Ruins of Abbey of St Agatha Easby, England

Listed Building Data

Ruins of Abbey of St Agatha has been designated a Grade I listed building in England with the following information, which has been imported from the National Heritage List for England. Please note that not all available data may be shown here, minor errors and/or formatting may have occurred during transcription, and some information may have become outdated since listing.

List Entry ID
1131606
Listing Type
listed building
Grade
I
Date Listed
4 February 1969
Name
RUINS OF ABBEY OF ST AGATHA
Location
RUINS OF ABBEY OF ST AGATHA
Parish
Easby
District
Richmondshire
County
North Yorkshire
Grid Reference
NZ 18491 00291
Easting
418490.6650
Northing
500290.7406

Listed Building Description

Text courtesy of Historic England. © Crown Copyright, reprinted under the Open Government License.

EASBY EASBY NZ 10 SE 4/39 Ruins of Abbey of St Agatha (formerly listed as Easby 4.2.69 Abbey Ruins)

GV I

Ruins of Premonstratensian Abbey of St Agatha. Late C12, early C13, c1300, early C14, early C15. Sandstone. Church with cloister, sacristies, chapter house, refectory, dorter, guests' solar and reredorter to south, and infirmary and abbot's accommodation to north. Church: foundations only of late C12 aisleless nave with many fine grave covers, with crosses, set in floor; considerable height of early C14 north chapel, with complete stone altar, added on to west side of late C12 north transept; late C12 aisleless choir lengthened by addition of early C14 presbytery, largely surviving to approximately 2 metres high, with 2 tomb recesses with double-chamfered segmental-pointed arches on north side; 3-bay early C14 east wall of south transept survives. 2 sacristies. Chapter house: 2-storey structure survives from early C13 with bench-table, and with early C15 alterations including hollow-moulded multi-light east window with almost flat segmental- pointed arch with label, and above, and in adjoining buildings to south, 2- light windows with cinquefoiled ogee-headed lights and hood-moulds. Undercroft of early C13, formerly vaulted, below complete c1300 8-bay refectory with 5-light east window and 6 south windows, all with remains of Geometric tracery, and reader's pulpit in the second from easternmost bay. In cloister, 1 bay survives of the lavatorium, with a trefoiled niche with nailhead decoration. Next to it, an ex-situ doorway from cloister to dorter, with a round arch of 2 orders with weathered beak-head ornament. The west range is not of standard monastic plan due to the steep fall of the land: early C13 groin-vaulted undercroft below dorter, and west of it an early C13 undercroft below the guests' solar with a south window of 3 intersecting flat-pointed arches forming 4 lights with stiff-leaf capitals and blind quatrefoils in the spandrels. West again, the early C13 3-storey reredorter which served the guests' solar, dorter and also the prior's apartment formerly west of the refectory. Its west wall has pilaster buttresses, a rolled string, 2 lancet windows on the second floor and a corbel table. The reredorter was flushed by the tail-race from the Abbey Mill (qv). The infirmary, with abbot's apartment on first floor, survives 2-storeys high in places with some shouldered doorways and complete external offset chimney-stack. Founded 1155. The canopied choir-stalls, commissioned by Abbot John Bampton after 1515, are now in St Mary's Parish Church, Richmond. The parclose screen is now in Wensley Church. Scheduled as an Ancient Monument. A Hamilton Thompson, Easby Abbey (DOE Official Handbook); VCH i, pp 53-59.

Listing NGR: NZ1848900308