's
History of Kent In around AD 670 King
Ecgberht of Kent gave land at Minster for his mother
Seaxburh of Ely to establish a Benedictine nunnery, but this was burnt down by the
Danes in 855. At some point before the
Norman invasion the church was rebuilt and refounded as a Benedictine nunnery, incorporating elements of the original construction in the north chancel and nave. Between 1123 and 1139
Archbishop Corbeil (Corbeuil) refounded it as an Augustinian nunnery. Corbeil is thought to be responsible for the unusual "semi-detached" arrangement of two churches next to each other: the Saxon church of the convent to the north and a parish church to the south for the villagers. They share a wall containing pointed arches and are now used as a single building. The
abbey was dissolved in 1539, and along with
Davington Priory near Faversham it came into the possession of Sir
Thomas Cheney (Cheyney/Cheyne), a favourite of
Anne Boleyn. He died in 1558 and was first buried in the chapel of Saint Katherine, which was demolished to allow construction of the east end of the chancel in 1581. Today the old abbey gatehouse is occupied by a museum run by the Sheppey Local History Society. ==Burials at the abbey==