Rusper Priory
Monastery information | |
---|---|
Full name | Priory of St Mary Magdalene of Rusper |
Established | before 1200 |
Disestablished | 1537 |
Dedicated to | St Mary Magdalene |
People | |
Founder(s) | House of Braose |
Site | |
Location | Rusper, West Sussex, England |
Visible remains | None |
Public access | None |
Rusper Priory was a priory of Benedictine nuns in West Sussex, England.
Foundation
William de Braose was the patron when the foundation was confirmed c.1200 by Seffrid II, Bishop of Chichester. The priory was probably for twelve nuns under a prioress. The priory received income from the churches of Warnham, Ifield, and Selham, to which John de Braose added that of Horsham in or before 1231.[1][2]
13th to 16th centuries
The total income in 1291 was over £44. After the Black Death the priory declined. There were eight nuns in 1442, but only five in 1478. There were four nuns in 1521 and three in 1527.[3][4]
Dissolution
In 1535, the annual value of the priory was estimated by the Valor Ecclesiasticus at £39. It was dissolved in 1537. At that time there were only one nun and the prioress, both very aged. They had two women servants.[5][6]
Post-Dissolution
The last prioress, Elizabeth Sydney, received a pension of 100s, and the one remaining sister a gift of 60s. (They were two of the three nuns who had professed on 8 August, 1484.)[7] The reversion of the priory's demesne estate was granted to Sir Robert Southwell and his wife Margaret. The medieval priory buildings were replaced by a building called The Nunnery, which was much altered in later centuries.[8]
Present day
The present house occupying the site, although still called The Nunnery, was built in the nineteenth century.[9]
Notes
References
- A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 2, The Victoria County History, 1973
- A History of the County of Sussex: Volume 6, Part 3, The Victoria County History, 1987
- The Buildings of England: Sussex, Ian Nairn and Nikolaus Pevsner, Penguin, 1965
- Medieval Religious Houses: England and Wales, David Knowles and R. Neville Hadcock, Longman, 1971