| Timeline |
| Lady St. Mary Priory Some topics have links
to supplementary notes and A
bibliography.
- Late 7th or early 8th
century
- The priory is reputed to have been founded about this time by Saint
Aldhelm.
- 709
- Death of St. Aldhelm
- 786
- Vikings attack and enter Wareham.
- 800 or 802
- Saxon King Beothric was buried either in the nunnery or the adjacent
minster, presumably he is still there. He was the last king of the
West Saxons. His name may also be spelled Brictric or Brithric.
- 876
- Bishop Asser recorded a convent
of nuns in the town.
Danish invaders sacked the town at this time and skeletons found just
outside The Priory's walls are thought to be the remains of many of
these nuns.
- About 900
- Alfreda, daughter of Alfred the Great rebuilt the nunnery.
- 978
- King Edward the Martyr was murdered at Corfe when about 16 years
of age. His bones were kept at Wareham for two years. About this time
the prioress was Wulfwynn, she was of Royal blood.
- 1015
- The Danes again sack Wareham and destroy the minster and nunnery.
- 1017 - 1035
- King Canute (Cnut). He rebuilt many ecclesiastical institutions,
it appears that the priory was one of them.
- 1042 - 1066
- King Edward the Confessor. He granted the priory to the Norman Abbey
of St. Wandrille. Monks replace nuns in the priory.
- 1066 - 1087
- King William the Conquerer. After the battle of Senlac Field (Hastings)
he subdued many Saxon boroughs including Wareham destroying in the
process about a third of the town including the properties of the
Abbey of St. Wandrille.
- About 1100
- Robert de Beaumont, Count of Mellent (Later Earl of Leicester) built
Wareham Castle and refounded the priory. He arranged the transfer
of the priory to the Benedictine
Abbey of Lire.
- 1160
- The Earl of Leicester made a grant
of fishing rights to the priory.
- 1291
- The total income of the priory was listed as being £20
3/5d of which £12 2/9d
was contributed by dependent chapels at Church Knowle, East Stoke,
Shapwick, Wareham and Winfrith. The connections with French monasteries
had long since been broken by war.
- 1337
- King Edward III confiscated the priory's lands. The
prior was required to pay to the Royal Treasury £2 per year.
- 1387
- The priory had fallen on hard times. The Monday before Easter an
inquisition was held in Wareham. The priory's properties were found
to be worth, after all deductions and charges, about £10.
- 1398
- Ownership of The priory was transferred to the Carthusian monastery
of Mount Grace in Yorkshire
- 1419
- King Henry V requires prior Walter Elton to transfer allegiance
to his Carthusian foundation of Sheen in Middlesex.
- 1535
- The Dissolution of the Monasteries by King Henry VIII.
- 1536
- The priory closed. Its annual income was estimated at £43
16/8d. Some ruins of this building still
remain.
- 1554
- The Priory was sold to the Reeves and Cotton families. Much of the
existing building dates from this period when it was a farm house.
- 1643
- The siege of Corfe Castle (an
hour's walk to SSW), from 23rd June until
4th August Lady Mary Bankes and a tiny garrison
defied 600 Parliamentarians. The siege was raised by Prince Maurice
for the King. Captain Lay and a small Roundhead force (thought to
number about 200) attacked Wareham upriver from Poole. Battle was
joined from Redcliffe to Wareham Quay, The Priory grounds must have
seen action yet the house survived. Captain Lay captured the town,
200 prisoners and a large quantity of arms and ammunition.
- 1644
- April 12th, Wareham taken by the Royalists
in a dawn raid. 6 officers, 150 men, 6 ordinance and 200 muskets captured.
August 8th/10th
Assault by 1200 Parliamentarian horse and foot, the outworks fell
and the town surrendered.
- April 1646
- The second siege of Corfe Castle. Lady Mary again resisted the Parliamentarian
forces for eight days until the castle fell through treachery. The
castle was slighted.
- 1762
- The Fire of Wareham. Being on the edge of town and close to the
river the structure of The Priory survived relatively unharmed whilst
the main part of the town was entirely destroyed.
