· ANNUAL REPORT
FOR THE YEAR 1966
ANNUAL REPORT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 3 l sT DECEMBER,
1966
Council presents its One Huncfred and Eighth Report, and the Statement
of Accounts for 1965.
OBITUARY
It is with the greatest regret that Council records the death of Mrs.
Nancy Piercy Fox, which occurred on 30th March, 1966. She had been a
valued member of the Society since 1936, and a member of Council since
1953. She occupied a foremost place in the field of excavation and, from
1955 to her death, conducted on behalf of the Society a full investigation
into the problem of the Iron Age in Kent, a most valuable addition to
lmowledge by which she will be especially remembered. A Fund has been
established by the Society to her memory, by the gift of £2,000 from the
Keston Field Club and Dr. E. V. Piercy Fox, for the publication of archreo•
logical research, an object in which she took a very close personal interest.
A full obituary appears in this volume.
AmmAL GENERAL MEETING
The Annual General Meeting was held in the Museum, Maidstone, on
14th May, 1966, the President in the Chair. Council's Annual Report and
Statement of Accounts for 1965 were received and adopted. After the
luncheon interval, an audience of eighty members and their friends heard
a most interesting lecture by Mr. C. R. Councer, F.S.A., embodying the
results of his recent researches on the Dissolution of the Monasteries in Kent.
The lecture was enthusiastically received, and the President expressed the
warm thanks of the Meeting to the lecturer.
VIOE·PRESIDENT
At the Annual General Meeting Mr. F. C. Elliston-Erwood, F.S.A., was
elected a Vice-President of the Society, in recognition of his long and
distinguished service to the Society in the promotion of Archreology in
the County.
MElliIBERSHIP
During the period from 1st January, 1966, to 31st December, 1966,
· eighty-two new members were elected, and allowing for resignations and
deaths, the total membership stands at 1,149. This is a satisfactory result
over the year, showing a continued increase. An acceleration in membership,
however, is needed, and Council renews its appeal for new members.
The Society's ,Information Leaflet is ava.ilable to all on application to
Local Secretaries, Maidstone Museum, or the General Secretary.
COUNCIL
At the Annual General Meeting the following were re-elected to
Council: Professor F. R. H. Du Boulay, Wing-Commander W. V. Dumbreck,
Major H. M. Rand, Mr. S. E. Rigold, and Dr. W. G. Urry, together
xlii
REPORT, 1966
with Mr. A. P. Detsicas, nominated by Council to fill the vacancy caused
by the death of Mrs. Piercy Fox. The following have also been nominated
to Council during the year: Brigadier E. V. Bowra, Mr. F. Higenbottam,
and Dr. E. V. Piercy Fox, the latter to fill the vacancy caused by the
resignation of Professor F. R. H. Du Boulay.
Mr. C.R. Councer has been elected Chairman of Council, and Council
membership is now complete.
FINANCE
The Accounts for 1965 are published with this Report. A marked
increase in membership is essential if the Society is to maintain the high
standard of its publications and widen its activities. Council therefore
appeals for:
(1) New members.
(2) Donations to the ArcMeologia Gantiana Fund, and to the Records
Publications Fund.
(3) Members to enter into seven-year Covenants, to enable the Society
to recover Income Tax on their subscriptions at no extra cost to
members. Forms of Undertaking may be obtained on application
to the General Secretary.
Note. Members who do not pay their subscriptions by Banker's Order
are requested to send them DIRECT to the General Secretary.
EXCURSIONS
Three Excursions were arranged and all were well supported by members
and their friends. The individual places visited are listed below, and the
gentlemen who kindly acted as guides are indicated. The Society is most
grateful for their services.
Saturday,
21st May
Saturday,
9th July
EastS utton and Hea dcorn
Maidstone Museum-Mr. L. R. A. Grove, F.S.A.,
and Mr. D. B. Kelly.
East Sutton Church-1.fr. H. A. James.
East Sutton Place
Headcorn Manor l Mr. S. E. Rigold,
Shakespeare House, Headcorn F.S.A.
Church Cottage, Headcorn
The Society is grateful to Miss A. R. Mitchell, Governor
of H.M. Borstal, East Sutton Place; to Mr. and Mrs.
R. Kinsey of Headcorn Manor; to Mr. and Mrs. 0.
Evans of Shakespeare House, Headcorn; and to Mrs.
M. Haines of Church Cottage; for their kindne£S and
co-operation.
