Tintern Abbey

For other uses, see Tintern Abbey (disambiguation).
For the abbey of the same name in co. Wexford, Ireland, see Tintern Abbey (County Wexford).
Tintern Abbey

Monastery information
Order Cistercian
Established 1131
Disestablished 1536
People
Founder(s) Walter de Clare
Site
Location Tintern, Monmouthshire, Wales
Coordinates 51°41′49″N 2°40′37″W / 51.697°N 2.677°W / 51.697; -2.677Coordinates: 51°41′49″N 2°40′37″W / 51.697°N 2.677°W / 51.697; -2.677

Tintern Abbey (Welsh: Abaty Tyndyrn,  pronunciation in Welsh ) was founded by Walter de Clare, Lord of Chepstow, on 9 May 1131. It is situated adjacent to the village of Tintern in Monmouthshire, on the Welsh bank of the River Wye, which forms the border between Monmouthshire in Wales and Gloucestershire in England. It was only the second Cistercian foundation in Britain, and the first in Wales. Falling into ruin after the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 16th century, the remains were celebrated in poetry and often painted by visitors from the 18th century onwards. In 1984 Cadw took over responsibility for the site.

Foundation

Walter de Clare, of the powerful family of Clare, was first cousin of William Giffard, Bishop of Winchester, who had introduced the first colony of Cistercians to Waverley, Surrey, in 1128. The monks for Tintern came from a daughter house of Cîteaux, L'Aumône Abbey, in the diocese of Chartres in France.[1] In time, Tintern established two daughter houses, Kingswood in Gloucestershire (1139) and Tintern Parva, west of Wexford in south east Ireland (1203).

The Cistercian monks (or White Monks) who lived at Tintern followed the Rule of St. Benedict. The Carta Caritatis (Charter of Love) laid out their basic principles, of obedience, poverty, chastity, silence, prayer, and work. With this austere way of life, the Cistercians were one of the most successful orders in the 12th and 13th centuries. The lands of the Abbey were divided into agricultural units or granges, on which local people worked and provided services such as smithies to the Abbey. Many endowments of land on both sides of the Wye were made to the Abbey.

Development of the buildings

The present-day remains of Tintern are a mixture of building works covering a 400-year period between 1136 and 1536. Very little remains of the first buildings; a few sections of walling are incorporated into later buildings and the two recessed cupboards for books on the east of the cloisters are from this period. The church of that time was smaller than the present building and was slightly to the north.

Tintern Abbey, interior

During the 13th century the Abbey was mostly rebuilt; first the cloisters and the domestic ranges, then finally the great church between 1269 and 1301. The first Mass in the rebuilt presbytery was recorded to have taken place in 1288, and the building was consecrated in 1301, although building work continued for several decades.[2] Roger Bigod, 5th Earl of Norfolk, the then lord of Chepstow, was a generous benefactor; his monumental undertaking was the rebuilding of the church. The Abbey put his coat of arms in the glass of its east window in thanks to him.

It is this great abbey church that is seen today. It has a cruciform plan with an aisled nave; two chapels in each transept and a square ended aisled chancel. The Decorated Gothic church represents the architectural developments of its day. The abbey is built of Old Red Sandstone, of colours varying from purple to buff and grey. Its total length from east to west is 228 feet, while the transept is 150 feet in length.[3]

In 1326 King Edward II stayed at Tintern for two nights. In 1349 the Black Death swept the country and it became impossible to attract new recruits for the lay brotherhood. Changes to the way the granges were tenanted out rather than worked by lay brothers show that Tintern was short of labour. In the early 15th century Tintern was short of money, due in part to the effects of the Welsh uprising under Owain Glyndŵr against the English kings, when Abbey properties were destroyed by the Welsh rebels. The closest battle to the abbey was at Craig y Dorth near Monmouth, between Trellech and Mitchel Troy.

