
Some Kentish Indents III
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An Incised Slab at West Wickham
Ancient Monuments in Kent
SOME KENTISH INDENTS, III.
By R. H. D'ELBOUX, M.O, M.A., F.S.A.
BRIDGE
Outside the west door, as part of the paving, is a slab, 35 by 82 in.,
now very worn and broken. It shows indents, in parts, for a man and
wife c. 1450, and a group of daughters. Most of the outline of the male
effigy and the area where sons might have been are completely gone.
It is unnoticed by Parsons and Cozens, but Hasted (Vol. I l l , 726 n.)
gives :—" On the north side of the churchyard, near the porch, is an
antient tomb, on which were once the figures of a man and woman, and
an inscription in brass, aU long since gone." Hasted differentiates
between " tomb " and " gravestone." It would seem, therefore, that
this slab, which now hes north and south, was once the top slab of a
table tomb, and probably a rare example of an external brass of preformation
days, since it is most unlikely that a tomb ejected from the
church would be re-erected in the yard.
If a genuine external brass, it is the earhest in date so far recorded,
and the only pre-ref ormation example in Kent, though three wiUs exist
that ask for churchyard brasses, aU of early sixteenth century. At
High Halden, the churchyard tomb of Stephen Scott 1601 stiU retains
part of its brass (see M.B.S. Trans, for 1948).
No doubt the tomb was destroyed and the slab placed where it now
is, during the construction of the path from the road to the west door,
presumably at the renovations of 1859-60.
CHILHAM.
Faussett visited this church in 1757. He noted two indents, and a
now lost brass ; in the chancel, " Another stone wch has had a Brazen
Figure and a Coat upon it which are both gone ; " in the north transept,
" Here is another Black stone, with a Brass Figure of a Man in a
Priest's habit—But the Plate with ye Inscription is lost." FinaUy,
in the nave, " On a loose Brass Plate is this Inscription :
" Hie Facet Rob'tus S . . . et . . . Uxor ejus, qui quidem
Rob'tus obijt xx° Die Mensia November' A° ani 1425.1 Quorum
Animabus ppicietur Deus. Amen."
Zechariah Cozens, Margate schoolmaster, and author of A Tour
Through the Isle of Thanet, was born at Chilham in 1763. In 1791 he
1 Faussett has a note opposite : " This figure looks like a 4." He evidently
copied into his manuscript book from notes taken on the spot.
109
SOME KENTISH INDENTS, III
sent to the Topographer a detaUed account of the church and its
monuments, these being verified from the parish registers. Of the lost
brass, he wrote :—" About the middle of the south transept is a flat
stone which had on it a smaU figure in a Monkish habit; and a brass
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BRIDGE.
inscription plate, part of which has been lost many years ; what
remains is as f oUows :—
" Hie iacet Robtus . . . wood
xx° die mes Novebr A0 ani MCC."
In 1793 he pubhshed his Tour, which included the Canterbury
environs. Monument No. 35 at Chilham is again our lost brass,
110
SOME KENTISH INDENTS, III
" apparently of a priest " and an inscription " part of which has been
defaced many years ; what remains legible is as foUows :
%xt facet Hofitue ^Rinftgufe tt . . . v.^ov, c\m oBttf
?f Me mee Qflovefitf