Byland Abbey
Byland Abbey in the North York Moors National Park is one of the most important and least visited of the great Cistercian abbey ruins of the north of England, the remains of a wealthy medieval monastery whose once-magnificent church represented the largest Cistercian church in England at the time of its completion in the late twelfth century. The abbey was founded in 1177 and rapidly became one of the great houses of the Cistercian order in the north, its church and domestic buildings constructed on an ambitious scale that reflected both the order's wealth and the patronage of the powerful local lords who supported it.
The ruins of the abbey church retain enough of their fabric to convey a strong impression of the building's original grandeur. The west front, with its great rose window aperture above the main doorway, is the most impressive surviving element, a composition of early Gothic lancets and round-arched decorative elements that represents the transition from Romanesque to Gothic in late twelfth-century English church architecture. The floor of the church, paved in geometric encaustic tiles of exceptional quality, survives in significant areas and represents one of the finest examples of medieval floor tile work in any English monastic ruin.
Byland was the site of a significant and humiliating defeat in 1322 when a Scottish raiding force under Robert the Bruce routed the English army of Edward II who was using the abbey as a temporary residence. The Scots plundered the abbey following their victory, and the episode is both an important historical event and a reminder of how thoroughly the north of England was exposed to Scottish raiding throughout the early fourteenth century.
The village of Byland below the abbey provides a picturesque English rural context for the ruins, and the North York Moors landscape surrounding the valley offers excellent walking and further monastic ruins at Rievaulx and Ampleforth within easy reach.