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The following is a list of the monastic houses in East Sussex, England. Battle Abbey. Bayham Abbey. Beddingham Monastery. Hailsham Cell. Hastings Priory. Langney Priory.
Seacox Heath is a house in the village of Flimwell in East Sussex, England. It is owned by the Russian government, and is used as a weekend retreat by the staff of their embassy in London. It was built in 1871 to designs by the architects Richard Carpenter and William Slater.
Robin Bruce Lockhart, Half-way to Heaven: The Hidden Life of the Sublime Carthusians (London: Thames Methuen, 1985); Nancy Klein Maguire, An Infinity of Little Hours: Five Young Men and Their Trial of Faith in the Western World's Most Austere Monastic Order (roman à clef, = novel based on real-life stories) (New York: PublicAffairs Books 2006, a division of Perseus Publishing, ISBN hardback ...
South East England portal; Pages in category "Monasteries in East Sussex" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. ...
Ashburnham Place is an English country house, now used as a Christian conference and prayer centre, five miles west of Battle, East Sussex. It was one of the finest houses in the southeast of England in its heyday, but much of the structure was demolished in 1959, [ 1 ] and only a drastically reduced part of the building now remains standing.
Like many places in Sussex, increased pressure for farm productivity has come at the expense of much of its natural beauty. North of Isfield was a densely wooded area, but much of the ancient woodland has been cut down, including large parts of Park Wood, Owlsbury Wood, Grove Wood, Stroodland Woods, and Foxearth Wood (a bit further west). [ 9 ]