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Byland Abbey - Ryedale (EH) The order of monks who founded Byland was that of Savigny, a reforming branch of Benedictines. They first set out from the mother abbey at Furness in Cumbria and after several wandering and fruitless journeys, and a rather unchristian dispute with the Abbot back at Furness, they came to Byland in Ryedale. Although the land and location was suitable, they could hear the bells of the nearby Cistercian abbey of Rievaulx and visa versa, which was not conducive to the holy life of either community and as the more recent arrivals, the Savigny monks withdrew to the west where on land given by Roger de Mowbray, they settled down and built a small stone church. The Order was merged with that of the Cistercians in the same year, and the monks at Byland had to change their grey habits for white and adopt the routines and services of those they had escaped at Rievaulx. The monks acquired the nearby land of the present site, which was marshy and unused and set about clearing it . The earliest surviving building on the present site is the west range, providing accommodation for lay brothers. The monks themselves moved here in 1177, when most of the monastic buildings were complete, but the great church still had a very long way to go. It was built around a temporary church, which was gradually demolished as the work progressed, and finished in the 1190s. The abbey was pillaged by the Scots in 1322 after the defeat of Edward II's unprepared army at nearby Shaws Moor, but it became a very prosperous place. In 1538, the abbey's annual income was �295, and the then abbot, John Ledes, together with twenty-five choir monks and all the lay brothers had to give the land over to Henry VIII's Suppression Commissioners and were pensioned off. The destruction of the abbey began immediately; all altar plate, furnishings, timber and lead from the roofs were sold and it inevitably fell gradually into the ruined state we see today. When it was first built, Byland was the largest Cistercian church in Britain and the scale of the building is still impressive. It was also innovative, as it was one of the first buildings in the north to fully reject the Romanesque for the new Gothic style of architecture. The masonry was of the highest quality, contrasting with the more functional appearance of the cloister buildings. Inside it was quite colourful, with limewashed walls decorated with red painted false masonry lines, painted vine leafs and scale patterns and the carved capitals highlighted in red. The floor was covered in tiles, some of which survive, as shown above. The West Front was dominated by a huge rose window, traditional in Cistercian churches. From excavations it has been discovered that the master mason designed the tracery of the window on the floor of the room above the warming house, and its central pattern is also inscribed on the inside wall of the west front. |
Back to the Home Page of the UK Heritage collection. This information has been researched and published here by: Jonathan & Clare |