St Leonard's Nunnery Explained

St. Leonards Nunnery was a house of Augustininian canonesses at Perth, Scotland, founded in the 13th century.[1] [2] After King Edward I of England's foray in Scotland in 1296, the Prioress swore fealty to him. The convent was annexed to the Carthusian Monastery at Perth by 1434 and was suppressed in 1438. The nunnery stood near today's Craigie Cross.

Elizabeth Dunbar, daughter of George I, Earl of March, was a prioress of the convent in the 14th-15th century.[3]

References

56.3903°N -3.4393°W

Notes and References

  1. Book: Ian B. . Cowan . David E. . Easson . Medieval Religious Houses Scotland . Longman . London . 1976 . 2nd . 0-582-12069-1 . 151.
  2. http://canmore.rcahms.gov.uk/en/site/28432/details/perth+priory+chapel+and+hospital+of+st+leonard/ "St. Leonards"
  3. http://www.electricscotland.com/history/perth/vol1chapter4.htm "Perth, the Ancient Capital of Scotland, Chapter IV"