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Tomb of Richard de Vere the 11th Earl of Oxford - died 1417 - and his second wife Alice. He commanded the English centre under Henry V at Agincourt, and was involved in the king’s French campaigning. (Image: © Rebecca Batley)

Colne Priory – Revisiting the Excavation Of The Earls Of Oxford’s Tomb Sites

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No trace of the medieval Colne Priory in Essex remains above ground, as the site is now occupied by a later building of the same name, and in private ownership. However, for decades archaeologists have been digging into its past as the priory was once one of the key religious buildings in the country and burial place of the De Vere Earls of Oxford, who for centuries were to be found at the side of England’s kings.

A view of the Colne Priory site - not the priory but an 18th-century house that partly stands on the site of a the Priory that was founded at about 1100–1105 (Robert Edwards / CC BY-SA 2.0)

A view of the Colne Priory site - not the priory but an 18th-century house that partly stands on the site of a the Priory that was founded at about 1100–1105 (Robert Edwards / CC BY-SA 2.0)

The relationship between Colne Priory and the De Vere’s goes right back to the site's earliest foundation. The priory started life as a cell to the Abbey of Abingdon, which was founded by Godfrey de Vere, the eldest son of Alberic de Vere and his wife Beatrix, who was a half-sister of William the Conqueror. According to legend he founded the cell after having been cured of disease by Faritius, the Abbot at Abingdon. Alberic in all likelihood fought at the Battle of Hastings on October 14, 1066 and he was gifted a large number of lands by William the Conqueror, including those on which the priory would be built. The cell was founded with the consent of Maurice, Bishop of London and the king, a charter of 1111 recognizing its creation. As Faritius became Abbott in 1101 and Maurice died in 1107 the initial foundation of the Priory must have occurred between those two dates.

The Long Gallery at Abingdon Abbey (CC BY-SA 2.0)

The Long Gallery at Abingdon Abbey (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Originally there were six monks placed there but the wealth of the family meant that these numbers quickly doubled. Records tell that the church was dedicated to St Mary and St John the Evangelist and that it rapidly became the burial place for the De Vere’s. The church was dedicated in 1148 by the Bishop of London, Robert who set upon the site a long and detailed curse that promised eternal damnation to anyone who should rob the priory of its treasures.

The priory continued quietly until the 13th century when it came into conflict with its mother-house at Abingdon.

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Rebecca Batley has a Bachelor’s degree in archaeology (University of Wales) and a Master’s degree in Classics. In the field she has worked on sites dating to the Bronze Age, Iron Age, Romano-British, Roman, Medieval, Tudor, Georgian and modern periods. Employed by the Louvre Museum, she researched and excavated at sites in Egypt, Syria, and Israel. She works at the Military Intelligence Archive to help to prepare World War One records for cataloguing and digitalisation and she is a part time History tutor.

Top Image: Tomb of Richard de Vere the 11th Earl of Oxford - died 1417 - and his second wife Alice. He commanded the English centre under Henry V at Agincourt, and was involved in the king’s French campaigning. (Image: © Rebecca Batley)

By: Rebecca Batley

 

Rebecca

Rebecca Batley has a Bachelor’s degree in archaeology (University of Wales) and a Master’s degree in Classics. She has several qualifications in Historical Documents Studies and has completed courses in basic Latin and Ancient Greek. She worked as an archaeologist... Read More

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