( .196 )
MEDIEVAL REMAINS AT ROOHESTER,
BY A. A. ARNOLD.
Arch beneath the approach to Bochester Castle.
MANY of the members of the Kent Archseological Society
present at the annual meeting held at Rochester in 1886,
will remember the " Notes for a Perambulation" of that
ancient city, written by the Hon. Secretary, Canon Scott
Robertson; but probably few penetrated to the place he there
described as an " enclosed rubbish-yard," at the top of Twopost
Alley, or inspected the remains oO a small pointed arch
which he mentioned as one of the arches which supported
the road to the main gate of the castle.
In the course of the summer of 1888, this yard was
cleared from the accumulated rubbish, ruinous old wooden
buildings, and fragments which had. covered it; and so a
better view was obtained, for the first time, of what remained
of that arch and of this part of the old castle ditch. It is
now again entirely hidden from view; a very substantial'and
handsome building—the Rochester Liberal Club—having
been built, which covers the whole site.
When the site was cleared, some photographs and drawings
were made, and the accompanying illustrations prepared
from them will give a better idea of the remains than
any description which I could offer.
In the History of Bochester, published by Pisher in 1772,
the writer of that most careful and valuable work says, in
his description of the castle:
" Three sides of the castle were surrounded with a deep broad
ditch, which is now nearly filled up. On the other side runs the
River Medway. The entrance into this fortress is from the northeast.
Part of the portal still remains. On each side of this is an
angular recess, with arches in the outward walls that command the
UlCH >'). 2, IN C.wn.K \\
Wr^^»-
ARCH NO. 1, UHDaa CASTLE BiUUGE.
IN THE MOAT OP ROCHESTER CASTLE.
MEDIAEVAL REMAINS AT ROOHESTER. 19 7
avenues to thebridge of the castle to the right aud left. Over the
gateway and the recesses was a large tower, from this entrance is
an easy descent into the city, formed on two arches turned over the
•castle ditch. This descent from the castle terminated in a street
• which, in the Registrum Roffense, is called Venella, and was the
grand av.enue from the High Street to the castle, which no doubt
procured it the name of Castle Street,* which it appears by a Court
Eoll to have retained so low at least as 1576."
The descent from the castle, as will be seen from the
above extract, was a steep roadway formed on two arches
turned over the castle ditch, and the lower of these arches
is shewn as No. 1 in our Plate; the remains of the more
central and probably the more spacious arch under the roadway,
spanning the moat, have altogether disappeared. The
lower archway, shewn in our illustration, was formed of
large blocks of chalk, with some rag-stone.
• I regret to say that no exact measurements were taken,
but the width of the arch in its broadest part may be
approximately stated at 12 feet, and the height about
8 feet. It was impossible to get more than a few feet into
the interior, which was filled with rubbish. The ditch, on
the south side of this road or causeway, now forming the
site of the new Liberal Club, had been to a great extent
levelled, and wooden buildings had been standing there for
probably a century and a half; they were altogether removed
in 1888.
The excavations which I have mentioned exposed not
only the arch under the Castle Bridge, but also another
arch supporting the remains of the castle wall, at the rear
of the site. It is one of those arches often described as
" an arch of construction," of which other examples are to
* The Castle Street was afterwards called Castle Lane; the portion leading
to the street has for many years been a way for foot-passengers only, and posts
having been erected—probably to prevent other traffic—it has acquired the
euphonious appellation of " Two-post Alley." The upper part of the thoroughfare,
nearer to the castle, where it widens towards Boley Hill, forming a shoulder
or "epaulement" to the works (seethe annexed map), obtained probably from
that circumstance the name of Epaule, or commonly Epple Lane, by which it
is sometimes, even now, called. The lane near, now known as King^s-head Lane,
leading from the King's Head in the High Street, past the anoient enclosed
burial-ground to Boley Hill, is undoubtedly the lane which, in the grants from
Ethelbert to the Church of Rochester (see Hearne's Teztus Roffensis, pp. 63
and 85), is called Doddingherne.
