The abbey was given by
Empress Matilda in 1151 to monks from
Quarr Abbey on the
Isle of Wight. Originally at Loxwell, to the east of
Chippenham, it moved to nearby
Stanley in 1154. The abbey grew in size in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, reaching a size of at its largest. Its influence also grew, Abbot Nicholas entertaining
King John in October 1200 and in 1210 Abbot Thomas of Calstone attending the meeting of King John and the Cistercian abbots at York. In 1280
King Edward I gave stone to the abbey for a chamber to be built for his own use, and according to the abbey chronicle he made use of it in the spring of 1282. Princess Mary, the bishop of Salisbury and
Edward II were all reported to have stayed at the abbey during the first years of the fourteenth century. Nothing now remains
in situ except a green site on private property, but access may be obtained to visit it from Old Abbey Farm. == Subsequent history ==