SITES AND REMAINS OF RELIGIOUS HOUSES
St. Frideswide's priory.
The Augustinian priory, (fn. 1)
founded in the early 12th century by a royal chaplain,
Gwymund, was built on the site, near the south wall of
the town, of a pre-Conquest monastery or collegiate
church which Gwymund had acquired from Roger,
bishop of Salisbury. (fn. 2) Henry I confirmed the site to the
canons in 1122, (fn. 3) and between 1135 and 1140 King
Stephen granted them their gate in the town wall, with
permission to build over the wall itself. (fn. 4) The church
had probably been rebuilt by 1180 when the relics of
St. Frideswide were translated, but in 1190 it and the
priory buildings were burnt down. (fn. 5) Money for the
rebuilding was being collected in 1194 (fn. 6) and evidence
of the resultant work survives in the church, which
was completed first, the chapter-house, dating entirely
from the early 13th century except for a 12th-century
west wall, and the dorter, much altered but probably
also of early-13th-century date.
In 1423 the bishop of Lincoln ordered a new house
to be built for strangers and laymen, formerly lodged
in the infirmary: evidently a guest house next to St.
Lucy's chapel, recorded c. 1230, was no longer in use. (fn. 7)
The cloister was rebuilt in the late 15th century and a
large new prior's lodging added south of the dorter. (fn. 8)
After the priory's suppression in 1524 Cardinal
Wolsey, to make way for his college, took down much
of the priory including the west ends of the church and
of the cloister which adjoined the nave on the south.
The church became the cathedral of the new Oxford
diocese in 1546. The rest of the cloister survived, as
did the chapter-house on the east side, the frater on the
south, and the dorter to the south-east. The prior's
lodging became the east range of the Chaplain's Quadrangle, but was removed later. (fn. 9) The kitchen, which lay
west of the frater, and the refectory, presumably in the
west range of the cloister, were demolished by Wolsey.
Oseney abbey.
The house was founded as an
Augustinian priory by Robert d'Oilly on his manor of
South Oseney in 1129 and raised to the rank of an
abbey c. 1154. (fn. 10) By the early 13th century the buildings included a number of separate lodgings within the
abbey court, one at least with its own chamber,
kitchen, oratory, and stable. (fn. 11) Much of the abbey was
rebuilt during the abbacy of John Leech, from 1235 to
1249, and the work continued in the later 13th
century. (fn. 12) At the Dissolution the monastic buildings
included, as well as the dorter, frater, refectory, infirmary, and chapter-house, seven 'lodgings', one with its
own chapel, the abbot's lodgings, Abbot John's hall,
the guest hall, the great hall with the parlour beneath
it, the school-house and the schoolmaster's chamber,
chambers for the petty canons, the prison-house, St.
Nicholas's chapel, and numerous out-buildings. (fn. 13)
The abbey precincts were entered from Oseney
Lane, on which lay the great gate, two smaller gates,
the alms-houses, and St. Nicholas's chapel. Inside the
great gate was the great court, its east side formed by
the west end of the church, its south by the refectory
and kitchen, and its west perhaps by the canons'
lodgings. South of the refectory, perhaps in another
court, was the infirmary with its chapel. (fn. 14) The main
cloister lay on the south side of the church, its west and
south ranges containing the dorter and frater; the
chapter-house extended eastwards from the east range.
South of the frater stood the abbot's lodgings with its
own hall, gatehouse, and yard. (fn. 15) A range of outbuildings extended along the river bank between the abbot's
lodging and the mill. (fn. 16) The abbey church was c. 300 ft.
