Calder Abbey in Cumbria was a Savigniac monastery founded in 1135 by Ranulph de Gernon, 2nd Earl of Chester and moved to this site following a refoundation in 1142. Boundaries and divisions Cumbria is neighboured by Northumberland, County Durham, North Yorkshire, Lancashire, and the Lieutenancy The Catholic Congregation of Savigny ( Savigniac Order) started in the Abbey of Savigny, situated in northern France, on the confines of Normandy Ranulf IV, also known as Sir Ranulph de Meschines or Ranulph de Gernon inherited his palatine earldom in 1128 aged 28 upon the death of his father who It became Cistercian in 1148. The village nearby is Calder Bridge.
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Raids by the Scots seem to have been responsible for the difficult beginnings of the abbey and for the fact that it never attained any great size or wealth. In 1535, the an unfavourable report was made against the abbey and it's community by the King's commissioners (though their views are often suspected to be biased and dubiously motivated). The abbey was surrendered in 1536 by the last abbot, Richard Ponsonby. At this time, the only recorded relic in the monastery's possession was that of a girdle claimed to have belonged to the Virgin Mary!
Monk's Bridge, as it is still called, on Cold Fell, built by the monks of Calder, is the oldest packhorse bridge in Cumbria; it spans Friar Gill. This article is about the item of clothing In the Scots language, girdle refers to a cooking griddle. A packhorse bridge is a Bridge intended to carry Packhorses ( Horses loaded with sidebags or Panniers across a River or Stream [1]
Much of the cloister buildings remain either incorporated into Calder Abbey House, now a largely early-nineteenth century structure that is still a private residence,[2] or in adjoining ruins, such as the chapter house. A cloister (from Latin claustrum) is a part of Cathedral, Monastic and Abbey architecture A chapter house is a building or room attached to a Cathedral or Collegiate church in which meetings are held The church was allowed to fall into decay and much of it still remains as a picturesque ruin, no doubt retained by early residents of the newly formed mansion as an ornamental feature.
Calder Abbey at cistercians.shef.ac.uk