Text and Illustrations from Wikipedia - the free encyclopaedia,
unless otherwise stated.
Rievaulx Abbey, Yorkshire, England.
Photo: 8 September 2012.
Source: Own work by mattbuck.
(Wikimedia Commons)
It was one of the wealthiest Abbeys in England and was dissolved by Henry VIII of England in 1538. Its ruins are a tourist attraction.
Rievaulx Abbey.
Very atmospheric on a foggy Autumn day.
Photo: 15 October 2009.
Source: From geograph.org.uk.
Author: Simon Palmer.
(Wikimedia Commons)
The remote location was ideal for the Cistercians, whose desire was to follow a strict life of Prayer and self-sufficiency, with little contact with the outside world. The Patron, Walter Espec, settled another Cistercian community, founding Wardon Abbey, in Bedfordshire, on unprofitable wasteland on one of his inherited estates.
Rievaulx Abbey, North Yorkshire, England.
Photo: 14 August 2006.
Source: Own work/oeuvre personnelle.
Author: Myself (Bernard Leprêtre).
(Wikimedia Commons)
The Te Deum.
5th-Century Monastic Chant (Solemn).
Available on YouTube at
Monks of one of the Abbeys of the Solesmes Congregation sing this beautiful Chant.
The Te Deum is attributed to two Fathers and Doctors of the Church, Saint Ambrose and Saint Augustine, and is one the most majestic Chants in the Liturgy of the Church.
It is sung in Traditional Seminaries and Monastic Houses at the Divine Office and for Double Feasts of the First Class, The Nativity, Easter, Corpus Christi, Epiphany, Pentecost and those Feasts which have an Octave.
The Solemn Te Deum is sung on all occasions of public Church rejoicing (in Traditional Catholic Churches).
Rievaulx Abbey, Yorkshire, England.
Photo: 8 September 2012.
Source: Own work by mattbuck.
(Wikimedia Commons)
The old course of the river is visible in the Abbey's grounds. This is one illustration of the technical ingenuity of the Monks, who, over time, built up a very profitable business mining lead and iron, rearing sheep and selling wool to buyers from all over Europe.
Rievaulx Abbey became one of the greatest and wealthiest Abbeys in England, with 140 Monks and many more Lay Brothers, receiving grants of land totalling 6,000 acres (24 km²) and establishing Daughter Houses in England and Scotland.
Rievaulx Abbey, Yorkshire, England.
Photo: 8 September 2012.
Source: Own work by mattbuck.
(Wikimedia Commons)
Rievaulx Abbey, Yorkshire, England.
Photo: 8 September 2012.
Source: Own work by mattbuck.
(Wikimedia Commons)
Rievaulx Abbey ruins.
Photo: 23 August 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Photograph by Mike Peel (www.mikepeel.net).
Permission: Creative Commons CC-BY-SA-2.5.
Please attribute using name and website URL (as per the author line above).
(Wikimedia Commons)
Miserere Mei Deus.
Gregorian Chant.
Available on YouTube at
Rievaulx Abbey, Yorkshire, England.
Photo: 8 September 2012.
Source: Own work by mattbuck.
(Wikimedia Commons)
Rievaulx Abbey, Yorkshire, England.
Photo: 14 April 2008.
Source: Own work.
Author: Tilman2007.
(Wikimedia Commons)
Rievaulx Abbey showing Presbytery (right), South Transept,
Chapter House foundations and wall of Infirmary (left). Mist at dawn.
Date: 2011.
Source: http://www.wyrdlight.com Author: Antony McCallum.
Author: Antony McCallum.
(Wikimedia Commons)
Rievaulx Abbey in Winter.
Source: (Not Known).
Attribution: (Not Known).
Rievaulx Abbey.
Available on YouTube at
Henry VIII ordered the buildings to be rendered uninhabitable and stripped of valuables such as lead. The Abbey site was granted to the Earl of Rutland, one of Henry's advisers, until it passed to the Duncombe family.
In the 1750s, Thomas Duncombe III beautified the estate by building the terrace with two Grecian-style temples; these temples, now called Rievaulx Terrace & Temples, are in the care of the National Trust. The ruins of the Abbey are in the care of English Heritage.
When awarded a life peerage in 1983, former Prime Minister, Harold Wilson, a Yorkshireman, adopted the title Baron Wilson of Rievaulx.
I was born and bred in Yorkshire. I know Rievaulx well. Yorkshire had more Abbeys than any other county. Many visitors remark that the monks knew where to choose the best land in the county but what they overlook is that it was the hard work of those very monks which developed the land, farmed it and made it so productive. As is remarked above, the destruction of Rievaulx held back the industrial revolution by two centuries. The abbeys looked after the poor, educated the children, nursed the sick and were such a blessing to the ordinary people. With the destruction of the monasteries the poor had nowhere to go, the sick had nowhere to go. The destruction of the monasteries benefited the rich at the expense of the poor.
ReplyDeleteG'Day, JARay.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your most welcome Comment.
I am delighted that you liked the Rievaulx Article and that you, being a "Tyke", know the location so well.
I have visited Rievaulx Abbey many times, and the Holiness and Sanctity of the Abbey, redolent of all those Cistercian Monks hundreds of years ago, is almost tangible.
I deliberately included the "Te Deum" YouTube recording, as I felt it should be listened to whilst viewing the photographs of the Abbey ruins. To realise that the "Te Deum" was sung many times within those hallowed walls of the Abbey, only enhances the sentiments expressed, above.
Have a "Cold Tinney" on me.
Thank you Zephyrinus. I was born in Wakefield and I now live in Perth, Western Australia.
DeleteThe Abbey which I know best is Kirkstall which is just on the very fringe of Leeds. An Aunt of mine, God rest her soul, used to live within walking distance of Kirstall and I have seen her walk her little dog there and gently kiss the wall of that Abbey in memory of the monks who worshipped God there. Many, many years ago I processed from Leeds Cathedral in a large procession of Catholic men (and youths...I was one) and we had Holy Mass there. Ah! Those were the days!
Most grateful, JARay. Thank you.
DeleteA wonderful, wonderful, image you give of your dear Aunt "gently kissing the wall of the Abbey in memory of the Monks who worshipped there".
May she R.I.P.
God Willing, she will be enjoying the Beatific Vision, together with those Monks.