long and comprised a nave with double north and
south aisles, a presbytery and choir, a north-east Lady
chapel, a west tower, and a central tower; behind the
high altar were five small chapels. (fn. 17) The nave, a Lady
chapel at the east end of the choir, and probably the
lower stages of the west and central towers, were built
by Abbot Leech; the presbytery and central tower were
completed by 1267. (fn. 18) Thomas Kidlington, abbot
1330-73, added the Lady chapel on the north side of
the presbytery. (fn. 19) The outer aisles of the nave seem to
have been added in the late 15th century, for in 1480
there were said to be only three nave aisles. (fn. 20)
In 1542 the abbey church became the cathedral for
the new diocese of Oxford, (fn. 21) but in 1546 the see was
moved to Christ Church, as were the furnishings, lead,
and bells from Oseney church. (fn. 22) In 1547 the dean
and chapter leased the site of Oseney to the clothier
William Stumpe who removed most of the remaining
lead, glass, iron, and woodwork, unroofing the dorter
and partially demolishing the great barn and the long
stable. (fn. 23) In 1555 or 1556 the great gate, the great hall,
and the abbot's hall were demolished, and in a lease of
1565 Christ Church reserved the right to take stone
from the remaining buildings. (fn. 24) By 1578 only the walls
of the church, a few detached houses, the dovecot, and
the range of buildings by the mill remained standing. (fn. 25)
An explosion in a powder-house on the site in 1643
caused further destruction, and the last vestige of the
church, the west tower, was taken down c. 1650. (fn. 26)
Part of the range by the mill was intact in 1720, (fn. 27) and
some walling and a small 15th-century building survived in 1974.
Part of the site was conveyed by Christ Church in
1847 to the commissioners for building new churches,
for a cemetery; the remainder was sold in 1929. (fn. 28)
Rewley abbey.
The abbey, founded in 1280 by
Edmund, earl of Cornwall, as a house of study for
Cistercian monks, (fn. 29) lay on the west bank of a branch
of the river Thames opposite Gloucester (later Worcester) College. The church, dedicated in 1281, (fn. 30) stood
beside the river in the south-east corner of the site; the
cloister and monastic buildings seem to have been
north of the church. From the outer gateway, on the
south side of the site, an avenue of elms led to an inner
wall and gate. (fn. 31) In 1285 a chamber jutting over the
Thames impeded navigation. (fn. 32) In 1300 the abbot's
gates, close, and houses were damaged by townsmen. (fn. 33)
Building was in progress on the church in 1461, and
the choir was being rebuilt in 1488. (fn. 34)
The abbey was suppressed in 1536 and in 1541 its
site was granted to George Owen of Godstow, (fn. 35) who
in 1546 surrendered it to Henry VIII for the endowment of Christ Church. (fn. 36) The college retained the site,
leasing it to a succession of tenants, mainly Oxford
men, until c. 1850 when it was sold to the L.N.W.R. (fn. 37)
Most of the monastic buildings had disappeared or
been converted into a dwelling-house and outbuildings by 1720, (fn. 38) but two buildings at the northwest corner, one of which may have been the refectory,
survived in ruins until their demolition c. 1850 to
make way for the railway. (fn. 39) Only a section of the
precinct wall, including a small 15th-century gateway,
survived in 1974.
Hospital of St. John the Baptist.
The hospital,
founded outside the east gate of the town in the later
12th century, was greatly enlarged by Hugh Malaunay
between 1191 and 1199. (fn. 40) It was refounded in 1231
by Henry III on part of the Jews' garden or burial
ground near East (later Magdalen) Bridge, adjoining
its earlier site, (fn. 41) and in 1293 Edward I added the
remainder of the garden, to the south of the road,
as a cemetery. (fn. 42) Between 1232 and 1257 the hospital
was completely rebuilt. Work was in progress on the
chapel in 1232 and 1240, (fn. 43) on the kitchen in 1235,
1256, and 1257, (fn. 44) the infirmary in 1238, (fn. 45) a chamber
for women in childbirth in 1240, (fn. 46) and a grange in
1246. (fn. 47) By 1245 there seem to have been two chapels,
one for the brethren and one for the patients. (fn. 48) One
range of buildings, including a chapel, lay along the
street frontage; the infirmary was apparently some
distance away to the north and on a slightly different
alignment, on the site of the north range of Magdalen
College cloister. North of the infirmary and aligned
with it was a two-storey building, perhaps for the
sisters of the hospital. The kitchen, which became the
college kitchen, was on the east side of the site. The
chapel by the street was of four bays with a vaulted
chamber or charnel-house beneath it; a mid-13thcentury drawing shows it with three pairs of lancet
windows in the side walls and a tower at one end,
presumably the west. (fn. 49)
The hospital was granted to William Waynflete,
bishop of Winchester, in 1456 and suppressed in 1458
for the foundation of Magdalen College. (fn. 50) Most of the
hospital buildings were demolished, but the late-12thor early-13th-century infirmary block formed the
north range of the college cloister until 1822; the
building to the north of it survived as the college
stables until 1733, and some late-13th- or early 14thcentury rooms adjoining the kitchen served as the
divinity reader's lodgings until 1783. The chapel survived almost intact until 1790, having been converted
into a lecture-room and alms-houses in the 16th
century. The lower part of the building survived in
1974 in the south range of the college buildings; in the
angle formed by its south-west buttress is a late-15thcentury external pulpit. The hospital kitchen, with
three blocked lancet windows in its north wall, was
used as the college kitchen in 1974. (fn. 51)
Other hospitals.
