Witham Charterhouse

The charterhouse was founded by Henry II in his Royal Forest of Selwood, as part of his penance for the murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket of Canterbury and was established at Witham Friary, Somerset, in 1178/1179 by a founding party led by a monk called Narbert from the Grande Chartreuse.

[1] The house was suppressed as part of the dissolution of the monasteries on 15 March 1539.

Later work in 1965 and 1968 revealed further buildings, two of which were interpreted as the chapter house and possibly a church.

[2] The site of the charterhouse is marked by extensive rectilinear earthworks, cut by a railway line, and some worked stone can still be seen in buildings in the village of Witham Friary.

The remains of the original monastic fishponds still survive to the east of the site.

Site of the cloisters