ROC (3 AVIRIEDIREL
GROUND PLAN OF
me tfaiSiT 'MOM Shewing the foundations or THE EARLY NORMAN FRONT, arid of the Eastern Apse of THE SAXON CHURCH.
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COMPARATIVE GROUND PLAN OF CHURCH
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( 261 )
FOUNDATIONS OE THE SAXON CATHEDRAL
CHUROH AT ROCHESTER.
BT THE BEV. GBEVILE M. LIVETT,
MliTOB OAHOH- AND EREOEHTOB.
lsr the autumn of the year 1888 the Dean and Chapter of
Bochester, acting under the advice of Mr, J. L. Pearson, R. A.,
decided to proceed at once -with the underpinning of the
west front of the cathedral churoh, preparatory to its
restoration. The work was put into the hands of Mr. John
Thompson, contractor, of Peterborough. In the course of
the excavations some important discoveries were made, and
it is the object of this paper to record them, and to shew
their relation to the history of the church. The present
west front, which is Norman, marked in "blue outline in the
larger part of Plate I., was found to rest upon an earlier
wall, also of Norman date, which had heen demolished to
within about 2 feet 6 inches of its foundations, marked red
in the Plan. In this paper, therefore, I shall call the existing
front Later-Norman work, and the remains of its predecessor
I shall call Early-Norman. The Early-Norman
work, however, must not be confused with the still earlier
Norman of Bishop Ghmdulf, though it "belongs to his
time. Gi-unduJTs work will be called by his name, excepting
when the first Norman church is referred to as a whole,
and then both works are to he included, since the Early
Norman front was built to complete Gundulf's unfinished
churoh. The remains of the Early-Norman west front were
not the only interesting discovery we made. Running
under and through its foundations, were discovered the
foundations, and portions of the walls, of a building of far
earlier date than the earliest of the Norman works. These
older foundations underlie the northern half of the present
west front, and are mai'ked black in the Plan. They doubtless
262 FOUNDATIONS OF THE SAXON
form part of the Saxon church, the documentary evidence for
which Mr. W. H. St. John Hope has collected,* and the
discovery of which Mr. J. T. Irvine, years ago, prophesied
would be made, whenever the west front should be underhuilt.
t
The following table of the dates of the bishops who will
be mentioned will clear the way for a description of fahe
discoveries:
1. JUSTUS (translated to Canterbury) 604— 624
3. PAranros (glim Bishop of York) 633— 644
4. TTHAMAII the Englishman 644— 655
9. TOBIAS the Learned 693—726
29. CuirDTri.j? (monk of Bee, and Lanfranc's
chamberlain) 1077—1108
30. BAIES DE TuuBrNE (translated to Canterbury)
1108—1114
81. EBNUIIE (prior of Canterbury, and abbot
of Peterborough) 1115—1124
32. JOHN DE CANTEBBTJBY 1125—1137
I. THE SAXON CHTTKCH.
The underpinning, of the west front, was carried out in
sections. • To attempt to describe the piecemeal discovery of
the earlier foundations would be tedious and uninteresting.
The reasons which lead us to identify these foundations with
the Saxon church are threefold. In the first place, history
tells us a church was built at Bochester in the year 604.
Secondly, the character of the discovered masonry is what
one would expect to see in work of that period, and the plan
of the "building could hardly belong to anything else than a
church. And, lastly, the ground on the south and east of
these foundations is full of graves, which lie exactly parallel
to the axis or line of orientation of the building erected on
the foundations.
* See his Notes on the Architectural Sistory of Rochester Cathedral Church,
and a communication to the Sooiety of Antiquaries entitled Gundulf's Tower at
Rochester, and the first Norman Cathedral Church there.
t MS. notes. Mr. Irvine was Clerk of the "Works to Sir Gr. G-. Soott during
the restoration of the cathedral which was carried out between the years 1871
and 1878. He is now superintending the work at Peterborough for Mr. Pearson.
I am much indebted-to Mr. Irvine for tracings, and for information of what was
disoovered at that time, over and ahoye that supplied in his MS. notes.