The MedwGAJ River andSheppe;y
Shurland Castle } M. Ir R M D Id Minster Abbey Church 1 • ..... • ac ona ·
Eastchurch Church-Rev. L. Wilkinson.
Queenborough Town Hall-The Town Sergeant.
Notes were provided for the River trip.
The Society is grateful to the Sheerness Harbour Cc.;
to Messrs. A. and J. Sillars of Shu.rland Castle; and to
the Mayor and Corporation of Queenborough, for their
help and co-operation.
xliii
Saturday,
3rd September
REPORT, 1966
The Battle of Hastings
Pevensey Castle-Mr. C. T. Chevallier and Lt.-Col.
G. W. Mea.tes, F.S.A.
Battle Abbey and Battlefield-Mr. C. T. Chevallier.
Bodiam Castle-Lt.-Col. G. W. Meates, F .S.A.
The Society is grateful to Miss Jacoby of Battle Abbey
School; to members of the Battle Historical Society;
and to the Custodian of Bodiam Castle; for generous
help.
A.RCR..!EOLOGIA CANTI.A.NA
·volume Ixxx wa.s published early in 1966. It is the largest volume for
many years, and includes a coloured frontispiece, all in spite of the increase
of printing costs. It is very well balanced in the various papers which it
contains, and members will appreciate that in ArchreoT,ogi,a, Gantiana they
receive an outstanding publication.
LIBRARY AND COLLECTIONS
Six books, fifty-five pamphlets, and manuscript material from the late
W. P. D. Stebbing and the late V. J. Torr have been given to the Library.
Transcripts of the Ightham Parish Records, 1669-1915, made by the late
Sir Edward Harrison, have been deposited on loan by Ightham Parochial
Church Council.
The Society has ta.ken out subscriptions for the Journal of Roman
Studies, the Proceedings of the Prehist,orio Society, and the Journal of
lndustri,a,l Archreology. An exchange of publications bas been arranged
with the Hampshi.J:e Field Club, and the exchange with the Oxford Architectural
and Historical Society for Oxoniensia has been renewed.
When using the Library, members a.re requested to show their Membership
Cards to the Museum attendant, and members who may not hold
cards are invited to apply for them to the General Secretary.
RECORDS PUBLICATIONS COMMITTEE
It is deeply regretted that volume 19, Calendcvr of the White and Slack
Books of the Cinque Ports, has b(')en so long delayed. These delays have
been entirely outside the control of the Society, although pa.rt of the trouble
undoubtedly is connected with the size of the volume. The publication of
Archbishop Warham's Visitations, edited by Dr. Wood-Legh, will be completed
as soon as possible after the receipt of volume 19, but cannot be
expected before 1968.
PLAOE NAMES COMMITTEE
The work of the Place Names Committee has been very seriously
affected by the unfortunate loss of its Secretary, Mrs. Piercy Fox. Arrange•
ments a.re in hand for a meeting with a representative of the English Place
Na.mes Society, but there seems no immediate likelihood of a volume on
Kent, though such a volume would undoubtedly arouse considerable
interest.
xliv
REPORT, 1966
C.P.R.K./K.A.S. PRESERVATION OF ANCIENT BUII.,DINGS COMMITTEE,
1965/66
( l) The fate of the thirteenth-century Commandery of the Hospitallers
of St. John at Swinfield hangs in the balance, as Kent County Council had
decided not to approve the money required for its compulsory acquisition
and restoration. As the Ministry of Public Building and Wod,s had agreed
to provide a substantial sum towards the cost of acquisition and restoration,
with a view to ta.king it subsequently into guardia.nship, since they
considered the building to be worthy of preservation, a site meeting has
been arranged between an official of the Ministry and all County Members,
and the fate of the building depends upon the outcome of the meeting.
(2) The Joint Committee made strong representations to save from
demolition Ivy House, New Romney, an attractive early Georgian house
in a somewhat unique situation facing up the High Street, from which so
many ancient buildings have already been demolished, thereby completely
changing the character of this pleasant small town. When a letter from the
Hon. Secretary was read at a meeting of the Borough Council the Joint
Committee was referred to as 'self-appointed busy bodies', and this was
widely reported in the press. Far from being annoyed by this appellation,
the Joint Committee took it as a compliment, as clearly it is only by the
action of such busy bodies, be they self-appointed or not, that much of
this country's ancient heritage is being preserved. Unfortunately and,
in the Joint Committee's view, quite unnecessarily, Kent County Council
decided not to oppose the demolition, so as to make it easier for the
Ministry of Transport to widen the road at this point.
