Reconstruction illustration showing a view of Mount Grace Priory as seen from the north-east, as it may have appeared before its dissolution in 1539

Date:
circa 1991
Location:
Mount Grace Priory, East Harlsey, Mount Grace, Hambleton, North Yorkshire
Reference:
IC068/002
Type:
Reconstruction Artwork
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Description

Mount Grace Priory was one of ten 'charterhouses', meaning Carthusian monasteries or priories, in England. The Carthusian way of life was one of the most strict in monastic terms. The monks lived a pious life to a strict timetable, spending most of their time in their 'cells' with minimal contact with other monks at the site. As a result, the layout of the Priory differs from typical layouts of priories or monasteries of other monastic orders, with Carthusian sites largely consisting of single accommodation cells arranged around a courtyard, and with a smaller, simpler church or chapel as part of the complex.

Content

This is part of the Volume: IC068 Mount Grace Priory, North Yorkshire; within the Series: EHC01/146 English Heritage Reconstruction and Artwork Collection; within the Collection: EHC01 English Heritage(EH):Archive

Rights

© Historic England Archive

People & Organisations

Illustrator: Lapper, Ivan

Keywords

Medieval Priory, Medieval Carthusian Monastery