CATHEDBAL CHURCH AT ROCHESTER. 263
1. In the year 604, seven years after his arrival in
England, St. Augustine established the two sees of London
and Eochester, and ordained Mellitus and Justus to fill
them. King JUthelbert built the church of St. Andrew in
Bochester, and endowed it with lands.* Beda tells us it
was built a fundamentis (from the foundations): an expression
which would refer to a building of stone rather than
one of wood. , Seventy years later, when the Mercians
invaded Kent, the city was sacked and the church, spoiled j
but the actual fabric seems to have survived both this and
later invasions, for no statement to the contrary is found.
This view is confirmed by the fact that the sites of the
graves of Paulinus and Tthamar, who were buried in the
church, were known up to the eleventh century. Gundulf
found the Saxon Church almost a ruin, omit a new church, •
and transferred into it the relics of Paulinus, whose grave
up to that time had evidently not been disturbed. So much
for the historical evidence, which certainly gives the Saxon
church an unbroken existence from the seventh to the
eleventh century.
2. The discoveries made indicate a building terminating
towards the east in an apse, the width of the apse being
almost as great as that of the building itself. A sleeperwall
lies along the chord of the apse. In the Plan, the
foundations are hatched, and defined with a bounding line
only where they were actually disclosed in -the excavations.
The wall, where seen, is marked in solid Hack, and the conjectured
parts of it are cross-hatched. These foundations
were first struck, by the workmen, along the southern half of
the sleeper-wall on the chord of the apse. They were
worked out to the bottom thereabouts, and probably a small
part of the actual apse-wall disappeared in the process. I
did not arrive on the scene until this had been done; and
then I was told that the concrete was so hard that the ordi-
* See Grant ly Mhelbert, King of Kent, to St. Andrew's, Roohester, of land
at Southgate, 28 April 604, which occupies a prominent place in Mr. Walter de
Gray Birch's Cartularium Saxonicum. See also Thorpe's Registrum Roffense
Ihe chief additional authorities for the history are : for the early Saxon period'
the 'Eccles. Sist. of the Ven. Bede; for the early Norman period, Ernulfs
**«#»* Roffensis, and a Vita ffundulfi, written by a monk of Boohester about
1115, or a little later, and printed by Wharton in his Anglia Sacra.
2M FOUNDATIONS OF THE SAXON
nary picks were not stout enough to deal with it, and that
strong iron chisels had been especially made for the purpose.
At the bottom of the foundations, at this point, a large
"sarsen" stone was found, embedded in the mortar: it
is now in my garden. Then followed the discovery of the
foundations of the apse, inside the present building. Later
on, the junction of the apse with the north end of the
sleeper-wall was disclosed. The upper part of the internal
quoin had been removed, to make way for a modern circular
brick drain.* Lastly, the junction of the apse with the east
end of the south wall of its nave was found. This was the
most important "find" of all; and our thanks are due to the
Dean and Chapter for the leave they gave me to have two
days of extra digging to try to discover this junction. Its importance
lies in the fact that it has afforded us the best
example of the masonry of the actual walls. Even here the
wall remained to a height of only about 1 ft. 8 in. above the
foundations. A slight sketch of the masonry may be seen in
Plate IL, No. 3. -The quoin consists of two ferruginous sandstones,
faced, and of large size; the angles are much worn away.
A suggestion of herring-bone work will be noticed, and also
the use o£ an 11-inch Eoman brick (of a drab colour). The
work is exceedingly irregular, and the joints large. The
mortar is very hard; and made of a sharp flint sand, with a
few shells and. some charcoal in it. Sketch No. 3 also shews
the two courses of Eoman brick which alone remained to mark
the line of the apse on this side. The Eoman bricks were
of different colours, drab, buff, and red, some broken, some
whole. There was also a portion of a flue-tile. All these
were evidently old materials, used again. Portions of
the apse-wall remained on the foundations elsewhere, as
shewn in the Plan, but they consisted merely of one course
of long roughly-squared stones, some of tufa, others of Kentish
rag. The walls were 2 feet 4 inches in thickness.
A section of the foundations is given in Plate II. (No. 6).
The dimensions vary slightly, but the depth is about 4J feet,
* Bodies were found near the centre of the sleeper-wall, whioh had apparently
been partly worked away to receive them. It may oe an error therefore,
though it is convenient, to call this a sleeper-wall.