St. Bartholomew's leper hospital, about a mile east of Magdalen Bridge, was
founded by Henry I before 1129 and granted by
Edward III to Oriel College in 1328; (fn. 52) its later history
and buildings are described elsewhere. (fn. 53)
Two other hospitals, presumably unendowed, were
recorded in the 14th century. The master and brethren
of the hospital of St. Giles, Rotherweye, were given
protection while collecting alms in 1330, 1336, and
1346, and the poor of 'le Spital' next to St. Giles's
church received a legacy in 1390. (fn. 54) A hospital of St.
Peter, perhaps associated with the church of St. Peterin-the-East, was recorded in 1338. (fn. 55)
Dominican friary.
The Black Friars settled in the
Jewry, on the west side of the later St. Aldate's Street,
in 1221. (fn. 56) They enlarged their chapel, dedicated to the
Virgin Mary, in 1227, and in 1233 built a school, (fn. 57) but
in 1237 they acquired a new site beside the Thames
outside Littlegate, and they moved there in 1245. (fn. 58)
The new church, dedicated to St. Nicholas, was completed in 1246, the cloister was under construction in
1251, and 'studies' needed repair in 1269. (fn. 59)
Much of the plan of the second priory has been
revealed by excavation. (fn. 60) In the north-east corner of
the site was the church comprising an aisleless choir, a
nave with narrow north and south aisles, and a
walking place, probably with a tower or belfry above
it, between nave and choir. North of the walking place
there seems to have been a chantry chapel. The nave
was extended westwards by one bay in the late 13th or
early 14th century, and about 100 years later a galilee
was added at the west end. The north aisle was partly
re-built or at least refenestrated in 1426, (fn. 61) and a 'north
nave' like that at the Greyfriars may have been added
at a later date. The choir was rebuilt c. 1500. (fn. 62) The
main cloister lay south of the church, the chapterhouse projecting eastwards from its east range. The
dorter, on the first floor of the east range, was rebuilt c.
1500. (fn. 63) South of the chapter-house was a large building, perhaps a school. Along the river bank on the
south of the site was a range of buildings probably
including a water-gate; between them and the main
cloister were other buildings, perhaps the infirmary
cloister. Other buildings lay west of the church. A gate
or gatehouse in Littlegate Street formed the main
entrance to the priory but there was probably a
separate entrance to the church from Preachers'
Bridge.
The friary was surrendered in 1538; (fn. 64) its site was
leased to William Frere and John Pye of Oxford for 21
years from 1540, and sold in 1544 to Richard
Andrews of Hailes (Glos.) who in the same year sold it
to Frere. (fn. 65) Frere demolished the church and most of
the friary buildings, selling the materials. (fn. 66) By c. 1800
the only surviving portion of the friary was part of the
main gatehouse, then used as a private house. (fn. 67) The
blocked 15th-century gateway survived in 1975. (fn. 68)
Franciscan friary.
