Cleeve Abbey
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Cleeve Abbey is a Cistercian Abbey near the village of Washford, Somerset, England. It is one of the best preserved mediaeval monasteries in Britain.
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[edit] Foundation
The abbey was founded in the late twelfth century by William de Roumare between 1186 and 1191, on land he had been given by the king. The move was strongly opposed by the neighbouring abbots of Neath Abbey and Forde Abbey, who claimed that a new foundation so near to them would harm their monasteries. These objections were eventually overcome, however, and on June 25 1198, a new colony of 12 monks led by Abbot Ralph arrived at the site from Revesby Abbey in Lincolnshire. The official name of the abbey was Vallis Florida (Latin: 'Flowering Valley') but throughout its history it was generally known as Cleeve after the nearby village.
[edit] The Abbey buildings
Work immediately began on constructing the abbey church, a task that took many decades. It was a conservative design, heavily influenced by the thoughts of St. Bernard and the order’s early churches in its homeland of Burgundy. It was cruciform in shape with an aisled nave of seven bays, a short, square east end, and transepts each with two side chapels. The eastern parts of the church were built first, and were likely finished in the early 1230s, at which point the abbey received a royal donation of oak to build choir stalls. The remainder was probably completed by mid-century.
To the south of the church a cloister was laid out, surrounded by the domestic buildings of the house. The east range, which was completed first (probably by 1250), held the chapter house, sacristy, the monks’ dormitory, day room, and reredorter (latrine). The south range was built next, it contained the kitchens, warming house and a 19.7 m long refectory which projected south beyond the main body of the building, a classic Cistercian plan. It is suggested from the heraldry used in the tiled floors of the refectory that it was finished at the end of the thirteenth century. The final part to be finished was the small west range, which was used for storage and quarters for the lay brothers. East of the core buildings, and linked to them, was a second cloister around which was the monastic infirmary.
The monastery would have been surrounded by gardens, fishponds, orchards, barns, guesthouses, stables, a farmyard and industrial buildings. The abbey grounds were defended by a water filled moat and a gatehouse. Excavation has revealed that a large stone cross, like a market cross, stood just west of the main building.
Though Cleeve was by no means a wealthy house, the monks were able to make significant investment in remodelling their home so as to match the rising living standards of the later mediaeval period. In the fourteenth century elaborate polychrome tiled floors (an expensive and high status product) were laid throughout the abbey and in the mid-fifteenth century radical works were undertaken. Abbot David Juyner (r. 1435-87) commissioned a complete redesign of the south range of the monastery. He demolished the old refectory and built a new one parallel to the cloister on the first floor. This grand chamber with its wooden vaulted ceiling (carved with angels) was the equal of the hall of any contemporary secular lord. Beneath it he built several self-contained apartments. These were probably used by corrodians, pensioners of the abbey. Juyner may also have been responsible for decorating the abbey with many wall paintings (some of which survive) on religious and allegorical subjects. Work continued under his successors right up until the eve of the Dissolution, with the result that at the end Cleeve would have resembled a luxurious manor house as much as a monastery. The last building to be completed was a new gatehouse, constructed after 1510, though as late as 1534 the monks were engaged in a major project of renewing the cloister ranges the latest fashion, a task that, as at the neighbouring house of Forde Abbey, was never to be completed.
[edit] History as an Abbey
Like most of the smaller Cistercian houses, comparatively little is known about the internal history of the abbey. In its early years Cleeve received grants of land and property from local lords and the Crown to supplement its initial endowment and in the prosperous years of the thirteenth century grew steadily, reaching 28 monks in 1297. A major source of income was the export of wool. However, the fourteenth century saw a change in fortunes: the Black Death, a worsening economic climate and poor administration left the abbey (like many others of its order) with sharply declining numbers and saddled with severe debt. Things improved in the fifteenth century and despite the vast expense caused by the extravagant building projects of the last abbots, better management, access to new resources (such as the profit from the right to hold markets granted by the crown) and a general improvement in the circumstances facing the house meant that just prior to the dissolution Cleeve was enjoying an Indian Summer of comfortable stability.
[edit] Dissolution
In 1535 the abbey's income was assessed in the Valor Ecclesiasticus, Henry VIII's great survey of church finances, at £155, which meant the following year that it came under the terms of the first Suppression Act, Henry's initial move in the Dissolution of the Monasteries. Abbot William Dovell and his 16 monks were forced to surrender the abbey on September 6th 1536. There were proposals from local gentry and even some of the king's officials for the suppression that Cleeve should be granted a reprieve, as a number of others among the smaller monasteries were, however, it was not to be and the monks finally left in the spring of 1537. Abbot William was given a pension of 40 marks per year, not large but comfortable, which he was still drawing 20 years later. Most of the other monks were given pensions too. One former monk of Cleeve rose to prominence and came to a sticky end. This was John Hooper who became Bishop of Gloucester and Worcester and was killed in 1555 for his protestant beliefs by Mary I.
[edit] Later history
Soon after Cleeve became Crown property, it was leased to Anthony Busterd for 21 years. In 1538, the freehold of the site was granted to Robert Radclyffe, 1st Earl of Sussex. The church was demolished, save for the south wall which bounded the cloister, and the rest of the abbey converted into a mansion suitable for a gentleman. By the early seventeenth century, however, Cleeve had turned into a farm. The dormitory was now a large barn, the cloister was the farmyard and the rest of the buildings were used for agricultural purposes and a farm house.
George Luttrell of Dunster Castle acquired the site in 1870. The abbey stopped being used as a farm and extensive archaeological excavations took place. The farm house was converted into rental cottages, and the site became a tourist attraction.
Cleeve Abbey was passed back to the Crown in 1949 to pay Death Duties on the Luttrell estate. Major restoration and archaeological work followed. In 1984, English Heritage took over responsibility for Cleeve Abbey and continues to care for it today.
[edit] The Abbey today
The church and infirmary have almost entirely vanished, but the site boasts some of the finest and best preserved monks' living quarters still surviving in Britain. The buildings round the cloister are still roofed and habitable and many of the rooms retain their vaults. Among the most important preserved rooms are the chapter house, the refectory with its magnificent arch braced wooden vault and the painted chamber. This latter is decorated with rare fifteenth century wall paintings depicting a man standing on a bridge with a dragon, a lion and St. Catherine (the meaning of this painting is not known). Much of the abbey's medieval tiled flooring remains. Other major survivals include the abbey gatehouse, which still provides entrance to the visitor, the moat and fishponds.
Cleeve is open to the public from April to October.
[edit] Trivia
The Abbey was used as a backdrop for the TV series Maid Marian and her Merry Men. It is also the original for 'Gracedieu', the Abbey used as a setting for the Abbey Girls series of books by Elsie J. Oxenham.
[edit] Bibliography and references
- The Abbeys and Priories of Medieval England, Prof. Colin Platt, Secker & Warburg 1984
- Cleeve Abbey, Stuart A. Harrison, English Heritage 2000 ISBN 1-85074-760-1
- The Cistercian Abbeys of Britain, ed David Robinson, Batsford 1998
- A History of the County of Somerset: Volume II, The Victoria County History 1911
[edit] External links
- English Heritage: Cleeve Abbey
- Online version of 'A History of the County of Somerset: Vol II': [1]
- Official site about the abbey from Somerset County Council [2]