(3) The tiny medieval St. Edmund's Chapel, Dover, which for several
centuries has been in private ownership and not used for religious purposes,
nd had fallen into disrepair, has been acquired by the Roman Catholic
Church and is to be restored. Mr. Anthony Swaine, the well-known Canterbury
architect, an expert in such work, who is a member of the Joint
Committee, is in charge of the restoration, in the course of which many
very interesting features have already come to light, which would lead
one to believe that the chapel is a reconstruction of an even earlier building.
The Joint Committee has good reason to derive considerable satisfaction
from the outcome, as it had strived for several years to save this chapel,
which has historical connections with St. Richard of Chichester.
( 4) After much thought had been given to the matter, and with the help
of the Maidstone College of Art, a plaque has been constructed showing
the white horse of Kent and the words 'Historic Building of Kent' on a
dark red background, for :fixing to suitable houses in the county, approved
by the Joint Committee. A specimen in cardboard was on view, fixed to
Lullingstone Castle, at the 1965 A.G.M., also in the Committee exhibit
at the 1965 County Show. A number have now been sold, and when :fixed
in a suitable position on a. building look very handsome. Several other
applications for plaques have been received but have not been approved,
as the Joint Committee did not consider that the buildings in question
were of sufficient merit.
(5) The memorandum which the Joint Committee drew up in 19.66 on
defects in the Town and Country Planning Acts 1947 and 1962 relating to
the preservation of buildings of architectural or historic interest caused
considerable interest, and led to questions being asked in the House of
Commons. As a result of a short article appearing in Town and Country
Planning, the monthly journal of the Town and Country Planning Associaxlv
REPORT, 1966
tion, requests for copies of the memorandum have been received from as
far afield as Yorkshire and Somerset. A copy has also been sent to Mr.
Duncan Sandys, as it was thought that it might be of interest to him in
the drafting of his Private Member's Bill dealing with the countryside, and
a letter of acknowledgement has been received from him. .
(6) The Joint Committee has been represented at a number of site
meetings called by Kent County Council, or public inquiries appointed
by the Minister in connection with ancient buildings, notably at Waldershare
Park, the seat of the Earl of Guilford, Townley House, Ramsgate,
Nos. 11 and 12 West Street, Faversham, Ivy House, New Romney, and
St. John's, Swingfield. It is highly gratifying that the Committee for the
Preservation of Rural Kent, or the Joint Committee, as the case may be,
is so frequently invited by Kent County Council to send a representative
to the many site meetings concerning matters known to interest them.
Report on the Third Conference of Building Recorders, held in the Mu.seum,
Maidstone, on Saturday, 8th October, 1966.
This Conference was held on behalf of the C.P.R.K./K.A.S. StudyGroup
on Recording Historic Buildings. The Chair was taken by Mr. C. R.
Councer, F.S.A.
The first speaker, Mr. P. J. Tester, F.S.A., traced the development of
Saxon Churches in Kent, commencing with the important series of early
churches at Canterbury, associated with St. Augustine. The Saxon sundial,
discovered a few years ago at Orpington, was also discussed.
Mr. E.W. Parkin then spoke of his discoveries in Sandwich, which he
revealed as perhaps the finest medieval town of its size in England. Due to
coastline changes, the Quay had been moved northwards, leaving a row
of buildings of Norman origin behind the present Strand Street. Later
houses erected in front of these include several with three stories and overhanging
fronts, with a high-hall behind.
Next, Mr. C. A. Hewett introduced his basic work on Medieval Timber
Joints. By careful study of timber construction in his native Essex, he
not only proposed a new method of dating timber buildings, but additionally
explained the order in which the timbers were assembled for each of
several types of houses and barns. His talk was accompanied by an excellent
series of drawings, clearly showing the joints used for periods from the
twelfth to the eighteenth centuries.
Finally, Mr. H. A. James explained the construction of the dovecote
and illustrated and traced the chronology of all the examples he knew in
Kent.
The standard of all these talks was very high, and the work put into
them by the speakers was much appreciated by the audience of about
forty people. Thanks must also be recorded to Mr. L. R. A. Grove, F.S.A.,
for his kindness in providing a venue for the Conference.
EXCAVATIONS O0MMITTElll
Mr. A. P. Detsicas, M.A., F.S.A., has been elected to the Committee.