198 MEDIAEVAL REMAINS AT ROCHESTER.
be seen in Rochester; one especially iu the city wall, near
the gardens abutting on Crow Lane. The newly-discovered
arch of construction is shewn as No. 2 in our Plate.
The new building of the Rochester Liberal Club covers
the whole site, which was cleared and excavated; the lower
walls effectually block up all access to the arch under the
castle bridge, but not to that under the castle wall.
The entrance gateway to the castle and the portal mentioned
in the History of Bochester have disappeared; but they
are seen on the old map or plan which accompanies this
paper. A great fragment of the wall, said to be thirty feet
high, and about twenty feet in width, is recorded to have
fallen on the 19th March 1806, with a dreadful crash, and
to have entirely destroyed a coach-builder's shed below it,
then occupied by Mr. Butcher (Gentleman's Magazine, vol.
lxxvi,, p. 274), which at that time stood on this site. Another
part of the entrance gateway was, I think, taken down
about 1871, when the castle gardens were first taken by the
City Corporation, and thrown open to the public as a recreation
ground.
The moat or ditch round the castle is described, in the
above extract from the History of Bochester, as " deep and
broad;" and how true that description was may still be
judged by viewing what is now left of it between the new
Rochester Bridge Chamber (which stands probably on the
mouth, or nearly on the mouth, of the ditch, where it joined
the river) and the top of " Two-post Alley." Some hand- *
some new houses, and the Rochester and County Club, have
been lately built on the upper ridge overhanging the moat,
and there is a rapid and deep dip between the back of these
houses and the rear of the houses in the High Street. This
is still more apparent on the highest point of this ridge,
where, if the garden-doors (made in the thickness of the old
wall) are open, it is seen that the descent to the moat is
still very steep, and sharply defined. Even under the altered
circumstances, this view gives a good idea of the depth and
imposing proportions of the moat, as it must have been in
the thirteenth century. The other part of it, above the
castle bridge, passing along the back of Boley Hill, through
« .
fe,^
^
No. 2. No. 1.
IN THE MOAT OF ROCHESTER CASTLE—ARCHES: (1) UNDER CASTLB BRIDGE ; (2) IN OUTER WALL.
MEDIEVAL REMAINS AT -ROCHESTER. 199
the castle grounds known as cc Baker's Walks," and so into
the river at the west side of the castle, have been more
effectually levelled; but for the greater part of this route
the course of the moat can very easily be traced. What may
be called the Boley Hill portion of the moat was levelled
early in the last century, as we learn from the History of
Bochester, p. 281.
Map of Bochester, dated 1717.
In order to illustrate this description of the moat and
the Castle bridge, and their surroundings, I am allowed by
the Wardens of Rochester Bridge to annex a copy of an
old map in their possession. The original was revised in
1717 from a survey made some thirty-three years earlier,
and it shews better, certainly, than any map I have before
seen, the proportions of the moat, and the access to the
Castle, the Castle bridge, Castle Street, and other points
referred to in this paper. The map was merely designed to
shew the houses and other possessions of the Bridge Wardens
within the city, and is interesting in that respect; it
also shews the South gate of the city,* which stood between
the wall of Boley Hill House, now Mrs. Aveling's, and the
opposite wall belonging to the gardens of the old palace of
the Bishops of Rochester. The arch of this gate is marked
in the earlier copy of the map made in 1684 at a different
angle; namely, as crossing the road from east to west,
instead of from north to south, nearly.
