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Beauvale Priory

Coordinates: 53°02′11″N 1°16′02″W / 53.036424°N 1.267206°W / 53.036424; -1.267206
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Beauvale Priory
The Structural Remains of Beauvale Priory in 2007
Beauvale Priory is located in Nottinghamshire
Beauvale Priory
Location within Nottinghamshire
Monastery information
Full nameThe Priory Church of the Holy Trinity, Beauvale
Other namesBeauvale Charterhouse
OrderCarthusian
Established1343
Disestablished1539
Dedicated toHoly Trinity
People
Founder(s)Nicholas de Cantiloup, Lord of Ilkeston
Site
LocationBeauvale, Nottinghamshire, England
Coordinates53°02′11″N 1°16′02″W / 53.036424°N 1.267206°W / 53.036424; -1.267206
Public accessyes

Beauvale Priory (also known as Beauvale Charterhouse) was a Carthusian monastery in Beauvale, Nottinghamshire. It is a scheduled ancient monument.

History

The priory was founded in 1343 by Nicholas de Cantelupe (d.1355), in honour of the Blessed Trinity. The priory was originally built to be home to a prior and twelve monks. It was the third of nine houses of the Carthusian order established in England. The two earlier houses were established in Witham Friary and Hinton in Somerset.[1] The others were London Charterhouse, St. Anne's near Coventry, Kingston upon Hull and Mount Grace in Yorkshire, Epworth and Shene.[2] The Valor Ecclesiasticus of 1534 lists the priory as having an annual income of £227 8s., of which £196 6s. was left after expenses. At this time the priory was in control of the advowsons of the churches of Greasley and Selston in Nottinghamshire; Bonby in Lincolnshire; and Farnham in Yorkshire.[3]

Role in late-medieval English mysticism

Although concrete evidence remains scant, several claims have been made for Beauvale's role in shaping late medieval English spirituality: John P.H. Clark suggests that the author of the seminal mystical text The Cloud of Unknowing was likely a Carthusian of Beauvale Priory.[4] and Jonathan Hughes posits that Beauvale may have been an important centre for the study of English mystic Richard Rolle.[5]

Dissolution and martyrdom

Following England’s break from Rome, the Carthusians refused to accept King Henry VIII's supremacy over the church. Robert Lawrence, Prior of Beauvale, travelled to London in 1535 to see Thomas Cromwell in person in the hope of stopping the dissolution of his priory. Cromwell never saw Lawrence and he, along with two other Carthusian Priors who had made similar journeys, were imprisoned in the Tower of London as traitors. One of these was John Houghton, Lawrence's predecessor as Prior at Beauvale. Prior Lawrence was interrogated on 20 April but declared he could "not take our sovereign lord to be supreme head of the Church, but him that is by God the head of the Church, that is the bishop of Rome, as Ambrose, Jerome, and Augustine teach". The three Carthusians and a Brigittine monk from Syon Abbey were all tried on 28 April and charged with "verbal treason" for claiming King Henry was not the supreme head of the Church of England. The jury refused to find the four guilty as they felt "they did not act maliciously"; Cromwell, however, violently threatened the jury until they returned a guilty verdict.[3]

Prior Lawrence became one of a group known as the Carthusian Martyrs. He and his fellow prisoners were sentenced to death (to be hanged, drawn and quartered) and returned to the Tower until 4 May when they were taken to Tyburn for execution. The execution was made deliberately more "ghastly and revolting" to show the King's power and deter others. Prior Lawrence was executed wearing his monk's habit. The rope used to hang him was larger than usual to avoid fatally strangling him; thus ensuring he was still alive when he was butchered and mutilated, before finally being "quartered" (chopped into 4 pieces).[3]

Lawrence was created a saint by Pope Paul VI in 1970 as one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales.