Council for British Archceology, Group 1 lA
The Group has had a successful first year of existence, and membel'ship,
which includes Historical Societies, Museums, and Local Authorities, now
stands at 28, not including the County Societies, an increase of 6 during
xlvi
REPORT, 1966
the year. The A.G.M., which was held on 1st October, 1966, at Tunbridge
Wells, was honoured by the presence of Miss K. M. Kenyon, C.B.E.,
D.Litt., F.B.A., F.S.A., who took the Chair. An interesting talk on 'Early
Iron-working in the ·weald' was given by Mr. J. H. Money, M.A., F.S.A.
The Group also held a Conference on 'Science and Archreology' at the
Institute of Archreology on 26th November, 1966. The meeting was
extremely well attended, and the five speakers presented a varied and
interesting programme which was much appreciated.
Excavations in the County
The standard of excavation in the County remains high and in accordance
with modern requirements. Work is widespread and, as will be seen
from details recorded in the Appendices, covers many different periods in
the history of Kent. Appendix I contains Reports on excavations directly
supported by the Society, and Appendix II contains Reports from Local
Secretaries and Groups.
LOCAL SECRET.A.RIES AND LOCAL ACTIVITIES
The following ladies and gentlemen have assumed the duties of Local
Secretary for the following areas:
Bromley
Faversham
Tonbridge
Tunbridge Wells
Dr. E. V. Piercy Fox
Mr.Ja.mes Doak
Mr. A. P. Detsicas, M.A., F.S.A.
Mrs. M. Davies, B.A., Joint Local
Secretary with
Mrs. V. M. F. Desborough.
The Society records its gratitude to the above for assuming these
duties, and expresses its thanks to all Local Secretaries for their work
during the yeru-. Reports from Local Secretaries on local activities will be
found at Appendix II.
By Order of the Council,
1st January, 1967.
APPENDIX I
G: W. Meates, Lieut.-Colonel,
General Secret,ary.
Reports on Excavations supported and aided by the Society.
Interim Report by Mr. D. B. Kelly, on the Excavations at Quarry Wood
Oamvp, Loose:
The Society's newly acquired resistivity meter was used in September
to trace the bank and ditch on the south side of the earthwork which was
levelled in the early part of the nineteenth century and which is no longer
visible. A trench dug to test the result obtained revealed the buried remains
of the rampart and the ditch to its south, filled with material from
the demolished rampart. It is hoped to complete this section of the bank
and ditch this year and next year to test another section on the south side
and continue the work on the west bank begun in an earlier season. Sincere
thanks are due to Miss A. Salter, Mr. A. Miles and l\'Ir. T. Ithell for their
help in the excavation. This will complete the Society's study of the E.arly
Iron Age in Kent, initiated by the late Mrs. E. V. Piercy Fox.
xlvii
REPORT, 1966
Interim Report b7J Mr. P. J. Tester, F.S.A., on the Society's Research
Programvme at the site of the Benedictine Priory at Hi,gham:
Exploratory digging was undertaken at Abbey Farm, Higham (National
Grid Ref. TQ71757421), on behalf of the Society in April, July and August
1966, the object being to test the truth of the tradition that this is the site
of the Benedictine Priory dissolved in 1522. The probability was heightened
by observations made by our member and Local Secretary, Mr. A. F.
Allen, and Mr. D. Spittle, during the demolition of some cottages in 1959,
a detailed account being published in Arch. Gant., lxxx (1965). It was there
suggested that the destroyed cottages, which adjoined the existing brick
house, were part of the west claustral range, and attention was drawn to an
isolated piece of standing flint wall which might also have been a medieval
survival. :Mr. Allen pointed out this feature to me on a visit to the site in
January 1965, and also brought to my notice the pronounced scatter of
tiles and other building material on the surface of a ploughed field some
distance to the south.
The K.A.S. Excavations Committee having agreed that the site was
a suitable subject for research, and permission having been granted by
the landowners and tenant, a preliminary resistivity survey was carried
out by Mr. K. W. E. Gravett with encouraging results. Mr. J.E. L. Caiger
made a careful survey of the area and produced a large-scale plan on which
the features uncovered by excavation could be accurately plotted. Trenching
was carried out by a small party of diggers from 12th to 23rd April,
and for two short periods in the summer. The immediate result was the
uncovering of rubble foundations which confirm in general the theories of
:M:r. Allen and Mr. Spittle. Although a full-scale excavation of the area has
not been practicable, enough has been done to enable the relative positions
of the monastic church, chapter house, warming room, reredorter and
refectory to be planned. Parts of the foundations were found to have
been robbed long ago, but even here it was possible to trace the general
direction of the walls. The width of the north, east, and west cloister alleys
was established and here graves were discovered, one containing a stone
coffin with decorated cover. These objects have been removed to Maidstone
Museum where they are now on exhibition.
