Winnold House
Winnold House, formerly the Benedictine Priory of St Winwaloe, is a country house in the parish of Wereham in Norfolk, England. The house is constructed from the remaining fragments of a former Benedictine priory. The priory was founded in 1199 and was dissolved in 1321. It was demolished in 1539, and the surviving fragments were incorporated into a house sometime in the 17th century; it was rebuilt in the mid-19th century. It is a Grade II* listed building.
History
The St Winwaloe's Priory was founded by the earls of Clare during the reign of Richard I in the late twelfth century. It was dedicated to Winwaloe, a Breton saint who flourished about 550 CE, and whose body was enshrined in the Abbey of St Salvius and St Winwaloe, Monsterol in the diocese of Amiens in France. It was an alien priory of Monsterol.The earliest extant deed of the priory is one of 1199, whereby L., prior of St Winwaloe, with the consent and advice of his brother, Remigius, abbot of Monsterol, granted a toft and eleven acres to Robert de Stradesete. In 1270, there was an exchange of lands in Wereham between the abbot and convent of Wereham and the abbot and convent of St Salvin's of Monsterol, acting on behalf of the priory of St Winwaloe. At the time, the priory held lands in three Norfolk parishes, with the annual value of £7.
In 1321, the abbot and convent of Monsterol sold the priory to Hugh Scarlet of Lincoln, who conveyed it to Elizabeth de Clare, the foundress of Clare College, Cambridge. In 1336 she conveyed the manor and lands of the priory to the abbot and convent of West Dereham on the condition that he would find a chaplain to say daily mass in the chapel of St Winwaloe for the souls of Gilbert, earl of Clare, and of Elizabeth and her ancestors and heirs forever. Ten years later, Elizabeth granted the custody of the priory to her friend, John de Brauncestre.
At the dissolution of the manor of Winwaloe, late belonging to the abbey of Wereham, came to the crown, and was granted to Thomas Guybon and William Mynn.
A large fair was held on St Winnold's Day ; the fair moved to Downham Market in 1798.