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abbey and surrendered
On 22 November 1539 the abbey was surrendered to Henry VIII's commissioners in the Dissolution of the monasteries.
In 1539 Bradley surrendered the abbey when Henry VIII ordered the Dissolution of the Monasteries.
He surrendered the abbey to the Crown and in return he obtained a pension of £ 266 13s 4d, and also the house and park at Forthampton.
The Benedictine foundation at Sherborne ended in the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1539, when the abbey was surrendered to King Henry VIII.
Plumstead manor, together with the church of Plumstead and the chapel of Wickham annexed to it remained part of the possessions of the monastery until its final dissolution in 1539, the 30th year of the reign of Henry VIII, when the abbey and all its revenues were surrendered into the King's hands by the then abbot, John Essex and its thirty members.
In September 1538, the abbot and the twelve remaining monks surrendered the abbey.
He was at Evesham at the time the abbey was surrendered on 27 January 1540 in the Dissolution of the Monasteries.
In 1590, the city surrendered to Henry IV, who converted to Catholicism in 1593 in the abbey of Saint-Denis.
The Abbot and his monks finally surrendered their abbey to Henry's commissioners on Christmas Eve 1539.
The last abbot, John Bourchen, surrendered the abbey to Thomas Cromwell, Wolsey ’ s old secretary.
As a result, the abbey survived the first wave of closures during the Dissolution of the Monasteries, but was surrendered to the king's commissioners in 1538, by which time there were eleven nuns in residence.
The abbey was surrendered to Henry VIII in 1539 with the Dissolution of the Monasteries and was largely destroyed ; a portion of the Abbot's Porch and Abbey guesthouse remain.
In the time of the dissolution of the monasteries, the last abbot surrendered the abbey and the site was given to Sir Giles Strangways.
At the peace of Lunéville in 1801 the part of the landgraviate on the left bank of the Rhine was surrendered to France, and in 1815 other parts were ceded to Prussia, the landgrave Victor Amadeus being compensated by the abbey of Corvey and the Silesian duchy of Ratibor.
The abbey was only surrendered to Henry VIII in 1539, so that before the year was out the work of spoliation had begun, and the abbot ’ s brass had been removed and re-engraved to Margaret Bulstrode.

abbey and during
* Abbey of Cluny, an abbey, reformed during the Middle Ages, strictly adhering to the Rule.
According to Jocelin of Brakelond, in 1198 during a fire at the abbey of St Edmundsbury ( now Bury St Edmunds ), the monks ' ran to the clock ' to fetch water, indicating that their water clock had a reservoir large enough to help extinguish the occasional fire.
Both town and abbey converted to Lutheranism in 1539 during the Protestant Reformation.
The abbey was secularized in 1802 during the German Mediatisation and Quedlinburg passed to the Kingdom of Prussia as part of the Principality of Quedlinburg.
Scholars generally agree that these copies were written at Monte Cassino and the end of the document refers to Abbas Raynaldus cu ... who was most probably one of the two abbots of that name at the abbey during that period.
In 584, during the abbacy of Bonitus, the Lombards sacked the abbey, and the surviving monks fled to Rome, where they remained for more than a century.
# 361r: Heinrich von Tettingen ( well documented during 1236 – 1300 ; of a family of ministeriales of Reichenau abbey )
While his father had founded only one monastery ( Otto I later replaced the abbey with the Cathedral of Magdeburg ) during his 37 years of reign.
The cheese was originally invented by Trappist monks during the 19th century at the abbey of Notre Dame du Port du Salut in Entrammes.
England prospered during his reign and his greatest monument is Westminster, which he made the seat of his government and where he expanded the abbey as a shrine to Edward the Confessor.
Her tomb originally boasted an alabaster memorial, which was deliberately destroyed during extensions to the abbey in the reign of her grandson, Henry VII.
In 1791, during the French Revolution, the abbey was seized and sold by the government.
The church occupies the site of the ancient chancel and transepts of a large medieval Benedictine abbey, which was sacked in 1560 during the Scottish Reformation and permitted to fall into disrepair.
The abbey had a violent end during the Dissolution and the buildings were progressively destroyed as their stones were removed for use in local building work.
The abbey was largely destroyed in 1538 during Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries.
The name commemorates the abbey in France which held the patronage of Tintagel during the Middle Ages ( the commune is now known as Fontevraud-l ' Abbaye ), founded by Robert of Arbrissel.
Visitors to the abbey usually are not allowed inside the abbey itself, although during the school's summer holidays, access to the abbot's hall is often allowed.
Her body was moved to nearby St Mary's Church, Bury St Edmunds, when the abbey was destroyed during the Dissolution of the Monasteries.
A skeleton thought to be hers was rediscovered in 1960 during the restoration of the abbey.
The cathedral ceased to be an abbey during the Dissolution of the Monasteries when all religious houses were suppressed.
In 1559, during the Scottish Reformation, the abbey suffered further damage when a mob destroyed the altars and looted the rest of the church.
The roof was vaulted in stone in 1758, but the work was badly executed, and during a storm in 1768 the roof collapsed, leaving the abbey as it currently stands, a roofless ruin.
Both town and abbey suffered during the 9th century from the attacks of the Vikings, who later settled to the west in Normandy.
In 1536, abbey life came to an end with the Dissolution of the Monasteries during the reign of King Henry VIII.

