Just been reading an interesting blog post at English Buildings about East Begholt's unusual bell cage...
http://englishbuildings.blogspot.co.uk/2012/10/east-bergholt-suffolk.html
i like old churches. old churches are cool. exciting, strange, unique, and ubiquitous ecclesiastical architecture.
Wednesday, 24 October 2012
East Bergolt Bell Cage
Monday, 22 October 2012
Hare & Hounds, Kilpeck Church
Kilpeck Church in Herefordshire is a beautifully preserved romanesque church with fantastic carving. The building consists of three cells: nave, chancel and apse. The whole building is of pink sandstone. It is famous for its collection of carved corbels, each with human and animal figures, such as the charming hare and hound. They have a soft, cartoon-like quality and deep piercing eyes. Of particular not is the doorway. The church's survival is probably thanks in part to its remoteness, in the wild borderlands of England and Wales. The churchyard is right up against a farm yard, and shows the closeness of religious and manorial sites in many ancient settlements.
Some Links:
http://hoary.org/snaps/engl/kilp.html
http://www.sacred-destinations.com/england/kilpeck-church.htm
Some Links:
http://hoary.org/snaps/engl/kilp.html
http://www.sacred-destinations.com/england/kilpeck-church.htm
Labels:
Architecture,
Church,
Herefordshire,
Kilpeck,
Norman,
Romanesque
Thursday, 18 October 2012
Kirton Church, Lincolnshire... Got any spare cash?!
This beautiful Grade I listed church in Kirton, just south of Boston, Lincolnshire, needs some cash! It's £40,000 short to pay for roof repairs. Can you help? It has a beautiful perpendicular clerestory
The news story:
http://www.thisislincolnshire.co.uk/Lincolnshire-church-facing-closure-pound-40k-roof/story-17094159-detail/story.html
Listed Building Description:
http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-192089-church-of-st-peter-and-st-paul-kirton-li
Tuesday, 9 October 2012
A cottage in Buckinghamshire...
A few weeks ago I was fortunate enough to visit this pair of old estate cottages hidden deep in a wood in Buckinghamshire. It's collapsing. There are trees growing through the roof. It has no services. It's amazingly beautiful, but also quite scary. The rear facade was built to look like a wealden house.
The Thatched Church at Markby, Lincolnshire
Monday, 8 October 2012
Scratch Dials / Mass Dials
A little known feature of many of England's mediaeval parish churches is Scratch Dials or Mass Dials. They were essentially small sundials built into the South wall of churches, presumably to indicate the times of church services back in the days when most people were illiterate. Most of them have lost their indicating stick, so no longer work, and others have been moved to other walls, are upside down, or have been relocated to the North walls of churches.
The Sundial Society is compiling a list of all known scratch dials, so if you know of one, let them know!
Labels:
Architecture,
Church,
Mass Dials,
Scratch Dials
Tuesday, 2 October 2012
St Peter's, Northampton
Northampton is seldom considered a very beautiful town. Its architectural heritage has been mostly either lost of bastardised. But the town is blessed with a few isolated gems which are up there with the finest buildings in the country. The Sessions House, 78 Derngate, The Guildhall. The town centre's four remaining ancient churches, All Saints, St Giles, Holy Sepulchre and St Peters, each have their own place in the superlative lists of English churches.
The church of St Peter is today in a neglected outpost of the town, between the station and the town centre. It is on Marefair, a road that once hosted a market (fair) for female horses (mares). It sits high on a mound overlooking the inner ring road. It was once so different. The station is the site of Northampton Castle, a major royal palace and fortress in the Middle Ages. Nearby St Peters served the town (and supposedly once a Saxon Palace). The town centre has since shifted eastwards, and the area around St Peters, known as the Boroughs, became the location of slum housing and small industrial buildings.
The church has beautiful Norman carving inside and out. Like many cottages in the area, it makes use of the contrasting local limestone and ironstone in horizontal bands. A single, long, roof covers the nave and chancel and below it is an arcades clerestory. It was rather enthusiastically "restored" in both the 17th and 19th centuries, yet there is still so much to see. The tower has moved east, the east front has moved west, but the norman body survives.
Centuries of social decline in the area left the church forgotten and neglected. Once it was surrounded by urban grain, little houses and factories. Today, it has Marefair on one side and nothingness on the other. It was eventually declared redundant, but this move may be what has saved it. It was taken over by the Churches Conservation Trust.
The CCT have restored the GG Scott paintings in the chancel, sorted out the damp problem, restored the fabric, and importantly open the church on a regular basis. The area to the south of St Peters, along by the overlooked River Nene, is soon to be redeveloped (supposedly) as part of the Northampton Business Improvement District. Let's hope that this investment can be used to improve the church's setting and reinvigorate the ancient heart of the town.
For more information about the church go to http://www.visitchurches.org.uk/Ourchurches/Completelistofchurches/St-Peters-Church-Northampton-Northamptonshire/
For The Friends of Northampton Castle go to http://www.northamptoncastle.com/
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