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WEDDINGTON CASTLE - An
Online History
Other Halls and Castles Around
Nuneaton - Nuneaton Priory
Click on thumbnail for larger
image. Scroll down for historical details of this building.
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1876 Ruins of St Mary's Abbey Church, Nuneaton (a part page from the 'Illustrated London News' (dated 1876))
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Nuneaton Priory - early East view of ruins
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c1700 - 1750
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Priory ruins, pictured c.1900-1909
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Heraldic arms of Nuneaton Priory
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Ceramic mug featuring the crest of Nuneaton Priory
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The celebrated abbey of Fontevrault, Anjou,
was founded in 1100 by Robert de Arbriscelle, for both monks and nuns of the
Benedictine order. Many French convents were subordinate to this monastery, as
well as the three English cells of Amesbury (Wilts.), Grove (Beds.) and
Nuneaton.
The latter appears to have been originally founded at Kintbury in Berkshire by
Robert, Earl of Leicester and Gervase Paynel, who was his son-in-law, having
married the Earl's daughter Isabel, widow of Simon de Senliz, Earl of
Northampton. About 1153-5 the Earl of Leicester gave to the abbey of Fontevrault
25 librates of land in Kintbury and in the soke of Hungerford for the erection
of a convent of nuns belonging to that abbey.
At the same time Gervase Paynel granted to Fontevrault and to 'the nuns of
Keneteburi serving God in that place' his mill of Inkpen (Berkshire). For some
reason, however, the site of the foundation was speedily removed to Eaton in
Warwickshire, subsequently known as Nuneaton; and about 1155 Gervase Paynel
confirmed his gift of the mill of Inkpen 'to Saint Mary and the nuns of Eton of
the order of Fontevrault serving God and Saint Mary in that place.' Robert, Earl
of Leicester, in a charter possibly slightly Earlier than that of Gervase Paynel,
as it does not mention the mill of Inkpen, confirmed to the convent of the order
of Fontevrault which he had founded at (Nun)eaton the manor of Eaton, except the
lands at StocKingford held by the canons of St. Mary 'de Prato' of Leicester and
those held by the nuns of Chaise-Dieu (in Eure) in Attleborough or Eaton; also
land paying £25 rent in Kintbury, his holding in Upwell and Outwell (Norfolk);
the gift of his daughter Isabel and her son Earl Simon of land and pasture in
Waltham (Leicestershire); land in Swinford, and rent in Leicester.
In this confirmation charter the nunnery is called an abbey, and it is so termed
in most of the Early charters, and occasionally in the later; but from the time
of its foundation its head never appears to have had a higher title than
prioress. Associated with the prioress was a prior, leases and similar deeds
running in the names of 'the prioress and prior and all the convent both of
brethren and sisters.' These brethren, of whom the prior was the head, were not
monks, but a community of secular chaplains, similar apparently to that which
existed at Godstow Abbey. A deed of about 1160 is attested by Hugh, Fromund,
Nigel, Robert 'the bearded,' Bertram, and Humfrey, all called 'brethren,' whose
names are preceded by those of William and Vital, priests, who may also have
belonged to the community. In 1328 there were seven chaplains, including the
prior.
The title of prior appears to have lapsed in the fifteenth century, and is not
found after 1424, the chief chaplain being referred to after this date as
'master and receivergeneral of the convent.' The post of prior, in its business
aspect, can have been no sinecure, for not only were the priory estates widely
scattered, but the number of inmates was remarkably large. In 1328 there were
eighty-nine nuns, while a century earlier, in 1234, there had been ninety-three.
These numbers must have diminished considerably after the Black Death of 1350,
for in 1370 there were only forty-six nuns, and there would seem to have been
about forty nuns in 1459, as the prioress in that year arranged for forty choir
stalls to be made by Thomas Karver of Lichfield, from which same city, it may be
observed, two free-masons were obtained in 1516 to complete the stonework of the
cloisters.
At the election of Elizabeth Hasilrigg as prioress in 1507 the nuns numbered
twenty-three in all, and the same number received pensions upon the dissolution
of the priory. Besides the prioress there were the claustral prioress,
sub-prioress, third prioress, 'fratrissa,' and 'celleraria.' The 'celleraria'
appears to have had part control of the infirmary, as about 1180 Aileva de
Kerleton, wife of Robert the Cook, quadam infirmitate detenta, put herself into
the hands of Dame Cecilia, the 'celleraria,' and Dame Eidiez de Hinkelai, at the
same time granting to the priory certain houses in Leicester and Bristol,
cattle, a fur mantle and cape, and a gold ring, on condition that if she
recovered the priory should restore her enough to live upon, and receive her as
a nun when she should so desire.