Abbots

Name Appointment transferred/Died Notes
William[4] c1139 1148
Henry before 1153 transferred to Waverly c.1161 Henry was a former robber who repented of his ways,[5] took the Cistercian habit and was duly appointed abbot of Tintern where he was renowned for his profusion of tears at the altar.
William II: before 1169 1188.
Eudo 1188 Eudo previously served as prior of Waverley and abbot of Kingswood
Richard[6] before 1218[7]
Ralph 1232 1245 Translated to Dunkeswell
"J" c.1253.
Vacancy 1259
John before 1267 1277
Ralph c1285 1303
Hugh de Wyke 1305 1320 buried at the Cistercian abbey of Stratford Langthorne
Walter of Hereford 1321 1331
Roger de Camme 1330 1331
Walter c1333
Gilbert 1340 1341
John c1349 1375
John Wysbech 1387 1407 previously abbot of Grace Dieu
John fl1411
John Chernyllis, Cherville 1421 appointed papal chaplain in May 1413
John Chapfeld 1437
Robert Acton 1438 1441
John Tynyern 1442 1455
Thomas Monmouth 1456 c1459
Thomas Colston 1460 1486
William Ker c1488 1492
Harry Newland 1493 1506
Thomas Morton fl 1514
Richard Wiche 1536[8] awarded a pension following the Dissolution

Dissolution and ruin

The Chancel and Crossing of Tintern Abbey, Looking towards the East Window by J. M. W. Turner, 1794

In the reign of King Henry VIII, his Dissolution of the Monasteries ended monastic life in England, Wales and Ireland. On 3 September 1536 Abbot Wyche surrendered Tintern Abbey and all its estates to the King's visitors and ended a way of life that had lasted 400 years. Valuables from the Abbey were sent to the royal Treasury and Abbot Wyche was pensioned off. The building was granted to the then lord of Chepstow, Henry Somerset, 2nd Earl of Worcester. Lead from the roof was sold and the decay of the buildings began.

In the next two centuries little or no interest was shown in the history of the site. In the 17th and 18th centuries, the ruins were inhabited by workers in the local wire works.[2] However, in the mid eighteenth century it became fashionable to visit "wilder" parts of the country. The Wye Valley in particular was well known for its romantic and picturesque qualities and the ivy clad Abbey became frequented by tourists. One of the earliest prints of the Abbey was in the series of engravings of historical sites made in 1732 by Samuel and Nathaniel Buck.[9] After the publication of the book Observations on the River Wye by the Reverend William Gilpin following his 1770 tour,[10] visitors greatly increased, a fact evidenced both by the number of poetic descriptions and of atmospheric paintings and prints of the site.

Poetry and painting

A dedicatory letter at the start of Gilpin’s work is addressed to the poet William Mason and mentions a similar tour made in 1771 by the poet Thomas Gray. Neither dedicated a poem to the Abbey, but it appears in the work of a number of others, including Rev. Dr. Syned Davies’ long “Describing a Voyage to Tintern Abbey, in Monmouthshire, from Whitminster in Gloucestershire”, which was made by boat with a party of others as early as 1745.[11] Another topographical work, the six-canto Chepstow; or, A new guide to gentlemen and ladies whose curiosity leads them to visit Chepstow: Piercefield-walks, Tintern-abbey, and the beautiful romantic banks of the Wye, from Tintern to Chepstow by water, was published from Bristol in 1786.[12] There was also the “Poetical description of Tintern Abbey” by the parson poet Rev. Duncomb Davis, who lived locally and furnished it with many historical and topical discursions, including the method of iron-making that took place adjacent to the site.[13] This appeared in two guide books, the most popular of which was Charles Heath's Historical and Descriptive Accounts of the Ancient and Present State of Tintern Abbey, that went through many editions from 1793 onwards.[14]

William Wordsworth’s poem "Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey, on revisiting the banks of the Wye during a tour, July 13, 1798", is often linked with the Abbey, although it does not actually mention the ruins.[15] Instead, it recalls an earlier visit five years before and comments on the beneficial internalisation of that memory.[16] Robert Bloomfield also dedicated a long poem to “The Banks of the Wye” (1811) in which the Abbey is only mentioned briefly.[17] However, it was followed in 1825 by yet another long poem dealing with the area, annotated and in four books, by Edward Collins: Tintern Abbey or the Beauties of Piercefield (1825).[18]

Edward Jerningham’s earlier short lyric, “Tintern Abbey”, written in 1796, followed Gilpin, whom he quoted, in commenting on the mournful lesson of the past.[19] Two poems of about that time also moralised on a visit to the ruins. Edmund Gardner, in his “Sonnet written in Tintern Abbey”, concludes with the line that 'Man’s but a temple of a shorter date',[20] while Luke Booker, in his “Original sonnet composed on leaving Tintern Abbey and proceeding with a party of friends down the River Wye to Chepstow”, hopes to sail peacefully to the 'eternal Ocean' at death.[21] Richard Monckton Milnes' sonnet on “Tintern Abbey” dates from 1840.[22] It is also known that Tennyson’s “Tears, Idle Tears” (1847) was composed on a visit, but no mention of the Abbey appears there and the poem refers to personal feelings.[23]

