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Abbeys and priories in Hampshire lists abbeys, priories, friaries or other monastic religious houses in Hampshire, England.
Hampshire, and especially the city of Winchester had many important and influential monasteries, especially those Benedictine houses of royal foundation such as the Priory of St Swithun and Newminster. The county was also rich in alien priories, probably because the county was readily accessible from the continent and Normandy. The Cistercians considered the New Forest remote enough for a foundation at Beaulieu and its daughter house at Netley. In addition, all four orders of the mendicant friars established houses in Winchester, one of only a handful of cities where all four orders were present. There were six houses of Austin Canons but only one of Premonstratensian Canons. The Carthusians and Gilbertines had no presence in the county. The Knights Templar owned property but had no establishments, and the Knights Hospitaller had only one preceptory at North Baddesley.
There were hospitals for the accommodation and relief of poor wayfarers, the sick and infirm at Winchester, Southampton, Portsmouth, Basingstoke and Fordingbridge. And colleges at Marwell, Winchester and Basingstoke.
The main table includes abbeys, priories and friaries, including alien houses, monastic granges, cells, and camerae of the military orders of monks (Templars and Hospitallers). Hospitals and colleges are listed separately.
| Towns with more than one order | |
| Benedictine | |
| Augustinian Canons | |
| Cistercian | |
| Tironensian | |
| Premonstratensian Canons | |
| Knights Hospitaller | |
| Other |
Foundations are listed alphabetically.
Communities/provenance: shows the status and communities existing at each establishment, together with such dates as have been established as well as the fate of the establishment after dissolution, and the current status of the site.
Alt. Name: some of the establishments have had alternative names over the course of time. In order to assist in text-searching such alternatives in name or spelling have been provided.
Formal Name/dedication: shows the formal name of the establishment or the person in whose name the church is dedicated, where known.
References: presents links to online references to the particular establishment in addition to the general printed and online references given at the foot of this article. Establishments for which online references have not been specified are referred to within the printed references listed.
Location: provides a link to the geographical position of the site of the foundation where established. Where the location has been established the location is pinpointed (dependent on the available resolution of the map data), otherwise the general location is given in italic.
| Foundation | Image | Communities & Provenance | Formal Name or Dedication & Alternative Names |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Appuldurcombe House | Historical county location. See entry under Isle of Wight | |||
| Alton Abbey * | Anglican Benedictine monks founded 1895; extant |
The Abbey of Our Lady and Saint John | ||
| Andover Priory | Benedictine monks alien house, dependent on St-Florent, Saumur; founded before1087, church of St Mary granted to St-Florent by William the Conqueror, confirmed by Pope Eugenius III 1146; dissolved c.1414; alienated to Winchester College |
St Peter Blessed Virgin Mary |
||
| Andwell Priory | Tironensian monks alien house, daughter of Tiron founded in the reign of Henry I by Adam de Port of Maplederwell; dedicated 1215/38 by John, Bishop of Ardfert (officiating for Peter de Roches, Bishop of Winchester); dissolved 1391; granted to Winchester College |
The Blessed Virgin Mary (or St John the Baptist?) | ||
| Baddesley Preceptory # | Knights Hospitaller transferred from Godsfield Hospitallers manor and estate of Godsfield here before 1167; transferred here before/c.1355; dissolved 1540; granted to Sir Nicolas Trockmorton 1539/40; house named 'Baddesley Manor' built on site |
North Baddesley Preceptory; South Badeisley Preceptory Isle of Wight]] |
||
| Beaulieu Abbey ^ | Cistercian monks transferred from Faringdon, Berkshire, daughter of Citeaux; founded 2 Deccember 1203 (1204) by John; dissolved 1538; granted to Thomas Wriothesley Esq. 1538/9; now part of Beaulieu Palace, in private ownership with public access |
The Abbey Church of Saint Mary, Beaulieu Bellus Locus Regis; De Bello Loco Regis; (Royal Beaulieu); abbatia quae vocitatur Bellus Locus |
||
| Breamore Priory | Augustinian Canons Regular founded 1128-33 by Baldwin de Reveriis and his uncle Hugh; dissolved 1536; granted to Henry, Marquis of Exeter 1536/7; Elizabethan manor house (1536) on site |
