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Cartmel Priory

Coordinates:54°12′4″N2°57′8″W / 54.20111°N 2.95222°W /54.20111; -2.95222
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Parish church in Cumbria, England

Cartmel Priory
Cartmel Priory Church
Cartmel Priory is located in the former South Lakeland district
Cartmel Priory
Location in the former South Lakeland district
Show map of the former South Lakeland district
Cartmel Priory is located in Cumbria
Cartmel Priory
Location in Cumbria
Show map of Cumbria
Monastery information
Full nameCartmel Priory
Other namesSt Mary the Virgin & St Michael
OrderAugustinian
Established1190
Disestablished1536
DioceseCarlisle
People
Founder(s)William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke
Site
LocationCartmel, Cumbria, England
Coordinates54°12′4″N2°57′8″W / 54.20111°N 2.95222°W /54.20111; -2.95222
Visible remainsChurch still used as parish church, gatehouse nearby.
Public accessYes

Cartmel Priory church serves as theparish church ofCartmel, Cumbria, England (formerly inLancashire).

Priory

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Foundation

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Thepriory was founded in 1190 byWilliam Marshal, created 1stEarl of Pembroke, intended for a community of theAugustinianCanons regular and was dedicated toSaint Mary the Virgin andSaint Michael.

To support the new house, William granted it the wholefief of the district of Cartmel.[1] It was first colonised by aprior and twelve canons sent fromBradenstoke Priory in Wiltshire.[2]

14th century

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Between 1327 and 1347 a chapel with fourtraceried windows was provided byJohn Harington, 1st Baron Harington in the south choir aisle; his tomb, also containing his second wife, is in the building. The stonework on the tomb contains the Harrington coat of arms with theHarrington knot as well as the Dacre coat of arms with the scallop shells.[3] The gatehouse, which apart from the church itself is the only surviving structure of themedieval priory, was built between 1330 and 1340.

15th and 16th centuries

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In the 15th century extensive work was undertaken, in part due to damage (believed to be from subsidence) in the southern part of the complex. The original cloister was demolished and a new one built to the north of the priory church. In the east end of the church, the earlylancet windows were replaced by one huge window of stained glass,misericords were installed in the choir, and the tower was extended. Unusually, the extension to the tower sits at a 45-degree angle to the base on which it rests,[4] a feature believed to be unique in England. Work on the building continued intermittently into the 16th century, when thechoir screen was constructed.

The 25misericords date from 1440, and are of an exceptional quality. They include representation of theGreen man, which with its three heads sprouting foliage is said to symbolize the devil.[5]

Dissolution

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See also:List of monasteries dissolved by Henry VIII of England

The priory was surrendered by its then community of ten canons at theDissolution of the Monasteries in 1536. An effect of thePilgrimage of Grace was that the community was reinstated, one of perhaps 16 such cases.[6] The prior, Richard Preston, had not thrown in his lot with resistance, but had fled to the Crown forces underEdward Stanley, 3rd Earl of Derby. He was to secure a parochial living to supplement his Crown pension.[7] Others had a different fate. With the failure of the rising, as in other similar cases there came a brutal end for some, the subprior and several of the canons being hanged, along with ten villagers who had supported them.[1]

The priory's ancient responsibility for providing a Guide over Cartmel Sands was transferred to theDuchy of Lancaster. Thomas Hogeson was appointed by the Duchy as the firstofficial guide to the sands on 29 January 1548.[8]

Parish Church

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The Dissolution commissioners had instructions to "pull down to the ground all the walls of the churches, stepulls, cloysters, fraterys, dorters, chapter howsys"[9] and all the rest. The materials were then to be sold for the profit of the Crown. These habitual procedures would have meant Cartmel Priory's church being demolished along with the rest of its buildings. However, in this case the founderWilliam Marshal had given analtar within the church to the village, and provided a priest along with it. The villagers petitioned to be allowed to keep the church as it was their only place of worship, and this was granted.[1]

17th century

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Despite the villagers' being allowed to keep the church, the lead was stripped from the nave, and until 1618[10] when George Preston, a landowner at nearbyHolker Hall, provided considerable finances to allow the roof to be reinstated, the villagers actually worshipped in thechoir, rather than thenave of the church. In 1643 someRoundhead troops stayed in the village, stabling their horses in the church. Bullet holes from this time are still visible in the southwest door of the nave.

The nave was used after the Dissolution as a prison and later between 1624 and 1790 as agrammar school.[10]

19th and 20th centuries

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By 1830 the church was in need of repair again, and underwent a restoration, which has been described in the Edge Guide[11] as "more enthusiastic than sympathetic". In 1850 a new panelled ceiling was inserted in the central part of the church, forming the belfry floor.[12]

A further restoration was carried out in 1867 byE. G. Paley.[13] The restoration was described in theWestmorland Gazette of 28 September 1867[14]

The old seats and galleries have been removed from the nave and transepts, which have been reseated with new benches of oak. The plaster and whitewash of succeeding centuries has been entirely taken off and cleaned from the walls, pillars, and arches of the church. The ancient massive open timbered roof of oak, which for centuries has been hid behind a plastered ceiling, has been uncovered and restored. The whole of the windows have been reglazed with Hartley’s cathedral glass. A new font, pulpit and reading-desk of stone have been added to the church. The font is square with moulded panels, carved and drapered work, and marble shaft. The pulpit is of octagonal design, supported by marble shafts, on three sides are moulded panels containing carved heads representing our Saviour, St. Peter, and St. Paul. A new organ has been erected in the town choir.

