Canons Ashby Priory

Canons Ashby Priory was an Augustinian monastic establishment in Northamptonshire, England.

The Priory was founded by Stephen La Leye on a site to the south of the present church between 1147 and 1151, during the reign of Henry II.

In 1253 the Augustinians were granted a licence to build the Norwell, which still exists to the north of the present church, to supply water to the priory.

Following the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 1530s, the priory and its land were granted to Sir Francis Bryan, a close ally of Henry VIII. Bryan only held the estate for a short while before selling it in 1538 to Sir John Cope, a wealthy Banbury lawyer. Sir John's daughter Elizabeth inherited what is thought to have been the priory farmhouse . In 1551 she married John Dryden, who extended the building to form the earliest parts of Canons Ashby House.

Part of the building survives: St Mary's, the parish church of Canons Ashby, dates from about 1250 and this, together with Canons Ashby House, is now owned by the National Trust. Its power and size can be judged by its outlying buildings which cover a huge area of the surrounding countryside. The remains of the priory's hospitalium can still be seen as the monastic building centred around the parish church of Maidford, some five miles away.

Famous quotes containing the words canons and/or priory:

    Unless criticism refuses to take itself quite so seriously or at least to permit its readers not to, it will inevitably continue to reflect the finicky canons of the genteel tradition and the depressing pieties of the Culture Religion of Modernism.
    Leslie Fiedler (b. 1917)

    Blessing turned to blasphemies,
    Holy deeds to despites.

    Sin is where our Lady sat,
    Heaven turned is to hell,
    Sathan sits where our Lord did sway,
    Walsingham, Oh farewell!
    —Unknown. A Lament for the Priory of Walsingham (l. 39–44)