Isleham Priory Church

The Chapel of St Margaret of Antioch, converted to a barn at a later date, is the only surviving building in the priory complex.

[1] The site also includes the buried foundations of other priory buildings, as well as the earthwork remains of a medieval agricultural complex to the north of the church.

[3] The chapel is 30 m (98 ft) in length and consists of a nave and chancel with an apsidal sanctuary at the east end.

In 1254 the monks moved to the sister cell at Linton in southern Cambridgeshire, although the site seems to have been used as a priory after that time.

[1][2] Due to the tensions of a French-owned monastery in England during the Hundred Years' War, the lands were seized by King Henry V in 1414 and granted to the Master and Fellows of Pembroke College, Cambridge in 1440.

Isleham Priory Church