Pill Priory, Milford Haven, Pembrokeshire
Recording, geophysical survey and a watching brief undertaken at Pill
Priory, a Tironian house founded near Milford Haven in the late 12th century,
has considerably increased our knowledge of a little understood site.
Although the priory, a daughter house of St Dogmaels Abbey, appears to
have been of moderate size it nevertheless had a fully-developed conventual
plan, based around a cruciform church.
Only the chancel arch and part of the south transept now survive; however,
the north transept north wall was revealed during sewage-pipe excavation
and the nave and chancel wall-lines, a detached building, possibly an
infirmary, have been detected as geophysical anomalies.
The conventual buildings were selectively adapted as domestic accommodation
through the 16th century - 19th century, but elements of the medieval
fabric still survive.
The sewage pipe excavation revealed 31 graves, all related to the priory
and contained well-preserved human skeletal remains in varying degrees
of completeness, but had undergone later disturbance and only one had
any evidence of a coffin.
Project contact: Ken Murphy
Ludlow N 2003 ‘Pill Priory, 1996-1998: Recent Work
at a Tironian House in Pembrokeshire’, Medieval Archaeology 46
The project was grant aided by Cadw: Welsh Historic Monuments
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