The remaining abbey buildings are now in the care of
English Heritage. They are open to the public, who can view the church, which remains unaltered since its original construction. Although without a roof and much of the walls, the remains are considered to be among some of the best preserved 12th-century examples of a Cistercian church in Britain.
Arrested decay and artistic licence of Birmingham There are indications that the abbey needed fairly frequent maintenance even when in use. In 1232, for example, Henry III at Bridgnorth was persuaded to donate thirty oak trees from the nearby
royal forest of Shirlett to the abbot specifically
ad reparationem ecclesie sue, "towards the repair of his church." The
nave and
aisles were roofed in wood. However the structure as a whole was in good repair up to the dissolution and the only major modification since the completion of the church and claustral buildings was a large chapel on the south side, constructed about 1400 and possibly for the lay servants who had largely replaced the lay brothers by that time. The recyclable metals were always valued separately by the king's commissioners and the bells and
lead at Buildwas were reckoned at over £94. Once stripped of the lead roof covering, rapid decay and collapse of the roof would have been inevitable. The decay over the first two centuries can be gauged from
Samuel and Nathaniel Buck's 1731 engraving of the abbey, inexplicably entitled "the South-West View of Bildewas-Abby in the County of Salop," which was dedicated to Acton Moseley, the son of Jane Acton and Walter Moseley. The outer walls of the aisles had disappeared almost completely. Little remained of the cloisters, although the northern and western walls partially survived and the latter still had a complete doorway. There was also part of the east wall of the
refectory. The engraving itself was evidence of an already changing attitude to ancient buildings, and Buildwas attracted a number of notable artists in the 18th century. Both
Paul Sandby and
Michael Angelo Rooker pictured the interior of the church in use as an agricultural store.
J. M. W. Turner left at least two drawings and a
watercolour of the abbey ruins. More helpful as a witness to the condition of the church is a sketch from about 1800 by
Edward Williams, incumbent of
Battlefield Church, showing it much as in 1731, although its south west viewpoint shows that a small part of the south nave wall still stood. Other artists tended to bend the truth to their own preconceptions of a medieval ruin. Although a trained architect,
John Coney could not resist sharpening the arches of the church, to conform to a preconception of the
gothic, in his 1825 illustration for an important revision of
William Dugdale's
Monasticon, although the actual building has only very blunt points, characteristic of late
Romanesque architecture. In 1839 Rev John Cox Bayliss, a railway engineer and draughtsman, presented the ruined church from the north west in an idyllic riverine scene that revealed the remaining cloister walls had gone, probably decades earlier. As
Eyton noted in 1858: Now at length the time has come when a changed state of feeling again views such Ruins as sacred;—sacred to departed genius and taste, sacred to the ever-living beauty of grandeur and repose, sacred indeed to yet higher and holier associations, of which nothing but a too narrow Sectarianism would forbid the indulgence. For
Mackenzie Walcott two decades later Eyton's exalted view of Buildwas had to be supplemented with the practical value of tourism: These unrestored memorials of the infinite taste and genius of our forefathers, who built for eternity, are very precious as a school of instruction, and should be regarded as national monuments. ....The careful preservation of these remains from demolition and wanton injury, and the stoppage of the progress of further decay materially conduce to the attractions and interest of their neighbourhood, and the good name of those persons into whose hands their safe keeping has devolved. Deterioration of the ruins seems to have been largely arrested by Eyton's time and Walcott's 1877 study included a plan little different from that in recent guides to the abbey. The claustral buildings to the north of the nave were now down to footings but the abbey church showed little change since the Bucks' engraving, which Walcott had copied. In 1915 the ruins were the subject of a protection order under the
Ancient Monuments Consolidation and Amendment Act 1913. In 1925 Major H. R. Moseley placed the site in the care of the Commissioners His Majesty's Works, whence it passed to the
Ministry of Works and its successors, at present
English Heritage. Maintenance continues: in 2019, for example, the south wall of the presbytery was partially fenced off for repairs.
Description The abbey site is a short distance south of the River Severn. The drainage opportunities afforded by the river made it sensible to place the claustral buildings to the north of the church, which is roughly parallel to the river, and so fairly accurately oriented. The remains of the buildings are entirely of local
sandstone: all wooden parts disappeared long ago. The remains of buildings around the infirmary court and the abbot's lodging, all on the north and east sides of the site, are not open to the public, as they are within a private residence. The remains that are open to the public, free of charge at present, are described below.
