place

Burnham Norton Friary

Carmelite monasteries in EnglandGrade II* listed buildings in NorfolkGrade I listed buildings in NorfolkMonasteries in NorfolkNorfolk building and structure stubs
United Kingdom Christian monastery stubs
Burnham Norton Friary 8
Burnham Norton Friary 8

Burnham Norton Friary was a Carmelite (White Friars) friary near Burnham Market in Norfolk, England. It is now a ruin. The friary was founded by Sir William Calthorp and Sir Ralph Hemenhale in 1241, the first Carmelite monastery to be founded following the expulsion of the order from Mount Carmel in Sinai in 1238. The theologian monk Robert Bale was prior of Burnham Norton for a time until his death in 1503. The friary was closed down in 1538, when occupied by only four poor monks, as part of the Dissolution of the Monasteries under King Henry VIII and passed undamaged into the ownership of Sir Richard Gresham. The grade I listed ruined gatehouse; the adjacent grade II* listed free-standing gable end of an unknown building remain; the almost intact precinct wall and the church still remain. The free-standing gable end’s closeness to the gatehouse suggests it was not part of the friary church.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Burnham Norton Friary (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Burnham Norton Friary
Friar's Lane, King's Lynn and West Norfolk Burnham Norton

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Website Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Burnham Norton FriaryContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.9509 ° E 0.7348 °
placeShow on map

Address

Priory church of Saint Mary

Friar's Lane
PE31 8JA King's Lynn and West Norfolk, Burnham Norton
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

Website
heritage.norfolk.gov.uk

linkVisit website

Burnham Norton Friary 8
Burnham Norton Friary 8
Share experience

Nearby Places

Norfolk Burnhams

The Norfolk Burnhams are a group of adjacent villages on the north coast of Norfolk, England. The villages are located near a large natural bay named Brancaster Bay and the Scolt Head Island National Nature Reserve. A medieval verse speaks of "London York and Coventry and the Seven Burnhams by the sea". The Domesday Book of 1086 also mentions some of the Burnhams (see external links). At one time there were indeed seven Burnham villages, all within a radius of two miles. These were: Burnham Deepdale Burnham Norton Burnham Overy Burnham Sutton Burnham Thorpe Burnham Ulph Burnham Westgate Hence the mnemonic for the seven Burnhams: Nelson Of Thorpe Died Well Under Sail. It is thought that Burnham Market is one of the original seven Burnhams, but this is incorrect. Burnham Market is a modern merging of three Burnhams: Burnham Sutton, Burnham Westgate and Burnham Ulph. Over the years those three central villages have merged to form the larger village and civil parish of Burnham Market, which forms the principal centre for the Burnhams and several other nearby villages. The most westerly of the villages, Burnham Deepdale, has more or less merged with the neighbouring village of Brancaster Staithe, and both are now part of the civil parish of Brancaster. Burnham Norton and Burnham Thorpe still exist as separate villages and civil parishes, much as they always have. Burnham Overy is still a single civil parish, but in modern times a distinction is often made between the two settlements of Burnham Overy Town (actually a small settlement adjacent to the parish church) and Burnham Overy Staithe (a rather larger settlement about a mile away and next to the creek-side harbour). The Burnhams are all located either on the River Burn, or adjacent to its mouth, and the name Burnham may derive from this. Burnhamthorpe Road in Toronto and Mississauga, Ontario, Canada was named after Burnham Thorpe.