Monastic Wales.








Event detail for site: Usk

1330: Confirmation

Elizabeth de Burgh confirmed an important charter granted to the house by Richard Strongbow.

People associated with this event

Elizabeth de Burgh; Elizabeth de Clare , magnate and founder of Clare College, Cambridge (confirms charter)

Bibliographical sources

Printed sources

Cartwright, Jane, Feminine Sanctity and Spirituality in Medieval Wales (University of Wales Press: Cardiff, 2008) p. 263

Williams, David H., 'Usk nunnery', Monmouthshire Antiquary, 4 (1980) p. 44


Other events in the history of this site

pre 1135Foundation - Richard de Clare settled Benedictine nuns at Usk before 1135. [1 sources]
pre 1176Concessions - Richard Strongbow, 2nd Earl of Pembroke (d. 1176) granted an important charter to the priory. [2 sources]
1246Election - The community received licence to elect a new prioress.  [3 sources]
1284Visitation - Visitation conducted by Archbishop Pecham. [3 sources]
c.1291Wealth - According to the Taxatio of 1291 the priory had twenty-four acres of arable and its temporalities and spiritualities totalled £42 6s.  [2 sources]
1322Patronage - Edward II granted the patronage of the house to Hugh Despenser the Younger (d. 1326), together with the advowsons of Caerleon (Llantarnam) Abbey. [2 sources]
1330Confirmation - Elizabeth de Burgh confirmed an important charter granted to the house by Richard Strongbow. [2 sources]
c.1360Bequest - Elizabeth de Burgh (lady Clare) left the nuns £6 13s 4d and two cloths of gold. [1 sources][1 archives]
1404Papal indulgences - Adam of Usk requested the pope that indulgences be granted to attract alms to St Radegund’s chapel at Usk Priory which had been devatsated by warfare. [4 sources]
1440Burial - Adam of Usk, writer and lawyer, was buried at the house. [1 sources]
1514Burial - William Bakere willed to be buried before an image of "Blessed Mary of the Priory."  [1 sources]
1516Disputed election - There was a tussle between Joan Harryman and Catherine Kemmys over the office of prioress.  [2 sources][1 archives]
c.1535Wealth - On the eve of the Dissolution the net income of the house, according to the Valor Ecclesiasticus, was £55. [2 sources][1 archives]
1536Dissolution - In June 1536 the priory was surveyed and on 29 August it was dissolved. At this time the prioress, Ellen Williams, resided with five other nuns; she was granted a pension on 28 June.  [6 sources]

 
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