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The Great Britain Guide

Memorials & monuments · South East England

The Abbey Gateway

Free admission

The Abbey Gateway is a memorial in the United Kingdom.

The Abbey Gateway, memorials & monuments in South East England

Wikimedia Commons contributors — see linked file page for photographer and licence licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
15 min–45 min
Nearest railway station
Reading · 0.5 km
  • Free entry
  • Dog-friendly

About

The Abbey Gateway is a public memorial or monument in the United Kingdom. Coordinates: 51.4564°, -0.9667°. This entry is part of The Great Britain Guide, a free, ad-free, open-data tourist directory.

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From the Wikipedia article

The Abbey Gateway was originally the inner gateway of Reading Abbey, which today is a large, mostly ruined abbey in the center of the town of Reading, in the English county of Berkshire. The gateway adjoins Reading Crown Court and Forbury Gardens and is one of only two abbey buildings that have survived intact, the other being the Hospitium of St John the Baptist. It is a grade I listed building, and includes a porter's lodge on the ground floor and a large open room above the gate. The gateway marked the division between the area of the abbey open to the public and the section accessible only to monks, with the abbot's lodging just inside the gateway. The gateway thus became the meeting place between the abbot, who commanded considerable powers within the town, and the people of the town. In 1539, after the dissolution, Hugh Faringdon, the last abbot of Reading was hanged, drawn, and quartered outside the abbey gateway. Whilst the other buildings of the abbey were stripped for lead and stone, the abbot's lodging was turned into a royal palace on the orders of Edward Seymour, who was acting as lord protector as King Edward VI was still a child. The abbey gateway was also retained, as the entrance to the royal residence. Edward's sister, Queen Elizabeth I, was a regular visitor to the royal palace, but during the Civil War the old abbot’s lodgings were damaged, and were not used as a royal palace again. Eventually the palace was demolished and new houses were built alongside the gateway. In the late 18th century one of them was home to the Reading Ladies’ Boarding School, attended amongst others by the novelist Jane Austen. The school used the room above the gateway as a classroom. The gateway was heavily restored by Sir George Gilbert Scott, after a partial collapse during a storm in 1861. In 1900 a series of twelve heads, sculpted by Andrew Ohlson, were added to the gateway. In 2010, the gateway was closed and fencing erected when some of the decorative stonework…

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Coordinates
51.4564, -0.9667
District
Reading
Parish
Reading, unparished area
Postcode
RG1 3BD
Parliamentary constituency
Reading Central
Nearest railway station
Reading0.5 km

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is The Abbey Gateway?
The Abbey Gateway is in South-East England, United Kingdom (postcode RG1 3BD), in the parish of Reading, unparished area.
Who owns The Abbey Gateway?
The Abbey Gateway is owned by Reading Borough Council.
Is The Abbey Gateway free to visit?
Yes, The Abbey Gateway is free to enter.
How do I get to The Abbey Gateway?
The nearest railway station is Reading, about 0.5 km away. Drivers can navigate to postcode RG1 3BD.