Hailes Abbey

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Hailes Abbey

Gloucestershire

National Trust

Hailes Abbey Landscape.jpg
Grid reference: SP050300
Information

Hailes Abbey is a ruined abbey found two miles northeast of Winchcombe in Gloucestershire. It is today owned by the National Trust.

History

The abbey was founded in 1245 or 1246 by Richard, Earl of Cornwall, called "King of the Romans" and the younger brother of King Henry III. Richard founded the abbey to thank God, after he had survived a shipwreck. Richard had been granted the manor of Hailes by King Henry, and settled it with Cistercian monks from Beaulieu Abbey in Hampshire.[1] The great Cistercian abbey was entirely built in a single campaign in 1277, and was consecrated in a royal ceremony that included the King and Queen and 15 bishops.

Hailes Abbey became a site of pilgrimage when Richard's son Edmund donated to the Cistercian community a phial reputed to contain the Holy Blood, purchased in Germany, in 1270, and such a relic of the Crucifixion was a considerable magnet for pilgrimage. From the proceeds, the monks of Hailes were able to rebuild the Abbey on a magnificent scale.[1] One Abbot of Hailes was executed as a rebel after the Battle of Bramham Moor in 1408.

King Henry VIII's commissioners declared the famous relic to be nothing but the blood of a duck, regularly renewed, and Abbot Stephen Sagar admitted that the Holy Blood was a fake. Hailes Abbey was one of the last religious institutions to acquiesce following the Dissolution Act of 1536. The Abbot and his monks finally surrendered their abbey to Henry's commissioners on Christmas Eve 1539.[1]

After the Dissolution, the west range consisting of the Abbot's own apartments was converted into a house and was home to the Tracy family in the seventeenth century, but these buildings were later demolished and now all that remains are a few low arches in a meadow with outlines in the grass. Surviving remains include the small church for the disappeared parish, with unrestored mediæval wall-paintings.[1]

The abbey is owned by the National Trust but managed by English Heritage.

Hailes Church

Hailes Church
Hailes Church's Mediæval Paintings

Outside the remains of the Abbey is Hailes Church. The church is older than the abbey, being consecrated in 1175 and then served as the Capella Ante Portas to the Abbey until its dissolution.

Inside the church are fine Mediæval wall paintings.

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Hailes Abbey)

References