The interior of the south porch of Malmesbury Abbey church, showing the elaborately-carved mouldings around the inner doorway

Date:
1900 - 1930
Location:
Malmesbury Abbey, Market Cross, Malmesbury, Wiltshire
Reference:
OP19872
Type:
Photograph (Printing Out Paper Print)
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Description

The twelfth-century porch was rebuilt externally in the fourteenth century. Malmesbury Abbey was a Benedictine Abbey. Its church was founded in circa 637 by the Irish hermit Mailduib, although nothing remains from this phase of the site. The present church was begun in the early twelfth century. The Abbey was closed in 1539 under King Henry VIII's dissolution of the monasteries.

Archival History

Previously held in the collections of George Granville Buckley and the Courtauld Institute. Courtauld Institute number B.448. This photograph was withdrawn from the Red Box Collection for conservation reasons during the 2011-12 Red Box Project.

Reverse of card mount is stamped 'Not to be reproduced without permission' and 'From the collection of G Granville Buckley'.

Content

This is part of the Series: RBO01/45 Early Photographic Print Collection: Wiltshire; within the Collection: RBO01 Early Photographic Print Collection

Rights

Source: Historic England Archive

People & Organisations

Collector: Buckley, George Granville

Keywords

Porch, Moulding, Doorway, Medieval Church, Medieval Abbey