History in the news

An article in today’s Guardian is a reminder of Preston’s links with the monks of Furness Abbey in the Lake District. This is from Kim Travis’ article on the history of Tulketh:

‘The first inhabitants of Tulketh (the area of Tulketh, not the Hall) for whom there is reliable evidence are the monks who established a monastery there in 1124. Stephen of Blois, nephew of King Henry I, and later to be King himself, gave land at Tulketh to found a monastery. Thirteen monks from the Abbey of Savigny in Normandy arrived on 4 July 1124 led by Ewen d’Avranches. On 7 July 1127 the monks transferred their monastery to what became Furness Abbey, and Tulketh was transferred back into Stephen’s ownership. The Monastery at Tulketh was Benedictine, though about 20 years later Furness and Savigny became Cistercian.’

Furness Abbey

https://www.theguardian.com/…/medieval-monks-night…

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