- 1850
- Sir William Pitt sold The Priory to the Earl of Eldon, Squire of
Encombe.
- 1900
- At this time The Priory was the home of Annie Beale who let apartments.
- 16th June 1976
- On the death of the owner, Mr. John Greenwood late vice-chairman
of Boots the Chemist, The Priory was sold to the present owners who
wished to open an hotel.
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| Historical Notes &
References |
| This page is intended to supplement The
Timeline. Sources are listed in The
bibliography below.
- St. Aldhelm
- Bishop of Sherborne. He held an estate in the area.
He is known to have visited the locality in AD700
and to have founded a religious house. There is no
proof that this house was The Priory. No alternative
site has been found.
- 876 invasion
- Cressy mentions ...a noble
monasterie of religious virgins seated in the same
town [Wareham]. This was certainly on the present
site. At various times large numbers of skeletons
have been excavated in and adjacent to The Priory.
Many of the earlier ones were female and thought to
be the remains of these same religious virgins. Hutchins
tells of a 'cartload of bones' being removed when
a cellar was dug, some of them from between two stone
slabs. One of these, a broken thighbone, was unusually
large.
- Abbey of Lire
- Also called Lira. The Abbey was founded by William
Fitz Osborn, a kinsman of William the Conquerer
- Grant of Fishing Rights
- This action separated the rights from much of the
adjoining land forming a several fishery
(Several - severed from other rights). In
consequence, long after the dissolution of the monasteries
these rights became the subject of protracted legal
action. At one time the then holder of the rights
attempted to claim the entire river to its source,
for a while he was allotted the river as far upstream
as Holme Bridge but eventually it was found that rights
only existed as far up as Wareham Pool. Curiously
the Priory Hotel does hold some fishing rights so
the entire fishery doesn't fall under the severance.
- Income in 1291
- Presumably the temporalities (non religious
income) included the tithes of grain ground by the
North Mill on the River Piddle which was known to
be owned by the priory in 1150.
- Priors of Wareham
- Not all the Priors are known, a fairly complete
list from the 13th to the
15th century can be assembled
as follows:
| Roger |
Undated |
During the reign of Richard I (1189-1199)
|
| William |
Mentioned |
1216
|
| Nicholas Bynet |
Mentioned |
1297
|
| Peter de Deserto |
Presented 1302 |
|
| John Mabere |
Presented 1311 |
|
| Ralph de Coudray |
Presented 1323 |
|
| William de Bally |
Presented 1329 |
Resigned 1332
|
| John de Bediers |
Presented 1332 |
|
| Michael de Molis |
Presented 1334 |
|
| William de Barly |
Presented 1343 |
|
| William de Noys |
Presented 1349 |
Resigned 1354
|
| Robert de Gascur |
Presented 1354 |
Also called Gascourt
|
| Ludovicus de Goulaffe |
Presented 1362 |
Resigned 1362
|
| Peter Ultra Aqua |
Presented 1362 |
Resigned 1364
|
| William de Minquet |
Presented 1364 |
|
| Stephin de Barron |
|
Died 1412
|
| John Kyngeston |
Presented 1412 |
|
| Walter Eton |
Presented 1416 |
Also spelled Eston, Elton & Eltone
|
- The Victoria History of the County of Dorset.
V2
- Hutchins's History of Dorset
John Hutchins was Rector of Wareham from 1743-1773.
His tomb is in The Church of Lady St. Mary where he
preached. His great history, his life's work, was
saved from the 1762 fire of Wareham by the prompt
action of his wife.
- Royal Commission on Historical Monuments in
the County of Dorset See especially V2 Pt.2
p317
- Cressy Church History of Britain
- Dorset Natural History and Archaeological
Society: Proceedings XIX p82 Article by George
Bennett
- Robert Douch Handbook of Local History: Dorset
- Country Life March 4th
1976 Article on The Priory Garden by A.G.L.
Hellyer
- Dorset Life July 1990 Article 'an historic
site' on the history of The Priory by Paul Randall.
- Lillian Ladle Wareham, A Pictoral History.
Phillimore Press 1994
- Some useful ephemera are stored in The Dorset County
Library's "Wareham" file in Dorchester.
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