Notley Abbey was founded in between 1154 and 1164 by the second
Earl of Buckingham,
Walter Giffard and his wife, Ermengard. The house was dedicated to the
Virgin Mary and
Saint John the Baptist and was made to house
Augustinian canons. Despite its lack of historical fame, Notley Abbey was one of the largest and richest Augustinian monasteries in the Oxford region. Notley Abbey was originally meant to fuse the lifestyles of monastic and apostolic people, forming a middle ground between monks and secular clergy; however, the monastic lifestyle dominated. The fact that Notley Abbey was constructed at
Earl's park in Long Crendon suggests that Augustinians were becoming purely monastic by 1160. Notley Abbey possessed several pieces of land including
Lower Winchendon (not acquired until around 1302),
Chilton,
Princes Risborough, and
Stragglethorpe in
Lincolnshire. These lands helped generate revenue, but the abbey's primary source of income came from
tithes from
appropriated churches. Traditionally, a
secular vicar served an abbey's appropriated churches, but in 1258,
Alexander IV granted Notley Abbey permission to serve their appropriated churches by their own canons in person. In 1461, Notley Abbey absorbed a small
priory of Chetwood, thus considerably adding to its revenue sources. The abbey was visited by Henry IV who stayed there after the
battle of Radcot Bridge. Henry V also stayed at Notley Abbey. Notley Abbey was
dissolved by Henry VIII in 1538. By about 1730, the abbey reached
farmhouse status, but was regenerated in 1890. The
abbot's house and part of the
cloister were kept as a private house that remains today. ==Architecture==