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St. Gregory's Monastery, Downside

Downside Abbey
Downside abbey2-2.jpg
Abbey monastic basilica and library (left)
Downside Abbey is located in Somerset
Downside Abbey
Location within Somerset
Monastery information
Full name Abbey of St Gregory the Great at Downside
Order Benedictine
Established 1605
Mother house Valladolid
Dedicated to Gregory the Great
Diocese Clifton
Controlled churches Basilica of St Gregory the Great
People
Founder(s) St John Roberts OSB
Prior Dom Leo Maidlow Davis, OSB
Important associated figures Architects Archibald Matthias Dunn and Edward Joseph Hansom
Site
Location Stratton-on-the-Fosse, Somerset, England
Coordinates 51°15′18″N 2°29′37″W / 51.2549°N 2.4936°W / 51.2549; -2.4936Coordinates: 51°15′18″N 2°29′37″W / 51.2549°N 2.4936°W / 51.2549; -2.4936
Grid reference ST6550950840
Other information Relics of St. Oliver Plunkett and
St. Thomas de Cantilupe

The Basilica of St Gregory the Great at Downside, commonly known as Downside Abbey, is a Benedictine monastery in England and the senior community of the English Benedictine Congregation. One of its main apostolates is the Downside School, for the education of children aged eleven to eighteen. Alumni of the school are known as Old Gregorians.

Both the abbey and the school are located at Stratton-on-the-Fosse between Westfield and Shepton Mallet in Somerset, South West England.

Downside Abbey has been designated by English Heritage as a grade I listed building. Sir Nikolaus Pevsner described the Abbey as "the most splendid demonstration of the renaissance of Roman Catholicism in England".

The community was founded in 1605 at Douai in Flanders, then part the Spanish Netherlands, under the patronage of St Gregory the Great, (who had sent the monk, St Augustine of Canterbury, as head of a mission to England in 597). The founder was the Welshman St John Roberts, who became the first prior and established the new community with other monks from Britain who had entered various monasteries within the Spanish Benedictine Congregation, notably the principal monastery at Valladolid. In 1611 Dom Philippe de Caverel, abbot of St. Vaast's Abbey at Arras, built and endowed a monastery for the community.


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