{{Short description|Monastic foundation in Warwickshire, England}} {{Use dmy dates|date=September 2019}} '''Warmington Priory''' was a [[Benedictine]] priory or more probably a cell in [[Warmington, Warwickshire|Warmington]], [[Warwickshire]], England. It was apparently founded by the monks of [[Préaux Abbey]] in Normandy after [[Henry de Newburgh]], [[earl of Warwick]], gave them his lands in Warmington in the reign of [[Henry I of England]]. Whatever its initial status, by the 14th century it was a cell of [[Toft Monks Priory]] in Norfolk, which similarly belonged to Préaux Abbey. After the dissolution of the [[alien priories]] by [[Henry V of England|Henry V]] it was granted in 1428 to the Carthusians of [[Witham Charterhouse]] in Somerset.<ref>[https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/warks/vol2/pp131-132 Victoria County History of Warwick: Alien houses – Priory of Warmington]</ref><ref>[http://www.warmingtonheritage.com/publications/research-projects/ Warmington Heritage Research Projects] – includes [[William Dugdale]]'s entry on Warmington Priory from his ''Antiquities of Warwickshire''</ref>
==References== {{Reflist}}
{{coord missing|Warwickshire}}
{{Monasteries in Warwickshire |state=expanded}}
[[Category:Monasteries in Warwickshire]] [[Category:Benedictine monasteries in England]] [[Category:Alien priories in England]]
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