Naturally there were many distinguished ladies in the priory; the founder's
wife, Amice, became a nun there, and his daughter Hawise was also an inmate. The
Earl had given 100s. of land in ' Dadelinton' to the nuns with his daughter, but
Hugh de Novilla deprived them of the land; they thereupon entrusted their
charter to the abbot of Leicester, who undertook to guard it until the Earl had
made good the loss. Accordingly, Robert (IV), then Earl, granted 9 virgates of
land formerly held by Aaron the Jew of Lincoln in Belgrave in exchange for 'the
land of Dadelinton which my father gave with my sister Hawise of pious memory.'
Apparently in this case the girl had been entrusted to them for education and
not to become a nun, as she subsequently married the Earl of Gloucester, and, as
countess of Gloucester, left her body to the priory with 100s. rent from Nutfort
mill in Pimperne, Dorset. Emma, mother of Ralph de Tureville, became a nun here
shortly after the foundation of the house, and persuaded her son to grant the
church of Burton Hastings.
Several other churches were obtained; that of Burley in Rutland being given by
Richard, bishop of Winchester, at whose disposal it had been put by David de
Armentières about 1182; that of Waltham-on-the-Wolds by the nuns of St. Paul,
Beauvais, to whom Earl Simon de Senliz had given it about 1186; the chapel of
Blendworth, in Hampshire, given for the soul of William, its founder, by
Geoffrey the Fowler and his wife about 1170, and in the same county the church
of Petersfield with Mapledurham chapel, Catherington church, and that of Chawton
given by Henry II before 1163. Also those of Hodnell, obtained from Kenilworth
Priory; St. Gregory's, Sudbury, from William, Earl of Gloucester; Mursley
(Buckinghamshire), from Richard Fitz Nigel, and Claybrooke (Leicestershire),
from Isabel de Wateville, mother of Arnold de Bosco. The church of Marton was
given by Robert de Craft, and confirmedabout 1160 by William, Earl of Warwick,
as being situated upon the fee of his man Hugh FitzRichard, the founder of
Wroxall Priory; to this church a number of neighbouring vills paid yEarly rents
of rye and corn as 'churchamber,' and to it was appurtenant the chapel of
Honingham, which the nuns surrendered to the priory of Monks Kirby about 1170,
reserving a rent of 5s.
Henry II granted the nuns a fair at Nuneaton on the feast of the Invention of
the Cross and the four following days. Henry III confirmed this in 1239, and
extended the fair to the two days preceding the feast. In 1226 Henry III granted
the priory a Tuesday market at Nuneaton; and the market day was changed in 1233
to Saturday.
In 1236-8 the nuns were rebuilding their church, and the King granted them ten
oaks out of Kenilworth Woods and fifteen out of Cank Forest.
Yet in spite of these and many other gifts Gregory IX, in 1234, granted leave to
the priory and nuns of Nuneaton of the order of Fontevrault, who for the past
half-year had been unable to support themselves, to hold for their uses, on its
voidance, the church of Chawton (Hants) in their patronage, valued under sixteen
marks, provided that a vicar was appointed and a portion reserved for episcopal
and archidiaconal procurations. In May, 1255, Pope Alexander IV, in
consideration of their hospitality and great service to the poor, sanctioned the
appropriation by the nuns of the church of Claybrooke in the diocese of Lincoln,
which was of their patronage, on the next voidance, without the assent of either
bishop or archdeacon, provided a portion was reserved for a perpetual vicar.
The taxation of 1291 shows how large had been the benefactions to this priory.
The temporalities of the nuns of Nuneaton in the deanery of Arden were declared
of the annual value of £49 3s. 7d., and the three churches appropriated to them
in the county, Burton, Marton, and Hodnell had a united annual value of £13. The
temporalities in the diocese of Lincoln were worth £26 2s. 2d., and in the
diocese of Sarum £16 10s. 8d., as well as smaller sums elsewhere. But next year,
in 1292, John, bishop of Winchester, allowed the nuns to appropriate the church
of Catherington 'as their revenues have diminished, and three or four times a
week they have lived on hard bread.' Later, in 1451, their revenues had been
further reduced, and they had suffered by royal officials seizing their goods on
the way to Nuneaton fair; accordingly they received licence to acquire property
to the value of 20 marks, and exemption from such seizures. The Valor of 1535
gives the clear annual value of the priory of Nuneaton as £253 14s. 5½d. The
nuns gave in yEarly alms £6 17s. 4d.
In 1320 a dispute seems to have arisen as to the right of appointing a prioress.
The abbess and convent of Fontevrault, to whom the priory of Nuneaton was
subject, appointed Katherine de Stamforde one of the nuns, but the bishop of
Lichfield and Coventry ' intruded' Isabella de Sullec (sic, recte Sudlee), also
a nun, who held office as prioress 'in contempt of the pope' and to the injury
of the abbess and convent of Fontevrault, who thereupon petitioned the pope for
redress. In November of 1320, John XXII issued a mandate to the bishops of
Salisbury and Hereford to examine and report to him on the subject.
There was a writ of inquiry from the King's court addressed to the bishop of
Coventry and Lichfield in 1358, with reference to Joan wife of Nicholas Grene.
