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Beauties of England and Wales Steel Engraving
BUILDWAS ABBEY, SHROPSHIRE
1803 copper plate engraving - Published in London by Vernor, Hood & Sharpe, Poultry, April 1, 1803
Engraved by J. Greig from a Drawing by P Munn - for the Beauties of England and Wales
Overall Size including margins: 5 x 6 3/8 inches
Condition: Excellent. A nice quality copper engraving. Guaranteed original antique print and not a modern reproduction.
A beautiful peaceful country scene with boaters in the foreground. Buildwas Abbey is located along the banks of the River Severn in Buildwas, Shropshire, England, about two miles west of Ironbridge. The Cistercian Abbey of St Mary and St Chad was founded in 1135 by Roger de Clinton, Bishop of Coventry (1129–1148) as a Savignac monastery and was inhabited by a small community of monks from Furness Abbey. The stone from which it was built was quarried in the nearby settlement of Broseley. The abbey's location near the border of Wales meant it was destined to have a turbulent history. Welsh Princes and their followers regularly raided the Abbey, and on one occasion in 1406 raiders from Powys even kidnapped the abbot. This however paled in comparison to an event in 1342 where one of the Buildwas monks, Thomas Tong, murdered his abbot, managed to evade arrest and then petitioned for re-instatement into the Cistercian order. The abbey was finally closed in 1536 by the order of Henry VIII during the Dissolution of the Monasteries, whereupon the estate was granted to Lord Powis. (wikipedia)
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