Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Balmerino Abbey

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Order
  
Cistercian

Diocese
  
Archdiocese of St Andrews

Disestablished
  
1603

Burials
  
Ermengarde de Beaumont

Phone
  
+44 1721 722502

Founder
  
Ermengarde de Beaumont

Mother house
  
Melrose Abbey


Controlled churches
  
Balmerino; Barry; Cultrain; Logie-Murdoch

Address
  
Balmerino Abbey, Balmerino Village, Newport-on-Tay DD6 8SB, United Kingdom

Similar
  
Hill of Tarvit, Kellie Castle, Melrose Abbey, Falkland Palace, Barry Mill

The ruins of balmerino abbey newport on tay fife


Balmerino Abbey, or St Edward's Abbey, in Balmerino, Fife, Scotland, was a Cistercian monastic community founded in 1227 to 1229 by monks from Melrose Abbey with the patronage of Ermengarde de Beaumont and King Alexander II of Scotland. It remained a daughter house of Melrose. It had approximately 20 monks at the beginning of the sixteenth century, but declined in that century. In December 1547 it was burned by an English force, and allegedly damaged again in 1559 by Scottish Protestants. In 1606 and 1607 it was created as a secular lordship for James Elphinstone, 1st Lord Balmerino.

Contents

The abbot s house balmerino abbey fife


Current condition

In 1910 the landowner employed Francis William Deas to survey the building and execute a programme of repairs and consolidation.

The abbey is now under the stewardship of the National Trust for Scotland, and a small entrance fee is requested at an honesty box, with no ticket booth or manned presence on-site. The ruin consists of a substantial section of the east wall of the main church. More substantial ruins of some of the associated buildings exist to the side of this but access is currently prohibited due to their poor state of repair.

As of summer 2007, a sign on site states that entrance fees will be used to contribute towards a possible future stabilisation of these ruins in order to improve safety for visitors to enter once again.

Burials

  • Ermengarde de Beaumont, Queen of Scotland
  • References

    Balmerino Abbey Wikipedia