Our Homeland Churches and How to Study Them

Previous

OUR HOMELAND CHURCHES AND HOW TO STUDY THEM.

Index

Title: Our Homeland Churches and How to Study Them

Author: Sidney Heath

Language: English

Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1


[Frontispiece]


The Homeland Handbooks—No. 55.

OUR HOMELAND
CHURCHES

AND HOW TO STUDY THEM.

BY

SIDNEY HEATH

(Author of
"Some Dorset Manor Houses,"
etc.)

ILLUSTRATED BY THE AUTHOR
AND

ETHEL M. HEATH

AND BY
PHOTOGRAPHS.

Published under the General Editorship of
Prescott Row and Arthur Henry Anderson,
by the Homeland Association for the Encouragement
of Touring in Great Britain.

London:
THE HOMELAND ASSOCIATION LTD.,
22, Bride Lane, Fleet Street, E.C.
First Edition.1907.

EDITORIAL NOTE.

With a view to making future Editions of this Handbook as accurate and comprehensive as possible, suggestions for its improvement are cordially invited. If sent to The Editors, The Homeland Association, Association House, 22, Bride Lane, Fleet Street, E.C., they will be gratefully acknowledged.


COPYRIGHT.

This Book as a whole, with its contents, both Literary and Pictorial, is Copyrighted in Great Britain.


ADVERTISING.

Local.—Terms for Advertising in future issues of this Handbook will be forwarded on application to the General Manager of the Homeland Association, at the above address.

General.—Contracts for the insertion of Advertisements through the whole series of Homeland Handbooks, more than fifty volumes, circulating through the country, can be arranged on application to the General Manager.

CONTENTS

Author's Preface    
Dedication    
Introduction    
Chapter I.   Early British Churches
Chapter II.   Early Church Architecture
Chapter III.   The Saxon and Norman Styles
Chapter IV.   The Early English Style
Chapter V.   The Decorated Style
Chapter VI.   The Perpendicular Style
Chapter VII.   The Renaissance and Later
Chapter VIII.   Church Furniture and Ornaments
Chapter IX.   Bells and Belfries
Chapter X.   The Spire: Its Origin and Development
Chapter XI.   Stained Glass
Chapter XII.   Crypts
Chapter XIII.   How to describe an Old Church
Appendix   A Glossary of the Principal Terms used in
Ecclesiastical Architecture
Bibliography    
Index    

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

Plate 1   Foundations of a Romano-British Church (Frontispiece)
Plate 2   The Church of St. Margaret, Lynn
Plate 3   A Fine Perpendicular Tower, St. Mary, Taunton
Plate 4   Sedilia and Chantry, Luton
 
  The Various Forms of Arches
  Plan of a Typical Gothic Cruciform Parish Church, Luton
  Examples of Gothic Windows
  Examples of Buttresses
  A Rood Screen, with a Restoration of the Rood
  The Church of S. Martin, Canterbury
  Window Built with Roman Brick, Swanscombe
  A Reputed Saxon Doorway, Bishopstone
  Tower of Earls' Barton Church
  An Example of Norman Tower, Bishopstone
  A Norman Pier Arcade, Abbots Langley
  Examples of Norman Mouldings
  A Late Norman Parish Church, Castle Rising
  West Doorway, Rochester Cathedral
  Tympanum of Norman Doorway, Fordington St. George
  Examples of Norman Capitals
  A Curious Norman Capital, Seaford
  Norman and Early English Doorways, Dunstable Priory Church
  Windows, Showing the Origin of Tracery
  An Early English Arch, Rochester Cathedral
  Wall Arcading, Showing Junction of Norman and
 Early English Masonry,Dunstable Priory Church
  An Early English Doorway, Huntingdon
  A Group of Thirteenth Century Lancet Windows, Ockham
  Salisbury Cathedral
  Examples of Early English Capitals and Ornament
  A Late Decorated Window in a Parish Church, East Sutton
  Examples of Decorated Ornament
  Examples of Perpendicular Ornament
  Early Perpendicular Parish Church, Yeovil
  A Fine Parish Church, Showing Rich Perpendicular Work,
 Terrington St. Clement, Norfolk
  A Perpendicular Doorway, Merton College
  A Perpendicular Porch, King's Lynn
  An English Renaissance Church, S. Stephen, Walbrook
  A Typical Cornish Font
  The Sanctuary Knocker, Durham Cathedral
  The Baptistery in Luton Church
  An Example of a Leaden Font of the Late Norman Period
  A Reputed Saxon Font, Shaldon
  A Detached Holy-Water Stoup of Unusual Design
  A Typical Somerset Bench-End, Spaxton
  A Richly-Carved Pulpit and Canopy, Edlesborough
  Screen with Rood Loft, Kenton
  The Carved Oak Balustrade in Compton Church
  Bell Turret for Three Bells, Radipole
  The Best Example of a Saxon Spire or Pyramidal Roof, Sompting
  Leighton Buzzard Church, with Early English Tower and Spire
  A Parish Church with a Shingle Broach Spire, Edenbridge
  Interior Elevation of a Bay of a Church