abbey and dissolution
One manuscript indicates that a sapphire altar was among the items King Henry VIII confiscated from the abbey at its dissolution a thousand years later.
Some twenty years after the dissolution, Reading town council created a new town hall by inserting an upper floor into the former refectory of the hospitium of the abbey.
About 100 years after the abbey school occupied the hospitium, and after the dissolution of the monasteries, Reading town council created a new town hall by inserting an upper floor into the hospitium's refectory, leaving the lower floor to be used by the school.
A new gateway, now called the Abbey Gateway, was built to the abbey grounds in 1365, which was the only part of the monastery buildings ( besides the church ) to survive the dissolution, later being used as a prison and now part of St Albans School.
St. Benet's Abbey in Norfolk was the only abbey in England which escaped formal dissolution, its estates being transferred directly to the bishops of Norwich.
Its dissolution was made lawful by the Dissolution of the Lesser Monasteries Act and the lands of the abbey were granted to lay owners.
The present-day church consists of the nave of the Norman abbey church, the 14th-century Lady Chapel and west wall, and a 16th-century west tower, added after the dissolution.
The Roche Abbey records were lost or destroyed so there are no accounts of what went on in the abbey, other than there were 14 monks and an unknown number of novices at the time of dissolution in 1538.
It was the dissolution by King Henry VIII of England that rendered the abbey to ruin, but the walls of the north and south transepts are still impressive.
The burgesses, who had little independence under the abbey, tried to obtain self-government after the dissolution of the monasteries.
Skellig Michael remained in the possession of the Order of St. Augustine until the dissolution of the Ballinskelligs abbey by Elizabeth I in 1578.
The abbey was closed in 1539 by Henry VIII as part of the dissolution.
Following the suppression of the Pilgrimage of Grace, from 1539, it met at the former house of the Abbot of St. Mary's Abbey, York ( founded by the Lord of Richmond ) in the centre of that city ; after the dissolution of the abbey, the building had been retained by the king who formally allocated it to the Council.
It was a priory of that abbey until the dissolution of the alien houses by Henry V, when it was given to the abbess and Convent of Syon at Isleworth, Middlesex.
The church is older than the abbey, being consecrated in 1175 and then served as the Capella Ante Portas to the Abbey until its dissolution.
Image: Limoges St Michel St Martial shrine. jpg | Shrine of St Martial in the church of St Michel des Lions, Limoges, where the relics have been stored since the dissolution of the abbey.
Following the dissolution of Netley, on 3 August 1536, King Henry granted the abbey buildings and some of its estates to Sir William Paulet, his Lord Treasurer and subsequently Marquess of Winchester.
The abbey soon recovered and continued to thrive until its dissolution in 1539.
St Frideswide's Priory, a medieval Augustinian house which became Christ Church, Oxford following the dissolution of the monasteries is claimed to be the site of her abbey and relics.
The abbey was demolished directly after the dissolution and much of its masonry taken to Calais to reinforce that town's defences against French interests.
He set up what was believed to be a scheme to save the Abbey ( despite his firm belief in the dissolution of the monasteries )— the sale of the abbey ’ s land and possessions.
At the dissolution of the monasteries during the Tudor period, the abbey and its lands passed through the following dynasties: Sir Richard Grenville, Robert Boyle and William Forward.
The priory was fully subject to Tewkesbury until the dissolution of the abbey in 1540.

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