
Foundations of the Saxon Cathedral Church at Rochester
Contributions to the next volume are welcome. See the guidance for contributors and contact Editor Jason Mazzocchi. Also see the guidance for peer review.
Search page
Search within this page here, search the collection page or search the website.
Surgical Report on a Skeleton found in the Crypt of Canterbury Cathedral (1888)
St James Church, Sheldwich
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.
-
411Csssit4t011104 0 dato WO,
4 „eoez.:• • N
sx,
CIE.
FEET 10
••
•... S .•••.
•%. . . . • ,
. •.. . • .....:.„ %,... .. ` • .
ss,
•
• S. • S. • • \ \
• •
tS'accfoounn iwdaaitlio annsd
-FkaV Norman, wall, wail,
foundations ; 1 ' :
.Later 7r7rza7i, etc.
VINTIPPORMIVINTIRVTIMP
I. 1 t t t t t
S.
I Discoveivel
2 CONfttilaVit
Discovered,
Conjectured,
27w ftgumet arrows rerer to sections given/in/Rotel 1.
Scale.
10
Ket.L.LITHO 8, FUR f IVAL. sr HOL•OR E.C.
COMPARATIVE GROUND PLAN OF CHURCH
SRa.rxsot An: rSoroynl ean iCluerch.:
2f,,2 G1u2nr4c,l .1u1liero:r7num: Grey: _(6Luantedr audit*d .Tiotiownesr: : outliru> .
FEET SOI I 0 S4O. FEET.
20 fEgT
( 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.
rI
w I
>i
«ls;
V>Jf^
. . . . . --N INT.
1
SARLY NOR. qUNOULF
4,FOUNDATION DITOH
I s t . B A Y - S . A I S L S .
5 . CeNT&AL DOORWAY,
WSST FROMSCALE
OF PSST AND INCH6S
*J
Sssssss feWtef® tf&§2f>
?!£$&% ^ ^iiyy
SSSSS^
n M M :Uigj^g%^ 4 . SARLY NORMAN WALLING
I. SARLY NORMAN BASES
3 . S A X O N W A L L I N O , n. S A M I A N N A / A R E .
sss\
^^^^^wm
lilLJfcUifi
i \ cofJef^eTe
rot/fJo/^i-ioH
6 . SAXON WORK.
6ASTORN APSS.
l6th,CTi(
T - O v / e ^ I FAVINq
eoTTtwjvfiT) KjefJTisH
REPAIFSS 1 M*
-W
>=