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Tewkesbury Abbey

The Abbey Church of St Mary the Virgin, Tewkesbury, commonly known as Tewkesbury Abbey, is located in the town of Tewkesbury in the ceremonial county of Gloucestershire, England. A former Benedictine monastery, it is now a parish church. Considered one of the finest examples of Norman architecture in Britain, it has the largest Romanesque crossing tower in Europe.

Parish Church of St Mary the Virgin

Tewkesbury had been a centre for worship since the 7th century. A priory was established there in the 10th century. The present building was started in the early 12th century. It was unsuccessfully used as a sanctuary in the Wars of the Roses. After the dissolution of the monasteries, Tewkesbury Abbey became the parish church for the town. George Gilbert Scott led the restoration of the building in the late 19th century. The church and churchyard within the abbey precincts include tombs and memorials to many of the aristocracy of the area.


Services have been high church but now include Parish Eucharist, choral Mass, and Evensong. These services are accompanied by one of the church's three organs and choirs. There is a ring of twelve bells, hung for change ringing.

23 October 1121 – the choir consecrated

1150 – tower and nave completed

1178 – large fire necessitated some rebuilding

~1235 – Chapel of St Nicholas built

~1300 – Chapel of St. James built

1321–1335 – choir rebuilt with radiating chantry chapels

1349–59 – tower and nave vaults rebuilt; the of the nave replacing wooden roofing

lierne vaults

1400–1410 – rebuilt

cloisters

1438 – Chapel of Isabel () built

Countess of Warwick

1471 – ; bloodshed within church so great that it is closed for purification

Battle of Tewkesbury

1107 – when the abbey's founder died in 1107, he was buried in the chapter house while his son-in-law Robert FitzRoy, Earl of Gloucester (an illegitimate son of King Henry I), continued building the abbey

Robert Fitzhamon

1375 – , Lord of the Manor of Tewkesbury, is remembered today chiefly for the effigy on his monument, which shows him in full colour kneeling on top of the canopy of his chantry, facing toward the high altar

Edward Despenser

1395 – Robert Fitzhamon's remains were moved into a new chapel built as his tomb

1471 – a brass plate on the floor in the centre of the marks the grave of Edward of Westminster, Prince of Wales, the son of King Henry VI and end of the Lancastrian line, who was killed in the Battle of Tewkesbury – the only Prince of Wales ever to die in battle. He was aged only 17 at his death.

sanctuary

1478 – the bones of (brother of Edward IV and Richard III), and his wife Isabel (daughter of "Warwick, the Kingmaker") are housed behind a glass window in a wall of their inaccessible burial vault behind the high altar

George, Duke of Clarence

1539 – the which Abbot Wakeman had erected for himself is only a cenotaph because he was not buried there

cadaver monument

Also buried in the abbey are several members of the Despenser, and Beauchamp families, all of whom were generous benefactors of the abbey. Such members include Henry de Beauchamp, 1st Duke of Warwick, and his wife, Cecily Neville, Duchess of Warwick, sister of "Warwick, the Kingmaker".

de Clare

Notable church monuments surviving in Tewkesbury Abbey include:

Leonard William Tracy Arkell 1910–1912

[28]

Richard Abdiel Chorley 1950–1985

[29]

Churchyard[edit]

The churchyard contains war graves of two World War II Royal Air Force personnel.[33]

Abbey precincts[edit]

The market town of Tewkesbury developed to the north of the abbey precincts, of which vestiges remain in the layout of the streets and a few buildings: the Abbot's gatehouse, the Almonry barn, the Abbey Mill, Abbey House, the present vicarage and some half-timbered dwellings in Church Street. The abbey now sits partly isolated in lawns, like a cathedral in its cathedral close, for the area surrounding the abbey is protected from development by the Abbey Lawn Trust, a registered charity[34] originally funded by a United States benefactor in 1962.[35]

Gerald of Avranches (1102–1109).[37][38] Previously served as Abbot of Cranborne, when Tewkesbury was a dependent cell. Gerald was made Abbot when the abbey was transferred to Tewkesbury by William Rufus and Robert Fitz Haimon. He also previously served as chaplain to Hugh, Earl of Chester[39]

[36]

Robert (1109–1123)

[37]

Benedict (1124–1137) Previously served as Prior of Tewkesbury

[37]

Roger (1137–1161)

[37]

Fromund (1162–1178)

[37]

Robert (1182–1183)[38]

[37]

Bishop of St Davids held the priory for three years (1183–1186)[37]

Peter de Leia

(1186–1202).[40] His tomb is in the south ambulatory of the choir

Alan of Tewkesbury

Walter (1202–1213). Previously served as the Sacrist at Tewkesbury

[37]

Hugh or Henry (1212–1215). Previously served as Prior of Tewkesbury

[37]

Peter of Worcester (1216–1232)

[41]

Robert (1232–1254). Previously served as Prior of Tewkesbury. A tomb thought to be his is in the south ambulatory

[41]

Thomas de Stoke or Stokes (1255–1276). Previously served as Prior of [38][41]

St James' Priory, Bristol

Richard of Norton (1276–1282)[41]

[38]

Thomas of Kempsey, Kemeseye, or Kemes (1282–1328)[41]

[38]

John de Cotes (1330–1347). Previously served as Prior of Tewkesbury[42]

[41]

Thomas de Leghe (1347–1361)[41]

[38]

Thomas de Chesterton (1361–1389)

[43]

Thomas Parker (1389–1420)

[43]

William de Bristol, or de Bristow (1425–1442)

[43]

John de Abingdon (1444–1452)

[43]

John Galeys, Gales, or Galys (1452–1468)

[43]

John Streynesham, or Streynsham (1468–1480)

[43]

Richard Cheltenham, or Cheltynham (1480–1509)

[43]

Henry Beely, Beauley, Beley, or Beoly (1509–1534)

[43]

(1534–1540). Last Abbot before the surrender of the monastery on 9 January 1540. Appointed Bishop of Gloucester in September 1541[44]

John Wyche alias John Wakeman

Choirs[edit]

The abbey possesses, in effect, two choirs. The Abbey Choir sings at Sunday services, with children (boys and girls) and adults in the morning, and adults in the evening. Tewkesbury Abbey Schola Cantorum is a professional choir of men, boys and girls based at Dean Close Preparatory School and sings at weekday Evensongs as well as occasional masses and concerts. The Abbey School Tewkesbury, which educated, trained and provided choristers to sing the service of Evensong from its foundation in 1973 by Miles Amherst, closed in 2006; the choir was then re-housed at Dean Close School, Cheltenham, and renamed the Tewkesbury Abbey Schola Cantorum.

Morris, Richard K. & Shoesmith, Ron (editors) (2003) Tewkesbury Abbey: history, art and architecture. Almeley: Logaston Press  1-904396-03-8

ISBN

Official site

Tewkesbury Medieval Town Showcase