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* Mr. A. A. Arnold, Mr. Q. M. Arnold, and Mr. George Payne also saw
portions of the work at different times.
CATHEDRAL CHURCH AT ROOHESTER. 269
IE. THE EAKLT-NOKMAN WEST PBOHT.
1. The first thing the great Norman architect Gundulf
did, in the city of Eochester, was to build a massive square
tower, at a distance of 150 feet from the Saxon church eastward.
No one knows for certain what purpose the tower
was meant to serve in the first instance, but seventy years
later it was being used as a campanile. It is shewn in solid
black in the small Plan of Plate I. Gundulf had been
bishop only a few years when he replaced the four secular
canons who remained in the impoverished college by twenty.
Benedictine monks, and set about building a new and larger
church for them.* He was enabled to do this by the recovery,
with the king's help, of certain lands which Odo of
Bayeux had usurped. " After a brief interval, therefore, when
the old church had been demolished, the new one was begun;
a circuit of offices [for the monks] was conveniently arranged;
and the whole work finished within a few years by the
munificent help of Lanfranc." So, with certain inaccuracies,
wrote the monk of Eochester thirty or forty years afterwards
; and he adds that when all things were ready Lanfranc
went in solemn procession with the monks and clerks
to the grave of Paulinus in the old church, and translated
thence his sacred relics into the new church. This translation
took place in the year 1087, which is doubtless the date
of the close of Gundulf's building operations. Two other
facts are equally certain: (i) the Saxon church was not demolished
before the new one was begun; and (ii) Gundulf had
not finished his church. So much as he did accomplish is
shewn in solid black in the small Plan. Now arise the questions
: (i) Why did Gundulf complete the south aisle wall and
the great arcade on the south side of the nave, and stop halfway
on the north side ? (ii) When was the work taken up
again and finished? The answer to these questions may be
. * .It will be noticed that the ohurch orientates nearly due south-east. This 1S °Tirl$to tlie faot t h a t Gundulf was in a strait for want of space : he could not
go further north (towards the east) on account of his tower, so he arranged that
the tower should falL into the corner, between his north transept aud choir aisle
wails, and he could not go further south (towards the west), or he would not
nave had room for his oirouit of offices between the nave and the south wall of
270 • EOUNDATIONS OE THE SAXON
drawn from the fact that previous to the year 1423, when the
church of St. Nicholas was built upon a piece of land in
Green Church Haw, given by the monks for the purpose,
the parishioners of St. Nicholas worshipped in the nave of
the cathedral church. There is evidence in the Begistrum
Roffense that the altar of St. Nicholas, " parochial in the
church of St. Andrew," existed towards the end of Gundulf's
episcopacy. Doubtless this was only a fulfilment of Gundulf's
original intention, that the nave or a part of it should
be assigned to the parishioners, though such intention is not
expressly recorded. This being the case it seems likely
also, as Mr. St. John Hope has already pointed out, that
Gundulf was content to build the monks' part only (except
that he was obliged to complete the south aisle in order to
have a wall against which to place the monks' cloister), and
that 'he left it to the parishioners to build their part.*
The Early-Norman foundations we have discovered, belong
to a building which is quite distinct from that of Gundulf;
but they cannot be more than a few years later in date.
They are doubtless the work of the parishioners of St.
Nicholas, undertaken, say, between the years 1095 and 1100.
Some twenty to twenty-five years later, when the Norman
style had lost its early rude and plain character, the
first Norman church was enriched, and partly rebuilt on the
old lines. This work was probably begun by the great
builder Ernulf, and completed by his successor John de
Canterbury,^ for the church was dedicated in the year 1130
on Ascension Day. The Later-Norman front, which is built
on the remains of its predecessor, was no doubt the latest
work of this partial rebuilding of the first Norman church;
a rebuilding which might be called the second Norman
church. With regard to the Saxon church, it probably
* The first site of the altar of St. Nicholas is not known. Early in the fourteenth
century, it was sub pulpito, at the east end of the nave. Mr. St. John
Hope reminds me that Gundulf must have built a certain amount west of the
crossing to oarry the thrusts of theorossing arches. Of course it is possible that
he may have originally meant to build the whole churoh at onoe, and that he
stopped for want of funds, just the later Gothic builders stopped. It is clear
that his plan and design were as plain and inexpensive as possible. Eor further
information on the subjeot, and for a full acoount of the altar of St. Nioholas, I
must refer the reader to Mr, St. John Hope's Notes.