An aquatint of the Abbey from Gilpin's Observations on the River Wye

In 1816, the abbey was made the backdrop to Sophia F. Ziegenhirt’s three-volume novel of Gothic horror, The Orphan of Tintern Abbey,[24] dismissed by The Monthly Review as “of the most ordinary class, in which the construction of the sentences and that of the story are equally confused.”[25] Two years earlier Jane Austen described the decorations of Fanny Price's sitting room at Mansfield Park that included three fashionable transparencies, one of which features the Abbey.[26] Gilpin’s work on the Wye deals not simply with the picturesque as a pictorial quality but with the added appeal of Gothic associations, as in the case of Tintern Abbey.[27] The visiting artists Francis Towne (1777),[28] Thomas Gainsborough (1782),[29] Thomas Girtin (1793),[30] and J.M.W. Turner in the 1794-5 series at the Tate[31] and the British Museum, depicted details of the Abbey's stonework.[32] So did Samuel Palmer (see Gallery) and Thomas Creswick in the 19th century.[33]

Charles Heath, in his 1793 guide, commented on the "inimitable" effect of the harvest moon shining through the main window.[34] Once the railway arrived in 1876, steam excursions were organised in the 1880s to Tintern station at that season to view the moon through the rose window.[35] Peter van Lerberghe’s interior of 1812, with its tourist guides[36] carrying burning torches, showed the abbey lit by moonlight (see Gallery). Paintings of the abbey at a distance include John Warwick Smith’s 1779 moonlit scene of the ruins,[37] a sunset by Samuel Palmer[38] and Benjamin Williams Leader,[39] and the later colour study by Turner in which the building appears as what Matthew Imms describes as a "dark shape at the centre" beneath slanting sunlight (see Gallery).[40][41]

Industry and access

The area adjacent to the abbey became industrialised from the mid-16th century with the setting up of the first wireworks by the Company of Mineral and Battery Works and the later expansion of factories and furnaces up the Angidy valley. Charcoal was made in the woods to feed these operations and, in addition, the hillside above the Abbey was quarried for the making of lime at a kiln in constant operation for some two centuries.[42] The site was in consequence subject to a degree of pollution[43] and the ruins themselves were inhabited by the local workers. J.T.Barber, for example, remarked on “passing the works of an iron foundry and a train of miserable cottages engrafted on the offices of the Abbey” on his approach.[44]

The WVR branch line bridge to the wire works

Until the 19th century, the local roads were rough and dangerous and the easiest access to the site was by boat. Samuel Taylor Coleridge, while trying to reach Tintern from Chepstow on a tour with friends in 1795, almost rode his horse over the edge of a quarry when they became lost in the dark.[45] It was not until 1829 that the new Wye Valley turnpike was completed, cutting through the abbey precinct.[46] In 1876 the Wye Valley Railway opened a station for Tintern. Although the line itself crossed the river before reaching the village, a branch was built from it to the wire works, obstructing the view of the Abbey on the road approach from the north.

Not all tourists were shocked by the intrusion of industry, however. Joseph Cottle and Robert Southey set out to view the ironworks at midnight on their 1795 tour,[47] while others painted or sketched them during the following years.[48] A 1799 print of the Abbey by Edward Dayes includes the boat-landing near the ruins and some of the encroaching housing. In the background above are the cliffs of a lime quarry and smoke rising from the kiln (see the Gallery). Though Philip James de Loutherbourg’s 1805 painting of the ruins does not include the intrusive buildings commented on by others, it makes their inhabitants and animals a prominent feature. Even William Havell’s panorama of the valley from the south pictures smoke rising in the distance, much as Wordsworth had noted five years before “wreathes of smoke sent up in silence from among the trees” in his description of the scene.[49]

Heritage

In the 19th century ruined abbeys became the focus for scholars, and architectural and archaeological investigations were undertaken. In 1901 the Abbey was bought by the crown from the Duke of Beaufort for £15,000. It was recognised as a monument of national importance and repair and maintenance works began to be carried out. In 1914 the Office of Works was passed responsibility for the ruins, and major structural repairs and partial reconstructions were undertaken — the ivy considered so romantic by the early tourists was removed. In 1984 Cadw took over responsibility for the site, which was Grade I listed from 29 September 2000.[50]

American poet Allen Ginsberg took an acid trip at Tintern Abbey on July 28, 1967, and wrote his poem "Wales Visitation" as a result. In the poem he wrote of "...the lambs on the tree-nooked hillside this day bleating/ heard in Blake's old ear, & the silent thought of Wordsworth in eld Stillness/ clouds passing through skeleton arches of Tintern Abbey-/ Bard Nameless as the Vast, babble to Vastness!".[51][52]

The abbey is the setting for both the 1969 Flirtations music video Nothing But A Heartache and the 1988 Iron Maiden video Can I Play with Madness.

