Saturday 4 April 2020

Gatehouse Ruins of St Radigund's Abbey, Bradsole, Dover, UK

Gatehouse Ruins of St Radigund's Abbey, Bradsole, Dover, UK

The photo was taken on a permitted coronavirus lockdown bike ride (route map below). Note that Radigund is a modern spelling of Radegund:

St. Radegund's Abbey at Bradsole was a medieval monastic house in the parish of Hougham Without near Dover in southeast England.

It was dedicated to Radegund, the sixth-century Merovingian princess, who, once married to the unsavory King Chlothar I, turned to a life of asceticism and charitable works.

The remains of the abbey buildings have since have been incorporated into a farm:




The abbey was founded in 1191 on the land of Bradsole Manor, which had been donated by King Richard I.

The community was established by Premonstratensian Canons sent over from the mother abbey of Prémontré in Aisne, France, and building commenced in 1191, lasting some fifty years.

Although the abbey benefitted from its control of several local churches, the site itself proved fairly inhospitable.

By the end of the 13th century the monks were occupied in increasingly secular activities such as supervising the building of Dover Castle.

And by the end of the following century the monastic buildings had fallen into a state of neglect, with only 8 canons still in residence.

In 1538 the abbey was dissolved as part of the Dissolution of the Monasteries and much of the stone carried away to help build Sandgate Castle.

The site was sold to Simon Edolph in 1590, who converted the refectory building into a farmhouse. Still standing, it is a Grade II* listed building.

The remaining ruins, part of which act as a gateway to the farmhouse, have also been Grade II* listed.

Source: St. Radegund's Abbey

The location the photo was taken from is marked "P1" on the  map at the bottom left hand corner of the red triangle:




Cycle route: Tower Hamlets in Dover to St Radigunds Abbey via Coombe Valley. From ruins of St Radigunds Abbey to Kearsney Abbey via Minnis Lane. Returned to Dover through the village of River.

Original map and biometrics are on this Polar Flow web page.

Abbreviated versions of this post are also on Facebook and Twitter.

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