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Bearpark Priors House

Also known as, or recorded in historical documents as;
Beaurepaire, Bear Park

In the civil parish of Bearpark.
In the historic county of Durham.
Modern Authority of Durham.
1974 county of County Durham.
Medieval County of County Palatinate of Durham.

OS Map Grid Reference: NZ24284387
Latitude 54.78946° Longitude -1.62369°

Bearpark Priors House has been described as a certain Palace.

There are masonry ruins/remnants remains.

This site is a scheduled monument protected by law.

Description

The remains of the Prior's House and chapel of Beaurepaire or Bear Park, built by Prior Bertram (1244-58), later destroyed by the Scots and rebuilt, C.1346, by Prior Fosser. Whilst the Prior and Bishop of Durham had to lived at close quarters within the city, the Bishop had his favourite country seat at Bishop Auckland and the Prior his rather nearer home here at Beaurepaire; both houses were the centres of large hunting parks, that at Beaurepaire of 1300 acres. Beau Repaire is French for beautiful retreat and the manor house here was used as a retreat for the priors and monk of Durham Cathedral. It could house up to 40 monks at any one time. It was built in the mid 13th century (1244-58). Beaurepaire seems to have begun as a retirement home built buy Prior Bertram de Middleton (1244-1258), and was considerable extended over the next fifty years or so. It suffered badly during Scottish attacks culminating in the nearby Battle of Neville's Cross in 1346 'Only the shattered and roofless shell of the chapel is now standing, with dilapidated remains of some adjacent buildings'. The building was restored and extended again by Prior Fossour (1341-1374) to develop into a rest home for the monks of Durham, as did Finchale Priory to the north of the city, although the Prior continued to use it (along with his manor house at Pittington) as a favoured country residence until the Dissolution; Prior Hugh de Whitehead, the last Prior, is known to have carried out considerable alterations. The buildings continued in use as an occasional residence of the early deans of Durham, until during the Civil War the Scots inflicted further damage in the 1640s, after which most of them lay in ruin. Fortunately the site attracted antiquarian attention and a series of informative drawings (notably those of Grimm) provides much information on buildings lost to decay and clearance in the 19th century. Old prints chronicle the gradual loss of the ruins. An 1827 print by Davison shows only the south gable of the hall and south wall of the chapel standing, and an 1846 drawing by Billings only the hall gable, shown again in sketches by Blair dated 1891; this finally fell in a storm during the autumn of 1893. The few fragments that survived attracted little attention, until major excavations in the 1980s and consolidation work exposed many lower walls. Inevitably the freely-accessible site is now beginning to suffer from the attentions of vandals. All that survives now are some ruined walls and a number of grass-covered mounds. The site is a Scheduled Ancient Monument protected by law. (Durham HER)
Comments

Technically should not be in the Gatehouse gazetteer, which includes only royal and bishops palaces. Included because comes up as a palace on a search of the Durham HER. Hutchinson writes was part of the possessions of the bishop before being obtained by Prior Bertram, but with no suggestion of it being a residential site. This is a particular interesting example of a large magnates house, with an additional function as a place of retirement for Durham monks.
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Sources of information, references and further reading
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Suggestions for finding online and/or hard copies of bibliographical sources can be seen at this link.
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This record last updated 26/07/2017 09:20:09

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