Gallery

References

  1. J. H. Round, « Clare, Walter de (d. 1137/8?) », revised by C. Warren Hollister, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004.
  2. 1 2 Newman, John (2000). Gwent/Monmouthshire. The Buildings of Wales. London: Penguin Books. p. not cited. ISBN 0-14-071053-1.
  3. Kelly's Directory of Monmouthshire, 1901
  4. Robinson, David, Tintern Abbey, Welsh Historic Monuments (4th edn; Cardiff, 2002) pp. 12–15
  5. Cistercian Abbeys: TINTERN.
  6. The National Archives and Kings College London, 'Fine Roll C 60/11, 3 Henry III', (Document), membrane 11 item 20
  7. Fine Roll C 60/11, 3 Henry III membrane 11 item 20:
  8. Tintern Abbey.
  9. Tintern Conservation Area survey, p.13
  10. Archived online
  11. Epistle IV
  12. Google Books
  13. University of Michigan
  14. University of Michigan
  15. Deborah Kennedy, "Wordsworth, Turner, and the Power of Tintern Abbey", Wordsworth Circle, Spring 2002
  16. Online text
  17. II.65–88
  18. University of Toronto
  19. Poems and Plays, Vol.2, p.135
  20. The sonnet originally appeared pseudonymously, accompanying a similarly moralising sonnet on the Severn in The European Magazine vol.30, p.119
  21. Booker's sonnet appeared in Charles Heath’s guide to Tintern Abbey
  22. Poetry for the People, [ p.87]
  23. James Gribble, Literary Education: a revaluation, Cambridge University 1983, pp.58–61
  24. Marshall B. Tymn, Horror literature: a core collection and reference guide, R.R.Bowker, 1981, p.175
  25. Vol.79, p.439
  26. Standard novels edition, London 1833, p.135
  27. William Gilpin, Observations on the Rivery Wye, London 1882, pp.47
  28. Christies
  29. Tate Gallery
  30. Art Renewal Center
  31. Iconeye
  32. BM site
  33. BBC Arts
  34. Charles Heath, Historical and Descriptive Accounts of the Ancient and Present State of Tintern Abbey, Monmouth, p.91
  35. Wyr Valley, Old Station Tintern
  36. C.S.Matheson, "I wanted some intelligent guide", Romanticism, p.38
  37. Metropolitan Museum
  38. Wikimedia
  39. Wikimedia
  40. Matthew Imms, "Tintern Abbey from the River Wye c.1828 by Joseph Mallord William Turner", catalogue entry, March 2013, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2013,
  41. Sandra Gibson, review of the 2012 Turner, Monet, Twombly exhibition at Tate Liverpool, Catalyst Media
  42. Wyde-Dean Tourism
  43. Charles J. Rzepka, Inventions and Interventions, ch.14, pp.189–222
  44. .” J.T.Barber, A tour throughout South Wales and Monmouthshire, London 1803 p.266
  45. Joseph Cottle, Early recollections: chiefly relating to the late Samuel Taylor Coleridge, London 1837, pp.43–50
  46. Cadw, Lower Wye Valley
  47. Joseph Cottle, Early Recollections pp.50–1
  48. See the 1798 print of “Iron Mills, A View near Tintern Abbey" belonging to the National Library of Wales and James Ward’s 1807 sketch of “Mr Thompson’s Wire Mill, Tintern” at the Yale Center for British Art
  49. ”Lines written a few miles above Tintern Abbey”, lines 18–19
  50. Good Stuff IT Services. "Abbey Church of St Mary (Tintern Abbey) including monastic buildings – Tintern – Monmouthshire – Wales". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 2013-06-03.
  51. Ginsberg: A biography by Barry Miles, Virgin Publishing 2000 p394
  52. Allan Ginsburg's 'Wales Visitation' 2010-01-31, accessed 2012-01-01

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