CATHEDRAL CHURCH AT ROCHESTER. 271
remained standing for the use of the parishioners until the
building of the Early-Norman front made it necessary to
demolish the eastern parts of it. The western part, however,
was standing after that, for the remains of Bishop
Tthamar, who, according to Weever, had been buried in the
nave of the Saxon church, were not removed until the episcopate
of John de Canterbury. This removal probably
marks the final destruction of the old church.
2. In laying down the Early-Norman wall and foundations
in the Plan, I have treated them in the same way as I
treated the Saxon work. I did not see the excavations on
the south side of the central doorway; sufficient signs of
the position of the quoins on the outside remained after the
holes had been filled up. On the inside, however, this was
not the case, and, as no notes or drawings are forthcoming,
I am obliged to assume that the Plan corresponds with that
of the north side except in one particular. It is said that
some barrel-loads of loose chalk were taken up from under
the respond of the great arcade. As Gundulf used loose
chalk wherewith to fill his foundation-ditches, it seems
likely that these came from the end of the sleeper-wall of his
arcade. I have therefore indicated such a Gundulf sleeperwall
in the Plan by black dotted lines. It is also said that
under the north side of the same respond there was a deep
sinking of masonry. Not having sufficient data I could not
indicate its position. It is possibly some Eoman foundationwork
made use of by Gundnlf in connection with the sleeperwall.*
The longitudinal section, No. 4, Plate II., shews the
junction of the two works in the foundation-ditch under the
south aisle wall in the westernmost bay. Gundulf's ditch
was not much more than three feet deep, and did not reach
maiden soil. About one-third of it was filled with loose
gravel, and then a quantity of chalk in small lumps, such as
. * Foundations of Boman walls were found by Mr. Irvine in front of the south
ais e wall. _ Mr. Eoach Smith, too, tells me he has seen the foundations of a Eoman
wall running diagonally across Boley Hill, near the County Magistrates*offioT
There were doubtless several Roman buildings within the walls of the citv but
know = naUte t t eOm!0W ^ * *» ^ te US *° *V ™ ^
272 EOUNDATIONS OE THE SAXON
could be dug with an ordinary garden spade, were thrown
in.*
The Early-Norman builders went down deeper, and
reached the reddish earthy river-sand, containing flints,
which constitutes the maiden soil; and they adopted a new
method of filling their ditch. Eirst, a double layer of flints
was laid in and covered with sand mixed with a little lime.
Then the ditch was filled with four layers of chalk and
' sand. This, Mr. Irvine remarks, was evidently meant to be
a great improvement on the old method, but the builders
were probably using up materials left by Gundulf, for when
the ditch was opened up again, by Mr. Thompson's men,
under the west front, in the recess near the corner turret,
they found the use of chalk abandoned, and flints used
throughout in similar layers, and set in mortar and red
mould alternately. The depth of this work varied from 3£
to 4 feet, and the thickness of the several layers varied
considerably. The newer method was followed all along the
west front, f A still further improvement was noticed under
the north aisle wall in the first bay, where I had an opportunity
of making a close examination of the foundations.
The Early Normans widened their ditch here, and made its
southern face run across to join the apse-foundations, as
shewn by the dotted line in the Plan, Plate I. The plan of
operations here (see Section 2) had been to lay down a bed
of mortar some three inches in thickness, and on it to throw a
layer of flints. This in turn was covered with red sandy
mould, and the whole was rammed, and that so effectually
that we found it very hard work to remove the flints with
the pick. All this had been done four times, and then, at
the top, came a layer of flints and mortar without mould,
on which the foundation footing appeared. The mortar
was very loose, and contained pieces of a fine white plaster
in considerable quantities—both wall and floor-plaster, apparently—
as well as a smaller number of fragments of thin
* On the chalk two courses of stone foundation, 11 inches deep, were laid.
These have disappeared from the south aisle wall (exterior), but Section 1 shews
them as they were found by Mr. Irvine under the north aisle wall,
t See Section No, 3 in Plate II.
