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Roche Abbey: lands
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Ela de Warenne,
daughter of Earl Hamelin and widow of Robert du Neubourg
and William Fitzwilliam (d. 1219-24) granted the monks of
Roche, in her widowhood, five virgates of land in Rottingdean,
Sussex, and three villains and their sequels (1219-40); the
abbey did not, however, retain this property for too long
and sold it to the dean and chapter of Chichester in 1227-41.
[Early Yorkshire Charters VIII, p. 21, pp. 134-5 (no. 96), p. 135.] |
The Cistercians sought to live simply
by the fruits of their own labour; each abbey thus required a variety
of
possessions, such as arable and pastoral land, woodland, mills
and fisheries, to sustain a self-sufficient community. At its foundation
every house was endowed with the resources necessary to establish
monastic life, and thereafter the abbey acquired additional lands
and rights to support the growth of the community. Roche was a
moderately-sized house and never
had extensive holdings. As can be seen from the map, below, the
abbeys
holdings stretched across the five counties of Yorkshire, Nottinghamshire,
Derbyshire, Lincolnshire and Lancashire. For a short while the
community had one outlying property at Rottingdean, Sussex (see
right). Most
of Roches possessions were concentrated within a fifteen-mile
radius of the abbey, and a number of these lay within five miles
of the house.
Whilst we do not have a complete record of the
abbeys
holdings, from charters and, more importantly, papal and royal confirmations
of Roches possessions, we can compile a list of
most places where the community held lands at some point during
their four-hundred year history. Some of the places mentioned in
the deeds no longer exist and whilst several of these can be located,
others, such as Innesby and Ennus / Ernuse
cannot be identified; these are listed in the table but
have not been plotted on the map. It is also difficult to identify
and locate places whose names have changed, and when there are
several
locations of the same name within the same vicinity to determine
which of these belonged to the monks.
Map of the lands of Roche abbey
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