Abbey Clock - Shrewsbury, Shropshire, UK.
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member veritas vita
N 52° 42.452 W 002° 44.656
30U E 517278 N 5839767
The Abbey was founded as a Benedictine Monastery. The Abbey Clock offset on the bell tower, has unusual markings - 1 to 8 are Roman Numerals, 9 o-Clock is 'if' 10 simply 'f', 11 'fi' and 12 'fii' The Church is located in Shrewsbury, Shropshire, UK.
Waymark Code: WMQFCE
Location: West Midlands, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 02/21/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member dreamhummie
Views: 1

Christian worship has taken place at this location for over a thousand years. The Abbey Church of Saint Peter & Saint Paul, was constructed at the site of a small wooden Anglo Saxon Church in 1083.

The Abbey Clock is mounted offset on the West face of the Bell tower, Just to the left of a 14th Century stained glass window.
The clock is unusual in that the traditional 'X' used on Roman numeral dials is replaced by an 'f' which probably makes the clock over 150 years old.
The figures & Hour & Minute hands on the clock face are painted Gold and set against the stonework of the tower.
The single face chiming clock, looks small against the massive tower but is at least five feet across.

The Abbey Church is the Parish church of Holy Cross, Shrewsbury in the Dioceses of Litchfield

Shrewsbury is located in the landlocked county of Shropshire on the border of the Welsh Marches of Mid & North Wales, & to the East is surrounded by the Counties of Cheshire, Staffordshire, Herefordshire & Worcestershire.

Detailed history of the Abbey;
"The site of Shrewsbury Abbey is a very ancient one. A wooden Saxon church of St. Peter, possibly a small monastery, was recorded here in the Domeday Survey. St. Wulfstan, the Bishop of Worcester (from 1062), used to stop there to pray on his journeys between Chester and his own Sées.

The Benedictine Abbey of today, however, is a post-Conquest foundation, dedicated to St. Peter and St. Paul. It was in 1083 that the priest of St. Peter's, returning from a pilgrimage to Rome, persuaded Roger de Montgomery, the newly appointed Earl of Shrewsbury, to raise the already existing church into a grand abbey. Roger had two monks brought from his lands in Sées (Normandy) to direct the building arrangements and monastic life was established four years later. Fulchered, the first Abbot, also came from Sées. The founder himself took the vows in his Abbey in 1094, three days before his death.

Though the Abbey flourished, during the early twelfth century, the monks of Shrewsbury apparently felt their monastery incomplete for the lack of the relics of a special patron to honour and bring glory to the name of God - not to mention lucrative offerings from vast hoards of pilgrims. The Prior, Robert Pennant, therefore took it upon himself to find a suitable candidate whose remains he might appropriate for his Abbey Church. With his Abbot's blessing, he led an expedition into Wales where, in 1138, he acquired the bones of St. Gwenfrewi from the inhabitants of Gwytherin in Gwynedd. Known as St. Winifred to the English, this lady was brought back to Shrewsbury and enshrined, probably behind the high altar, with great ceremony. Her holiness did indeed make the Abbey a major pilgrimage centre, bringing honour and prestige to its Abbots.

The Medieval Abbots of Shrewsbury were some of the most significant ecclesiastics in the Country. They were often drawn into political life because of their great diplomatic and administrative skills. They would be called upon to inspect the local militia and survey the town's castle; they served as Justices of the Peace and as gaolers for important hostages; and, from the 13th century, they sat in Parliament." Text Source & More Info; (visit link)

Address:
Shrewsbury Abbey, Abbey Foregate, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, SY2 6B5
Status: Working

Display: Mounted

Year built: Not listed

Web link to additional info: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
Photo of clock.
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veritas vita visited Abbey Clock - Shrewsbury, Shropshire, UK. 02/22/2016 veritas vita visited it