CATHEDRAL CHURCH AT ROCHESTER. 273
Eoman stucco. Among the flints I found what appeared to
be a portion of a Eoman quern-stone.
I have described the contents of the Early-Norman ditch,
somewhat at length, first, because it indicates tbe progress
of the work from the south side round to the north; and,
secondly, because it proves beyond all doubt that it was
quite distinct in point of time from Gundulf's work. The
rubble walling is also distinctly of later character, though
one could scarcely push its date into the twelfth century,
Two bits of the wall are sketched in Plate II. (Nos. 2 and 4).
The joints, filled with a fine yellow sand mortar, are wide
and irregular. Otherwise there seems to be nothing calling
for remark in the masonry, except • it be the use of their
bonding courses. In one of the examples this bonding
course is slightly, but only slightly, suggestive of herringbone
work. The earlier rubble walling of Gundulf has
much more strongly marked features. An example to be
seen in the south aisle (interior) shews most decided herringbone
work, in addition to the courses of thin and also of
bigger stones which occur in the Early-Norman work* A
second example of Gundulf's may be seen in a portion of
the north aisle wall (exterior), where the courses are much
the same size, and all consist of stones set herring-bone-wise,
with a larger stone set straight here and there only.
If these differences shew a distinction of date, there are
enough points of likeness to bring the Early-Norman work
close to that of Gundulf. In both cases the walls rest on a
stone foundation (generally of two courses) of Kentish rag,
which is only just wide enough to carry comfortably the
pilaster buttresses. In both cases, walls and buttresses rise
from the footings without plinths j and in both cases tufa
is used for all the quoins, and Kentish rag for the faces of
the rough walls and footings, with flints inside. The mear
surements correspond. The footing of the Early-Norman
work is generally about 1 foot 4 inches in depth and about a
foot wider than the wall on each side. Sometimes a third
* This bit of Gundulf's work is very similar to that of the same architect's
walling in st. Leonard's Tower, Malling, which is figured in Parker's Introduction
to Gothic Architecture. •
VOX,. XVIII. m
274 EOUNDATIONS OE THE SAXON
and thin course is found between the two larger courses, as
may be seen in Section 2. The Plan shews that at the end
of the aisles the wall of the front is much thinner than elsewhere,
and that the footing is correspondingly wider on the
inside, and consists (as may be seen in Section 3) of a single
course of stoDes of great size, very rough, tbe joints of which
contain flints. The projection of the buttresses is 7-£ or 8
inches. That of the clasping buttresses of the corner pinnacles
may have been slightly greater. They were not exposed
at either end, but I conclude that the supports of the corner
pinnacles of the west front were treated in this way (as
shewn in the Plan), because it was the treatment which Mr.
Irvine found adopted in the south transept of the first
Norman church. The thinness of the wall at the end of the
aisle would point to the same conclusion.
The ground-plan indicates a very plain front. Perhaps
the most interesting of all our discoveries connected with it
is that of the bases of the jamb-shafts of the central doorway,
which was wider than its Later-Norman successor, but
not so deeply recessed. There are two bases remaining on
each side. The material is tuf a. Those on the south side, by
an arrangement of the new plinths,' will remain, not always
open to view, but accessible. Including the mortar-bed
they stand about 7% inches high. Base and quoin are
worked together in one stone in.'the ordinary way. The
plinths are square, the mouldings almost plain, and worked
to a shallow central keel, suggestive' of the double-ogee
moulding so common in the perpendicular style, but reversed.
The bases on the north side have of necessity been covered
again. They are figured, however, in Plate H. (No. 1). One
of them repeats the moulding just described, and the other
shews two plain rounds. The mortar-jqints are large, varying
in width from 1 to 1^ inches. The bases stand upon
the platform which carries the door-step. The bases of the
shafts of the innermost order of the arch have disappeared,
but the outlines of their mortar-beds .could be traced on the
door-step on each side, so that they must have stood higher
than the others. The platform which carries the bases and
the step is 18 inches wide, and about 20 inches above the
CATHEDRAL CHURCH AT ROOHESTER. 275
foundation-footing. This fact alone would tell us that some
of the Early-Norman wall was underground from the first.