The Priory Church of the Holy Trinity, Saint Mary and Saint Michael Bromere Priory |
||
| Breamore Minster? | large pre-Conquest church suggested to have been a minster 10thC - evidence lacking | St Mary
Isle of Wight]] |
||
| Christchurch Priory | Historical county location. See entry under List of monastic houses in Dorset | |||
| Eling Monastery? | founded c.680; possible site of ancient monastery under Abbot Cimberth (Cynebert), (alternatively at Redbridge); strong evidence that the current Parish Church of St Mary, substantially restored 1863, was the pre-conquest minster, possibly Reodford/Redbridge | Reodford Monastery (possibly); Nursling Monastery (possibly) |
||
| Ellingham Priory | Benedictine monks alien cell, daughter of St-Sauveur-le-Vicomte founded 1160, church of St Mary and land granted by William de Solariis to build a cell; dissolved 1414; granted to Eton College 1462 |
Church of Saint Mary Church of All Saints |
||
| Farnborough Abbey * | Premonstratensian Canons' cell, founded 1887; French Benedictine 1895; raised to abbey status 1903; English Benedictine cell of Prinknash 1947; priory 1969; independent community 1980; extant |
The Abbey Church of Saint Michael the Archangel | ||
| Godsfield Preceptory | Knights Hospitaller founded before/c.1171; transferred to North Baddesley 1355; chapel on site c.1360-70 |
|||
| Hamble Priory | Tironensian monks alien house, daughter of Tiron founded between 1109 and 1140 by William Giffard, Bishop of Winchester; dissolved 1391; granted to Winchester College |
Priory of St. Andrew, Hamble Hamble-en-le-rys; Hamblerice; Hamble-le-Rice |
||
| Hayling Priory | Benedictine monks alien house, daughter of Jumièges founded after/c.1067 ("by King William, and afterwards by King Henry I"), land granted by William the Conqueror; part of estate (possibly including church and conventual buildings) inundated by the sea 1324-5 and 1340; dissolved 1413; granted to Arundel College 1541/2; granted to Sheen; site is now beneath the sea — a number of locations suggested as being the main site |
Halling Priory; Hailing Priory |
||
| Netley Abbey | Cistercian monks daughter of Beaulieu founded 25 July 1239 projected by Peter des Roches, Bishop of Winchester on land granted by him before 1238; co-founder with Henry III; dissolved 1536; granted to Sir William Paulet 1536/7 (EH) |
The Abbey Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary and Saint Edward the Confessor Locus Sancti Edwardi (Lieu-Saint-Edward); Nettely Abbey |
||
| Nursling Monastery? | Benedictine monks founded 8thC by St Boniface; destroyed in raids by the Danes c.878; 'The Walls' reputedly the site of monastery; although argued that the monastery was at Romsey; inconclusive evidence of pre-Conquest foundation from excavations during 1982 |
Redford Monastery (possibly) | ||
| Pamber Priory + | Benedictine monks alien house, daughter of St Vigor, Cerisy (Cerisy-le-Forêt founded 1100 (c.1120-30); dissolved 1135; dissolved 1414; granted to St Julian's Hospital, Southampton; granted to Queen's College, Oxford 1446 and continues in that ownership; priory church extant |
St Mary and St John the Baptist Monk Sherborne Priory; Sherborne Priory |
||
| Portchester Priory + | Augustinian Canons Regular founded 1128-9(1133), by William de Pont de l'Arche(d'Arch), chamberlain and sheriff of Hampshire, with the assistance of Henry I within the walls of the castle; site soon proved unsuitable; transferred to Southwick c.1145; dissolved 7 April 1538; granted to John White 1538/9; priory church in parochial use as the Parish Church of St Mary |
St Mary Porchester Priory |
||
| Portsmouth Blackfriars | projected house for Dominican Friars (1225) establishment never implemented |
|||
| Quarr Abbey, medieval | Historical county location. See entry under Isle of Wight | |||
| Quarr Abbey | Historical county location. See entry under Isle of Wight | |||
| Redbridge Monastery | founded c.680; possible site of ancient monastery under Abbot Cimberth (Cynebert), though more likely at Eling | Reodford Monastery | ||
| Ryde - St Cecilia's Abbey | Historical county location. See entry under Isle of Wight | |||
| St Cross Priory | Historical county location. See entry under Isle of Wight | |||
| St Helen's Priory | Historical county location. See entry under Isle of Wight | |||
| Selborne Priory | Augustinian Canons Regular founded 1233–34 by Peter de Roches, Bishop of Winchester (charter dated 20 January 1233/4, confirmed by Pope Gregory IX September 1235); dissolved 1484: house financially and physically delapidated; annexed by Magdalen College, Oxford 11 September 1484 (confirmed 1485) |
Priory Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary | ||
