The abbey, which owned in the twenty parishes that constituted the
Malmesbury Hundred, was closed at the
Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1539 by
Henry VIII and was sold, with all its lands, to
William Stumpe, a rich merchant. He returned the abbey church to the town for continuing use as a parish church, and filled the abbey buildings with up to 20 looms for his cloth-weaving enterprise. The west tower fell around 1550, demolishing the three westernmost bays of the nave. As a result of these two collapses, less than half of the original building stands today. During the
English Civil War, Malmesbury suffered extensive damage evidenced by hundreds of pock-marks left by bullets and shot which can still be seen on the south, west and east sides of the building. In 1949, the church was designated as a
Grade I listed building.
Historic England added it to their
Heritage at Risk Register in 2022, stating that the roofs of the nave and aisles were leaking and in need of repair. Today Malmesbury Abbey is in full use as the
parish church of Malmesbury, in the
Diocese of Bristol. The remains still contain a fine
parvise (a room over the porch) which holds some examples of books from the abbey library. The
Anglo-Saxon charters of Malmesbury, though extended by forgeries and improvements executed in the abbey's
scriptorium, provide source material today for the history of
Wessex and the West Saxon church from the seventh century.
Vicars of St Paul's and the Abbey Church, Malmesbury From 1301 until the mid-16th century, the
parish church of Malmesbury was St. Paul's. This stood in what is now Birdcage Walk (its tower and steeple remains, and is now the Abbey belltower). In 1539 Malmesbury Abbey ceased to exist as a monastic community and in August 1541
Thomas Cranmer licensed the abbey church to replace St Paul's as the parish church of Malmesbury. In 1837 the ancient chapelries of
Corston and
Rodbourne were made into a separate parish, called
St Paul Malmesbury Without, and
St Mary Westport was united to the abbey church. ==Organ==