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A priory is a monastery or monastic dependency whose superior is entitled prior.
Monastic unit The Dominicans, Augustinian Hermits, Carthusians, Carmelites, Servites and Brothers of Mercy call all their monasteries priories. The Benedictines and their offshoots, the Premonstratensians, and the military orders distinguish between conventual and simple or obedientiary priories. Conventual priories are those autonomous houses which have no abbots, either because the canonically required number of twelve monks has not yet been reached or for some other reason. The Congregation of Cluny had many conventual priories. There were likewise many conventual priories in Germany and Italy during the Middle Ages, and in England all monasteries attached to cathedral churches were known as cathedral priories. Nearly all the monasteries of the famous Maurist Congregation in France (seventeenth and eighteenth centuries) were called priories. At present the Benedictine Order has twenty-seven conventual priories. Simple or obedientiary priories are dependencies of abbeys. Their superior, who is subject to the abbot in everything, is called simple or obedientiary prior. Priories can be divided into two types, regular and alien. A regular priory is a monastery governed by a prior or prioress, usually Catholic. An alien priory is a priory which is dependent on a foreign mother house, and an alien priory cell was a residence of two or three monks dependent on a foreign mother house but sent to exploit a distant estate. Alien priory cells were suppressed in 1414. Originally, a priory is a secondary house created by an existing abbey, but this distinction fell out of use in late medieval times. Priories were generally organized as follows: The prior was the head of the priory, and although he oversaw most aspects of the running of the priory, many specific supervisory positions existed to help him manage the priory. The sub prior was essentially a deputy prior and the second in command. There could be various other lower, functional positions, depending on the size and activities of the priory, such as:
The prior was elected by a majority vote of the monks. At election times the votes were all counted equally from the youngest novice up to the sub prior. Often the local bishop would endorse a candidate; however, the election was left entirely up to the monks. Ken Follet's historical novel The Pillars of the Earth provides the reader with an accurate (albeit fictional) representation of priory life in 12th-century England. The relationships between individual priory members, between neighboring priories, and between the priory and diocese are well documented. Other prior and priories In some abbeys, there also was a prior, but as the deputy of the Abbot. Other congregations may have independent priories that do not depend on an abbey, and may even have been founded independently. Furthermore, a priory (or priorate) can be part of a military order that is headed by a knight, styled prior but more often a warrior or administrator than a member, and usually not a clergyman (often the office is opened only to laymen). Priory Estate The Priory is also an area in Dudley, West Midlands. A Benedictine Priory was built in the town about 800 years ago but it has been in ruins since at least the 19th century. Priory Park was opened in the grounds of the ruins just before the Second World War and the Priory Housing Estate was built in the 1930s. The houses around the park, in roads like Gervase Drive and Woodland Avenue, and the south side of Priory Road, were built for owner occupiers, but most of the estate was built by the council to rehouse people from town centre slum clearances. The estate survives to this day and is part of the most deprived ward in Dudley - Castle and Priory, which also includes the Wren's Nest Estate and the area around the Castle Gate complex. In February 2006, Dudley Council announced plans to demolish up to 260 homes on the Priory Estate. If the plans go ahead, the area should be completely redeveloped with both private and council-owned properties by about 2012. See also | ||||||||
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