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Lapley

Lapley
Lapley sign.JPG
Lapley village sign, June 2008
Lapley is located in Staffordshire
Lapley
Lapley
Lapley shown within Staffordshire
OS grid reference SJ875129
Civil parish
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Police Staffordshire
Fire Staffordshire
Ambulance West Midlands
EU Parliament West Midlands
List of places
UK
England
Staffordshire
52°42′49″N 2°11′10″W / 52.7135°N 2.1860°W / 52.7135; -2.1860Coordinates: 52°42′49″N 2°11′10″W / 52.7135°N 2.1860°W / 52.7135; -2.1860

Lapley is a small English village situated in Staffordshire some 3.5 miles WSW of Penkridge, 1.5 miles east of Wheaton Aston, 0.5 miles northeast of the Shropshire Union Canal, 1.5 miles north of Watling Street, and 6 miles SSW of Stafford. The civil parish is called Lapley, Stretton and Wheaton Aston.

Lapley Priory was a community of Black Monks (Benedictines), endowed c.1061, in the time of Edward the Confessor, by Ælfgar, Lord of Mercia and Chester, in memory of his third son Burgheard who died in Reims while returning from a pilgrimage to Rome with Aldred Archbishop of York. It had been Burchard's dying wish to be buried at the Abbey of Saint-Remi and for his father to donate land in return. Accordingly, Alfgar bestowed land at Lapley and elsewhere in Staffordshire and Shropshire on Rheims Abbey, which established a satellite house at Lapley, probably in the mid-12th century. In due course, it was suppressed by Henry V, who suppressed all alien priories in 1415 during the wars with France, before the general monastic Dissolution of 1537-8. Its estates became the property of the college of Tong, in Shropshire. In the English civil wars, the Priory House was fortified and garrisoned, but in 1645 it was dismantled under a parliamentary order. Some remains of the abbey are still visible in the walls of an old house near the church.


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