Event detail for site: Llangennith1413x1421: CustodyThe house was seized again during Henry V's reign and taken into royal custody. Bibliographical sourcesPrinted sourcesMedieval Religious Houses, England and Wales, ed. R. Neville Hadcock and David Knowles (Harlow, 1971) pp. 84, 89 Other events in the history of this sitepre 1123: Foundation - Llangennith was an alien priory established before 1123 when the church of St Cenydd was granted to the monks of St Taurinus, Normandy. [3 sources]
1195: Confirmation - Richard I (1189-99) confirmed all the priory’s previous grants. [1 sources] 1218: Size of community - At this time there were two or three monks at Llangennith. [1 sources] pre 1223: Illicit affairs - According to Gerald of Wales, a prior of Llangennith brought shame upon the house when he engaged in an illicit affair with a young woman of Gower. [2 sources] 1291: Wealth - According to Pope Nicholas IV's Taxatio Ecclesiastica, Llangennith’s temporalities were assessed at £4 16s and the community had 120 acres of arable land and six cows. [2 sources] 1295x1360: Custody - Following the outbreak of war with France, Llangennith was periodically taken into royal custody [2 sources] 1377: Poll tax - Only the prior of the house is listed on the poll tax return. [1 sources][1 archives] 1413x1421: Custody - The house was seized again during Henry V's reign and taken into royal custody. [1 sources] c.1434: Custody - By 1434 Llangennith's links with St Taurinus had been severed. [1 sources] 1441: Dissolution - On 16 March 1441 Archbishop Chichele and his colleagues surrendered the house to Henry VI. [1 sources] 1442: Post monastic ownership - On 5 February Archbishop Chichele and his colleagues granted Llangennith and St Clears to the king who duly granted them to the Oxford colleges of Warden and All Souls in April. [2 sources] |
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