Date (AD) |
Abbey Buildings |
Abbey Events |
Historical Events |
43 |
|
|
Roman Invasion of Britain |
63 |
Traditional Building of The Old Church |
Possible foundation of the first Christian community at Glastonbury by Joseph of
Arimathea |
|
410 |
|
|
Romans leave Britain |
443 |
|
Probable Visit of St. Patrick |
|
449 |
|
|
Coming of the Angles, Saxons and Jutes to Britain |
540 |
|
Carbon date for the occupation levels on Glastonbury Tor |
|
542 |
|
|
Supposed Death of King Arthur |
600 |
Carbon date for the Vallum Monasterii |
|
|
664 |
|
|
The Synod of Whitby |
712 |
First stone church built by King Ine |
|
|
836 |
|
|
Viking raids in Southwest |
843 |
|
|
King Alfred burns the cakes at Athelney |
940 |
Ine's church is lengthened by Dunstan who also builds the Cloisters |
Dunstan is Abbot |
|
967 |
|
King Edmund is buried in the Abbey |
|
963 to 973 |
|
|
Dunstan is made Archbishop of Canterbury, his reforms culminate in the Regularis Concordia adopted at the Council of Winchester |
975 |
|
King Edgar the Peaceable is buried in the Abbey |
|
988 |
|
|
Dunstan dies and is buried in Canterbury Cathedral |
1066 |
|
|
Battle of Hastings |
1077 |
Stone church is demolished and replaced by a larger Norman church by Abbot Thurstin |
Abbot Thurstin is dismissed after his soldiers kill monks by the High Altar |
|
1096 |
|
|
First Crusade to the Holy Land |
1100 to 1118 |
Abbot Herlewin demolishes the Norman church and builds another on a grander scale |
Abbot Herlewin |
|
1125 |
The Cloisters, Bell Tower, Chapter House, Refectory, Infirmary, Outer Gate, Brewery and Stables are built |
Abbot Henry of Blois William of Malmesbury completes his history of the Abbey, "De Antiquitate Glastonie Ecclesie" |
Martydom of Thomas a Becket at Canterbury |
1184 |
Great fire destroys the Abbey including the Old Church |
|
|
1186 |
The Lady Chapel is consecrated on the site of the Old Church |
King Henry II puts his chancellor, Ralph Fitzstephen in charge of rebuilding the monastery |
|
1189 |
Work starts on building the East end of the Great Church |
|
Third Crusade to the Holy Land led by King Richard I; Richard the Lionhearted |
1191 |
|
King Arthur and Guinevere's tombs found in the cemetery |
|
1195 |
|
Start of a 24 year feud between the Abbey and the Bishop of Bath and Wells |
|
1213 |
The Great Church is consecrated |
|
|
1215 |
|
|
King John signs the Magna Carta |
1274 to 1291 |
The Choir of the Great Church is completed, the Galilee Chapel and West end of the Nave are built |
Abbot John of Taunton Visit to the Abbey by King Edward I and Queen Eleanor to attend reburial of King Arthur's bones in front of the High Altar |
|
1323 to 1331 |
Lodgings for 8 secular priests are built to the North of the Lady Chapel |
Abbot Adam of Sodbury |
|
1337 |
|
|
The start of the 100 Years War between England and France |
1342 to 1348 |
The Choir of the Great Church is extended by two bays |
Abbot Walter of Monington |
The Black Death kills one third of the population of England |
1375 to 1415 |
The Cloisters are rebuilt |
Abbot John Chinnock The Archbishop of Canterbury visits the Abbey and notes the dissolute life of the monks |
Chaucer writes "The Canterbury Tales" The Battle of Agincourt |
1420 to 1456 |
The Abbot's Kitchen is built, as are the Bishop's Quarters and the wall around the Abbey precinct |
Abbot Nicholas Frome |
Accused of being a witch, Joan of Arc is burned at the stake |
1455 to 1492 |
|
Abbot John Selwood rebuilds the Parish Church of St. John the Baptist and the Pilgrim Inn |
The Wars of the Roses Columbus discovers the West Indies |
1493 to 1524 |
St. Patrick's Almshouses are built north of the Lady Chapel St. Joseph's Chapel is created in the crypt of the Lady Chapel Edgar Chapel and Loretto Chapel are built |
Abbot Richard Beere King Henry VII visits the Abbey |
Martin Luther challenges the sale of indulgences, an act seen as the start of the Reformation |
1534 to 1538 |
|
Abbot Richard Whiting Abbot Whiting signs the Act of Supremacy |
Act of Supremacy is passed First Act of Supression is passed The Second Act of Supression is passed |
1539 |
The Dissolution of Glastonbury Abbey |
|
|
1539 |
The Abbey buildings are ransacked and all valuables sold or removed to the King's treasury |
Abbot Whiting is hung on Glastonbury Tor |
|
1560 |
|
A colony of weavers is established on the Abbey site |
|
1908 |
Consolidation and repair of the ruined Abbey begins |
The Abbey ruins are purchased by the Bath and Wells Diocesan Trust |
|