• Source: Revesby Abbey
  • Revesby Abbey was a Cistercian monastery near the village of Revesby in Lincolnshire, England. The abbey was founded in 1143 by William de Roumare, Earl of Lincoln, and the first monks came from Rievaulx Abbey.
    After the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 16th century, the Abbey was demolished and a country house built. The current house was built in the mid-19th century, but is in poor condition. Unoccupied since the 1960s and previously earmarked for demolition, the house was listed on the 2023 Heritage at Risk Register issued annually by Historic England. The register recorded that, although some progress had been made in relation to the repair and renovation of the stable block, the main house remained at "serious risk".


    History


    Revesby Abbey was founded in 1142 by William de Roumare, Earl of Lincoln, who became a monk at the abbey in his later life, and was then buried within the abbey. The first monks at the abbey were sent from Rievaulx Abbey in Yorkshire. The abbey was endowed with land at Revesby, Scithesby and Thoresby, and with the advowsons of the churches of Hagnaby and Scithesby.
    During the mid-12th century, the monks of Revesby offered land in other villages to its tenants in the villages of Stichesby and Thoresby, if they would move. All 13 families left Stichesby and all 11 from Thoresby, leaving both of these settlements unpopulated. In the 14th century the abbey acquired the manor of Mareham and was granted permission to hold a weekly market and an annual fair there. In 1534 the abbey was recorded as having an income of £1287 2s. 4½d. (equivalent to £1,100,000 in 2023), and was in control of the manors of Claxby, East Keal, Hagnaby, Hameringham, Mareham-le-Fen, Mavis Enderby, Sibsey, Stickney and Toynton. However, despite this, the abbey's income appears to have been mismanaged, and in 1538 the Duke of Norfolk wrote to Thomas Cromwell to inform him the abbey was "in great ruin and decay". The abbey was dissolved c.1539.


    = Abbots of Revesby Abbey

    =
    List of known Abbots of Revesby Abbey:


    = Burials

    =
    Hawise de Reviers, sister of Baldwin de Redvers, 1st Earl of Devon (Reviers)
    William (Helie) de Roumare, 2nd Earl of Lincoln


    History after Dissolution


    After dissolution the former abbey passed through various hands. It was in the hands of Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk, at the time of his death in 1545. From Brandon it passed to John Carsley and then to his son Francis Carsley. The former monastic estate was sold to William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley, in 1575. It then passed through his family to his son: the 1st Earl of Exeter; and grandson: the 2nd Earl of Exeter. Through the marriage of the 2nd Earl's daughter, Lady Elizabeth Cecil, the estate passed to Thomas Howard, 1st Earl of Berkshire, and then to their third son, Henry Howard (a playwright). Following Henry's death, the estate passed to his nephew Craven Howard (d.1700; son of Henry's brother Thomas and father of Henry Howard, 11th Earl of Suffolk).
    Nothing of the abbey is visible today which was to the SW of the present house and the village of Revesby. Excavations undertaken in 1869 only located the abbey church and cloister. In 1870 the skeletons of several monks were found. Earthworks indicate the extent of the abbey precinct, and reveal the location of 3 rectangular fishponds.


    = Country House

    =
    The site of the former Abbey was, like many others, developed into a country house. Craven Howard (d.1700) built a new residential house at the former Abbey, although not on top of the former monastic remains. This new house and estate passed to Craven's son Henry Howard, 11th Earl of Suffolk.
    In 1711 Henry sold the house and 2,000-acre estate for £14,000 (equivalent to £2,490,000 in 2023). The purchaser was Joseph Banks I, who established his son Joseph Banks II at the house. Henry required a private Act of Parliament to sell the house, as it was tied to him and his children as "part of his marriage settlement". The purchase price was described as "evidently cheap", as the estate had an annual income of around £900. Revesby and the rest of Joseph Banks' possessions officially passed to his son with his death. Although Joseph II had lived primarily at Revesby during his father's lifetime, after his death, Joseph II spent little time there.
    The grounds were extensively landscaped in the mid-18th century, and in the late 18th century the house was home to the botanist Sir Joseph Banks, who sailed with Captain Cook.
    Revesby Abbey was built in 1845 in the "Jacobethan" style, by architect William Burn, for James Banks Stanhope. It appears the house was totally built and furnished from scratch, as the contents of the previous house, including furniture, paintings and curtains, were auctioned in 1843. The timber, cornices and fittings were also auctioned in 1844. Although the sub-basement for the current house is built with bricks much older than the house and so it is believed are the bricks from Craven Howard's house.


    21st century


    In 1977 the then owner, a Mrs Hill, applied for permission to demolish the house but this was initially refused. She was advised by the council to apply again, but did not do so. In 1987 English Heritage used Section 101 of the 1971 Town and Country Planning Act to conduct "urgent works which the owner is unwilling to do". The Secretary of State had the power to reclaim the costs of the building work from Mrs Lee, and the following year the house was listed for sale. The house then passed through multiple hands until 1999, when the current owners bought the abbey. The house has been unoccupied since at least 1968 and the current owners live in the stable block; its "remaining contents" were sold in 1953. The Revesby Abbey Preservation Trust was formed in the early 2000s to undertake work on the house, but was subsequently dissolved.
    The house is Grade I listed and was recorded on the 2023 Heritage at Risk Register issued annually by Historic England. The register recorded that, although some progress had been made in relation to the repair and renovation of the stable block, the condition of the main house remained "very bad" and that it was at "serious risk".


    References




    Bibliography


    The Cistercian Abbeys of Britain, ed David Robinson, Batsford 1998
    A History of the County of Lincolnshire: Volume II, The Victoria County History 1906


    External links



    "The Abbey of Revesby"; British History Online ("Houses of Cistercian monks - The abbey of Revesby'", A History of the County of Lincoln: Volume 2, 1906, pp. 141–143). Retrieved 17 May 2012
    "Revesby Abbey and Stable Yard, Revesby", British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 17 May 2012
    www.revesbyabbey.co.uk Country House Restoration
    Heritage at Risk Register: Revesby+Abbey+and+stable+yard+Revesby

Kata Kunci Pencarian: