Cathedrals · East of England
Swineshead Abbey
Swineshead Abbey is a cathedral in the United Kingdom.

Keith Evans — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence
Plan your visit
- Typical visit
- 1 h–2 h
- Best time of year
- Year-round
- Family-friendly
- Limited wheelchair access
About
Swineshead Abbey is a cathedral in england east, United Kingdom — the principal church of its diocese, dating from 1134. Cathedrals are seats of bishops in the Church of England, the Roman Catholic Church, and other Christian denominations across Britain.
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From the Wikipedia article
Swineshead Abbey was an abbey in Swineshead, Lincolnshire. The Abbey of St Mary, a Cistercian monastery, was founded in 1134 by Robert de Gresley. Gresley and his son, Albert, endowed the Abbey with 240 acres of land and other gifts. The Abbey was originally Savigniac and populated with monks from Furness Abbey, but was absorbed into the Cistercian order along with all the other Savigniac Houses in 1147. In 1170 the Abbot of Swineshead was reprimanded for owning villages, churches and serfs. King John spent a short time in the Abbey after losing his baggage in the fens, and just before his death in 1216. In William Shakespeare's King John, the name of the abbey where King John stayed is misspelled as "Swinsted Abbey" instead of "Swineshead Abbey", and this confusion was common in late-sixteenth century texts, for Swinstead is about 25 miles from Swineshead. It was dissolved in 1536 with the first Act of Suppression, its last Abbot being John Haddingham. The first documented reuse of the site dates from 1607 when a farmhouse, Abbey House, was built out of the abbey ruins by Sir John Lockton. The Abbey House is a Grade II listed building. The abbey occupied a slightly raised area in the marshland 1 km north east of Swineshead. In the raised area in the north-eastern part of the monument, partly overlain by Abbey House, are the buried remains of the abbey's inner court where the church, cloister and dorter (dormitory) would have been located. Adjacent to the west is another raised area where the remains of the outer court are located; these would include stables, barns and other agricultural and service buildings, together with the principal gatehouse of the abbey. The foundations of stone walls and fragments of medieval artefacts have been located in the outer court. Although the site is now a private residence it can still be seen from the main A52. If travelling south from Boston you reach the Baythorpe area of Swineshead, on the right is Manor Farm Shop and…
Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.
- Coordinates
- 52.9493, -0.1418
- County
- Lincolnshire
- District
- Boston
- Parish
- Swineshead
- Postcode
- PE20 3EY
- Parliamentary constituency
- Boston and Skegness
- Established
- 1134
Sources
- wikidata: Q1437315 (CC0)
- wikipedia: Swineshead Abbey (CC BY-SA 4.0)
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Frequently asked questions
- Where is Swineshead Abbey?
- Swineshead Abbey is in Lincolnshire, East of England, United Kingdom (postcode PE20 3EY), in the parish of Swineshead.
- When was Swineshead Abbey built?
- Built or established in 1134.
- How do I get to Swineshead Abbey?
- Drivers can navigate to postcode PE20 3EY. It sits within the Boston and Skegness parliamentary constituency.