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BOXGROVE PRIORY

ALTERNATIVE NAME:  PRIORY OF ST MARY THE VIRGIN AND ST BLAISE
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The ruins of Boxgrove Priory founded circa 1117 on the site of a secular college dating to pre-1066. The Benedictine Priory was founded as the Priory of St Mary the Virgin and St Blaise and was an alien priory. This means that it was controlled by another religious house outside of England. The transepts and crossing of the church date to the early 12th century and the choir and nave to the late 12th -14th centuries. A guesthouse and well were added in the 14th century. In 1536 the priory was dissolved as part of Henry VIII's Dissolution of the Monasteries programme from 1536 to 1541. In the 18th century the nave of the priory church was demolished.

The surviving remains consist of the priory church, which is now the parish church, and parts of the chapterhouse and guest house. The foundations of the cloisters, frater and dorter to the north of the church are visible on aerial photographs. The site is now run by English Heritage and is open to visitors.

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Further information about monuments may be obtained by contacting NMR Enquiry and Research Services , through the English Heritage website.