524 and granted to Cardinal Wolsey's college at Oxford and was occupied by scholars of the college;
remains (cellar range) now incorporated into after-dissolution farmhouse without public access
The Priory Church of Saint Margaret, Poughley

51°28′44″N 1°24′06″W / 51.4788839°N 1.4016581°W / 51.4788839; -1.4016581 (Poughley Priory (approx. loc.)) (approx)
Reading Abbey ReadingAbbey.JPG Cluniac monks
founded 1121 by Henry I
Benedictine monks
refounded c.1210;
dissolved 1539; granted to Edward, Duke of Somerset c.1550;
quarried and dismantled c.1550-1643
ruins extant
The Abbey Church of Our Lady and Saint John the Evangelist, Reading

51°27′23″N 0°57′55″W / 51.456367°N 0.965263°W / 51.456367; -0.965263 (Reading Abbey)
Reading Nunnery ReadingMinster.jpg nuns
founded 979
dissolved 1016; granted to Battle, Sussex by William the Conqueror;
apparently on the site now occupied by St Mary's Minster Church (restored 1551-1555 with masonry and timbers from the demolished Reading Abbey)


51°27′16″N 0°58′25″W / 51.454500°N 0.973690°W / 51.454500; -0.973690 (Reading Nunnery)
Reading Greyfriars, earlier site Franciscan Friars Minor, Conventual (under the Custody of Oxford)
founded 1233 by permission of Adam de Lathbury, abbot of Reading, and the abbey's convent;
transferred to new site 1285-6 (see immediately below)


Reading Greyfriars + ReadingGreyfriars.jpg Franciscan Friars Minor, Conventual (under the Custody of Oxford)
transferred from former site (see immediately above) 1285-6 with permission of the abbot of Reading;
church built 1311;
dissolved 15 September 1538; used as hospital, a poorhouse then a town jail;
converted back to a parish church
Saint Francis

51°27′24″N 0°58′36″W / 51.4567346°N 0.9766352°W / 51.4567346; -0.9766352 (Reading Greyfriars)
Sandleford Priory ^ Photograph of chapel at Sandleford Priory, 1906, by Evelyn Elizabeth Myers (c. 1872-1909).jpg Augustinian Canons Regular
founded 1193/1202 by Jeffrey (Geoffrey), Earl of Perch and his wife Maud (Matilda);
arrangements made 1274 by Maud de Clare, Countess of Gloucester and Hertford (1223–1289) to refound as a double house for Fontevrault Benedictine nuns and brothers, but this did not come about;
dissolved 1478
remains converted to a country house (see also Sandleford);
now an Anglican convent school
The Priory Church of Saint John the Baptist, Sandleford

51°22′39″N 1°18′59″W / 51.3774596°N 1.3163853°W / 51.3774596; -1.3163853 (Sandleford Priory)
Shalford Preceptory Knights Templar
founded c.1198, apparently granted by Simon de Ovile;
Knights Hospitaller
dissolved after 1276;
by 1338 had become a member of Greenham
Brimpton Commandery;
Brimpton Preceptory



51°22′41″N 1°11′54″W / 51.3781561°N 1.1983681°W / 51.3781561; -1.1983681 (Brimpton Preceptory (approx. loc.)) (approx)
Sheffield Lesser Priory ~ Benedictine monks
alien house: manor-grange dependent on St Martin-de-Noyon, Charleval;
founded after 1086, manor granted to Charleval by the Count of Evreux;
locally known as a 'priory'
dissolved and privately leased c.1166-7;
passed to Reading 1270


Sonning Minster Saxon minster
held by Bishop of Ramsbury/Sherborne 10th/11th century
sometimes considered joint see with Ramsbury, Wiltshire;
current parochial church dating to 9th century, largely rebuilt 1852–3;
restored 1870–90
Hundredal Minster

51°28′27″N 0°54′47″W / 51.4740526°N 0.9130722°W / 51.4740526; -0.9130722 (Sonning Minster)
Stratfield Saye Priory Benedictine monks
alien house: priory cell dependent on Valmont
founded 1169 or 1170 by Nicholas de Stoteville (Nicholas d'Estouteville): hermitage granted to Valmont;
dissolved 1399;
house named 'The Priory' built on site (Beech Hill in the Berkshire part of Stratfield Saye)
St Leonard
____________________
Stratfield-Say Priory


51°22′28″N 0°59′03″W / 51.374315°N 0.984226°W / 51.374315; -0.984226 (Stratfield Saye Priory)
Templeton Camera Knights Templar
possible small hospice or hostel with chapel;
passed to Knights Hospitallers in 1311; in private hands at Dissolution;
mansion named 'Templeton House' built on site 1895


51°23′40″N 1°28′56″W / 51.3944931°N 1.4823389°W / 51.3944931; -1.4823389 (Templeton Camera (approx. loc.)) (approx)

See also

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