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Kilburn Priory

Coordinates:51°32′28″N0°11′23″W/ 51.541°N 0.1896°W/51.541; -0.1896
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Kilburn Priory
Kilburn Priory as it appeared in 1722
Kilburn Priory is located in London Borough of Camden
Kilburn Priory
Location within London Borough of Camden
Monastery information
Full namePrimo fundatio monialium de Kylborne per abbatem Westmonasterii Herebertum
OrderAugustinian
Established1130–1134
Disestablished1537
Mother houseSt Peter at Westminster
Dedicated toSt. John the Baptist
Site
LocationKilburn,Middlesex,England
Coordinates51°32′28″N0°11′23″W/ 51.541°N 0.1896°W/51.541; -0.1896

Kilburn Priorywas a small monastic community[1]of nuns established around 1130–1134 three miles north-west of theCity of London,whereWatling Street(nowKilburn High Road) met the stream now known as theWestbourne,but variously known asCuneburna,Keneburna,Keeleburne,Coldburne,orCaleburn,meaning either the royal or cow's stream.[2]The priory gave its name to the area now known asKilburn,and the local streetsPriory Road,Kilburn Priory,Priory Terrace,andAbbey Road.[3][4]Kilburn Laneconnected the priory to the village ofKensalto the west.

The site was used until 1130 as a hermitage by Godwyn, a recluse, who subsequently gave the property to the conventual church of St. Peter, Westminster. Thepriorywas established with the consent ofGilbert Universalis,bishop of London, before his death in August 1134. Though it was originally subordinate toWestminster Abbey,whose monks followed theBenedictinerule, by 1377 it was described as being an order ofAugustinian canonesses.It was once believed that theAncrene Riwlewas written for the first three nuns of Kilburn, but this is now thought unlikely.

Agnes Strickland states that the priory was established in 1128 for the three pious and charitable ladies-in-waiting of QueenMatilda of Scotland,consort ofHenry I,named Emma, Gunilda, and Cristina.

After the death of the queen [in 1118] these ladies retired to the hermitage of Kilburn near London, where there was a holy well, or medicinal spring. This was changed to a priory in 1128, as the deed says, for the reception of these... damsels who had belonged to the chamber of Matilda.[5]

Kilburn Priory wasdissolvedbyHenry VIIIin 1537 and its site in Kilburn was given to theKnights of St. Johnin exchange for other property, and then seized back by the crown in 1540.

References

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  1. ^Hibbert, Christopher; Weinreb, Ben; Keay, John; Keay, Julia (2010),"Kilburn Priory",The London Encyclopedia,Macmillan,ISBN978-1-4050-4925-2
  2. ^J. E. B. Gover; Allen Mawer; F. M. Stenton (1942).The Place-names of Middlesex apart from the City of London.Vol. xviii. Cambridge: English Place-name Society. p. 112.cited inT. F. T. Baker; Diane K. Bolton; Patricia E. C. Croot (1969). "Kilburn, Edgware Road, and Cricklewood". In C R Elrington (ed.).A History of the County of Middlesex.Vol. 9: Hampstead, Paddington. pp. 47–52.
  3. ^Edward Walford (1878). "Ch XIX. Kilburn and St John's Wood".Old and New London.Vol. 5. pp. 243–253.
  4. ^A. D. Mills (11 March 2010).A Dictionary of London Place-Names(PDF).Oxford University Press.p. 1.ISBN978-0-19-956678-5.Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 29 June 2011.
  5. ^Agnes Strickland,Lives of the Queens of England from the Norman Conquest,vol I. (Philadelphia: Lea & Blanchard, 1841), 2nd ed, p. 270.Accessed 16 January 2013.

Further reading

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