Apparently the nuns' church was on the north side of the cloister and
the piece of flint wall noted by Mr. Allen now appears to have formed
part of the south wall of the nave. Unfortunately the site of the church
is covered by a farm trackway in constant use, and our opportunities for
recovering the plan of the church have been very limited.
In the outer (east) wall of the warming room, situated under the dormitory
in the east range, the medieval fireplace was uncovered with evidence
of successive hearths. The reredorter projected eastward from the
south end of the dormitory range, and as this lay in part of an open field
it could be investigated more fully. A stone and tile drain from the latrine
was traced for some distance eastward, and the sanitary arrangements of
the nunnery could be ascertained in some detail.
Our investigations show that the existing building which is attached
to the brick house, and formerly adjoined the cottages destroyed in 1959,
does not represent in itself part of the medieval establishment, although
it is obviously constructed of stone taken from the destroyed nunnery.
This stone outhouse and the inhabited brick house to which it is attached
are now seen to overlie the south-west corner ·of the claustral buildings at
the junction of the refectory and the west range.
xlviii
REPORT, 1966
The successful outcome of this investigation is due to the hard work
and loyal support of a small team of diggers. Thanks are due particularly
to Mr. A. C. Harrison and l\'lr. T. Ithell, and very valuable support was
also given by Messrs. I. Bissett, A. P. Detsioas, G. Dockrell, D. B. Kelly,
A. Miles and Mr. and Mrs. D. Jones. Help came also from some boys of
Gravesend Technical School and Sir Joseph Williamson's Mathematical
School, Rochester. Mr. R.H. Lawrence plotted the excavated features on
the site plan. The back-filling was most kindly undertaken by the farmer
without whose friendly co-operation the undertaking would not have been
possible. It is hoped to continue the work next year to discover further
details of the monastic layout. When all is completed the plan will be
published with a full description of the evidence.
Int,erim Report by Mr. A. P. Detsicas, 11!£.A., F.S.A., on the Excavations
at the Eccles Roman Villa:
Excavations were continued this year, on behalf of the Eccles Excavation
Committee, every weekend from the end of March until the end of
October and for a continuous fortnight in August, at two sites: (a) the
Romano-British villa at Eccles, Aylesford, and (b) the tilery supplying
building materials for the villa.
The work was supported by the Kent Archreological Society, the Society
of Antiquaries of London, the Craven Fund and the Haverfield Trust of
the University of Oxford. The results of this fifth season's work may be
summarized as follows:
(a) Further work was carried out in the area occupied, to north and
north-east of the baths compound, by the workshops of the villa in use
during the third and fourth periods of occupation of the site (c. A.D. 65-
180); these workshops provide ample evidence of continuous use and a
complex stratigraphical sequence which will be reported on in Arch.
Cant., lxxxii (1967). To the north-west of these workshops, a fairly large
area covered with metalling has been partly exposed, but its purpose and
dating is not yet established; to the north-east, parts of a large, barn-like
building have been cleared, and the remainder will be investigated in 1967.
More sections were also cut to south-west and north-west of the site and
across the line of the early ditch (Period I, to c. A.D. 55), which continues
beyond the points reached so for.
A resistivity survey of the area to the north-east of the sites excavated
during the last five years was carried out by Mr. I. J. Bissett using the
K.A.S. resistivity meter, and its interesting results will be confirmed by
excavation next year.
(b) A rescue excavation was undertaken at Wbitsun a short distance
. from the site of the villa to recover the plan of a tilery exposed in the course
of mechanical stripping of the topsoil. Though most of the evidence had
already been destroyed, it was possible to establish that the tilery was
rectangular, with overall measurements of 25 by 26 ft.; it had a central
flue extending over practically the whole length of the tilery and traversed
by several cross-walls. It was fired from the south and loaded from the
north, through an entrance in its north wall which was bricked over
before firing. This tilery (N.G.R. TQ717604) produced box-tiles, bonding.
tiles, tegul,re and imb1-ices in the course of the second century A.D. for use
at the site of the villa during Periods IV and V. The site of the tilery is now
concreted over for industrial purposes, and a foll report will appear in
Arch. Oant., lxxxii (1967).
xli:x:
4
REPORT, 1966
Interim Report "l>y Mr. J. H. Parfitt, on the Excavations at Lei,gh, near
Tonbridge:
The site of the excavation is a moated enclosure at Moat Farm, at the
eastern end of Leigh (N.G.R. 555466). The land enclosed by the moat is
approximately 200 ft by 90 ft., and has no permanent strcture above
surface level. A considerable tile scatter over most of the surface area and
exploratory work some foux years ago revealed evidence of previous
buildings on the site, and pottery finds suggest a late thirteenth-century
date.
