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Nuneaton Priory
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Nuneaton Priory was a medieval monastic house in , , . It was founded as a daughter house of the Order of Fontevraud in 1153.

The priory was initially founded by Robert de Beaumont and in 1153 at in as a daughter house of in . Soon afterwards, in around 1155 the foundation was moved to Etone (or Eaton) in Warwickshire, which subsequently became known as Nuneaton.Evelyn Baker, La Grava: The Archaeology and History of a Royal Manor and Alien Priory of Fontevrault, Council for British Archaeology, York, 2013, p. 271.

Nuneaton Priory must have become "denizen", that is, a naturalised English monastery, around the time of the suppression of the , since there was a prior of Nuneaton still in 1424 and other mentions are then found.

At various moments, the women's house at Nuneaton was large, containing 93 nuns in 1234 and 89 in 1328, but the will have taken its toll, and later the house numbered 46 nuns in 1370, about 40 in 1459, only 23 in 1507 and at the end, in 1539, 27 in total, of whom 25 were granted pensions. The 1535 Valor Ecclesiasticus, Henry VIII's pre-seizure survey, showed a net annual income for the priory of some 253 pounds.Cf. David Knowles & R. Neville Hadcock, Medieval Religious Houses, England and Wales, Longman Greens, London 1953, pp. 94, 216.

The seal of Nuneaton Priory depicted the in the pose of the Seat of Wisdom ( Sedes sapientiae), which was a common motif for seals of nunneries in medieval England, though not the majority choice.Roberta Gilchrist, Gender and Material Culture: The Archaeology of Religious Women, Routledge, London, 1994, p. 145. The motif entails a depiction of seated and facing forward, presenting or holding the Christ Child on her lap.

The nunnery was seized in 1539 during King Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries, and subsequently fell into ruin.


Restoration
An ancient Abbey church founded at 'Eaton' in 1155 gave the present town the name 'Nuneaton'.

By the 19th century, all that remained of the original church were portions of the 12th- and 13th-century piers of the tower, the south wall of the south transept, and the foundations of the north transept and nave.

The Church has been partially restored. The was rebuilt in 1876 on the old foundations by the Gothic Revival architect C.C. Rolfe. The was rebuilt in 1906, and then the north in 1931 by .

The church (such as it stands) is used as the Parish Church of St. Mary The Virgin and is known locally as the Abbey Church. The recent tradition of the church is .Blagdon-Gamlen, P. E. (1973) The Church Travellers Directory. London: Church Literature Association; p. 68

Despite this building's significance in Nuneaton's past and its recent history, it is a relatively unknown place, with little promotion or signage.


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