Chacombe Priory

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Chacombe Priory

Northamptonshire


House on the site of Chacombe Priory
Location
Grid reference: SP48854388
Location: 52°5’28"N, 1°17’18"W
Village: Chacombe
Order: Augustinian
History
Established: 12th century
Founder: Hugh de Chacombe
Disestablished: 1536
Information
Remains: core incorporated into country house;
also chapel and mediæval fishponds

Chacombe Priory (or Chalcombe Priory) was a priory of Augustinian canons at Chacombe, Northamptonshire.[1]

Hugh of Chacombe, lord of the manor of Chacombe, founded the priory in the reign of Henry II (1154–89).[1] on low-lying land just west of the village close to the stream.[2] Hugh gave the priory endowments including a yardland at South Newington.[3] In about 1225 the priory's property included eight tenements in Banbury, seven of which it retained until the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 1530s.[4] By the time of the Hundred Rolls in 1279 the priory owned a tenement in Warwick, where it expanded its holdings until it owned a substantial number of tenements and cottages by the time of the Dissolution.[5]

On 27 September 1535 Sir John Tregonwell reported to Thomas Cromwell:

At Chacombe the prior is newly come, and is competently well learned in Holy Scripture. He is bringing into some order his canons, who are rude and unlearned. I am only afraid that he is too familiar and easy with them.[6]

When the priory was suppressed in 1536[1] its property included land at Boddington, Northamptonshire,[7] Rotherby, Leicestershire[8] and Wardington, Oxfordshire,[9] and a tenement at Thorpe Mandeville.[10] Today the only visible remains of the priory are a small chapel apparently built in the 13th century[11] and a set of mediaeval fishponds.[1] However, at least three mediæval stone coffin slabs, including one from the 13th century, have been found in the priory grounds.[2]

Part of the priory site is now occupied by a house, also called Chacombe Priory. The house has a large Elizabethan porch and a late 17th-century staircase, and was remodelled in the Georgian era.[1][11] The house is a Grade-II* listed building.[1]

References

  1. Jump up to: 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 "Chacombe Priory". National Heritage List for England. English Heritage. 11 September 1953. http://list.english-heritage.org.uk/resultsingle.aspx?uid=1041228. Retrieved 10 November 2013. 
  2. Jump up to: 2.0 2.1 RCHME 1982, pp. 26–27.
  3. Crossley 1983, pp. 143–159.
  4. Crossley 1972, pp. 42–49.
  5. Stephens 1969, pp. 480–489.
  6. Gairdner 1886, pp. 143–165.
  7. Gairdner & Brodie 1898, pp. 315–331.
  8. Gairdner & Brodie 1902, pp. 227–244.
  9. Gairdner 1890, pp. 239–254.
  10. Gairdner & Brodie 1901, pp. 272–287.
  11. Jump up to: 11.0 11.1 Pevsner & Cherry 1973, p. 146.

Sources

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