Between 1225 and 1236 the
Grey Friars acquired a site in St. Ebbe's parish between
the later Church Street and the city wall. (fn. 69) In 1244
they obtained land outside the wall as far south as the
Trill mill stream, and were given permission to extend
their buildings across the line of the wall. (fn. 70) The site
was further enlarged by grants of adjoining properties
in 1245 and 1246, and of the adjoining friary of the
dissolved order of the Friars of the Penance in 1309. (fn. 71)
By the early 16th century the friary buildings
included the church, cloister, schools, and two libraries, and the grounds were laid out as gardens and a
grove. (fn. 72) The mid-13th-century church comprised a
choir, walking-place, nave, and north aisle; late in the
13th century the nave and aisle were extended westward by one bay, and early in the 14th century a long
north transept or 'north nave' almost as long as the
nave was built; along its east wall were seven small
chapels. Before 1480, probably in the mid 14th century, the north nave was extended northwards, making room for three more chapels, and in the late 15th
or early 16th century it was blocked off from the
church by a partition wall. (fn. 73) On the north side of the
north aisle was a small structure, probably the tomb
and chantry chapel of William, Lord Lovel (d. 1455). (fn. 74)
The cloister, schools, and domestic buildings lay south
of the church, one range extending as far south as the
Trill mill stream. (fn. 75)
The friary, its buildings already ruinous, surrendered in 1538. (fn. 76) Part of the site was leased, with the
Blackfriars, to William Frere and John Pye in 1540,
and the whole was included in the sale to Richard
Andrews in 1544. (fn. 77) Andrews sold it the same year to
Richard Gunter of Oxford, whose son Richard sold it
in 1563 to John Warner, M.D. The bells, lead, glass,
and buildings of 'churches, refectories, dormitories,
and chapter-houses' were specifically excluded from
the last sale; they were probably already being
demolished, and in 1572 Reynold Reading, lessee of
part of the site, bequeathed 40 loads of stone from
it to Ralph Flexney. (fn. 78) By the mid 17th century only
one small, decrepit building remained. (fn. 79) A few portions of walling survived in 1939, (fn. 80) but the whole site,
except for one column-base, was completely destroyed
in the building of the Westgate Centre in 1970 and
1971.
Carmelite friary.
In 1256 Sir Nicholas de Meules
gave to the Carmelite friars a site in Stockwell Street,
which was enlarged by Oseney abbey with grants of
adjoining land in 1257, 1260-1, and 1282. (fn. 81) The
church and other buildings were built between 1258
and 1268; further work was done on the church in
1276 and 1286. (fn. 82) A gate, built next to the hithe at
Hythe Bridge before 1282, was presented as a nuisance
by the abbot of Rewley in 1292-3, but was apparently
allowed to remain. (fn. 83)
In 1318 Edward II gave to the Carmelites his houses
in Oxford, (fn. 84) and the old site was sold in 1321 to the
Benedictines for Gloucester College. (fn. 85) The new site
was enlarged in 1324 and 1337 by grants from
burgesses of adjoining properties, (fn. 86) and in 1401
Henry IV gave to the friars more land to enlarge their
'strait and narrow' house. (fn. 87) The buildings of the king's
houses were adapted to the friars' use: a large room
near the chapel was furnished as a library, and the
chapel itself was enlarged, the additions including a
steeple and bells. (fn. 88)
When it was surrendered in 1538 the friary was
ruinous, the land let for a term of 30 years, and some
of the trees felled. (fn. 89) The site, which included the main
friary buildings, two houses and gardens, the entry
from Magdalen Street, and 6½ a. of land in three closes,
was granted in 1542 to Edmund Powell of Sandford. (fn. 90)
In 1560 Isabel Powell, widow, and her son Edmund
granted it to St. John's College. (fn. 91) The buildings were
being demolished in 1546 when 30 loads of stone were
carried to Christ Church; the great hall or refectory
was pulled down in 1595, having served as a poorhouse for St. Mary Magdalen parish, and by 1714 only
one small building, thought to have been the prior's
oratory, remained. (fn. 92) It contained a round window and
three medieval doorways, of which one may have been
of 13th-century date. (fn. 93) During the building of Beaumont Street in 1825, which destroyed the remaining
building, a number of burial-sites were found west of
the junction with St. John's Street, presumably marking the friars' graveyard, and the foundations of a wall
were uncovered running north and south across the
west end of Beaumont Street. (fn. 94)
Augustinian friary.