A precinct-gatehouse, beside the south-west entrance to
the Cathedral, as shewn in the accompanying old map, is
mentioned in books of the last century; but the memory of
it has died out. In the Kentish Traveller (edition dated
1790), p. 148, we read:
* The author of the Sistory of Rochester says in 1771: "The south gate
was near Boley Hill, in the road to St. Margaret's; the hooks on whioh the gate
hung are still in the wall at the north-east corner of Mr. Gordon's garden; the
gate is about nine feet wide; the aroh was taken down in the year 1770." The
hooks are gone, but the wall at this point still shews where the gates stood. The
late Mr. Phippen, in his Slcetrfies of Roohester, 1862, absolutely denied that
there was ever a " south gate " here. Our map would no doubt have convinced
him. • . . . .
200 OLD MAP OP ROCHESTER.
" The almonry of the convent was at the South "West extremity
of the church. It is now the house of the fifth Prebendary, and
this stall is annexed, by Act of Parliament, to the Provostship of
Oriel College in Oxford. There was within memory a gate, adjoining
to the gable end of this house, which enclosed this part of the
precinct, now called College Green."
I n the History of Bochester (edition 1772) we find two
allusions to this gate. On p. 97, speaking of the house Of
the fifth Prebendary, it is said, " from the dangerous state
of tbe adjoining gatehouse" it was removed. Again, we
read on p. 99:
" Besides the gate at tlie end of Dr. Clarice's house, there were
three other gates, belonging to the precincts of this priory, viz.,
the Cemetery G-ate, which seems to be that which is now called
' College Yard Gate.' . . . . St. "William's Gate was another avenue
into the precincts The Prior's Gate was where the grammar
school now (1772) is."
The remarkable tree* upon Boley (Bully) Hill, beneath
which the local courts used to be held, is also prominently
shewn upon our old map.
Dr. Thorpe, compiler of the Begistrum Boffense, resided in
a house, near the pump in the High Street, which is marked
with the figure 9 in our copy of the old map.
I t will be observed that the old bridge shewn in the map
stands further south than the existing modern bridge, which
starts from a site near the word "Kay" in the old map.
The extent of the old Crown Inn and its yard is well
shewn upon the old map; on our copy of it the Crown Inn
is denoted by the figure 12.
Satis House is shewn (No. 8 on our copy of the map) as
it must have been when Queen Elizabeth visited Mr. Watts
there. It was altered and " restored " by Mr. Brooke.
Boley Hill House (No. 6 on our copy of the map), formerly
occupied by the Gordon family (mentioned in the note
above on the last page), is now the residence of Mrs.
Aveling.
* Sec Archaologia Oantiana, XVII., pp. 183, 186, 187.
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REMAINS AT ROOHESTER. 201
Foundations of a Wall of the Priory.
In a separate paper in this Volume reference is made to
the assistance rendered to the Kent Archseological Society
by Mr. Banks of Eochester, the City Surveyor. In the
following instance we are also indebted to him. He carefully
measured and made a plan of the foundations of the
medieeval wall, which was found under the vacant piece of
land -between the High Street and the south side of the
choir of Eochester Cathedral. It was thought, by some,
that the foundations of the old- City Com Gross might be
found there, and so in 1887 an examination was made. If
any fragment of the Corn Cross had been found, it might
probably have been rebuilt by tbe City, as the Queen's
Jubilee Memorial. There was, however, no vestige of the
Cross. What Mr, Banks did find was the lower part of the
wall, of stone and chalk, " de petra et calce," which was
built by the Monks of St. Andrew in pursuance of the licence
granted in the 19th of Edward III. near the gate of
St. William, between the city and the garden of the Priory
(see Thorpe's Begistrum Boffense, pp. 552-3). Mr. Banks
uncovered this work for a length of about eighty-five feet.
I t lies fifteen feet from the outer side of the new retaining
wall against the High Street, the top is about three feet
below the present surface, Mr. Banks describes it as a
rubble wall, built of rough irregularly shaped pieces of stone.
The base appeared to be composed of large blocks of chalk;
the rubble work, of which about three feet remains, was
about five feet high, its base being about eight feet below
the surface; both the chalk and the rubble are set in
mortar, and the chalk base spreads a little wider than the
rubble wall.
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