Alberbury Priory

{{Short description|Medieval monastic house in Alberbury, Shropshire}}

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File:The abbots house at Alberbury, 1796.jpg

Alberbury Priory was a medieval monastic house in Alberbury, Shropshire, England, established c.1230. It was one of three houses in England belonging to the French Grandmontine Order.{{cite book|last=Baugh, Cox|first=G.C., D.C.|title=Monastic Shropshire|year=1982|publisher=Shropshire Libraries|page=8|isbn=0-903802-18-X}}

The monastery was small, with only 7 monks under a prior in occupancy in 1344, possibly supported by 'lay brothers' who did manual work.{{cite book|title=Monastic Shropshire|page=9}}

In 1359, the then prior of Alberbury was deposed for alleged violence, murder, and dissipation of the priory's goods. In 1364, one of his successors was outlawed for alleged murder and fled the house.{{cite book|title=Monastic Shropshire|pages=14–15}}

Alberbury Priory was dissolved in 1441 when King Henry VI, who had seized the alien houses during the Hundred Years War, gave it as an endowment to All Souls' College, Oxford.{{cite book|title=Monastic Shropshire|page=16}}

Burials

References

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{{Monasteries in Shropshire |state=expanded}}

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Category:Monasteries in Shropshire

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