Moreover, it is impossible that the surface of the ground
should have risen two feet and more in twenty-five or thirty
years—the interval between the building of the early and
later fronts.*
A glance at Section 5, in Plate IL, shews that the nearness
of the remains of the Saxon wall to the Early-Norman
doorway, and the height of those remains in the ground,
together preclude all possibility of the surface of the ground
being so low as the Early-Norman footing. Moreover, we
found a pathway running right up to, and on a level with,
the top of the door-step, which pathway, from its very position,
must have been older than the Later-Norman work,
and almost certainly coeval with the Early-Norman doorstep.
Its material, too, looked very much like that used in
the Early-Norman foundations. It consisted of two layers
of plaster, with flints and red sandy mould between, the
whole being about 8 inches thick. I unfortunately failed
to see either of the bases actually cleared, and so can
only suppose that the path sloped down on each side to
allow the bases to be seen. On the interior, the original
wall-plaster, a very firm and hard white plaster, was found
on the Early-Norman wall running right down to the
footing, so there must have been a considerable descent into
the nave of the church. This.awkward arrangement was
perpetuated and exaggerated by the Later-Norman builders.
We found no signs of the respond of the Early-Norman
arcade on the north side, but. its foundations remain and
were used to carry the Later-Norman respond. They run
eastwards, and abut upon the foundations of the Saxon
apse, indicating the line of the sleeper-wall of the arcade.
I have ventured to shew this sleeper-wall beyond the apse
" conjecturally." It is doubtful, however, whether the arcade
itself was ever raised, for no signs of it have yet been found
in the Later-Norman arcade, while on the south side the
,u4.i* ?^e r e is reascm> however, to believe that it was in this interval that the
ST t « ? of Kr?und between the west front (northern part) and the remains of
-the nau: demolished Saxon ohurch was used as a burial-ground,
1! 2
276 EOUNDATIONS OE THE SAXON
Later-Norman arcade undoubtedly is in the main Gundulf's
work.*- In fact, it is a question whether the Early
Normans did after all quite finish their church. Perhaps
funds failed, and they were content for a time with some
temporary structure on the north side to support a temporary
roof. It is significant that on the Early-Norman
footing of the north aisle wall, as shewn in Section 2, there
remain only two courses of the Early Norman walling,
not plastered, and that between them and the overlying course
there is at least an inch of mould. This overlying course is
undoubtedly Later-Norman work. It is of tufa, and has in
one spot some of the original plaster adhering to it. Its
mortar is grey and shelly, and quite different from the yellow
sand mortar used by the Early Normans in their walling. The
work above this is modern. The question thus raised seems
to he the only one of any real difficulty that has cropped up.
I t is not of any great importance to us now, but it should be
borne in mind in future researches.
III. It has already been said that the Later-Norman front
was the closing work of what was practically a rebuilding
of the first Norman church. It has suffered considerably
at the hands of restorers. The north pinnacle was rebuilt
in its present odd octagonal shape in the sixteenth century.
The north turret was rebuilt and finished off with a battlement
at about half its original height in the worst style of
the middle of the last century. At the same time, probably,
the bases of the central doorway and the double plinths
throughout were restored away, and a Bingle plinth substituted,
leaving only a few of the original stones.f A little
* This was discovered by Mr. Irvine. The lower orders of the arohes, and
the upper orders also on the aisle side, are all of tufa, now plastered over,
t It is this single plinth that is shewn in the Plan in blue. At the southwest
corner the double plinth remained as a guide to the architect, and it has
just been restored throughout. The bases, too, of the oentral doorway have been
replaced, I was at first led to believe that the repairs whioh destroyed the bases
and double plinth were made by Mr, Cottingham in 1826, but a list of Mr, Cottingham's
work, whioh Mr, A. A. Arnold, the Chapter-clerk, handed to me, and
of whioh I found a duplicate among some papers relating to the fabric whioh
the Dean kindly allowed me to look through, makes no mention of any suoh
repairs. The mortar used is most distinctive—a very tough white mortar with
green vesicles in it—and was found to have been used also for the two courses of
CATHEDRAL CHURCH AT ROCHESTER.. 277
later it was evidently found that the south turret was
unsafe, and so little did the guardians of the fabric of that
day appreciate their splendid inheritance from the past, or
their grave responsibility to the future, that they adopted
the ready cure of lopping off the top of it.* The whole
front, except perhaps the beautifid central doorway, is now
in a perilously dangerous condition, and the hideous shores
cannot be taken down before it has been wholly restored.