The church The abbey church is an originally
cruciform structure, about in long and wide (not including the aisles), made up of • a
chancel or presbytery to the geographic and ecclesiastical east, about in length, which is
aisleless, square ended, i.e. without an
apse, and extends to two
bays. • a
crossing, surmounted by a low, rectangular central tower. • north and south
transepts, or "arms" of the cross, each containing two
chapels, and making the church about across at that point. • a
nave of seven bays with north and south aisles, the western five bays, running to a length of about , originally divided from the eastern two bays, which, together with the crossing formed part of the monks' choir, totalling in length. • a large, later chapel on the south side. The roofs and all but a small section of the aisle walls are missing, as are the walls of the south chapel. The arches of the
nave are perhaps the most striking feature of the site, visible immediately to the visitor. The remains of low walls between the arches show that the aisles were divided from the nave to allow circulation during services. Walcott considered that the seven
columns on each side represented the seven pillars of Wisdom from the
Book of Proverbs (), which is less than likely as there are actually only six. The columns are massive and round in section, except the eastern pair: the south of these is octagonal while the north is semicircular on the inside and semi-octagonal on the outside. All rest directly on square plinths. They are austere, with the
capitals simply scalloped and claw ornamentation on some of the bases. The arches are bluntly pointed. Above them rises a tall
clerestory, although there was never a
triforium or raised gallery on the inside of the nave. The windows of the clerestory have semi-circular heads and most still have shafts at each side with delicately decorated capitals. There are two windows in the western end of the nave, very high up but with no west entrance beneath them: the drop in ground level to the west was very sharp. Internally too there is a drop in floor level at the western end, which seems to have provided space for the lay brothers or
conversi. File:Buildwas Abbey - nave from south west.jpg|Exterior view of the nave from the south west, showing the bluntly pointed arches. Central tower to right. File:Buildwas Abbey - aisle wall foundation.jpg|The south west corner of the church, showing all that remains of the abbey's aisle walls and a section of foundation. File:Buildwas Abbey - nave from north west.jpg|Exterior view of the nave from the north west, showing the massive round-section columns and a doorway into the north transept. File:Buildwas Abbey - columns north nave.jpg|Arches on the north side of the nave, featuring round-sectioned columns with scalloped capitals. File:Buildwas Abbey - capital north nave.jpg|Capital of a column in the north nave, showing scalloped decoration. Above it a
putlog hole, used for supporting scaffolding during construction. File:Buildwas Abbey - clerestory from nave.jpg|A section of clerestory seen from inside the nave, with delicately carved capitals suspended after the loss of the jamb shafts. File:Buildwas Abbey - capitals north aisle nave clerestory.jpg|Arch on north side of nave with scalloped capital and a view through the building to the clerestory on the south side. File:Buildwas Abbey - church from east.jpg|A view of the west windows and the nave seen from the church crossing, looking under a corbel arch supporting the central tower. The
quire or monk's choir took up the two eastern bays of the nave as well as the crossing. The western foundation of the
rood screen that divided it from the rest of the nave is discernible between the second piers of the nave. There are traces of altars that flanked the entrance through the screen. The central tower or
roof lantern is suspended over the
crossing by
corbels high in the walls. It was originally entered by stairs at its south east corner, leading up through the roof of the transept chapels. It had just two small windows on each side to admit light. The four transept chapels vary only slightly in design and were each equipped with an
ambry and a low piscina for the almost constant celebration of chantry masses. The
presbytery was originally screened off from the rest of the church. The triplet of eastern windows was inserted after the construction of the church to replace an earlier pair. The altar would have stood forward, detached from the east wall. There are triple
sedilia deeply set into the south wall for the priest and two assistants at a
High Mass which replaced an earlier and simpler stone bench. Immediately east of these is the
piscina or water drain for
eucharistic ablutions, in a plain, round-headed recess about across. File:Buildwas Abbey - central tower from south west 01.jpg|Roof lantern or central tower, viewed from the south west. File:Buildwas Abbey - church from west.jpg|View of the church interior, with the triple window in the eastern wall of the chancel, viewed through the arches supporting the central tower. File:Buildwas Abbey - clerestory from chancel.jpg|The north clerestory of the chancel or presbytery viewed from inside the building. File:Buildwas Abbey Eyton 6-334 Sedilia.png|The triple sedilia in the presbytery. From Eyton, R. W.
Antiquities of Shropshire, volume 6. File:Buildwas Abbey - piscina.jpg|Piscina or wash drain for ritual ablutions in the south wall of the chancel or presbytery. File:Buildwas Abbey - south transept chapels.jpg|Exterior view through entrances of the two chapels in the south transept. File:Buildwas Abbey - north transept chapels.jpg|The north transept chapels. File:Buildwas Abbey - chapel piscina.jpg|A piscina or drain for washing the eucharistic vessels in the wall of a side chapel in one of the transepts.
