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Chester Carmelite Friary

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Friary in Chester, England

Chester Carmelite Friary, otherwise Chester Whitefriars, was a friary in the city of Chester in Cheshire, England. The Carmelites were present in Chester from the late 1270s and by the mid-14th century were established as a well-regarded community. Their church and graveyard were popular for burials of the well-to-do and the friary was often mentioned in Chester wills. Their church steeple when rebuilt in 1495 became a useful landmark for ships. The friary was dissolved in 1538. There are no surviving buildings but the street name Whitefriars preserves the memory of the community.

References

  1. British History Online: A P Baggs, Ann J Kettle, S J Lander, A T Thacker and David Wardle, "Friaries: The Carmelites of Chester", in A History of the County of Chester: Volume 3, ed. C R Elrington and B E Harris (London, 1980), pp. 176-178
  2. Heritage Gateway: Historic England Research Records - Chester Whitefriars
Monasteries in Cheshire
Augustinian
Benedictine
Brothers of Penitence
Carmelite
Cistercian
Dominican
Franciscan
Savigniac
Independent
or
Unknown
  • Chester, St Michael's Monastery
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53°11′19.75″N 2°53′35.61″W / 53.1888194°N 2.8932250°W / 53.1888194; -2.8932250


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