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Uploaded: 10/04/07 1:54 PM GMT
Still Standing
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Well, I come to the last of my series on Binham Priory and I decided to try the old look on the last shot.

I will now do things back to front and give you some history on the Priory ;)

Binham Priory

The founders, Pierre de Valognes and his wife Albreda, were Normans. Pierre was a nephew of William the Conqueror, and was one of the Norman barons among whom William shared out his newly-won kingdom. Pierre's seat was in Suffolk but he was also given a number of estates in west and north Norfolk, among them the entire village of Binham. It was here he founded a monastery. Although we don't have an exact date, Binham was certainly in the first wave, if not the earliest, of the Norman religious foundations in the county.

Pierre endowed the priory with the entire village of Binham, so the prior was also lord of the manor. The priory also received the tithes of thirteen churches on Pierre Valognes's other Norfolk estates. It was founded for eight monks. In the fourteenth century there were thirteen or fourteen, but by the time it was suppressed in May 1539 numbers had fallen back to six.

The building of the priory church began, as was customary, at the east end perhaps as early as c.1090. In these early parts you can see how the builders used the local gingery-brown sandstone conglomerate to work in with the Barnack limestone. Then for a period of about 25 years they used the creamy Caen stone shipped over from Normandy. After that it was all the shelly Barnack brought in by sea and river from Northamptonshire.

Building stopped and started with the seasons and with the availability of cash and materials. A major break in the programme is evident at the west end of the nave, and when work resumed it was in a new style. The west front had been reached by about 1244, so a building that had started in the Romanesque style was able to finish with a grand gothic flourish (see photo of west end).

The presbytery at the east end, the area under the central crossing tower, the north and south transepts, both aisles flanking the entire length of the nave and the choir in the eastern two bays of the nave all served as the priory church. The rest of the nave was the parish church. It was because of this dual function that the church was only partially demolished and why it had no west tower.

Demolition

When the King's Visitor, who was closing down the lesser monasteries, appeared in Binham in March 1538 the monks played up their connexions with the prestigious St Albans and won themselves another fourteen months' existence. However, they fell in 1539 in company with the greatest abbeys in the land.

The information above was taken from the Norfolk Archaeological Trust.

I was having trouble finding a sketch of the original building or something like it but FilmBB came across this :)

I hope you have all enjoyed this series.

Comments

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.FlimBB
10/04/07 2:14 PM GMT
A most excellent series, Bonnie. I really have enjoyed the tour and this history for the finale is perfect. *stands up and continually claps hands waiting for others to join in *
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There are 00000010 kinds of people in the world. Those who speak binary and those who don't. -mw
::fogz
10/04/07 2:53 PM GMT
Adding the soft border has given this a dreamlike appearance Bonnie! nice presentation! ...and very interesting history.
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"Life is short, break the rules, forgive quickly, kiss slowly, love truly, laugh uncontrollably, and never regret anything that made you smile" .... mygallery
::fra99y
10/04/07 3:39 PM GMT
Excellent leaving present on this piccy.... border gives such eerie feel :) brilliant
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'to start press any key ! Wheres the ANY key ?
::paramedyc
10/04/07 5:02 PM GMT
Thanks for the excellent tour and the history lesson. Nice job. Terry
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I'm not a professional photographer but I enjoy sharing my work with everyone and viewing other peoples work. please visit my gallery Thank you, Terry
.Joanie
10/04/07 5:34 PM GMT
Very handsome photo and a wonderful job on your series Bonnie! I've enjoyed them all very much! Excellent work gf! :) :)
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Life is the pits sometimes, but God and your friends are always there to help you through it.
.gabriela2006
10/04/07 11:22 PM GMT
Nicely done and thank you for the history lesson ...learning something new every day:)
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::tigger3
10/05/07 12:04 AM GMT
Bonnie this was a very good finish to this nice series. Very well done my friend. I did follow the link too. Thanks for such a good narrative. ♥:)sandi♥
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I really enjoy hearing from my caedes friends.
::cynlee
10/05/07 12:34 AM GMT
That soft border was a nice touch. It reminds one of the times when this was complete and a working abbey. Nicely done.
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You will be led to the knowledge of the internal things which are invisible to you, by the external things which you see before you. . . . Even so then, we can represent to ourselves in thought the Author of all that is, by contemplating and admiring the (visible) things which He has made, and ever brings into being. - Hermes
::Catman68
10/05/07 2:18 AM GMT
Beautiful photo. Thanks for sharing.

Aj
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For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that everyone believing into Him should not perish but have eternal life.
::phasmid
10/05/07 2:38 AM GMT
Excellence in all areas and I'm on my feet clapping with Uncle BB.

♫ :)PJ 005 ♪

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"I never looked for it, gave it no name; yet I knew it always, when the gift of peace came. I stood quite still for the moment that it lasted...Then the light shifted slightly and the moment passed, leaving me...with the lasting echo of its presence.." Diana Gabaldon
.SEFA
10/05/07 8:35 AM GMT
This is the one I like the best of your series! The B&W is a great choise here.
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SEFA
::solita17
10/05/07 6:13 PM GMT
Great history and I really like the B&W on this! I knew those ruins had to be OLD. Like we don't have anything like it here in the USA... I mean in the cemeteries on the Cape there are slate headstones going back to the 1600's, and that's old to us, lol!
mary
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"If I dream I shall be real, or really myself..." Robert Penn Warren
.wheedance
10/17/07 3:39 PM GMT
I like this touch and the history included to finish your series! What a wonderful tribute to an amazing place.
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All of earth is crammed with heaven And every bush aflame with God But only those who see take off their shoes. - Elizabeth Barrett Browning<p> mygallery

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