Netley Abbey: Monastery, Mansion and Ruin

Netley Abbey: Monastery, Mansion and Ruin

Proc Hampsh Field Club Archaeol Soc, 49, 1993, 207-227 NETLEY ABBEY: MONASTERY, MANSION AND RUIN Ay JOHN HARE ABSTRACT isolated from the temptation of the rest of the world. The order had aroused immense jVetley Abbey was the youngest of Hampshire's monasteries, but enthusiasm, and spread rapidly in England after with the exception of those whose churches are. still used, its the foundation of the first English house, that of buildings survive more completely than those of any other. When, Waverley, in 1128. Its strictness and the simplicity however, Henry VIII dissolved the abbey in 1536, a new and of its life appealed both to those who wished to important phase began for the abbey buildings, which were now dedicate themselves to the monastic life and, with to re-emerge as a great Tudor mansion. Even when this phase had ended and tfie. buildings had become ruined, they continued toits cheapness and spiritual enthusiasm, to those be influential. As a romantic ruin in the later eighteenth century, patrons who were contemplating founding a new jVelley was to be a source of interest and inspiration to many of monastery. Netley was one of the last of the the writers of the lime, labels produced sonnets and odes and the Cistercian houses to be founded in England, and name of Netley Abbey found its way onto the plqybilb ofljtndon belongs to a small group of monasteries settled in and into the hands of the novel-reading public of Germany, the thirteenth century from the great new royal France and America. In this varied history, Netley has reflected foundation of Beaulieu in Hampshire, founded by many of the developments of 600 years in Hampshire and King John in 1203. beyond. The history of the abbey's early years has now been placed on a firm basis by CAF Meekings, upon whose article the next three paragraphs MONASTERY have been based (Meekings, 1981). Peter des Roches had died in 1238, before the foundation Netley Abbey owed its foundation to Peter des of his new abbey in the following year. The Roches, bishop of Winchester (1205-38) and a setting up of the monastery was thus the work of major political figure during the reigns of Kings his executors, the commissioner abbots appointed John and Henry III. As bishop of one oT the by the Cistercian order (those of Quarr and richest dioceses in Christendom and as an Waverley). and the abbot of the motherhouse, important influence on royal policy, he was a man Beaulieu. King Henry also helped, or did not of considerable wealth, and some of this was hinder the process, and subsequently claimed to applied to religious uses. He had already founded be the founder of the monastery. Bishop Peter three monasteries and a friary when, towards the may have sought to gain the king's support with end of his life, he became increasingly interested the dedication of the new monastery, which was in the Cistercian order. His heart was to be buried given to Henry Ill's favourite saint, King Edward at Waverley Abbey, Surrey, in the first of the the Confessor, the abbey being called the abbey of Cistercian houses and he planned to create two St Mary of Edwardstow, or the place of St Cistercian houses, one in France, at la Clarte Edward. The new monastery would need lands to Dieu, and one in England. It was the latter that provide it with an annual revenue: these came was to become Netley. from the purchase from two main sources. French The Cistercian order was one of the attempts monasteries who had been given lands in that emerged in Europe in the eleventh century to England, particularly after the Norman reform monasticism along stricter more Conquest, found it attractive to sell these now disciplined lines. The monks would be engaged in that the English kings had lost most of their manual work, as well as thought and prayer, with French lands and a return of English control in simpler buildings and music, and in remote sites France seemed unlikely. Secondly, gentry 208 HAMPSHIRE HELD CLUB AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY Figl I lie- ,il)l)c\ i h u n h the west suffering from financial difficulties sold land to well enough entrenched for its abbot to be the bishop or his executors. The endowment was appointed by the General Chapter of the certainly not lavish, and the bishop's death may Cistercian order to take part in the foundation of have been a cause of this. Netley was less well Xewenham Abbc\ in Devon. Initialk there is endowed than his earlier foundations at little evidence of Henry III taking any interest in Halesowen and Titchfield, although not the development of the abbey. The turning point, compared with that of