It wasn't hard to find a place in a religious house.
The religious houses were turned over as meeting places for the political clubs.
It was the private religious house attached to the castle.
The first recorded reference to a religious house here, however, is in a charter of 1185.
Presumably most of his work was for local churches and religious houses.
In spite of this great growth, individual religious houses were not huge.
Like her mother, she was a patron of religious houses.
As a result of this, many religious houses were in 1539 surrendered to the king.
The series was broken up in 1806, when the religious houses were suppressed.
This religious house was used for various purposes, until its abandonment around 1700.