Leicester Abbey was an abbey of the
Augustinian order established in 1143. Founded by
Robert de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Leicester, it became one of the wealthiest and most powerful monastic houses of the Order. In 1496
John Penny became
abbot, while also holding office as
Bishop of Bangor, and subsequently
Bishop of Carlisle. In around 1500, Penny ordered construction of a long boundary wall to the north and west of the abbey, which subsequently became known as Abbot Penny's Wall. The attribution to Penny arises from the initials
J.P., which appear in blue brick in the wall, and to
John Leland, who published a record of his visit in about 1540, noting that; "This Peny made the new bricke worke in Leicester Abbay, and much of the bricke waulles". Following the
Dissolution of the Monasteries the abbey was demolished in around 1538. The wall was restored in the 19th and 20th centuries. By the 21st century it was again in disrepair, and sections were threatened with collapse due to undermining from the roots of nearby trees. A survey in 2018 was followed by extensive renovations in 2020–2021. The restoration cost £540,000. ==Architecture and description==