Bourne Abbey

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Bourne Abbey
Parish Church of St. Peter and St. Paul
Location Church Walk
Bourne, Lincolnshire
PE10 9UQ
Country United Kingdom
Denomination Church of England
Previous denomination Roman Catholic
Website www.bourneabbey.org.uk
History
Founded 1138
Founder(s) Baldwin FitzGilbert
Architecture
Status Parish church
Functional status Active
Specifications
Number of towers 1
Administration
Diocese Lincoln
Clergy
Vicar(s) Rev Fr Chris Atkinson

Bourne Abbey and the Parish Church of St. Peter and St. Paul is a scheduled Grade I church in Bourne, Lincolnshire, England. The building remains in parochial use, despite the 16th-century Dissolution, as the nave was used by the parish, probably from the time of the foundation of the abbey in 1138.[1]

Monastic origins

The nave of Bourne Abbey today. The two nave arcades are consistent with a building date of around 1138 as are the responds from the chancel screen, visible at the entrance to the chancel. The repaired scars from the removal of the pulpitum can be seen below them. In the building there are stones carved into the form of arches of a style consistent with the later 12th century. These are likely to be from the eastern side of this pulpitum screen which obscured the view of the chancel while allowing sounds out from it.

While the Domesday Book makes it clear that there was a church in Bourne in 1066 and there is a suggestion that there was an Anglo-Saxon abbey,[1] as far as is firmly known, the abbey was founded as a canonry, by a charter granted in 1138, by Baldwin fitz Gilbert de Clare[2] (with the consent of Roger his son and Adelina his wife). He was a member of a post-conquest Norman family, settled in Suffolk, which later made its mark in Wales and Ireland. Adelina was a great-granddaughter of Hereward the Wake, though the connection with the Wake family was not made until the generation after Baldwin and Adelina, when their daughter, Emma married Hugh Wake. The house was for up to 14 canons of the Arrouaisian reform of the Rule of St. Augustine. This was the height of the period of abbey founding and castle-building in England.

The foundation of the abbey was part of a general restructuring of the estate so that the current town centre was built as a new town at the entrance to Baldwin's new castle. The new main road passed between Baldwin's new castle and the abbey.[1] The pre-Norman road[3] lies under the junction between the nave and the chancel. This proximity to the road may have influenced Baldwin's thinking when choosing an order for the new abbey. By this time, Arrouaise itself was moving away from being a hermitage towards providing a service for travellers.

In the late 13th century, the estate associated with Bourne Castle was reorganised so that the main road was moved onto what had been part of the site of the castle and a little away from the abbey.[1]

The abbey was dissolved in 1536 along with the other small monastic houses, in the first phase of Henry VIII's suppression of monasteries.

Abbots

The following is a chronological list of the abbots as far as they are known. It is based on that in Swift's book,[4] and from the Victoria County History.[5]

  • Abbey charter 1138
  • Gervaise of Arrouaise 1138
  • David 1156
  • Baldwin 1212
  • Everard Gutt 1224, resigned 1237
  • William of Repton 1237
  • Robert de Hamme, 1248, died 1260
  • Robert de Hasceby (Haceby), elected 1260, resigned 1275
  • William of Spalding, elected 1275
  • Nicholas 1287
  • Alan de Wauz (Waux), died 1292
  • Thomas de Calstewith (Colsterworth), elected 1292, died 1313
  • William of St Albans, elected 1313, resigned 1314
  • William of Abbotsley, elected 1314, died 1324
  • John of Wytheton, elected 1324, died 1334
  • Simon of Walton, elected 1334, died 1355 (mentioned as Simon Watton 1350 by Swift)
  • Thomas of Grantham, elected 1355, died 1369
  • Geffory of Deeping, elected 1369, occurs to 1406
  • William of Irnham, occurred 1440
  • Henry (died) 1500
  • Thomas Ford 1500
  • William Grisby (died 1512)
  • John Small, last abbot, occurs 1534
  • Dissolution 1536


Simon Watton was excommunicated, though we do not know how he had offended.

Literary associations

The Ormulum, an important work in the form of a Biblical gloss, helps bridge the gap between Old English and Middle English in studies of the development of the language. It was probably written in Bourne Abbey by Orm the Preacher, in around 1175.[6][7]

Robert Mannyng or Robert de Brunne, is well known among scholars of Middle English for his works dating from the early 14th century. He led the writing of English out of its eclipse by Latin and Anglo-Norman. He is often said to have been a monk in Bourne Abbey but he was a Gilbertine and the abbey was Arrouaisian or Augustinian. His name which associates him with 'Brunne', the form of 'Bourne' used in his time is likely to have arisen from his having originated in the town. Since the nave of the abbey was the parish church, Robert, the boy will have known it well until he left for Sempringham in 1288.

Burials

See also

References

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  3. For details of this Roman road, see King Street (Roman road).
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  • Needle, Rex. A Portrait of Bourne - the history of a Lincolnshire market town in words and pictures (1998–2008, on CD-ROM, including 3,000 photographs from past and present and an illustrated account of the church including the current restoration programme)

External links

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