Chipley Priory was a small Augustine religious house, dedicated to the Blessed Virgin, located about 1miles north-west of the village of Poslingford in the English county of Suffolk.[1] [2] The date of its foundation is unknown and the first references to it occur in 1235. The priory never became a major house – a taxation roll from 1291 shows its income at less than £5 per annum – and by 1455 the buildings were ruins. By 1468 the Bishop of Norwich allowed the lands to be annexed by the College at Stoke-next-Clare.
The site is occupied by a 17th-century farmhouse which incorporates some medieval building material believed to come from the priory buildings.[3] The priory church is believed to have been destroyed in 1818 and human remains and other artifacts have been recovered from the site, with a stone coffin and bell kept at Poslingford Church.
A plaque erected on the site in 1990 by the Clopton Family Association, lists information about the occupants, burials and priors of the priory.