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Reading Abbey Today: 20th Century Research

In 1901 the first book on the Abbey was published, written by Dr Jamieson Hurry. His interest inspired the commissioning of paintings of important events in the history of the monastery and the erection of a memorial to Henry I in the Forbury Gardens. Work was periodically carried out on the Abbey Ruins to restore their stability and to prevent further deterioration and they were given the legal protection of being scheduled as an ancient monument in 1914. Around the time of the 8OOth anniversary of the Abbey there was much local interest with a pageant on the story of Reading and the issuing of many commemorative medallions with the design based on the Abbey seal.

Dr Hurry's work has been carried further by staff at Reading University starting in the 1960s. Dr Slade excavated in the Cloister area, the east end of the Church, the Mill and the Stables, and Dr Kemp worked on manuscripts from the Abbey. The Trust for Wessex Archaeology continued excavations, revealing more of the Cloister and Stables, the wooden structures of the Abbey Wharf and the layout of the perimeter wall. Funding for excavation work has come most generously from grants from central government, Reading Borough Council, Berkshire County Council and developers and private industry. In contrast to the Victorian digging these excavations have been carried out with meticulous recording, drawing and photography of the successive layers uncovered and removed as investigation progressed, each peeled away as if reading the pages of a book. And all the objects found were plotted, marked and bagged to be kept for future study: pottery fragments, oyster shells, animal bones, coins, window glass.

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Archaeological excavation at the abbey
Photograph showing a tiled area of the cloister uncovered by by C.F.Slade during his excavations from 1964-67.
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