The Cloister The
cloister court lies to the north of the church at a lower level. The foundations of the walls remain on three sides but there is no trace of a cloister
arcade, which would have supported a shelter for the monks' walkway. The east range is the best preserved, although the upper storey, which contained the
dorter or sleeping quarters of the monks, has disappeared. The extant lower floor contains a
sacristy,
chapter house and
parlour, as well as the entrance to a
crypt. The
crypt is entered through a doorway and a flight of steps from the south end of the east cloister range and occupies a space under the north transept. Its roof is a
groin vault of three bays. Its original use is unknown and perhaps indeterminate. Walcott suggested it might be a location for confidential conversation, storage for monastic dress or even for laying out of corpses. Today it contains a small collection of items discovered during excavations, but it not always open. File:Buildwas Abbey - cloister from north.jpg|The cloister court, including the sacristy and chapter house, viewed from the north, over the remains of the lay brothers' range. File:Buildwas Abbey-cloister south-sacristy-chapter house.jpg|The east range of the cloister. From left: the parlour entrance; two west windows and door of chapter house; sacristy entrance. File:Buildwas Abbey - sacristy through cloister entrance.jpg|A view of the sacristy through the entrance from the cloister. File:Buildwas Abbey - sacristy ambry.jpg|Recess for an ambry, a cupboard used for book storage, in the sacristy. File:Buildwas Abbey - sacristy roof.jpg|The roof of the sacristy, groin vaulted in two bays. File:Buildwas Abbey - sacristy through cloister entrance.jpg|The sacristy seen through the entrance from the cloister, with an external exit that was originally a window. File:Buildwas Abbey - sacristy ambry 2.jpg|The other ambry recess in the sacristy. File:Buildwas Abbey - chapter house window cloister 1.jpg|One of the two windows in the cloister wall of the chapter house. File:Buildwas Abbey - chapter house roof.jpg|Ribbed vaulting on the roof of the chapter house. File:Buildwas Abbey - chapter house capital.jpg|A capital of one of the four columns supporting the rib vaulted roof of the chapter house. File:Buildwas Abbey - chapter house roof external windows.jpg|View of the chapter house, showing the three remaining windows in the east wall. File:Buildwas Abbey - chapter house floor.jpg|Decorated tiles restored to the chapter house floor. File:Buildwas Abbey - chapter house tomb.jpg|Outline of a tomb in the floor of the chapter house. File:Buildwas Abbey Eyton 6-334 Chapter House.png|The chapter house as seen in 1858. Internal view from the east end. File:Buildwas Abbey - parlour - cloister entrance.jpg|Segmental arched doorway to the parlour from the cloister. File:Buildwas Abbey - lay brothers range and gap.jpg|Undercroft of lay brother's range and gap giving entrance to cloister, showing how the building lay separate from the cloister itself. File:Buildwas Abbey - lay brotherss range.jpg|Remains of the lay brothers' range to the west of the cloister, showing the substantial undercroft. The
sacristy, intended to house
vestments, the eucharistic vessels (
chalices,
patens, etc.) and other liturgical items, is entered through a doorway with a
semi-circular arch. It has a vaulted roof of two bays. It is a narrow space, only about wide. Its north wall has two recesses with plain semi-circular heads. These were
ambries or small storage cupboards. For convenient deployment of the sacred vessels, the sacristy is connected to the church through a doorway in its south wall, giving access to a short flight of steps into the north transept. Another doorway in the east wall, giving access to the cemetery, now part of the private residence, was broken through from the original window. The
chapter house, where the community of monks held their daily general gatherings, for reading of the
rule and
martyrology and for the imposition of
penance. It is entered through a doorway from the cloister. This has a semi-circular head and was flanked by two jambs, although the shaft of one is now missing. The floor is well below the level of the cloister, requiring a flight of five steps to reach it. Four columns are spaced at the corners of a rectangle so as to create nine areas of ribbed vaulting, the most spectacular extant roof in the building. The dimensions of the space are by ant it is lit by three windows in the east wall, which projected beyond the neighbouring sacristy. There were once windows either side of this projecting bay, but they were later filled in. The five wall piercings were possibly a reference to the
Five Holy Wounds of Christ. The tiled floor was removed after the dissolution but is now partly restored. The
parlour provided the monks with a room where conversation was allowed. It has a roof made up of two bays of
ribbed vaulting. Its entrance from the cloister is through a doorway with a semi-circular arch and there are two further doorways: one in the east wall leading to the exterior and one in the north wall to the
undercroft. North of the parlour the visible ruins peter out and lie partly on private land. There must have been a staircase to access the sleeping quarters above the undercroft. The north range would have housed the frater or
refectory where meals were eaten together, a vital part of community life. The kitchen was probably at the west end. The west range housed the lay brothers' quarters. This was separated from the cloister itself by a 'lane' and the drop in level allowed it to rise to three floors, although the very large basement is all that remains. ==See also==