"' The Almonry Museum and Heritage Centre "'is a museum in Evesham in Worcestershire, England.
12.
Also remaining from the Benedictine Evesham Abbey are two churches, a bell tower, a cloister arch and the Almonry.
13.
The gatehouse acted as an almonry for many years and this was always an important element of the Sisters'social programmes.
14.
Following the closure of the Abbey, The Almonry has served as an ale house, offices, tea rooms and a private home.
15.
The gatehouse, which seems to have replaced an earlier structure built with Adderton, served as the convent almonry for many years after its construction.
16.
The museum derives its name from the original use of the building as the almonry of the 14th-century Evesham Abbey The museum opened within this building in 1957.
17.
The abbey precinct also contained an almonry, where poor boys received a free education in a type of boarding school; a water mill; a dovecote; and a fishpond.
18.
Booth served as Sub-Dean of the Chapel Royal, Deputy Clerk of the Closet, Subalmoner of the Royal Almonry and former domestic chaplain to Queen Elizabeth ( 1976-1993 ).
19.
The earliest church of which there is now evidence was built in the middle of the 12th century, probably when the church and its possessions were granted by Abbot Walter to the almonry of Ramsey Abbey.
20.
Benedictine and Augustinian foundations probably had almonry schools, At the Cluniac Paisley Abbey, secular chaplains were employed as schoolmasters . and were usually located in urban centres, probably teaching grammar, as at Glasgow and Ayr.