REVIEWS
A ngk>-Saxon Jewellery. By Ronald Jessup. 8¼ X 5¾ in. Pp. 96, including
33 plates. Shire Publications Ltd., Princes Risborough, 1974.
£2.25.
This is Mr. Jessup's second book on this subject: an abbreviated
and partly updated version of an identically titled work first published
in 1950 and now, alas, virtually unobtainable. Comparing the two,
while most objects described and illustrated in the new book are old
friends, one notes with pleasure the inclusion of the Late Saxon Strickland
and Fuller disc brooches and the addition of several outstanding
recent finds; the fifth-century belt-set in 'quoit brooch style' from
Mucking, Essex, and two splendid seventh-century pieces from Kent,
the 'Finglesham Man' buckle and the composite jewelled disc from
Monk.ton. A sad omission is the austerely beautiful little gold cross from
Thurnham, also in Kent, which was found in 1967 and never adequately
published before it was tragically lost to view in a private collection:
a good photograph of this would have enhanced the value of the book.
Compensation is at hand, however, in the form of another seventhcentury
cross and jewelled disc from Winster, in Derbyshire: here is the
best and most accessible reproduction of them since they were found
over two centuries ago. Most of the new photographs are good but
some ol prints (e.g. the bracteates, Pl. 5) should never have been reused
and some grotesque contrasts in scale should have been avoided
(Pl. 3). Th.e quality of the photographs is thus very uneven and the
visual impat of the book is further reduced by the lack of colour
reproduction· of any of the finer polychrome jewels. Though each
illustrated obje..ct is fully and generally well described, one misses
the individual htbliographies which made the earlier book such a
handy work of refnce and one regrets the perpetuation of old errors.
For example, the llle silver 'safety-pin' brooches, found with the
famous composite brch from Kingston, are not survivals from the
Early Iron Age (p. 74) b variants of a tYPe of miniature brooch known
from other Anglo-Saxon •aves of the seventh century (Uncleby,
Yorks.; Shudy Camps, Cams.; Swallowcliffe Down, Wilts.).
Mr. Jessup is the acknowedged master of British archaeology's
antiquarian literature and, whe:Q. citing such sources, is scrupulously
correct and brilliantly in his elent. With the course of modern
research he is less at home, however, and there are omissions in his
published bibliography which go far to explain some outdated statements
and a general unawareness of recent developments on the Continent.
Kent's earliest square-headed brooches are now known to have
227
REVIEWS
come not from the Rhineland (p. 39) but from Denmark (Egil Ba.kka,
On the Beginnings of Salin's Styl,e I in England, Bergen, 1958; and the
reviewer in Medieval ArchaeoUJfJY, ii (1958), 45-57), and our knowledge
of the techniques used in their production, particularly the casting
processes (p. 23), has been rendered less speculative since the discovery
of a large sixth/seventh century workshop site in Sweden (W .. Holmqvist
and others, Excavations at Helgo IV, Stockholm, 1972). There
square-headed brooches and other dress-fasteners were being massproduced,
complete with their so-called 'chip-carved' ornament, in
bi- or multipartite moulds of fine clay, which were remade for each
casting from existing bronze models. Probably only the jewellers'
models, examples of which are known from goldsmiths' graves from
various parts of Europe (J. Werner, Early Medieval Studies, i, Stockholm,
1970), were ma.de by the more laborious lost-wax process. The
mass production of Kentish disc or Anglian cruciform brooches must
have been carried out in similar workshops by virtually identical
methods.
The author tells us that it was his intention in this book to 'interest
the many, not to inform the select few', but that is begging the question.
In these enlightened days an attractively low-priced book that happens
to be the only work in print about such a fascinating topic as AngloSaxon
jewellery is bound to enjoy a large sale to all manner of people
seriously interested in archaeology. No matter who they are, they
deserve of the best. It is the unhappy duty of this reviewer to point out
that the manifold virtues of this little book are disfigured by too many
avoidable errors of omission and commission. So out with the paste
and scissors again, Mr. Jessup, and let us have a third edition, up to
date and up to scratch, which will measure up both to the subject
matter and to all our expectations and requirements.
SONIA CHADWICK HAWKES
A History of Kent. By Frank W. Jessup. 9J x7¼. Pp. 168, 57 plates
(3 in colour), 16 maps and numerous line-drawings. Phillimore
& Co. Ltd., London and Chichester, 1974. £3.75.
This handsome volume, by one of our vice-presidents and part of
the publishers' Darwen Oounty History Series, is a second edition of a
well-known book long out of print and something of a veritable tour de
force.
