Abingdon Abbey was a
Benedictine monastery also known as St Mary's Abbey located in
Abingdon,
historically in the county of
Berkshire but now in
Oxfordshire,
England.
History
The abbey was supposedly founded in 675 either by
Cissa, viceroy of
Centwine, king of the
West Saxons, or by his nephew
Hean, in honour of the
Virgin Mary, for twelve
Benedictine monks.
Endowed by successive West Saxon kings, it grew in importance and wealth until its destruction by the
Danes in the reign of
King Alfred, and the sequestration of its estates by Alfred because the monks had not made him a sufficient requital for vanquishing their enemies. There is a collection of 136 charters granted to this abbey by various Saxon kings, and the
Chronicle of the Monastery of Abingdon was written at the Abbey in the 12th century.
Amongst
its abbots were
Saint Aethelwold, afterwards
Bishop of Winchester (954), and Richard of Hendred, for whose appointment the King's consent was obtained in 1262.<!--It is recorded of him that he wore both mitre and pontificals on the Feast of the Holy Trinity in
1268.--> He was present at the
Council of Lyon in 1272.
The last Abbot of Abingdon was
Thomas Pentecost alias Rowland, who was among the first to acknowledge the
Royal Supremacy. With the rest of his community he signed the surrender of his monastery in 1538, receiving the manor of
Cumnor for life or until he had preferment to the extent of £223 per annum. The revenues of the Abbey (26 Hen. VIII) were valued at...
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