Monument record MLI30611 - Ruins and site of St Leonard's Priory, Stamford

Summary

Ruins and site of St Leonard's Priory, Stamford.

Type and Period (8)

Protected Status/Designation

Full Description

St Leonard’s priory at Stamford was a Benedictine priory established in about 1082 on the supposed site of a 7th century monastery (30612). The surviving remains consist of a Norman nave and a fine Transitional west front. {1}{2}{3} There is no reference to the monastery in the Domesday book. It is first referred to in the mid 12th century. It was a very large religious house. Excavations have revealed the full conventual buildings including the chapter house and church. From the 14th century onwards there were very few monks at the monastery. After the dissolution it passed to the Cecil family. {4} Excavations in 1967 were carried out to try to recover the plan of the monastery. There was a single aisled presbytery, later rebuilt with a square east end. The transepts had apsidal chapels. On south side of the site were cloisters. The general plan was revealed in 1968 and cellarers range was examined. {5} St Leonard's priory was founded by William II around 1090 and the west front was rebuilt around 1150. Part of the west front of the church and the north arcade survive. The west front is in a fine Transitional style. For the full description and the legal address of this listed building please refer to the appropriate List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest. {6}{7} These ruins are now a barn and consist of a west front and five arches of arcade. The east bays are pure Norman while the west front is Transitional. {8}{9} There is a full description in the revised scheduling document 22614. {10} A sewerage pipe cutting across the frontage of Priory Farm revealed 9 burials aligned east to west some six feet inside the boundary wall. A stone coffin (damaged) was found. {11} Excavation on the south side of the buildings proved the standing building is part of the north arcade of the nave. The cloister was on the south side of the church with a cellarers range to the west. {12} During excavations carried out prior to 1977 (possibly the same ones as detailed in Source 5 - see above) the plan of the monastery was revealed. It had a single-aisled church with a long apsidal presbytery and transepts with apsidal chapels. To the south lay the cloisters surrounded by three ranges of buildings. The western range was probably the cellar and was originally a long open building with a first floor supported on wooden posts although in the later medival period it was subdivided by cross-walls, presumably to allow the storage of different commodities. The southern range was probably the monks' refectory and had a first floor supported on stone columns. The eastern range would have contained the small chapter house mentioned in documentary sources and would usually house the monks' sleeping quarters. However, in this case the sleeping quarters may have been on the first floor of the western or southern range, closer to the latrines which would have been situated above the elaborate rere-dorter drain discovered in the south-western corner. This drain contained a mound of organic deposit and refuse, much of it typical of cess-pit material and including fabric, botanical material, pottery and small metal items. However, the layers immediately above this contained material which appears to have come from a late medieval laboratory. This includes fragments of glass distillation vessels (alembics), crucibles associated with metallurgical workings and also mercury in its elemental state, sulpher and copper. Book clasps and fragile, laminated material which may be the remains of pages were also found, suggesting an associated library which was also destroyed. A buried group of clippings from silver coins was found in the adjacent cellar which may also be related to the laboratory, and may indicate its location. This material may relate to the practice of alchemy/science, or to the preparation of medicinal compounds or even coining. The pottery from the drain includes many complete vessels and a nearly complete Spanish lustre-ware altar vase probably from Malaga. The upper levels of the drain contained material relating to the Priory's destruction during the Dissolution including large quantities of broken stained window glass, roofing material, wall rubble and traces of fallen roof timbers. {13}{14} There are a number of re-used medieval stones in the north boundary wall of the house in the north west corner of the site (St Nicholas). These include a short section of window mullion, an octagonal shaft and a round shaft. {15}

Sources/Archives (15)

  •  Index: Ordnance Survey. O.S. cards for Stamford. STAMFORD. TF 00 NW 26,1961, FC.
  •  Bibliographic Reference: D. Knowles and R.N. Hadcock. 1953. Medieval Religious Houses: England and Wales - First Edition. p.78.
  •  Index: SMR cards for Stamford. STAMFORD. TF 00 NW W -.
  •  Bibliographic Reference: Hartley, J.S. and Rogers, A.. 1974. The Religious Foundations of Medieval Stamford. no.28, pp.54-6.
  •  Bibliographic Reference: Mahany, Christine. 1969. The Archaeology of Stamford. -.
  •  Index: Department of the Environment. 1974. List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest. 2/135.
  •  Bibliographic Reference: Nikolaus Pevsner and John Harris, with Nicholas Antram. 1989. Buildings of England: Lincolnshire (Second Edition). p.691.
  •  Scheduling Record: HBMC. AM 7. SAM 36.
  •  Serial: LINCOLNSHIRE NOTES AND QUERIES. vol.IV, p.27.
  •  Scheduling Record: ENGLISH HERITAGE. 1994. REVISED SCHEDULING DOCUMENT 22614. Monument number 22614.
  •  Unpublished Document: L. Tebbutt. 1974. Sewerage Pipe Trench Cutting through the Frontage of Priory Farm and St Leonard's Priory. -.
  •  Graphic Material: DAWSON N. 1880. PARISH FILE. STAMFORD. UG76-150.
  •  Bibliographic Reference: Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England. 1977. An Inventory of Historical Monuments. The Town of Stamford. no.47, pp.34-6, plates 7-9.
  •  Article in Serial: Mahany, Christine. 1977. 'St Leonard's Priory, Stamford' in South Lincolnshire Archaeology. vol.1, pp.17-22.
  •  Bibliographic Reference: ROGERS, A.. 1970. The Medieval Buildings of Stamford. nos.27-8, p.31.

Map

Location

Grid reference Centred TF 0387 0729 (242m by 243m)
Civil Parish STAMFORD, SOUTH KESTEVEN, LINCOLNSHIRE

Related Monuments/Buildings (1)

Related Events/Activities (2)

External Links (0)

Record last edited

Mar 21 2021 8:35PM

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