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Allord School
Schola Dominostri
GNAllord.jpg
Location
Manstole
,
Enley

Information
TypeCommon boarding school
MottoLatin: Dominus glorificet
(May the Lord be glorified)
Established1405
AbbotThe Rt. Rev'd. Stephen Galbroom
HeadmasterThe Rev'd. Dr. Alaric de Reed
Dean of SchoolThe Rev'd. Dean Michael Rouder
Staffca. 80 masters
GenderBoys
Age10 to 19
Enrolmentca. 700
Colour(s)blue & white    
PublicationDominus Noster
Former pupilsOld Dominostrians
School SongCarmen Dominostrense

Allord School is a common school for boys in Manstole, Enley, Great Nortend. It is the school attached to Allord Abbey, a Benedictine monastery on the River Hame. The School was founded in 1405 to educate poor scholars for a future career in the Church. It is fully boarding, with an enrolment of approximately 700 boys. In keeping with its history as a school founded for the poor, 70 pupils are drawn from the surrounding county on academic scholarships. These commoners wear gowns and are known as gownmen. 14 additional gownmen attend on choral bursaries, singing in quire daily.

The rest of the pupils are known as freemen (likely a corruption of „feemen”), and are fee-paying pupils. Allord School charges up to £190 per annum, with three terms in a year. It is thus one of the most expensive schools in Great Nortend, and is a popular choice for the sons of royalty, peers and the gentry. Over half of the valedictorians in a given year matriculate at the University of Aldesey where Allhallowhall reserves up to half of its places for the „Old Dominostrians” of the school, and the rest for students from other Benedictine schools.

Name

Allord School was founded in 1405 by the newly crowned Charles I as the „Abbot and Common Scholars of the King's School at the Abbey of our Lord in the Forest” („Abbas et Plebeii Communii Scholæ Regis apud Abbatiam Domini nostri in Foresta”). This forest is the former Stole Forest, remnants of which include the royal Manstolewood hunting forest and Stole Park in Lendert-with-Cadell.

The aforementioned long name remains the formal name of the school; however, the shortened name „Allord School”, rendered in Latin as Schola Dominostri, is more commonly used. The portmanteaux „Allord” and „Dominoster” are the English and Latin names respectively of the small village which has grown up around the school and abbey.

Sport

Allord plays Green game, a sport generally only played at Allord School and by Old Dominostrians. This is played in the relevantly named „Green Term”, the Allord name for the short autumn Michaelmas term, named possibly for the new „greenmen”, i. e. freshmen, entering the School at that time. It is also sometimes known as Allord game. Stinning is played in the winter „Great Half”, and cricket in „Summer Half”. Other sports are also played or undertaken, such as athletics, rowing, racquets, closters (Closter game), hockey and tennis (Court game).

Houses

There are nine boarding houses at Allord School, each with its own housemaster. Gownmen's is reserved for the commoners. Freemen's houses, of which there are eight, are usually referred to by their housemaster rather than by the actual building's name, excepting Outhouse. The freemen's houses are presently called Wickman's, Michaelson's, Estfield's, Joblac's, Rosham's, Anotton's, Secbury's and Outhouse.

Boys live in their house, under the supervision of a housemaster and a matron. From the sixth two House Prefects are appointed per house. The House Captain, in charge of school sports and games, is elected by the boys of each house. Houses compete against each other in sport and games, and have traditions and customs of their own. Cadet service, which is compulsory at Allord, is organised by house.

Facilities

The interior of the school Swimming House.

The main buildings of Allord School are situated within the Abbey complex, extending out and along the High Street. Classrooms are scattered around buildings mainly dating from the 16th to 19th centuries. Daily chapel services of Mattins and Vespers are conducted in the school chapel dedicated and consecrated in 1643 after the monks complained of the pupils' behaviour in chapel, although divine service on Sundays and feasts is still conducted in the main Abbey church with the whole abbey community.

Allord School also has use of a number of ovals and fields for sports and games. There is a boathouse on the River Hame, from whence boys row down to the Manstolewoodmere, a distance of around six miles. The School has stables for horses, and facilities for keeping hounds for hunting purposes, as well as a swimming house built in 1933 fronting the High Street. The pool is 50 yards long and is used for competitive swimming, rather than recreational swimming, or bathing. It is also open to the public when not in use by the School.

Notable Dominostrians

See also