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Bury St Edmunds Abbey

The Abbey of Bury St Edmunds was once among the richest Benedictine monasteries in England, until its dissolution in 1539. It is in the town that grew up around it, Bury St Edmunds in the county of Suffolk, England. It was a centre of pilgrimage as the burial place of the Anglo-Saxon martyr-king Saint Edmund, killed by the Great Heathen Army of Danes in 869. The ruins of the abbey church and most other buildings are merely rubble cores, but two very large medieval gatehouses survive, as well as two secondary medieval churches built within the abbey complex.

The Norman Tower, a gateway and bell tower in front of the new cathedral tower
The Abbey ruins, Bury St Edmunds

History edit

 
View of churchyard and (L-R) Norman Tower, St James Church and SW Tower of Abbey, c. 1920

In the early 10th century the allegedly "incorrupt" (i.e. not decomposed)[1] body of the martyred king, St Edmund, was translated from Hægelisdun (a placename long and widely thought - but probably in error[2][3] - to refer to Hoxne)[4] to Beodricsworth, afterwards known as St Edmundsbury,[5] a site that had probably had a monastery founded by St Sigeberht some three centuries earlier.[6] At this time the early shrine was guarded by a group of secular priests, but in c. 1020, under the auspices of King Cnut and Ælfwine, the then Bishop of Elmham,[7] they were replaced by monks from St Benet's Abbey and a Benedictine Abbey of St Edmundsbury was founded. Two of the monks from St Benet's Abbey became Bury's first two abbots: Ufi, prior of Holme, (d. 1044), who was consecrated abbot by the Bishop of London; and Leofstan (1044–65). After Leofstan's death, the king appointed his physician Baldwin to the abbacy (1065–97). Baldwin rebuilt the church and reinterred St Edmund's body there with great ceremony in 1095. The cult made the richly endowed abbey[8] a popular destination for pilgrimages.

 
North transept of the Abbey

The abbey church of St Edmund was built in the 11th and 12th centuries on a cruciform plan, with an apsidal east end. The shrine of St Edmund stood behind the high altar. The abbey was much enlarged and rebuilt during the 12th century. At some 505 feet long, and spanning 246 ft across its westerly transept, Bury St Edmunds abbey church was one of the largest in the country. It is now ruined, with only some rubble cores remaining, but two other separate churches which were built within the abbey precinct survive, having always functioned as parish churches for the town. St James's Church, now St Edmundsbury Cathedral, was finished around 1135. St Mary's Church was first built around 1125, and then rebuilt in the Perpendicular style between 1425 and 1435.

 
Abbey Gate, rebuilt in the mid-14th century

Abbey Gate, opening onto the Great Courtyard, was the secular entrance which was used by the Abbey's servants.

The Cloisters Cross, also referred to as the "Bury St Edmunds Cross", is an unusually complex 12th-century Romanesque altar cross, carved from walrus ivory. it is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. The sculptor is not known. Thomas Hoving, who managed the acquisition of the cross while he was Associate Curator at The Cloisters, concluded that it was carved by Master Hugo at the Abbey. There is no certain evidence to suggest that the cross was even made in England, however, although this is accepted by most scholars, and other places of origin such as Germany have been proposed.

In 1327 the Abbey was destroyed during the Great Riot by the local people, who were angry at the power of the monastery, and it had to be rebuilt. The Norman Gate dates from 1120 to 1148 and was designed to be the gateway for the Abbey Church and it is still the belfry for the Church of St James, the present cathedral of Bury St Edmunds. This four-storey gate-hall is virtually unchanged and is entered through a single archway. Abbey Gate is an impressive 14th-century stone gatehouse, designed to be the gateway for the Great Courtyard. One of the best surviving examples of its type, this two-storey gate-hall is entered through a single archway which retains its portcullis. The Crankles was the name of the fishpond near the river Lark. The vineyard was first laid out in the 13th century. There were three breweries in the Abbey as each monk was entitled to eight pints a day.

 
Modern inscription within the abbey ruins commemorating events in 1214, leading to the promulgation of Magna Carta in 1215
 
Panorama of the ruins of the abbey church, with the new Millennium Tower
of St Edmundsbury Cathedral in the background.
 
The gardens

The Abbey's charters granted extensive lands and rights in Suffolk. By 1327, the Abbey owned all of West Suffolk. The Abbey held the gates of Bury St Edmunds; they held wardships of all orphans, whose income went to the Abbot until the orphan reached maturity; they pressed their rights of corvée. In the late 12th century, the Abbot Adam Samson forced the Dean Herbert to destroy the new windmill he had built without permission. Adam said: "By the face of God! I will never eat bread until that building is destroyed!"

