The name ultimately comes from the Medieval Latinmonasterium, denoting the historical presence of an abbey or monastery; such names are common in England and indeed throughout Europe.
Minster itself originally started as a monastic settlement in 670 AD. The buildings are still used as nunneries today.[2] The first abbey in the village was founded by St Domneva, a widowed noblewoman, whose daughter St Mildred, is taken as the first abbess. The tradition is that Domneva was granted as much land as a hind could run over in a day, the hind remains the village emblem, see also Kentish Royal Legend. The boundary defined by the hind was known as Cursus Cerve or St Mildred’s Lynch.[5] The abbey was extinguished by Viking raiding. The next abbess after St Mildred was St Edburga daughter of King Centwine of the West Saxons.[6]
The third known abbess was Sigeburh, who was active[7] around 762 AD and is known from the Secganhagiography and from Royal charters.[8] In 761AD Offa, king of the Mercians, granted Sigeburh a toll-exemption which king Æthelbald had previously granted to AbbessMildrith. Again in about 763 ADEadberht II, king of Kent, granted the remission of toll on two ships at Sarre and on a third at Fordwich.[9] It has been stated that in gaining these privileges, she may have been taking advantage of Æthelbald's political weakness.[10]
Vikings attacked the surrounding area in 850 AD.[11]
The parish church of St Mary-the-Virgin is largely Norman but with significant traces of earlier work, the problems of which are unresolved. The nave is impressive with five bays, and the crossing has an ancient chalk block vaulting. The chancel is Early English with later flying buttresses intended to halt the very obvious spread of the upper walls. There is a fine set of misericords reliably dated around 1400. The tower has a curious turret at its southeast corner that is locally referred to as a Saxon watch tower but is built at least partly from Caen stone; it may be that it dates from the time of the conquest but is built in an antique style sometimes called Saxo-Norman. A doorway in the turret opens out some two metres above the present roof line.
The 1876 Ordnance Survey Great Britain County Series map[12] shows a Methodist (Wesleyan) chapel in St Mildred's Road; on the 1898 OS map[13] it has become Roman Catholic and been renamed "St Mildred's R.C. chapel", also being referred to as "St Mildred's church and presbytery". It later closed but as permission to demolish it and build houses on the site was denied in 2010,[14] it was converted into a private residence.[15]
Twentieth century
Minster Abbey is a house incorporating remains of the Anglo-Saxon abbey and alleged to be the oldest continuously inhabited house in England. It now houses the village's third religious community, a priory of Roman CatholicBenedictine sisters that is a daughter community of St. Walburg, Eichstätt in Bavaria. It was settled in 1937 by refugees fleeing Nazi Germany and continues to flourish as an international community.[16] The Priory has the care of a relic of St Mildred that had been in the care of a church in Deventer in the Netherlands since the Reformation.[17]
Landscape
Generally a flat landscape, the area's main features include marshes, farms and rivers. Thanet District Council has, however, assessed Minster Marshes, south of the village, as being unstable,[18] and some areas of Minster, particularly in the south of the village, have suffered from flooding.[19]
Land reclamation has had a strong history in Minster and Monkton, where the original reclamation was done by the monks themselves.[20]
Education
The Primary School is called "Minster Church of England Primary School", which caters for the village's population.[21] As of 2022, there are 383 pupils attending the school.[22]
Minster has a war memorial dedicated to those lost in World War I and World War II and this is located in St Mary's church.
In 2013, Minster hosted a memorial for Jean de Selys Longchamps, a Belgian fighter pilot who is buried in Minster cemetery. This event was hosted by Minster & Monkton Royal British Legion in conjunction with Minster Parish Council and was attended by such dignitaries as The Lord Lieutenant of Kent and the Chief of the Belgian Air Defense.[citation needed]
Richard Culmer, the infamous Puritan minister known locally as Blue Dick Culmer, was presented to the living but the people rejected him and his name - to this day - is still omitted from the role of incumbents in the church porch.[23]
^Brayley, E.W. (1817). Delineations Historical and Topographical, of the Isle of Thanet and the Cinque Ports. Vol. 1. London, England: Sherwood, Neely, and Jones. pp. 1–192.: 15
^Charters of the St Augustine’s Abbey, Canterbury, and Minster-in-Thanet, ed. S. E. Kelly, Anglo-Saxon Charters 4 (Oxford: Published for The British Academy by Oxford University Press, 1995), p. 179.
^Johannes Hoops, Reallexikon der germanischen Altertumskunde, Vol. 24 (Walter de Gruyter, 1968) page 298.