In 1923, the gatehouse became a museum,[15] and was used for exhibitions, and meetings, before being presented in 1946[16] to theNational Trust who continue to operate it as the "Cartmel Priory Gatehouse".

The church is an activeAnglicanparish church in the deanery of Windermere, the archdeaconry of Westmorland and Furness, and thediocese of Carlisle. Itsbenefice is united with those ofSt Mary, Allithwaite,St Peter, Field Broughton,St John the Baptist, Flookburgh,St Paul, Grange-over-Sands,Grange Fell Church, Grange-Over-Sands, and St Paul, Lindale, to form the benefice ofCartmel Peninsula.[17] The church is recorded in theNational Heritage List for England as a designated Grade Ilisted building.[18]

  • Priory exterior from the east
    Priory exterior from the east
  • Interior, October 2007
    Interior, October 2007
  • The "Green Man" misericord in the Choir
    The "Green Man"misericord in the Choir
  • Grave markers, October 2007
    Grave markers, October 2007
  • Exterior, October 2007
    Exterior, October 2007

Organ

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The pipe organ was installed in 1867 by F. Jardine of Manchester. The inauguration was recorded in theWestmorland Gazette of 28 September 1867:[14]

The organ which has been built by Mr. Jardine of Manchester, had its capabilities tested by Mr. Stevens of Holy Trinity Church, Manchester. It had been intended where the rubric leaves it optional, whether any part shall be "said or sung" to have our beautiful church service sung by one of the finest choirs of Manchester, and the organ presided at by one of the most accomplished amateur players in the North of England. Arrangements having been made by Mr. Jardine for the attendance of Mr. Joule and his choir of St. Peter’s; but the Bishop has so strong an objection to musical services, and such strong fears of its effects on worshippers, that out of deference to his opinion the people of Cartmel were deprived of what would certainly have been, and what they had long been anticipating as a good treat.

The organ was rebuilt in 1969 byRushworth and Dreaper of Liverpool and in 2005 by Principal Pipe Organs. A specification of the organ can be found on theNational Pipe Organ Register.[19]

Bells

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The church tower contains a ring of 6 bells. Four are new, dating from 1987 by Eijsbouts, with an old set of 4 bells (2 from 1661 and then 1726 and 1729) making an old 6 when combined with the 2 smaller bells of 1932 by John Taylor and Co.[20]

Burials in the priory

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See also

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References

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  1. ^abc"British History Online: The Priory of Cartmel". Retrieved13 March 2014.
  2. ^"English Priories – Cartmel Priory". The Heritage Trail. Archived fromthe original on 14 September 2009. Retrieved21 March 2009.
  3. ^Pevsner, Nikolaus (2002).The Buildings of England. North Lancashire. Yale University Press. p. 89.ISBN 0300096178.
  4. ^Pevsner, Nikolaus (2002).The Buildings of England. North Lancashire. Yale University Press. p. 87.ISBN 0300096178.
  5. ^Hayman, Richard (2011).Church Misericords and Bench Ends. Bloomsbury.ISBN 9780747811831. Retrieved24 August 2016.
  6. ^Martin Heale,The Abbots and Priors of Late Medieval and Reformation England, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2016, p. 316
  7. ^David Knowles and R. Neville Hadcock,Medieval Religious Houses, England and Wales, Longmans Green, London, 1953, p. 133; Martin Heale,The Abbots and Priors of Late Medieval and Reformation England, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2016, pp. 316, 358
  8. ^Peter, David (1985).'Cross Kent Sands. Lunesdale Publishing Group Limited.ISBN 094609103X.
  9. ^David Knowles and R. Neville Hadcock,Medieval Religious Houses, England and Wales, Longmans Green, London, 1953, p. 267
  10. ^ab"British History Online: The parish of Cartmel". Retrieved7 March 2017.
  11. ^Edge Guide: "Cartmel Pruiory"
  12. ^"Cartmel Church".Westmorland Gazette. England. 6 April 1850. Retrieved5 March 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  13. ^Brandwood, Geoff; Austin, Tim; Hughes, John; Price, James (2012),The Architecture of Sharpe, Paley and Austin, Swindon:English Heritage, p. 222,ISBN 978-1-84802-049-8
  14. ^ab"Cartmel Church Restoration".Westmorland Gazette. England. 28 September 1867. Retrieved5 March 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  15. ^"Town and County Gossip".Derby Daily Telegraph. England. 2 July 1923. Retrieved5 March 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  16. ^"Gift to National Trust".Yorkshire Port and Leeds Intelligencer. England. 18 June 1946. Retrieved5 March 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  17. ^St Mary & St Michael, Cartmel,Church of England, retrieved18 November 2011
  18. ^Historic England,"Priory Church of St Mary, Cartmel (1335798)",National Heritage List for England, retrieved18 November 2011
  19. ^"NPOR [E01096]".National Pipe Organ Register.British Institute of Organ Studies. Retrieved7 March 2017.
  20. ^"Cartmel, Cumbria Priory Ch of S Mary V".Dove's Guide for Church Bell Ringers. Dovemaster. 4 August 2016. Retrieved7 March 2017.

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toCartmel Priory.
Church of England
Province of Canterbury
Province of York
Church in Wales
Scottish Episcopal Church
Churches in the Deanery of Windermere
Benefice of Cartmel Peninsula
Benefice of Grasmere
Benefice of Hawkshead
Benefice of Loughrigg
Benefice of Rydal
Benefice of South Lakes
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