It would appear that Joan had pleaded that the cause in which she was defendant
(a question of inheritance) should be heard in the ecclesiastical courts on
account of her having been professed at Nuneaton Priory. But the bishop denied
that Joan had ever been professed at Nuneaton, and forwarded a certificate of
having solemnly admitted, twenty years before, thirty nuns at Nuneaton, at the
request of the Earl of Lancaster, the patron. It transpired that the priory of
Nuneaton was exempt from episcopal visitation, but the nuns were admitted by the
bishop or his suffragan.
In 1391 Pope Boniface IX wrote to the prior of Coventry requiring him to confirm
the election of Rose de Everingham. The like confirmation was to be made so long
as the schism lasted, the abbess of Fontevrault, to whom the confirmation
belonged of right, being an adherent of the antipope. The influence of the
mother house was further affected by the French wars, and in 1412 the pope
commissioned the bishop of Salisbury to visit the priory at Nuneaton as often as
necessary so long as the abbess of Fontevrault, to whom the right of visitation
belonged, should be prevented by the continuance of war between England and
France.
In 1462, 'on account of the bad and wasteful governance of Maud the prioress,'
the priory had been taken into the King's hands. On 20 September he issued
letters patent by which it was entrusted to the custody of the abbots of
Leicester and Merevale, the prior of Coventry, Sir William Hastings of Hastings,
Richard Byngham, a justice of the bench, and three others, who were directed to
apply all issues beyond the necessary sustenance of the prioress and convent and
their servants to the relief of the priory, and they were also to inquire into
all the excesses and alienations which had been committed.
The immediate result was not altogether satisfactory, for although the abbot of
Merevale and the prior of Coventry in 1465 removed 'Dame Maude Everyngham
prioresse of Nuneton and Sir Simon Byllyngay broder of the same place,' by whose
misrule the goods of the priory had been wasted, and entrusted the management of
the house to Sir William Ecle and Sir John Westby, 'breder of the same place,'
yet the ex-prioress and Simon contrived to get the revenues into their own hands
and to waste them as before, and indeed Maud Everingham appears in January 1471
acting as prioress, having no doubt taken advantage of the confusion due to the
brief restoration of Henry VI to oust Elizabeth Barton, the lawful prioress.
In September, 1533, Sir Walter Smyth, sheriff of Warwickshire and
Leicestershire, who had been knighted at the coronation of Anne Boleyn, wrote to
Cromwell as to this priory, alleging that it kept no good rule either to God or
the world, charging one of the nuns (the name is not mentioned) with unchastity.
He asked that the King should be moved, as founder (patron), in the matter to
appoint a new prioress. If his prayer was granted the King should have £100, and
Cromwell should have £40 for himself. But there were others who held a very
different view as to the character and value of the nunnery, and when Cecily,
Lady Dudley, wrote to Cromwell on 24 February, 1537, complaining of the poverty
of herself and her husband, who were utterly undone unless the King took pity on
them, she stated that she had but little above £20 a year to find her and one of
her daughters with a woman and a man to wait upon them, and unless the good
prioress of Nuneaton had given them meat and drink free of cost, she could not
tell to what straits she would have been driven. Moreover, whenever her children
came to see her at the priory, the prioress entertained them as long as they
liked to tarry, with horse meat and man's meat to boot, and when they departed
put a piece of gold or two in their purses. If aught should come to the house of
Nuneaton she would stand in a very hard case.
On 12 September, 1539, the prioress Agnes Oulton and the convent were supposed
to surrender their house; but the deed of surrender has no signatures, merely
twenty-seven crosses. London received the surrender and signed the pensions,
namely, £40 to the prioress; £3 each to Agnes Wilsey, Isabel Purfreye, Joan
Whalleye, Elizabeth Milwarde, Mary Worseley, and Joan Wetnall; 53s. 4d. each to
Isabel Babington and Joyse Fitzherbert; 46s. 8d. each to Anne Everatte, Lucy
Hasilbrigge, Joan Bate, Joan Haseley, Margaret Dyxwell, and Rose Ceton; 40s.
each to Joan Copstone, Mary Barington, Ellen Townesende, Dorothy Riddell, and
Joyse Clarke; 26s. 8d. to Elizabeth Berdemore, Isabel Bannester, Joan More, and
Agnes Kingstone; and 33s. 4d. to Joan Palmer. Robert Glen, chaplain to the
nunnery, had a pension of £6. Seventeen of the nuns were living and drawing
their pensions in 1553.
Eight months after the surrender Henry VIII gave the site and all the priory's
possessions to his servant, Sir Marmaduke Constable.
Sadly, the ravages of time have not been kind to Nuneaton's priory. The site is
now in ruins, although these can still be seen at their original site adjacent
to the Church of St. Nicholas.
From: 'Houses of Benedictine nuns: Priory of
Nuneaton', A History of the County of Warwickshire: Volume 2 (1908), pp. 66-70.


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