The town of Bury St Edmunds was designed by the monks in a grid pattern. The monks charged tariffs on every economic activity, including the collecting of horse droppings in the streets. The Abbey even ran the Royal Mint. During the 13th century general prosperity blunted the resistance of burghers and peasants; in the 14th century, however, the monks encountered hostility from the local populace. Throughout 1327, the monastery suffered extensively, as several monks lost their lives in riots, and many buildings were destroyed. The townspeople attacked in January, forcing a charter of liberties on them. When the monks reneged on this they attacked again in February and May. The hated charters and debtors' accounts were seized and triumphantly torn to shreds.

A reprieve came on 29 September 1327 when Queen Isabella arrived at the Abbey with an army from Hainaut. She had returned from the continent with the intention of deposing her husband, King Edward II. She stayed at the Abbey a number of days with her son the future Edward III.

On 18 October 1327, a group of monks entered the local parish church. They threw off their habits, revealing they were armoured underneath, and took several hostages. The people called for the hostages' release: but monks threw objects at them, killing some. In response, the citizens swore to fight the abbey to the death. They included a parson and 28 chaplains. They burnt the gates and captured the abbey.[9]

In 1345, a special commission found that the monks did not wear habits or live in the monastery.[10] Already faced with considerable financial strain, the abbey went further into decline during the first half of the 15th century. In 1431 the west tower of the abbey church collapsed. Two years later Henry VI moved into residence at the abbey for Christmas, and was still enjoying monastic hospitality four months later. More trouble arose in 1447 when the Duke of Gloucester died in suspicious circumstances after his arrest, and in 1465 the entire church was burnt out by an accidental fire. Largely rebuilt by 1506, the abbey of Bury St Edmunds settled into a quieter existence until dissolution in 1539. Subsequently stripped of all valuable building materials and artefacts, the abbey ruins were left as a convenient quarry for local builders. A collection of wolf skulls were discovered at the site in 1848.[11]

The ruins are owned by English Heritage and managed by St Edmundsbury Borough Council.

Abbey Gardens edit

The Abbey Gardens are currently owned and managed by West Suffolk Council in conjunction with English Heritage. The maintenance of and improvements to the gardens are carried out by the council as well as support from volunteers.[12]

The Abbey Gardens surrounding the ruins had an "Internet bench" installed in 2001, which people could use to connect laptops to the Internet. It was the first bench of its kind.[13] There is a sensory garden for the visually impaired.[14]

Burials edit

 
Graves of abbots of the abbey, 1903 (from front to rear): Edmund of Walpole (1248–1256); Henry of Rushbrooke (1235–1248); Richard of the Isle of Ely (1229–1234); Samson (1182–1211); and Ording (1148–1157).

In the late 19th century, a manuscript discovered in Douai, France revealed the burial location of eighteen of the Abbey's abbots. The antiquary and author Montague R. James, an authority on the Abbey's history, published an account of the Abbey that made extensive use of the Douai Register.[15] He oversaw an excavation of the chapter house, and on New Year's Day 1903 the coffins and remains of five of the abbots were shown to the public.[16][17][18]

