|
Date: |
|
Description: | The Priory Church of St Mary stands within the walls of Portchester Castle. It is believed to have been built about 1133, when Henry 1 granted a charter to an Augustinian Order of Canons from Normandy. The Canons only remained for a few years before moving to a new Priory in Southwick. The Priory gradually decayed until it was restored during the reigns of Queen Elizabeth and Queen Anne. By the end of the 1800's, it was again in need of repair but another renovation occurred and it celebrated its 850th anniversary in 1983.
The church remains substantially as it was built in Norman times, except for the south transept which was demolished and the chancel which was curtailed. It has a magnificent west front with a great entrance door. The nave is long and gaunt, lit only by the original rounded Norman windows.
Reference:
1. Emery, John. 1985. Fareham in old Picture Postcards, p. 94.
2. Lloyd, David W. 1974. Buildings of Portsmouth and its environs, p. 9.
Copy photograph of an engraving. | Format: | image/jpeg | License: | http://www.sopse.org.uk/ixbin/hixclient.exe?a=query&p=gateway&f=generic_sitetext%2ehtm&_IXFIRST_=1&_IXMAXHITS_=1&cms_con_core_subtype%3acms_con_text_what=copyright&%3acms_sys_group=%22sopse%22 | Rights holder: | Hampshire Library and Information Service - Hampshire County Council | Subjects: | canon King Henry 1 building monk church Augustinian priory Southwick Priory Priory Church of St Mary tower Queen Elizabeth 1 churchyard Portchester Castle castle Queen Anne Norman | Temporal: | start=1850-01-01; end=1900-12-31; | Source: | Sense of place SE | Creator: | Copied by: Dine, Derek; Hampshire County Library; | Identifier: | http://www.sopse.org.uk/ixbin/hixclient.... | Language: | en-GB | Format: | image/jpeg | Go to resource |
|
|