St. Olaves Priory, Herringfleet

St Olave's Priory

Herringfleet Priory (also St Olave's Priory) was an Augustinian priory of Black Canons located in St Olaves, 6 miles (9.7 km) northwest of Herringfleet, Suffolk, England. Founded in 1239, it was situated near the ancient ferry across the River Waveney.[1] The priory of SS. Mary and Olave was founded by Sir Roger Fitz Osbert of Somerley in the time of Henry III. The remains consist of the undercroft, two aisles of the Lady Chapel, and the refectory, now a barn.[2]

The original dedication was to "St Olave, The Blessed Virgin Mary, and St Edmund, King and Martyr". Saint Olaf was King of Norway. He was born ca. 995 AD and Christianised Norway. In Suffolk, there was no other dedication to Saint Olaf, but two in Norfolk, and over fifty in the rest of England, with six in London. On 20 August 1536, Sir Humphrey Wingfield, the Commissioner for the Dissolution of the Monasteries arrived, and on 16 January 1546 Henry VIII made over the priory site to a local man, Sir Henry Jerningham of Somerleyton. Now in ruins, it gives its name to St. Olave's Bridge, over the Waveney, replacing a very ancient ferry, and also to a modern railway-junction.[3]

The Priory was allowed to hold an annual fair on St Olave's Day, 29 July. It was also given the lordship over Herringfleet and Burgh St Peter. The area has been excavated and several burials in the Canons' cemetery discovered. It is now in the guardianship of English Heritage.

Priors

St Olaves Priory, 13th century undercroft.

References

  1. British Archaeological Association; Royal Archaeological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland (1884). The Archaeological journal (Public domain ed.). Royal Archaeological Institute. pp. 394–. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  2. Walcott, Mackenzie Edward Charles (1861). The east coast of England from the Thames to the Tweed: descriptive of natural scenery, historical, archæological, and legendary (Public domain ed.). E. Stanford. pp. 68–. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  3. Viking Society for Northern Research (1905). Saga book of the Viking Society for Northern Research (Public domain ed.). Viking Society for Northern Research. pp. 181–. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
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