Holders of Corrodies edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gransden, A. "The Alleged Incorruption of the Body of St Edmund King and Martyr" in The Antiquities Journal, Vol. 74, March 1994, pp. 135-168
  2. ^ Evans, Margaret Carey "The Contribution of Hoxne to the Cult of St Edmund King and Martyr in the Middle Ages and Later" in Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology & History, Vol. XXXVI, Part 3 (1987), p. 182
  3. ^ Briggs, Keith "Was Hægelisdun in Essex? A New Site for the Martyrdom of Edmund" in Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology & History, Vol. XLII, Part 3 (2011), p. 278
  4. ^ Young, Francis (2018) Edmund: In Search of England's Lost King London: I B Tauris ISBN 978-1-78831-179-3, pp. 61 - 66
  5. ^ Schoch, Richard W. (June 1999). "'We Do Nothing but Enact History': Thomas Carlyle Stages the Past". Nineteenth-Century Literature. 54 (1): 27–52. doi:10.2307/2902996. JSTOR 2902996.
  6. ^ https://drfrancisyoung.com/2015/10/29/st-sigebert-east-anglias-first-martyr-king/ Retrieved 29 July 2023
  7. ^ https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/visit/places/bury-st-edmunds-abbey/history/ Retrieved 29 July 2023
  8. ^ With the manors granted by Edward the Confessor, the abbey was in possession of fully a third of Suffolk (A History of the County of Suffolk).
  9. ^ Alan Ereira; Terry Jones (27 May 2009). Terry Jones' Medieval Lives. Ebury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4090-7045-0.
  10. ^ Terry Jones, Medieval Lives, page 106
  11. ^ "Abbey of St Edmunds study reveals site's hidden secrets". Rhoda Morrison. Bury Free Press. 21 July 2018.
  12. ^ "Official site". Abbey Gardens Friends. Retrieved 22 March 2015.
  13. ^ "Bad start for internet bench". BBC News. 9 August 2001. Retrieved 30 December 2007.
  14. ^ "Abbey Gardens". www.westsuffolk.gov.uk. Retrieved 23 April 2018.
  15. ^ James, M.R. (1895). On the Abbey of S. Edmund at Bury: I. The Library. II. The Church. Cambridge: Cambridge Antiquarian Society.
  16. ^ "Discoveries at Bury St Edmunds". The Times. 9 January 1903. p. 9.
  17. ^ Bury St Edmunds Past and Present Society, burypastandpresent.org.uk 4 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Moshenska, Gabriel (2012). "MR James and the archaeological uncanny". Antiquity. 86 (334): 1192–1201. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00048341. S2CID 160982792.
  19. ^ Letters & Papers, For. & Dom. Henry VIII, vol 1 (1920)
  20. ^ "William Gower, Groom of the Chamber, grant of a Corrody in the Monastery of St. Edmund's Bury vice Hugh Denys deceased. Greenwich, 4th Jan. 1512". Letters & Papers, For. & Dom. Henry VIII, vol 1 (1920)

External links edit

  • suffolkchurches.co.uk page
  • 'Houses of Benedictine monks: Abbey of Bury St Edmunds', A History of the County of Suffolk: Volume 2 (1975), pp. 56–72
  • English Heritage page
  • Abbey Gardens Friends
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "The Abbey of Bury St. Edmund's" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

