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Pill Priory

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arch is now the most striking element of the site, and forms a garden feature, together with the remains of the south transept. The Pill Priory Cottage living quarters contain elements from the conventual buildings which were arranged around a more-or-less formalised cloister. The remains of all are
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recorded that Pill Priory was worth annually £67 15s. 3d. gross, £52 2S. 5d. net after charges. The manor of Pill, including the priory site and associated holdings, was sold in June 1546 to the aspiring local landowners Roger Barlow of
202:, Pembrokeshire and was founded within a few years of St Dogmaels. The founder was Adam de la Roche, a descendant of Godebert de Fleming. E. M. Pritchard thought it to be around 1180–90, while the Pembrokeshire antiquarian 435:
E. A. Lewis and J. C. Davies (eds.), Records of the Court of Augmentation relating to Wales and Monmouthshire (Cardiff, 1954), pp. 166-7: Haverfordwest Reference Library, Francis Green Collection, Vol. 12, 576, State
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Pritchard 1907, p. 139. It appears, moreover, that the sister house at Caldey was, periodically at least, occupied by a single monk (Haverfordwest Reference Library, Francis Green Collection, Vol. 12, 538, State
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The priory site and its environs, including five orchards, a wood and a meadow at Pill, the priory mill and several other possessions including St Budoc's and
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An account of Pill Priory by the Pembrokeshire antiquarian Richard Fenton, writing c. 1811, describes the priory ruins much as they survive today.
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He was granted a pension of £10 (Haverfordwest Reference Library, Francis Green Collection, Vol. I2, 538, State papers).
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Church were demised by the crown to John Doune who, in 1544, confirmed the grant of his interest to
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Ludlow, N. D. (2002). "Pill Priory, 1996–1999: Recent Work at a Tironian House in Pembrokeshire".
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The community may always have been small; it was recorded as five monks in 1534 and four in 1536.
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The entire site remains in private hands. The free-standing remains of the priory church's
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In 1536 St Dogmaels Abbey and its daughters at Pill and Caldey were dissolved in the
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Pill Priory was established by the Roche family of the Barony and
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who in turn had been the lessee of the "Priory" in 1536–7.
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The prior, William Wall, had been a monk at Pill in 1502:
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Episcopal Registers of the Bishops of St Davids 1397–1518
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with values of less than £200 and fell to the crown. The
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considered the earlier date of 1160–70 to be possible.
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The chancel arch and south transept are designated as
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Index


Affiliation
Catholicism
Benedictine
Milford Haven
Wales
Ecclesiastical or organizational status
General contractor
Materials
Old Red Sandstone
Carboniferous Limestone
Tironian
Milford Haven
Pembrokeshire
Wales
Priory
St Dogmaels Abbey
Cardigan
Benedictine
Caldey
Roch Castle
Richard Fenton
Blessed Virgin Mary
St Budoc
St Botolph
Steynton
John Wogan

suppression of those monastic houses
Valor Ecclesiasticus

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