The northern third of the moated area was allocated for excavation
this season, an area of 90 ft. by 40 ft., enclosed on three sides by the moat.
Stone wall footings were discovered close to the edge of the moat, and an
area approximately 35 ft. by 30 ft. surrounding these footings was uncovered
to a depth of approximately 2 ft. 6 in., below which is undisturbed
natural clay.
Thoμgh the first season's work has provided little as to the plan of the
structure partially uncovered, considerable quantities of pottery have been
obtained, all of a consistent period-provisionally dated to the end of the
thirteenth century. These fragments, of which over 1,000 have been
recovered, are mainly of three kinds, (i} Coarse grey cooking pots and
dishes, (ii) Finer gt·ey jug fragments, and (iii} Green glaze pottery. Some of
this has already been re-constructed, in particular some 150 fragments of a
heavily patterned grey pot of ornamental character (approximately 60 per
cent. of the total surface), which is quite unlike the other pottery sherds
so far discovered.
Other finds include, (i) considerable quantities of bone, (ii) boars'
tusks, (iii) lead and nails, (iv) oyster shells, and (v) small fragments of
glass. There are considerable quantities of charcoal and ash, suggesting a
fire, though the tile fall immediately above the occupation surface shows
no marks of fire.
The site so far uncovered indicates that it has been considerably
disturbed by ploughing and drainage in recent centuries, and this has
made the task of identifying layers very difficult.
Interim Report by Mr. A. C. Harrison, B.A., on the Excavp,tions at
St. 1v.Ia,ry' s Hoi-pital, N ewarlc Yard, Sitrood:
At the request of the Ministry of Public Building and Works, an
excavation has been undertaken by the Lower Medway Archreological
Research Group and the Archreological Society of Sir Joseph Williai;nson's
l\fathematical School, at Newark Yard in Strood, the traditional site of the
Hospital founded by Bishop Gilbert de Glanville of Rochester in 1193
and suppressed by Henry VIII in 1539. The excavation was supported
financially by the Kent Archreological Society, the Mayor of Rochester,
and the Ministry, which allowed a mechanical excavator to be used to
remove the walls and floors of later buildings overlying the medieval
structure.
It has proved possible to recover almost the whole plan of the principal
building, which consisted of a long narrow aisle-less Ho.11, 24 ft. wide by at
least 48 ft. long, lying approximately north-south, with a Chapel 35 ft.
long by 18 ft. wide projecting at right angles to the east. The Hall was
entered by two large doorways in the west wall and was divided by a
central partition-wall opposite the centre of the archway leading into the
I
REPORT, 1966
Chapel-a division clearly designed to separate the male and female inmates
while still enabling them to have an uninterrupted view into the
Chapel. This plan is closely paralleled by St. John's Hospital founded by
Lanfranc in Canterbury c. 1089 (cf. A1·ch. Journ., lxxxvi, pp. 101-2). The
bases of small shafts in the north-east and north-west corners of the Chapel
indicate that this was vaulted.
The original plan was twice modified. At some period, not closely
datable at present, the Chapel was destroyed almost to floor level, and,
after foundation material had been laid on top of and overlapping the wall
stumps, rebuilt with the floor at a higher level. It seems probable that the
collapse was due to the thrust of the vaulting overthrowing the walls,
which were somewhat insecurely based in alluvial clay. When rebuilt the
structure was strengthened with very massive buttresses at the corners
and the vaulted roof was not replaced. Still later the two doorways of the
Hall mentioned above were blocked, the central wall demolished, and a
new doorway opened up in the centre. At the same time the Hall was
shortened by the construction of walls at either end and the floor raised.
Inserted into this floor was a very well-constructed grave made of stone
and brick and floored with coloured tiles. 'I'his grave, which is tentatively
assigned to the fifteenth century, contained two burials. The situation of
these burials in what had been the living quarters, taken in conjunction
with the other modifications, would seem to suggest that in its later
stages the Hospital ha
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