STYLES OF ENGLISH ARCHITECTURE.

The following periods of architectural style may be of use for the purpose of reference, but it must be borne in mind that they are more or less approximate, as each style merged by slow degrees into the next.

Norman:   William I. to Stephen.   1066-1154.
Transition Norman.   Henry II.   1154-1189.
Early English Gothic.   Richard I. to Henry III.   1189-1272.
Decorated.   Edward I., II., III.   1272-1377.
Perpendicular.   Richard II. to Henry VII.   1377-1485.
Tudor.   Henry VIII. to Elizabeth.   1485-1600.

Sharpe gives seven periods of English architecture up to the time of the Reformation, and dates them as follows:—

ROMANESQUE.
I.    Saxon from —— to 1066  
II.    Norman from 1066 to 1145 79 years
III.    Transitional from 1145 to 1190 45 years
GOTHIC.
IV.    Lancet from 1190 to 1245 55 years
V.    Geometrical from 1245 to 1315 70 years
VI.    Curvilinear from 1315 to 1360 45 years
VII.    Rectilinear from 1360 to 1550 190 years

PREFACE.

It is a truism that the history of building is the history of the civilized world, for of all the arts practised by man, there is none which conveys to us a clearer conception of the religion, history, manners, customs, ideals and follies of past ages, than the art of building. This applies in a special sense to cathedrals and churches, which glorious relics reflect and perpetuate the noble aim, the delicate thought, the refined and exquisite taste, the patient and painstaking toil which have been expended upon them by the devout and earnest craftsmen of the past.

There are very few of our ancient churches in village, town or city which do not offer some feature of interest to the visitor, and in the absence of anything more important, there is sure to be some door, window, font, screen, or other detail which will amply repay him for the small amount of time spent in seeing it.

The aim of the author of this little volume has been to indicate the symbolism and meaning attaching to the various portions of our churches and cathedrals, and to endeavour briefly to describe, in language as simple as the subject will allow, the various styles of ecclesiastical architecture with their distinctive characteristics in such a way as will enable the reader to assign each portion and detail of a church to its respective period with an approximate degree of accuracy.

He does not claim to be original, but endeavours to be useful and interesting. The best authorities have been consulted and freely drawn upon, but with the object in view of writing a book at once thus useful and interesting, no attempt has been made to deal with the subject in a strictly architectural, or a purely scientific manner.

Weymouth, 1906.

DEDICATION.

To all those who love old buildings—cathedrals, abbeys, and village churches, which breathe the spirit of an age with which we have entirely broken—and who would fain hand down to posterity, unmutilated, the great building achievements of our forefathers, which we, with all our science, wealth, and means of curtailing labour, can no more imitate than we can reproduce the language of a Chaucer or a Shakespeare; this book is respectfully dedicated.

S. H.

"Firm was their faith, the ancient bands,
   The wise of heart in wood and stone,
Who reared with stern and trusting hands
   Those dark grey towers of days unknown;
They filled the aisles with many a thought,
   They bade each nook some truth recall
The pillared arch its legend brought,
   A doctrine came with roof and wall."
—Hawker of Morwenstow.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

Clyx.com


Top of Page
Top of Page