Selbournc. The abbey also alter which the king became more interested, needed a site for itself, and one that was seems to have been the decision by his brother sufficiently remote to fit in with the demands of Richard, carl of Cornwall, to found a new the Cistercian order. There was the village of Cistercian house at Hailes in Gloucestershire in Hound nearby but that was all. Then, though not 1242-3. Henry also could be a Cistercian now, Netley, or Letley as it was also called. founder, but with the minimum cost. By 1244, he seemed a sensible choice; it was cut off from the was calling himself Netley's founder, or at least world by the woodland and heathland on its one of the founders, and in 1251 he claimed sole landward side and by the sea elsewhere. responsibility. In 1244 he ordered the grant of According to the Waverley chronicle, the £100 'for the foundation of the church, whereof monastery began in 1239, although its buildings the king wishes to lay the first stone as founder'. had not yet commenced, the site of Netley being His name and title can still be seen carved on acquired in 1240-1. By 1245, the community was one of the foundation stones for the crossing of MARK: NETLEYABBEY: MONASTERY, M \\M<>\ \\l) RUIN 209 Fig 2. The south transept from the nortli-ursi the monastic church. His generosity, however, roi) in the New Forest. His financial grants to the seems to have been rather less than this might abbey and its buildings may, moreover, have suggest. He did not give it any land until 1252-3, included money owed to Peter des Roches and when he gave it an uncultivated area of three from the vacant bishopric of Winchester. It thus hundred acres at Roydon (the King's gift or don du seems more appropiate, while accepting a role for 210 HAMPSHIRE FIELD CLUB AND VRCHAEOLOGU AL SOCIETY Henry in the construction of the buildings, to see 1981, 24-32). Architecturally these would have des Roches as the founder of the abbey. included parts of the eastern arm, but not Initially, the monks would probably have necessarily the easternmost window. occupied temporary wooden accomodation, and The plan of the transepts and choir, with the this and the more permanent buildings would square ended and aisled eastern arm, showed the have begun by 1241. The latter buildings standard design of English Cistercian church probably began in the east part of the site, building from the early thirteenth century including the sacristry, chapterhouse and onwards (Coldstream, 1986, 145-8). Its plan dormitory. The foundation of the abbey church bears little relation to the grand chevet of probably began in the period 1244-46, with the radiating chapels at its mother house, latter year more likely. By 1251, substantial neighbouring Beaulieu, but it does show quantities of lead were ordered by the king for the Cistercian influence. Here should be noted the abbey and he also granted 30 oaks, all for the simple plainness of the architecture, and the use church. The king made further grants of cash and of two storeyed design with the middle triforium trees in the following year, and in the beginning gallery having shrunk into a wall passage, within of 1253 he gave a silver gilt processional cross. All the clerestory or upper window storey (Fig 3), this suggests thai during these years major roofing such as was also used at Tintern and Fountains was underway and that by 1253 substantial parts (Coldstream, 1986, 150). Contrasting with this of the abbey church were operational (Meckings, simplicity and with the lancets of the choir and I •••• Fig 3. The south transept and dormitory range from the south-west. HARK: NETLEY ABBEY: MONASTERY. MANSION AND RUN 211 transept, and the plate tracery of the reredorter activity for, as elsewhere, such alterations or undercroft, is the tracery of the large east window internal remodelling may well have left no which shows the influence of Henry's own evidence after the conversion to a country house, greatest architectural patronage: at Westminster the subsequent removal of such alterations, and a Abbey which he had begun to rebuild in 1246 period of decay. The only surviving evidence of (Colvin, 1963, 141). Here the work is any major building programmes in the monastic characterised by deep complex filleted mouldings, church is provided by a nineteenth century purbeck marble capitals and grooves for holding illustration of the east window suggesting the the window glass. This change may represent a addition of stone vaulting in the choir (Sharpe, halt in work or wholesale reappraisal of the 1848) and the remains of the vaulting of the south design in the course of its construction. It may transept.

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