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Forest Abbey (Abbaye de Forest) is a former Benedictine Abbey founded in 1105, located on the banks of the Geleytsbeek, a tributary of the Seine, south of the city of Brussels, Belgium in the commune of Forest. The abbey ceased its religious functions in 1796 and was sold in the following year. Today, the buildings belong to the municipality of Forest, and the site was designated as a historic monument in 1994.

Orgin
The abbots of Affligem, which had been the ecclesiastical owners of the parish since the bishop of Cambrai ceded the land to the parish in 1105, for the purposes of constructing a priory for noble women - namely, those women who were sisters and wives of the area nobles who were participating in the Crusades - in Forest, which at this time was a very small community. In fact, Gislebert Aalst, one of the abbots of Affligem, gave his own mother and sister to the Abbey before leaving for the Holy Land. The first abbess of the Forest priory was named in 1239. Also in the 13th century, the Romanesque church of Saint Denis was rebuilt in the newer Gothic style. The neighbouring abbatial church was rebuilt in the 15th century.

The abbey was abolished in 1796 and sold the following year. The buildings that survived the dismantling are now a cultural center for seminars, banquets and exhibitions belonging to the Brussels commune of Forest. The Abbey and the site were classified as a historical monument in 1994.