The following article will address the topic of Luffield Abbey, which has currently generated great interest and debate. For a long time, Luffield Abbey has been the subject of study and analysis by experts in the area, and its impact has reached various spheres of society. On this occasion, we will seek to thoroughly analyze the most relevant aspects of Luffield Abbey, as well as address different perspectives that allow us to understand its importance and impact. Through a detailed and rigorous analysis, it is intended to offer a comprehensive view of Luffield Abbey, in order to provide the reader with a broad and complete understanding of this topic.
Luffield Abbey | |
---|---|
Location within Buckinghamshire | |
Civil parish | |
Unitary authority | |
Ceremonial county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Luffield Abbey is a former civil parish, now in the parish of Lillingstone Dayrell with Luffield Abbey, in the very north of Buckinghamshire, England. It is on the border with Northamptonshire, close to Biddlesden and Silverstone.
The place takes its name from the Benedictine priory of Luffield, founded by Robert, 2nd Earl of Leicester some time before 1133. The priory was suppressed in 1494, by which time the priory was in ruins and there were only two monks.[1] The lands were then granted to Westminster Abbey.
There was no trace of the ancient abbey in a land survey conducted in 1732.[2] The remains of the abbey were found on the edge of the south east runway of the airfield which is now part of Silverstone Circuit, about 200 metres north east of Stowe Corner. Markings of the foundations can be seen in discolorations in the grass on some aerial images taken in the early 1990s. Human remains were found near the abbey in the 1970s. They were found to be monks who had been sufferers of the plague and buried face down.
Two corners of the circuit are named after the location: turn 1 is known as Abbey and turn 7 as Luffield.[3]
In 1551, after the Dissolution, the manor was granted to Francis Throckmorton. In 1718 it passed to his descendant Richard Temple, 1st Viscount Cobham of Stowe, and passed with the Stowe estates until the mid 19th century.[2]
Luffield Abbey was an extra-parochial area,[4] until 1844 partly in Northamptonshire and partly in Buckinghamshire. In 1844 the part in the former county was transferred to the Northamptonshire parish of Silverstone so that Luffield Abbey was entirely within Buckinghamshire thereafter.[5] In 1858 it became a separate civil parish.[6]
The parish consisted of a single farm.[2] By 1931 the population of the parish had dropped to 2. In 1971 the parish had a population of 0.[7] On 1 April 2001 the parish was abolished and merged with Lillingstone Dayrell to form "Lillingstone Dayrell with Luffield Abbey".[8] The name was also given to the northernmost ward of the former Aylesbury Vale District Council.