In twenty chapters, the author traces the history of the County
from 'before the Romans' to 'industrial development in the ninteenth
(sic) and twentieth centuries'. Mr. Jessup is well aware of the horns of
the dilemma almost certa.in to ensna.re any author attempting to compile
the history of a county so rich in material as ours and he has aptly
228
REVIEWS
dubbed them Scylla and Charybdis in the preface to his first edition;
yet, his readers ought to be grateful that he did not consider the
prospect too daunting but rewarding enough to complete his self.
imposed Herculean labour of love-nor, in the opinion of this reviewer,
does he need to offer as an alibi for the shortcomings and omissions he
readily admits to (p. 13) that he was 'influenced by his own personal
interests'. For it is just this personal approach that is one of the main
strengths of his book and a witness to the breadth of Mr. Jessup's
learning. Certainly, specialists in the various periods of the County's
history may find areas where their own personal and narrower interests
would stress points which the author found perhaps less close to his
heart; but to do this would surely mean a book of this size for each one
of these specialised fields. Clearly, what Mr. Jessup set out to do was to
write, as he himself says (p. 13), 'a series of accounts of the most important
periods and topics', to set out before his readers' eyes the broad
canvas with as much detail as would render his personal approach
intelligible to them and to urge them onto the path of the detailed
accounts which fall outside his conspect; in this aim, the author
succeeds admirably.
Mr. Jessup is justly proud of 'the wealth of illustrative material'
(p. 14) which enhances the value of his history and makes it come
alive with this profusion of well-chosen and reproduced plates and
distribution maps (specialists, again, may raise an eyebrow or two
over some of the latter, but Mr. Jessup has already disarmed them for
his treading on such tender toes!)-not least valuable are the delightful
line-drawings which grace the generous margins of this book, the
comprehensive index and adequate bibliography.
All in all, this is a history worthy of our County and an indispensable
addition to members' bookshelves before its deserved success adds this
volume, too, to the long Jist of unobtainable Kent books and forces
Mr. Jessup to embark upon its third edition. A. P. DETSICAS
Through This Door. By M. Lawrence. 8½ x 5½ in. Pp. 28, 6 pls., 4 line
drawings and a map. 50p.
St. Michael's Church, East Peckham, was declared redundant in
1972 after at least eight centuries of uninterrupted use as a place of
Christian worship. Mrs. Margaret Lawrence has marked the occasion
by compiling an informative and at the same time entertaining booklet
about some of the people who must in former times have passed through
the door of their parish ohurch. It is a work of predominantly human
interest, and there is nothing about the architecture or the monuments,
as they have been dealt with elsewhere by other writers. Her 1ist of
references indicates the extent of the research undertaken to obtain
229
15
REVIEWS
the facts on which this account is based, and the thumbnail sketches
interspersed in the text convey a lightness of touch which characterises
the presentation without in the least detracting from its value as serious
historical writing.
The numerous personalities who form the subject-matter are treated
under such headings as The Homecomer, the Anabaptist, The Linen
Lady, The Foundlings, The Commentator, The Heroes and The
Finalists. Some were notables like Sir Roger Twysden, while others
were orphan children fostered by local families who received them from
Thomas Coram's Foundling Hospital. John Day, the excommunicated
Anabaptist, had to be buried outside the churchyard 'between the gate
and the walnut tree', and we learn that Isabella Twysden was buried
in linen in 1681 despite the Act which insisted that nothing except wool
should be used for such purposes. Mary Nichol was baptised here in
1833, her parents passing through the parish at that time, the Curate
commenting of her mother: 'This woman I learn has been over the
country with the same child and has again and a.gain baptised the brat
pretending destitution and currying favour with the clergy'. Captain
John Norwood, whose family had farmed in the parish for six generations,
won the Victoria Cross at Ladysmith in the Boer War, and the last
bridegroom to walk through the door of the church in 1970 was
Frederick Cheesman whose ancestors were in East Peckham before the
registers began in the sixteenth century.
The fact that this remotely-situated church has now ceased to
fulfil its former purpose is a matter ofregret. That the final closing of its
door has prompted Mrs. Lawrence to write so engagingly about those
to whom it was once a spiritual home is a measure of compensation, as
all who read her account will readily appreciate.
Copies may be obtained from 'Barnfield', Church Lane, East Peckham,
and all proceeds go to the restoration of Holy Trinity Church, the
Victorianauccessor ofSt. Michael's. P. J. TESTER
Cat,alogue of Est,ate Maps, 1690-1840, in the Kent C
Previous
Previous
Kent Bibliography, 1973-74
Next
Next