The whole of the face of the wall up to a considerable height
has broken away from the rubble core, and cracks are developing
themselves in great numbers. The foundations were
found in a most unsatisfactory state. The wall overlaps the
Early-Norman wall on which it is built by as much as from
34 to 4 feet along the southern part of the exterior. The
Later-Norman builders, to widen the foundations, simply
dug a trench along the earlier wall and foundations, but by
no means to their full depth, and filled it with material of
the same character as that of their predecessors, but less
compact and serviceable.f The face of the wall above
is very thin, seldom more than six inches, and scarcely
bonded into the wall at all. One only wonders how any
part of it has stood so long. The careless way in which the
masons of that day put up their work is well illustrated by
Section 3, which shews how they placed the materials of
their walling on the footing, and against the face of the
earlier work, without attempting to bond them in. Under
foundation-work uuder the north turret (see Section 7), and for the steps inside
the small west door. Moreover, the tooling of the faced stone points to the
last century. So that I have now to come to the conclusion that these repairs,
traces of whioh may still be seen, are of the same date as the north turret j and
this being the case, for the words, " Cottingham's plinths," in Sections 3 and 5,
we must read, " eighteenth century plinths," and for "Cottingham's repairs" in
Section 7, we must read, " and foundations." Cottingham's repairs at the west
front consisted in taking down and rebuilding in Bath stone the great window
and the battlements'above, and of partially repairing the stone-work of the two
corner turrets. Cottingham's repairs here and elswbare cost nearly £10,000.
* A great deal has been done in the present century (more than £30,000 has
been expended by the Dean aud Chapter since 1840), and muoh more remains to be
done to make amends for the apathy and neglect of past ages, and to put the
fabno mto a condition of safety. v o > v ""
t The material contained more Kentish rag than the Early Norman, evidently
obtained from the destruction of the earlier wall. Some fragments of
apparently unused Norman mouldings were found in this foundation-work,
une iragment shewed a triple nebule moulding, and u seoond shewed a oouuteroompony.
They are sketched in Plate II., Nos. 5 aud 6.
278 WEST END OE ROCHESTER CATHEDRAL.
the north-west turret we found a stronger foundation than
elsewhere, but even there it did not reach the solid ground.*
I t consisted of great blocks of tufa and rag-stone, taken
evidently from the destroyed Early-Norman front, and tallies
with the mass of masonry which Mr. Irvine found in front
of the north aisle wall in the first bay, and proves the correctness
of his inference that the Later-Norman architect
meant to flank his front with towers—a design which he
evidently abandoned later on. Mr. Irvine found no such'
preparation made on the south side.
It is perhaps worthy of remark that the walls of both the
early and later fronts taper towards the north. The early
builders worked by "rale of brow." The Later Normans
used Caen-stone for all their facings and mouldings; and
they used up all the tufa which their predecessors left
behind them, but in no case did they use it where it would
be seen. The plaster floor of the Later-Norman nave was
cut through in several places during the excavations. A
moveable slab has been laid down in the present floor near
the respond of the north arcade, where the old floor may be
seen seven inches below and running up to the bottom of
the plinth of the respond. The plaster floor was very
uneven. It was found upon the Early-Norman footing,
inside the north-west doorway (as shewn in Section 3), from
whence it ran up on to the foundations of the apse, over a
triangular bit of foundation work inserted by the Later
Normans into the corner, at the junction of the said footing
and the apse, to support the turret.f Where there was no
stone-work for it to rest upon, the soil was prepared by a
layer of flints, on which the plaster, full of cockle-shells, was
laid. It formed a hard and durable floor. Mr. Irvine found
similar floors under the choir and transept-crossing.
So my task comes to an end. It only remains for me to
thank Mr. W. H. St. John Hope and Mr. Irvine for information
and advice, and Mr. Thompson and his foreman for
the kind facilities they afforded me.
* See the interesting Section, No. 7, shewing works of three periods j but
of. note f, p. 276.
- f The outline of this bit of foundation work is shewn by a three-dotted line
in the Plan.