On a tongue of cultivated land, slightly elevated above the marsh level are the ruins of a small monastic building called Leiston Chapel. This is the site of the original Premonnstratensian Abbey founded by Ralph de Glanvile in 1182. Premonnstratensians were an offshoot of Benedictines and disciples of St Norbert, their life to be one of rigid austerity. The site on the marsh proved so unhealthy due to the malarial swamps of the Minsmere Level that in 1363 Robert de Ufford, Earl of Suffolk, built a new abbey a mile from Leiston. Some twenty years later, this second abbey was burned down, but re-edified. A few monks appear to have occupied the older establishment until the dissolution of the monasteries, and John Grene, one of the abbots of Leiston and an Austin Canon of Butley, is recorded to have relinquished the abbey in order to become an anchorite (someone who, for religious reasons, withdraws from secular society so as to be able to lead an intensely prayer-oriented, ascetic and Eucharist-focused life) at the Chapel of St. Mary in the old monastery by the sea.
Following the Dissolution Act in 1536, Leiston Abbey was granted to Charles Brandon, 3rd Duke of Suffolk and brother-in-law to Henry VIII. The Abbey became a farm, the farmhouse being built into the ruins. Later, a Georgian front was added to the house, which was extended in the 1920s. In 1928 the Abbey ruins and farm was bought by Ellen Wrightson for use as a religious retreat. When she died in 1946, she bequeathed the house, ruins, land and buildings to the Diocese of St Edmundsbury and Ipswich. It was purchased in 1977 by the Pro Corda Trust, the National School for Young Chamber Music Players, a charity running chamber music courses for children. The ruins are in the care of English Heritage.
Somewhere near the ruined abbey there was said to have been a 'holy thorn' that flowered on Christmas Day, one of the many offshoots in Britain from Joseph of Arimathea's staff. It is also recorded that, at the Dissolution, the King's Commissioners could only find property valued at £40 when they made their inventory, giving rise to the legend that the abbey plate is still buried somewhere in the cloisters, or in the area of the 'pomatorium', south of the refectory ruins. There are also reports of numerous secret tunnels that emminated from the Abbey. One is reputed to run from the west end of the abbey ruins to Greyfriars at Dunwich. Another is said to run from the corner of the refectory all the way to Framlingham Castle. A third tunnel is said to run through to the Angel Inn at Saxmundham. The 'East Anglian Daily Times' of November 13th 1987 noted that a 'Mr. P' had found the Saxmundham tunnel to run 26 feet underground, and was big enough to allow the passage of a horse and cart. Supposedly, a "large, brick-lined tunnel" was found on this general alignment in the early 1970's when a parking lot was being constructed in Saxmundham.
0 comments:
Post a Comment