52°14′39″N 0°43′09″E / 52.2441°N 0.7192°E / 52.2441; 0.7192

bury, edmunds, abbey, abbey, bury, edmunds, once, among, richest, benedictine, monasteries, england, until, dissolution, 1539, town, that, grew, around, bury, edmunds, county, suffolk, england, centre, pilgrimage, burial, place, anglo, saxon, martyr, king, sai. The Abbey of Bury St Edmunds was once among the richest Benedictine monasteries in England until its dissolution in 1539 It is in the town that grew up around it Bury St Edmunds in the county of Suffolk England It was a centre of pilgrimage as the burial place of the Anglo Saxon martyr king Saint Edmund killed by the Great Heathen Army of Danes in 869 The ruins of the abbey church and most other buildings are merely rubble cores but two very large medieval gatehouses survive as well as two secondary medieval churches built within the abbey complex The Norman Tower a gateway and bell tower in front of the new cathedral tower The Abbey ruins Bury St Edmunds Contents 1 History 2 Abbey Gardens 3 Burials 4 Holders of Corrodies 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp View of churchyard and L R Norman Tower St James Church and SW Tower of Abbey c 1920 In the early 10th century the allegedly incorrupt i e not decomposed 1 body of the martyred king St Edmund was translated from Haegelisdun a placename long and widely thought but probably in error 2 3 to refer to Hoxne 4 to Beodricsworth afterwards known as St Edmundsbury 5 a site that had probably had a monastery founded by St Sigeberht some three centuries earlier 6 At this time the early shrine was guarded by a group of secular priests but in c 1020 under the auspices of King Cnut and AElfwine the then Bishop of Elmham 7 they were replaced by monks from St Benet s Abbey and a Benedictine Abbey of St Edmundsbury was founded Two of the monks from St Benet s Abbey became Bury s first two abbots Ufi prior of Holme d 1044 who was consecrated abbot by the Bishop of London and Leofstan 1044 65 After Leofstan s death the king appointed his physician Baldwin to the abbacy 1065 97 Baldwin rebuilt the church and reinterred St Edmund s body there with great ceremony in 1095 The cult made the richly endowed abbey 8 a popular destination for pilgrimages nbsp North transept of the Abbey The abbey church of St Edmund was built in the 11th and 12th centuries on a cruciform plan with an apsidal east end The shrine of St Edmund stood behind the high altar The abbey was much enlarged and rebuilt during the 12th century At some 505 feet long and spanning 246 ft across its westerly transept Bury St Edmunds abbey church was one of the largest in the country It is now ruined with only some rubble cores remaining but two other separate churches which were built within the abbey precinct survive having always functioned as parish churches for the town St James s Church now St Edmundsbury Cathedral was finished around 1135 St Mary s Church was first built around 1125 and then rebuilt in the Perpendicular style between 1425 and 1435 nbsp Abbey Gate rebuilt in the mid 14th century Abbey Gate opening onto the Great Courtyard was the secular entrance which was used by the Abbey s servants The Cloisters Cross also referred to as the Bury St Edmunds Cross is an unusually complex 12th century Romanesque altar cross carved from walrus ivory it is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City The sculptor is not known Thomas Hoving who managed the acquisition of the cross while he was Associate Curator at The Cloisters concluded that it was carved by Master Hugo at the Abbey There is no certain evidence to suggest that the cross was even made in England however although this is accepted by most scholars and other places of origin such as Germany have been proposed In 1327 the Abbey was destroyed during the Great Riot by the local people who were angry at the power of the monastery and it had to be rebuilt The Norman Gate dates from 1120 to 1148 and was designed to be the gateway for the Abbey Church and it is still the belfry for the Church of St James the present cathedral of Bury St Edmunds This four storey gate hall is virtually unchanged and is entered through a single archway Abbey Gate is an impressive 14th century stone gatehouse designed to be the gateway for the Great Courtyard One of the best surviving examples of its type this two storey gate hall is entered through a single archway which retains its portcullis The Crankles was the name of the fishpond near the river Lark The vineyard was first laid out in the 13th century There were three breweries in the Abbey as each monk was entitled to eight pints a day nbsp Modern inscription within the abbey ruins commemorating events in 1214 leading to the promulgation of Magna Carta in 1215 nbsp Panorama of the ruins of the abbey church with the new Millennium Towerof St Edmundsbury Cathedral in the background nbsp The gardens The Abbey s charters granted extensive lands and rights in Suffolk By 1327 the Abbey owned all of West Suffolk The Abbey held the gates of Bury St Edmunds they held wardships of all orphans whose income went to the Abbot until the orphan reached maturity they pressed their rights of corvee In the late 12th century the Abbot Adam Samson forced the Dean Herbert to destroy the new windmill he had built without permission Adam said By the face of God I will never eat bread until that building is destroyed The town of Bury St Edmunds was designed by the monks in a grid pattern The monks charged tariffs on every economic activity including the collecting of horse droppings in the streets The Abbey even ran the Royal Mint During the 13th century general prosperity blunted the resistance of burghers and peasants in the 14th century however the monks encountered hostility from the local populace Throughout 1327 the monastery suffered extensively as several monks lost their lives in riots and many buildings were destroyed The townspeople attacked in January forcing a charter of liberties on them When the monks reneged on this they attacked again in February and May The hated charters and debtors accounts were seized and triumphantly torn to shreds A reprieve came on 29 September 1327 when Queen Isabella arrived at the Abbey with an army from Hainaut She had returned from the continent with the intention of deposing her husband King Edward II She stayed at the Abbey a number of days with her son the future Edward