Archaeological site

Ankerwycke Priory

United Kingdom Wraysbury scheduled monument
Ankerwycke Priory
Ankerwycke Priory · Wikipedia

About

Ankerwycke Priory was a priory of Benedictine nuns in Buckinghamshire, England. The priory was established around 1160 by Gilbert de Muntfichet and his son Richard, dedicated to St. Mary Magdalene.

Ankerwycke Priory

It held an estate at Anckerwycke (or Anckerwick) near Wraysbury, and some land elsewhere in Buckinghamshire, Surrey, and Middlesex. The priory was small and relatively poor; in the 1290s the lands were valued at 10s by the Taxatio Ecclesiastica. There were eight nuns recorded at an episcopal visitation in 1441, and an estimated seven or eight at the start of the sixteenth century.

Ankerwycke Priory

When it was dissolved in 1536, the revenues of either £22 or £44 per year were assigned to the re-founded Bisham Abbey; the prioress received a pension of £5 per year. In 1197, a dispute over a nun who had left the priory after fifteen years and claimed she had been forced to take vows against her will reached Pope Celestine III. After dissolution, Ankerwycke passed through a number of hands before being acquired by Sir Thomas Smith in 1550, who built a manor house on the site.

Ankerwycke Priory

Excavations were carried out at the priory in 2022, confirming that the Tudor house was developed from the existing priory and demolished...