Monastic Wales.








Event detail for site: Usk

1246: Election

The community received licence to elect a new prioress.

The following year the prioress obtained letters of protection. This is the earliest documented reference to the community.

Bibliographical sources

Printed sources

Calendar of the Patent Rolls Preserved in the Public Record Office (London, 1891-) 1232-47, p. 483

Acts of Welsh Rulers 1120-1283, ed. Huw Pryce (University of Wales: Cardiff, 2005) vol. 2, p. 726 (no. L. 436)

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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