Delapré Abbey
| Delapré Abbey – the south facade | |
| Monastery information | |
|---|---|
| Full name | Abbey of St Mary de la Pré The Abbey of St Mary in the Meadow | 
| Order | Cluniac Nuns | 
| Established | c. 1145 | 
| Disestablished | 1538 | 
| Mother house | Abbey of Cluny | 
| Dedicated to | St Mary de la Pré, Sancta Maria de pratis, St Mary in the Meadows | 
| Diocese | Lincoln | 
| People | |
| Founder(s) | Simon de Senlis, 4th Earl of Huntingdon and Northampton | 
| Site | |
| Location | Hardingstone (extreme north of the parish), Northampton | 
| Coordinates | 52°13′29″N 0°53′22″W / 52.2247°N 0.8895°W | 
| Grid reference | SP759592 | 
| Visible remains | None | 
| Public access | Yes | 
Delapré Abbey is a neo-classical mansion in Northampton, England.
The mansion and outbuildings incorporate remains of a former monastery, the Abbey of St Mary de la Pré (the suffix meaning "in or of the Meadow"), near the River Nene 1 mile (1.6 km) south south-east of the centre of Northampton. It was founded as a nunnery about the year 1145 devoted to the congregation of the major Abbey of Cluny in Burgundy, France. Locally the name has the pronunciation 'Della-pree'.
The Abbey's expansive sloping grounds are a nationally protected Wars of the Roses battlefield, as a one-time site of the advance of the Yorkists during the Battle of Northampton (1460).