Monastic Wales.








Event detail for site: Kidwelly

c. 1535: Wealth

The Valor Eccelsiasticus records the gross annual income of the house as £38.

£31 6s 8d of this came from spiritualities.

People associated with this event

Henry VIII , King of England (commissioned survey)

Bibliographical sources

Printed sources

Heale, Martin, The Dependent Priories of Medieval English Monasteries, Studies in the History of Medieval Religion, 22 (Boydell and Brewer: Woodbridge, 2004) pp. 240-242

Web links (open in new window)

Detail of Valor Ecclesiasticus (View website)

Archival sources

The National Archives, 'The Valor Ecclesiasticus', (Document), (View website)


Other events in the history of this site

c.1110Foundation - Kidwelly was founded as a cell of Sherborne Abbey, which was at that time a cathedral priory. [2 sources]
c.1135Patronage - When the lordship of Kidwelly passed to Maurice of London he supplemented Sherborne's endowment at Kidwelly. [1 sources]
1223Destruction - The priory was burnt to the ground by Gruffydd ap Llywelyn. [1 sources]
c.1268Patronage - At this time Payne de Chaworth was patron of the house. 
1284Visitation - Archbishop Pecham conducted a visitation of the house following Edward I’s conquest.  [1 sources]
c.1291Wealth - The priory's wealth, according to the Taxatio compiled for Pope Nicholas IV c. 1291, was £16.  [3 sources]
1377Poll tax - Only the prior is listed. [1 sources][1 archives]
1379Poll tax - Only the prior is listed. [1 sources][1 archives]
1403Destruction - The area was devastated during the Glyn Dŵr rebellion. [1 sources]
1481Destruction - The church was struck by lightning. [1 sources]
1534Act of Supremacy - Prior John Godmyston and his monk companion, Augustine Green, took the Oath of Supremacy.  [3 sources]
c.1535Wealth - The Valor Eccelsiasticus records the gross annual income of the house as £38. [2 sources][1 archives]
1539Dissolution - As a dependency of Sherborne Abbey, Kidwelly was spared from suppression in 1536 and dissolved with its mother-house in 1539. [2 sources]

 
Graphic.