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LILLESHALL ABBEY

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The ruined, earthwork and buried remains of Lilleshall Abbey. The religious order was originally founded in 1143 at Lizard and in 1144 it moved to Donnington Wood and then finally to Lilleshall in 1148. Lilleshall abbey was founded by Richard de Belmeis for canons of the Augustinian Order of Aras. The church was built in the 12th and 13th centuries. The east and south ranges of the claustral buildings containing the sacristy and chapter house, and the refectory, kitchen and warming room, respectively were built in the 12th century. The west range containing the abbot's hall and chamber and the outer parlour was built in the 14th century. The abbey was dissolved in 1538 by Henry VIII during the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and was later converted into a house by Sir Richard Leveson. This was fortified during the Civil War and besieged by Parliamentary forces in 1645.


The remains of the abbey include the ruined crossing, transepts, chapels either side of the chancel, west tower, nave and presbytery of the church and a fine example of a Transitional Norman doorway. The claustral buildings were arranged to the south and include the ruins of the vestry, cloisters, chapter house and frater. There are also traces of the precinct wall to the south and just to the north west of the abbey precinct there are two separate areas containing earthwork dams of two fishponds.
Lilleshall Abbey had two dependencies: Alberbury Priory and the Hospital of St John the Baptist in Bridgnorth.

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