III On 18 October 1327 a group of monks entered the local parish church They threw off their habits revealing they were armoured underneath and took several hostages The people called for the hostages release but monks threw objects at them killing some In response the citizens swore to fight the abbey to the death They included a parson and 28 chaplains They burnt the gates and captured the abbey 9 In 1345 a special commission found that the monks did not wear habits or live in the monastery 10 Already faced with considerable financial strain the abbey went further into decline during the first half of the 15th century In 1431 the west tower of the abbey church collapsed Two years later Henry VI moved into residence at the abbey for Christmas and was still enjoying monastic hospitality four months later More trouble arose in 1447 when the Duke of Gloucester died in suspicious circumstances after his arrest and in 1465 the entire church was burnt out by an accidental fire Largely rebuilt by 1506 the abbey of Bury St Edmunds settled into a quieter existence until dissolution in 1539 Subsequently stripped of all valuable building materials and artefacts the abbey ruins were left as a convenient quarry for local builders A collection of wolf skulls were discovered at the site in 1848 11 The ruins are owned by English Heritage and managed by St Edmundsbury Borough Council Abbey Gardens editThe Abbey Gardens are currently owned and managed by West Suffolk Council in conjunction with English Heritage The maintenance of and improvements to the gardens are carried out by the council as well as support from volunteers 12 The Abbey Gardens surrounding the ruins had an Internet bench installed in 2001 which people could use to connect laptops to the Internet It was the first bench of its kind 13 There is a sensory garden for the visually impaired 14 Burials edit nbsp Graves of abbots of the abbey 1903 from front to rear Edmund of Walpole 1248 1256 Henry of Rushbrooke 1235 1248 Richard of the Isle of Ely 1229 1234 Samson 1182 1211 and Ording 1148 1157 Jurmin Edmund the Martyr Alan Rufus d 1093 was first buried outside the south door then reinterred inside the abbey church Thomas of Brotherton d 1338 Earl of Norfolk Lord Marshal of England son of King Edward I and Margaret of France buried in the choir Mary Tudor Queen of France Princess of England d 1533 daughter of King Henry VII whose remains were removed to nearby St Mary s Church at the Dissolution five years later In the late 19th century a manuscript discovered in Douai France revealed the burial location of eighteen of the Abbey s abbots The antiquary and author Montague R James an authority on the Abbey s history published an account of the Abbey that made extensive use of the Douai Register 15 He oversaw an excavation of the chapter house and on New Year s Day 1903 the coffins and remains of five of the abbots were shown to the public 16 17 18 Holders of Corrodies edituntil 1511 Hugh Denys of Osterley d 1511 Groom to the King s Close Stool of Henry VII 19 from 1511 William Gower Groom of the Chamber to Henry VIII 20 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bury St Edmunds Abbey Abbot of Bury St Edmunds Bury St Edmunds Cross Bury Bible Herman of Bury s On the Miracles of St Edmund John Taxster amp al s Bury Chronicle Jocelin of Brakelond s Chronicle of the Abbey of St Edmunds Annals of St Neots actually composed at Bury St Edmunds Abbey Thomas Carlyle s Past and PresentReferences edit Gransden A The Alleged Incorruption of the Body of St Edmund King and Martyr in The Antiquities Journal Vol 74 March 1994 pp 135 168 Evans Margaret Carey The Contribution of Hoxne to the Cult of St Edmund King and Martyr in the Middle Ages and Later in Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology amp History Vol XXXVI Part 3 1987 p 182 Briggs Keith Was Haegelisdun in Essex A New Site for the Martyrdom of Edmund in Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology amp History Vol XLII Part 3 2011 p 278 Young Francis 2018 Edmund In Search of England s Lost King London I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 78831 179 3 pp 61 66 Schoch Richard W June 1999 We Do Nothing but Enact History Thomas Carlyle Stages the Past Nineteenth Century Literature 54 1 27 52 doi 10 2307 2902996 JSTOR 2902996 https drfrancisyoung com 2015 10 29 st sigebert east anglias first martyr king Retrieved 29 July 2023 https www english heritage org uk visit places bury st edmunds abbey history Retrieved 29 July 2023 With the manors granted by Edward the Confessor the abbey was in possession of fully a third of Suffolk A History of the County of Suffolk Alan Ereira Terry Jones 27 May 2009 Terry Jones Medieval Lives Ebury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4090 7045 0 Terry Jones Medieval Lives page 106 Abbey of St Edmunds study reveals site s hidden secrets Rhoda Morrison Bury Free Press 21 July 2018 Official site Abbey Gardens Friends Retrieved 22 March 2015 Bad start for internet bench BBC News 9 August 2001 Retrieved 30 December 2007 Abbey Gardens www westsuffolk gov uk Retrieved 23 April 2018 James M R 1895 On the Abbey of S Edmund at Bury I The Library II The Church Cambridge Cambridge Antiquarian Society Discoveries at Bury St Edmunds The Times 9 January 1903 p 9 Bury St Edmunds Past and Present Society burypastandpresent org uk Archived 4 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine Moshenska Gabriel 2012 MR James and the archaeological uncanny Antiquity 86 334 1192 1201 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00048341 S2CID 160982792 Letters amp Papers For amp Dom Henry VIII vol 1 1920 William Gower Groom of the Chamber grant of a Corrody in the Monastery of St Edmund s Bury vice Hugh Denys deceased Greenwich 4th Jan 1512 Letters amp Papers For amp Dom Henry VIII vol 1 1920 External links editsuffolkchurches co uk page Houses of Benedictine monks Abbey of Bury St Edmunds A History of the County of Suffolk Volume 2 1975 pp 56 72 English Heritage page Abbey Gardens Friends Herbermann Charles ed 1913 The Abbey of Bury St Edmund s Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company 52 14 39 N 0 43 09 E 52 2441 N 0 7192 E 52 2441 0 7192 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bury St Edmunds Abbey amp oldid 1223857751, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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