Bottesford Preceptory
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (July 2007) |
| The introduction to this article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject. Please help improve the article with a good introductory style. |
Bottesford Preceptory, Lincolnshire was sited just to the south of Scunthorpe, in Lindsey. It is now lost in the new suburb at Grid reference SE898069. It lay in a small valley in the Lincolnshire limestone ridge called the Lincoln Cliff.
The present Bottesford Manor house is believed to have been the gatehouse to the preceptory. Templars Bath a spring in the field behind Bottesford manor is now hardly discernible, being simply a gathering of stones. The bath has been attributed to the Romans but others believe it was a dipping bath or well used by the Templar workers. It was in previous times used as a ‘magic’ health-giving spring. Travellers would drink its waters and leave cloth offerings (a ‘rag well’). This healing property was probably associated with the fact that a Templar hospital stood on or near the site. The only distinctive Templar artefact found here was an ancient gravestone with a large cross upon it. It was covering a body buried in a grave that had been placed at the angle formed by the north wall of the chancel and the east wall of the north transept, though this description does not indicate a normal Templar round church.
An inadequate dig was made in 1983 on the Templar fields nearby. Little was found and the land was backfilled. CW U.T.
[Bottesford Preceptory Church:[1]
[Bottesford Church, Earls of Rutland Chapel:[2]
[Bottesford Church Rutland Tomb:[3]

