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Langdon Abbey
Abbey in Kent, England from c. 1192 to 1535 / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Langdon Abbey (grid reference TR329468) was a Premonstratensian abbey near West Langdon, Kent, founded in about 1192 and dissolved in 1535, reportedly the first religious house to be dissolved by Henry VIII. The visible remains of the abbey are now confined to the extensive cellaring below the 16th-century house that occupies its site and small remains of a 17th-century ice house.
Quick Facts Monastery information, Order ...
![]() Carved stone corbel, part of the remains of the monastic cellars at Langdon Abbey | |
Monastery information | |
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Order | Premonstratensian |
Established | circa 1192 |
Disestablished | 1535 |
Dedicated to | the Blessed Virgin Mary and St Thomas the Martyr |
People | |
Founder(s) | Sir William de Auberville |
Important associated figures | Edward II |
Site | |
Location | West Langdon, Kent, England |
Visible remains | Monastic cellars and 17th-century ice house |
Public access | No |
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