| Southampton - Greyfriars | Franciscan Friars founded 1235 Observant Franciscan Friars refounded 1498; dissolved 1534; Augustinian Friars founded 1534; dissolved 1538; granted to John Pollard 1544/5; granted to Arthur Darcy 1551 |
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| Southwick Priory | Augustinian Canons Regular (community founded at Portchester c.1128-9); transferred here 1145, built 1145-53 (indulgences granted by the Archbishop of Canterbury to establish the canons at Southwick); dissolved 7 April 1538 |
Our Lady of Southwick | ||
| Titchfield Abbey | Premonstratensian Canons founded 1232 by Peter de Roches (Peter de Rupibis), Bishop of Winchester; granted to Thomas Wriothesley 1537; converted into a mansion named 'Palace House' by 1542, much of which demolished 1781; (EH) |
The Abbey Church of Saint Mary and Saint John the Evangelist Tychfield Abbey |
||
| Ventnor Priory | Historical county location. See entry under Isle of Wight | |||
| Wherwell Abbey # | Benedictine nuns founded c .986, probably on site of Saxon minster dissolved 1539; country house named 'The Priory' built on site mid-18thC, immediately to the south-east of the abbey church |
The Abbey Church of the Holy Cross, Wherwell; Whrewell Abbey |
||
| Winchester St Augustine's Friary - possible earlier site ~ | Augustinian Friars (under the Limit of Oxford) founded before 1300 possibly on a site outside the city wall; in 1342 Pope Clement VI instructed the Bishop of Winchester to allow the friars to move from their premises to a site they had procured within the city wall 1341; the Pope sanctioned the move in 1346 (see immediately below) |
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| Winchester - St Augustine's Friary ~ | Augustinian Friars (under the Limit of Oxford) founded before 1300 possibly on a site outside the city wall (see immediately above); transfer sanctioned by the Pope 1346; dissolved 1538; house named 'The Friary' built in the vicinity of the site |
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| Winchester - Blackfriars | Dominican Friars (under the Visitation of London) founded c.1231; dissolved 1538 |
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| Winchester - Greyfriars | Franciscan Friars (under the Custody of London) founded 1237; dissolved 1538; granted 1543/4 |
St Francis | ||
| Winchester - Whitefriars | Carmelite Friars founded before 1268 (1278) by Peter, rector of St Helen's, Winchester; dissolved 1538 |
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| Winchester - Hyde Abbey | Benedictine monks (community founded at New Minster 901); transferred from New Minster, (see immediately below), 1109; dissolved; granted to Richard Bethel 1545/6 |
New Minster | ||
| Winchester - New Minster | Benedictine monks founded 901 by Alfred the Great; transferred to new site at Hyde Abbey (see immediately above) 1109 |
The New Minster | ||
| Winchester - Nunnaminster Abbey # | Benedictine nuns founded c.902 (9thC) by Alfred the Great and his queen Ealhswith; completed before 908 by Edward the Elder refounded and rededicated 963 by Bishop Ethelwold; rededicated 1108; destroyed in the siege of Winchester; rebuilt 1141; dissolved 1539; granted to John Bello and John Broxholme 1546/7 |
St Mary Nunnaminster Abbey; St Mary's Abbey |
||
| Winchester - St Swithun's Priory | Benedictine monks founded 648; episcopal diocesan cathedral (founded c.662/3); demolished 1093-4 when the East end of the new cathedral church was completed (see immediately below) |
Old Minster | ||
| Winchester Cathedral Priory + | secular canons founded c.942–1064: built 1079-1094 by Wakelin, Bishop of Winchester; Benedictine monks founded 964; dissolved 1539; episcopal diocesan cathedral from 8 April 1093 |
The Cathedral Church of the Holy Trinity, Saint Peter and Saint Paul in Winchester The Cathedral Church of the Holy Trinity, Saint Peter, Saint Paul and Saint Swithun in Winchester |
||
| Wintney Priory | Cistercian nuns founded before 1200 (in the reign of William the Conqueror) by the son of Peter Jeffrey; dissolved 1536; granted to Richard Hill, Esq, Sergeant of the King's Cellar 1538/9; 18th-century Wintney Farmhouse on site |
Priory of the Blessed Virgin and St Mary Magdalene Winteney Priory |
||
| * | indicates current monastic function |
|---|---|
| + | indicates current non-monastic ecclesiastic function |
| ^ | indicates current non-ecclesiastic function |
| # | indicates no identifiable trace of the monastic foundation remains |
| ~ | indicates exact site of monastic foundation unknown |
| NT | National Trust |
| EH | English Heritage |
| LT | Landmark Trust |
| trns | transferred |
| rmv | removed |
| c. | circa (about) |
| ante | before |
| post | after |
| fd. | founded |
| dis. | dissolved |
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