Longues Abbey

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Longues Abbey (French: Abbaye de Longues, Abbaye Sainte-Marie de Longues) is a former Benedictine monastery in Longues-sur-Mer, Calvados, Normandy, France. It was founded in 1168 by Hugh Wac, of a family that owned Rubercy and other lands in the Cotentin, and was generously supported by gifts from the English and Norman nobility, and from King Henry II.[1] The prominent families of Bacon of Molay and d'Argouges were particular benefactors of the abbey and several of them were buried there.[2]

Abbot's Lodging, from the south
Ruins of the abbey church

From 1526 the abbey was in the hands of commendatory abbots.[1] After a long period of decline, it was finally closed in 1781 under the last commendatory abbot, Emmanuel-Louis de Cugnac, bishop of Lectoure, when its revenues were given to the seminary at Bayeux.[1]

Numerous ruins and structures remain, which have been listed at various times as monuments historiques.[3]

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Further reading

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