Standon Preceptory

Standon Preceptory was a Knights Hospitaller foundation in the parish of Standon, in the county of Hertfordshire, England. It was founded before 1154,[1] probably shortly after the Knights became possessors of the Standon Church in 1151,[2] and dissolved before 1443–4.[1]

Gilbert de Clare gave the church of Standon, 140 acres of land and his vineyard to the Hospitallers, who used it as a residence for sisters of the order until 1180.[3] The site was also used as a hospital and a school.[4] The building had a dormitory above and a refectory and kitchen below. It may have housed a dozen or more Knights.[2] At one time two Sisters of the Order named Melisene and Johanna resided within the commandery.[5]

When Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries, the manor, rectory and right to recommend an Anglican vicar at Standon were given to Ralph Sadler.[3] A fifteenth century timber-framed barn of aisle construction survives.[6]

References

  1. Historic England. "Standon Hospitallers Preceptory (370437)". PastScape. Retrieved 18 February 2018.
  2. Brown, J. A. The Standon Hospice, Transactions of the East Hertfordshire Archaeological Society, Volume 1, East Hertfordshire Archaeological Society Stephen Austin & Sons, 1901 p289-291.
  3. William Dugdale (1846). Monasticon Anglicanum: A History of the Abbies and Other Monasteries, Hospitals, Frieries, and Cathedral and Collegiate Churches, with Their Dependencies, in England and Wales. 6. Translated by John Caley. London: J. Bohn. p. 804.
  4. Pamela Shields (2005). Hertfordshire A-Z. The History Press. p. 149. ISBN 9780750953207.
  5. Struckmeyer, Myra, The Sisters of the Order of Saint John at Mynchin Buckland, in Luttrell, Anthony, and Helen J. Nicholson, eds. Hospitaller women in the Middle Ages. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2006.
  6. Nicholas Doggett (2004). "The Demolition and Conversion of Former Monastic Buildings in Hertfordshire at the Dissolution". In Doris Jones-Baker (ed.). Hertfordshire in History: Papers Presented to Lionel Munby. University of Hertfordshire Press. p. 59. ISBN 9780954218942.

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