Temple Newsam Preceptory
Has been described as a Questionable Fortified Ecclesiastical site
There are no visible remains
Name | Temple Newsam Preceptory |
Alternative Names | Temple Newsham; Temple Thorpe Farm |
Historic Country | Yorkshire |
Modern Authority | Leeds |
1974 Authority | West Yorkshire |
Civil Parish | Leeds |
A preceptory of the Knights Templars was founded at Temple Newsam before 1181, and dissolved 1308-12. It has been suggested that its site was not where the present building stands, but traditionally about a mile away to the N.E., or alternatively nearer the River Aire. Temple Newsam, however, probably occupies the site of the original buildings, and it is possible that some of the C12 foundations are incorporated in the north wing. No part of the present house is earlier than 1544, but it is probable that substantial buildings existed prior to that date. It was added to in 1620. Now maintained by Leeds Corporation as a museum. (Knowles and Hadock, 1971; Kitson and Pawson, 1927: Bogg, 1902). (PastScape)
The Manor of Newsam ('new houses') is first recorded in the Domesday Book in 1086. In 1155 it became a property of the Knights Templar, the military - religious order who guarded the pilgrim routes to Jerusalem. Their farmstead, excavated in 1991, was about half a mile to the south of the present house, close to the river Aire. After the order's suppression the property eventually passed to the Darcy family and the first person to build the new house on this site in c. 1500 was Thomas Lord Darcy, a courtier, mercenary and crony of Cardinal Wolsey. This was a spectacular four-sided courtyard house of which only the west wing survives as the central block of the building we see today. (Leeds City Council, 2004)
Site of Knights Templar Preceptory. Excavated between Autumn 1989 and Dec- 1990 after the initial evaluation. A cruciform aisled barn, pit containing wooden barrels, other structures and the surrounding moat ditch were excavated. Minor additional work in 1991 found that the area immediately north of the chapel was disturbed by recent animal burials. Three stone-lined pits were discovered
(NMR Excavation Index)
The preceptory, founded I 128-54, had fallen into ruin by 1347, and the course of Colton Beck had been altered to flow through the remains of the second building. The stream could have been diverted to power a mill or to feed a moat: a farm with a mill nearby is attested in the area in 1554, and a moated farmhouse and mill in the 17th century. (Med. Arch. 1990)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SE353309 |
Latitude | 53.7736892700195 |
Longitude | -1.46695995330811 |
Eastings | 435300 |
Northings | 430900 |