The annual value of this monastery was just under £200, the limit for the suppression of the lesser monasteries; but by paying the heavy fine of £166 13s. 4d. the monks were able to postpone dissolution. This bargain was effected on 2 January 1537/38.[3]

Beauvale Priory was finally surrendered for dissolution on 18 July 1539. The surrender document was signed by the Prior, Thomas Woodcock, and seven other monks: John Langdale, William Welles, Alexander Lowthe, Edmund Garner, Robert Gowton (proctor), Thomas Leyghton, and Thomas Wallis. Prior Woodcock was awarded an annual pension of £26 13s. 4d. The priory and most of its possessions were granted in 1541 to Sir William Huse of London. The manor of Etwall, previously held by the priory, was granted to Sir John Porte in 1540.[3]

List of priors

  • William, occurs 1404
  • Richard de Burton, occurs 1422, 1426
  • Thomas Metheley, occurs 1468
  • John Swift, occurs 1478
  • Thomas Wydder, occurs 1482
  • Nicholas Wartre, occurs 1486
  • John Houghton 1531.[6]
  • Robert Lawrence, executed 1535.[6]
  • Thomas Woodcock, 16 December 1537 – surrender 1539

Remains

Some tiles and fragments of stained glass are now in St. Mary's Church, Greasley.[7] Two manuscripts associated with the library at Beauvale are also extant: Cambridge MS Mm 5.37, a copy of Richard Rolle's Incendium Amoris, and Bodleian Library MS Douce 114, a collection of Middle English translations of the vitae of Elizabeth of Spalbeek, Marie of Oignies, and Christina the Astonishing, a letter concerning Catherine of Siena, and Henry Suso's Horologium Sapientiae.[8]

There are still substantial remains of the buildings, and the whole site has been designated as a scheduled ancient monument, because of the range of features that survive, and their rarity value, for Beauvale was one of only nine Carthusian houses to be built in England. The monks were well respected, because they maintained their austere standards until the Dissolution. The site was one of the first to receive scheduled monument protection, on 10 April 1915, and the individual buildings were granted listed building status in 1952.[9] The remains of the Priory Church are Grade II* listed, while the Gatehouse and parts of the boundary wall are separately listed as Grade II buildings.[10] The site also includes the Abbey Farmhouse, which was built in the 16th century and extended in the 18th and 19th centuries, using material which was largely quarried from the priory.[11]

In literature

The ruin of Beauvale Priory was the setting for D.H. Lawrence's historical short story, "A Fragment of Stained Glass."[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Transactions of the Thoroton Society". 1908: 69–94. {{cite journal}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |month= (help); Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. ^ The Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. Charles Knight. 1836.
  3. ^ a b c d e House of Carthusian monks: The priory of Beauvale, A History of the County of Nottingham: Volume 2 (1910), pp. 105–109. Date accessed: 28 June 2013
  4. ^ Clark, John P.H. The Cloud of Unknowing: An Introduction. Salzburg, Austria: Institut fur Anglistik und Americanistik, 1995.
  5. ^ Hughes, Jonathan. Pastors and Visionaries: Religion and Secular Life in Late Medieval Yorkshire. Boydell & Brewer, 1988.
  6. ^ a b Cranmer, Thomas (1833). The Remains of Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of Canterbury. Oxford University Press.
  7. ^ "St Mary's Church and Greasley Castle". beauvale-society.org. The Beauvale Society. Archived from the original on 27 August 2014. Retrieved 8 August 2014.
  8. ^ Hughes, Jonathan. Pastors and Visionaries: Religion and Secular Life in Late Medieval Yorkshire. Boydell & Brewer, 1988.
  9. ^ Historic England. "Beauvale Carthusian Priory (1002920)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 21 June 2016.
  10. ^ Historic England. "Beauvale Priory Church (1278052)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 21 June 2016.
  11. ^ Historic England. "Beauvale Abbey Farmhouse (1248103)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 21 June 2016.
  12. ^ "Beauvale Priory." The Oxford Guide to Literary Britain & Ireland. OUP, 2008.

Further reading