St. Mary's Abbey, York
![]() Ruins of St. Mary's Abbey in the Museum Gardens at York. |
The ruins of St. Mary's Abbey stand in the gardens of the Yorkshire Museum in the city of York, England. For 450 years, St. Mary's was the wealthiest and most powerful abbey in the North of England.
History
The abbey was a Benedictine refoundation by King William II of England (1088) of a 1055 monastery dedicated to Saint Olave to the west of York Minster.
St. Mary's was once the largest and richest Benedictine establishment in the north of England and the abbots were famously decadent. The abbey featured heavily in the early medieval ballads of Robin Hood, with the abbot usually as Robin Hood's nemesis.
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In 1132, a party of reform-minded monks left to establish the Cistercian monastery of Fountains Abbey. The abbey was destroyed during the Dissolution of the Monasteries under Henry VIII around 1540.
What to See
Today, the picturesque ruins of the abbey's north and west walls stand in the Museum Gardens and are often used as the setting for the York Mystery Plays. The plan of the rest of the monastic complex is laid out in the surrounding grass.
Other remains of abbey buildings include the Pilgrims' Hospitium, the West Gate and the 14th-century timber-framed Abbot's House (now called the King's Manor).
Excavated finds and architectural features, particularly relating to the chapter and warming houses, are displayed in the nearby Yorkshire Museum.
Location Map
Location map and satellite view of St. Mary's Abbey. Using the buttons on the left, zoom in for a closer look or zoom out to get your bearings. Click and drag the map to move around. You can explore all of York from space on our York Satellite Map.
- Wikipedia, accessed March 2006.
- Personal visit (May 2006).
- Britannia article












