ruins of Bolton Abbey or Bolton Priory in Wharfedale in the yorkshire dales


the ruined remains of Bolton Abbey priory in the Wharfedale Valley alongside the river Wharfe in the Yorkshire Dales National Park England Great Britain UK. Bolton Abbey is a ruined 12th-century priory in North Yorkshire, England. It gives its name to the parish of Bolton Abbey. Bolton Abbey was founded in 1151 by the Augustinian order, on the banks of the River Wharfe. The nave of the abbey church was in use as a parish church from about 1170 onwards, and survived the Dissolution of the Monasteries. The River Wharfe at Bolton Abbey The River Wharfe at Bolton Abbey Building work was still going on at the abbey when the Dissolution of the Monasteries resulted in the termination of the priory in 1539. The east end remains in ruins. A tower, begun in 1520, was left half-standing, and its base was later given a bell-turret and converted into an entrance porch. Most of the remaining church is in the Gothic style of architecture, but more work was done in the Victorian era, including windows by August Pugin. Today the Bolton Abbey Estate belongs to the Dukes of Devonshire. The Embsay & Bolton Abbey Steam Railway terminates at Bolton Abbey. The remains of the priory can still be seen, and the setting is immortalised in a painting by Edwin Landseer. Bolton Abbey was also featured in Alan Bennett's BBC television play, A Day Out (1972) as the destination of a Halifax cycling club's 'day out'. The album Faith by The Cure features a foggy picture of the abbey on the front cover.


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Photo credit: © Michael Sayles / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
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