Guildford Black Friary was built to the north of
Guildford town centre on gravel and alluvial soils deposited by the
River Wey. The site sloped downwards from east to west and levelling in the 17th and 19th centuries buried the remains of the friary buildings to an average depth of around . Excavations in 1974 and 1978 showed that the friary was constructed around a central, square
cloister, with the
nave of the church forming the south range. The main entrance is thought to have been on the east side, from the route now known as Woodbridge Road. There are thought to have been two paths leading south from the nave, one most likely used by worshippers to access the nave from the town and the other for the friars to reach the graveyard. The kitchen formed the north range of the cloister and the
chapter house was on the east side. At the east end of the nave, and to the south of the chapter house, were the
choir and
chancel, which may have been the first parts of the friary to be built. A
chantry chapel was added on the north side of the chancel in the 14th century and the east end of the church was extended at a later point. The suppression inventory mentions a steeple housing two bells "a grete and a small", although it is unclear where it stood. The west end of the nave was not revealed during the excavations. The walls of the friary varied in their materials and their construction, indicating that there were several distinct phases of building. The majority were made of chalk blocks, held together with mortar and faced internally with plaster and externally with flint. The original choir and chancel were constructed entirely of flint and the chancel extension was built entirely of chalk blocks. The majority of the floors in the friary were tiled. Bones from around 113 individuals were found during the excavations, although only 65 were still in their original graves. Around 41 of the individuals were in the cemetery area on the south side of the church and 40 were in the nave, with the rest elsewhere on the site. The bones of only ten are thought to be female, seven of whom were buried in the church. Around ten of the individuals are thought to have been under the age of 15 when they died and five were over the age of 55. Several skeletons had been buried together and these communal graves may have been for victims of the
bubonic plague. ==History==