Sheen Priory

Sheen Priory (ancient spelling: Shene, Shean, etc.) in Sheen, now Richmond, London was a former Carthusian monastery founded in 1414 within the royal manor of Sheen, on the south bank of the Thames, upstream and approximately 9 miles southwest of the Palace of Westminster. It was built on a site approximately half a mile to the north of Sheen Palace, which itself also occupied a riverside site, that today lies between Richmond Green and the River Thames. All above-ground traces of the priory have disappeared, yet it is known that the foundations of the priory church lie to the immediate southwest of Kew Observatory, under the fairway of the 14th hole of the Royal Mid-Surrey Golf Course, in Richmond Old Deer Park.[1] It is sometimes incorrectly referred to as Richmond Priory, due to the subsequent renaming of Sheen Manor in 1501, which confusion merits early examination.

Contents

Background

Sheen Priory was built as part of King Henry V's “The King's Great Work” centred on Sheen Palace (renamed Richmond Palace in 1501). The royal manor of Sheen lay on the right (south), Surrey, bank of the River Thames, opposite the parish of Twickenham and the royal manor of Isleworth on the left, Middlesex, bank. Sheen had been a favourite residence of the last Plantagenet king Richard II(1377-1399) and his beloved wife Anne of Bohemia. When Anne died there of plague in 1394, Richard cursed the place where they had found great happiness and razed the palace to the ground. His throne was usurped by his cousin Henry Bolingbroke, Duke of Lancaster, who ruled as Henry IV(1399-1413). Henry IV had been involved in the murder of Richard in 1400, and in that of Archbishop Richard le Scrope, and made a vow to expiate his guilt by founding 3 monasteries, which vow he died before fulfilling. Whilst Henry IV had shown little interest in the ruined Sheen, his son Henry V(1413-1422) saw its reconstruction as a means of emphasising the dynastic link between his own House of Lancaster and that of Plantagenet, of unquestioned legitimacy, and decided at the same time to found the 3 monasteries pledged by his father all within one great building scheme, known as “The King's Great Work”. Thus the “Great Work” commenced in the winter of 1413-14, comprising the new Sheen Palace, and nearby the following 3 monasteries:[2]

Establishment of the Priory

In 1414, Henry V established the Priory, designated "The House of Jesus of Bethlehem at Sheen", for 40 monks of the Carthusian order. It was built approximately 1/2 a mile to the north of the existing royal manor house or palace. It comprised 30 cells, round a great court or cloister.

Nomenclature

During the reign of King Henry VII (1485–1509), formerly styled "Earl of Richmond", the former royal manor house or palace of Sheen built by King Henry V was replaced in 1501 by a royal palace which was renamed "Richmond Palace" in honour of Henry VII. The name of the manor itself was likewise changed from "Sheen" to "Richmond". The name of Henry's earldom derived from his former stronghold, Richmond Castle in Yorkshire, itself named after Riche Mont (Rich Mountain) in France. The Priory of Sheen, although it then found itself within the newly renamed manor of Richmond, nevertheless retained its ancient appellation of "Sheen",[5] being a religious establishment, the function of which was ostensibly the glorification of God not, as in the case of the new secular palace, of the new King and Tudor dynasty, victorious after the Battle of Bosworth in 1485. In 1500, at the command of Henry VII, the town of Sheen, which had grown up around the royal manor, was renamed Richmond,[6] whereupon the entire ancient manor too, in which the new palace stood, became known as Richmond rather than Sheen. The ancient Manor of Sheen is now situated within today's London Borough of Richmond upon Thames.

It is therefore accurate today to say that the vestiges of Sheen Priory are situated in today's Borough of Richmond. The matter is however today even more confused since the ancient manor of Mortlake which stood to the north and east of the ancient manor of Sheen, has in modern times been split into 2 new districts, named North Sheen and East Sheen, although the area of neither was ever historically in Sheen Manor. Both are now under the administrative Borough of Richmond, which can therefore be seen to have absorbed the lands of the ancient Manor of Mortlake in addition to that of Sheen. It would have been more accurate to have called the 2 new districts "New Borough North (of) Old Sheen" and "New Borough East (of) Old Sheen, but the impracticalities of such pedantry, whilst befitting an Encyclopaedic Entry, are obvious when translated to Civic Government. The matter of nomenclature is however academic since Sheen Priory was dissolved within 4 decades of the erection of the new palace.

Notable Clerics Trained at Sheen

The establishment is celebrated as having been the nursery of Cardinal Pole and many other distinguished churchmen in the early 16th.c.[7]

Dissolution of the Priory

Sheen Priory was dissolved in 1539 following the Dissolution of the Monasteries by King Henry VIII. Its buildings and assets became Crown property and were disposed of in accordance with the King's wishes.

Remains of the Priory in 21st. century

The former Priory gardens remain as a public recreation area.

Sources

References

  1. ^ Cloake, 1990, diagram p.51
  2. ^ Cloake, John. Richmond Palace, its History and its Plan. London, 2001. pp.6-7
  3. ^ Aungier, p.21, footnote 1
  4. ^ First charter of foundation of Sheen Priory dated 25 Sept. 1414. Cloake, John. Richmond's Great Monastery; Richmond Local History Society Paper 6, 1990, pp.7-8
  5. ^ See e.g. the Will of Hugh Denys(d.1511), dated 1508, in which he bequeaths property to Sheen Priory, referring to the "Prior & Convent of the Charterhouse at Sheen". He was a courtier of H VII therefore surely alert to the niceities of terminology. Will quoted in Aungier, History of Syon.pp.465-78
  6. ^ Encycopaedia Brittannica, 9th. ed. (1881), vol 20, p.545a. Richmond.
  7. ^ Thornbury, Walter. Old & New London: A Narrative of its History, its People and its Places. London, undated, c.1878 (in 6 volumes) vol.2, p.553.