The Austin friars obtained
land outside East Gate in 1267, (fn. 95) but the following
year they settled outside Smith Gate in St. Cross
parish. (fn. 96) Before 1270 Bevis de Clare, rector of
St. Peter-in-the-East, granted to the friars land for
their chapel. (fn. 97) The site was further enlarged by grants
of 1295 and 1335. (fn. 98) Building was in progress between
1270 and 1275, and again in 1316. (fn. 99) Sir John
Haudlow (d. 1346), an important benefactor to the
friary, was described in 1456, in a grant to one of his
descendants, as the second founder, (fn. 1) but no details of
his gifts were recorded.
The chapel, which seems to have occupied the
north-west corner of the site, was c. 210 ft. long and c.
66 ft. wide, the choir and nave being of almost equal
length. (fn. 2) When the friary was surrendered in 1538 the
buildings were said to be ready to fall down, and they
were apparently demolished and the materials sold
soon afterwards. (fn. 3) The site was leased for 21 years
from 1542 to Thomas Cardon of the king's household; (fn. 4) in 1552 Edward VI granted it to Henry, duke of
Suffolk, and Thomas Duport, who sold it immediately
to Henry Bayley, from whom it passed in 1553 to
Edward Frere. (fn. 5) Frere's son William sold it in 1587 to
the city, from whom it was bought by Dorothy
Wadham in 1610 for the foundation of Wadham
College. (fn. 6) Any surviving buildings on the main part of
the site were presumably demolished between 1610
and 1613 during the building of the college, but a
house on Parks Road, said to have been part of the
friary, survived until 1810, (fn. 7) and some late-medieval
stonework remained in a wall on the east side of the
site in 1974. (fn. 8)
Other orders of friars.
The Friars of the Sack or
Penance acquired land in St. Budoc's parish in 1261 or
1262, perhaps from Ela, countess of Warwick; in 1265
Henry III gave St. Budoc's church for their chapel. (fn. 9)
The order was suppressed in 1274, and its Oxford
house was given to the Franciscans in 1309. (fn. 10)
The Trinitarian friars had arrived in Oxford by
1286; (fn. 11) in 1292 Edmund, earl of Cornwall, gave to
them a site outside the East Gate acquired from St.
John's hospital. (fn. 12) By 1311 the friars had obtain from
St. Frideswide's priory the chapel of the Holy Trinity
at the East Gate, and from the city land inside the
gate. (fn. 13) The city granted the reversion of another
property outside the gate in 1314, and in 1331 the
friars were licensed to acquire other lands and rents in
mortmain. (fn. 14) By c. 1352, however, all the friars were
said to have died, and the order does not seem to have
been re-established in Oxford, although the friary
at Hounslow (Mdx.) continued to hold the chapel of
the Holy Trinity and its property. (fn. 15)
The Crutched friars arrived in Oxford in 1342 and
occupied successively sites outside South and East
Gates, until 1352, after which there is no further
record of their presence in the town. (fn. 16)
Monastic colleges.
The Benedictine Gloucester
College (founded 1284) and Durham College (founded
1291), and the Cistercian St. Bernard's College
(founded 1437) became respectively Worcester, Trinity, and St. John's Colleges, and the history of their
sites and buildings has been given elsewhere. (fn. 17) The
third Benedictine college, Canterbury College
(founded 1362), was granted by Henry VIII to Christ
Church and incorporated into that college. (fn. 18) St.
Mary's College for Austin canons was founded in
1435 in New Inn Hall Street; it was largely rebuilt by
Cardinal Wolsey in 1518, and in 1541 its buildings
included a chapel with a library above it, a hall, about
eight chambers, a kitchen, buttery, and bakery. (fn. 19) The
site was granted in 1580 to Brasenose College which
demolished the chapel in 1656 and used the materials,
notably the roof, in its own chapel. (fn. 20) In 1974 part of
St. Mary's gatehouse in New Inn Hall Street, which
included an arched gateway and two bays of vaulting,
survived, and there was also an adjoining section of
walling, and a fragment of a timber-framed range
further south in the same street. (fn. 21)