( 145 )
TEYNHAM CHURCH: ARCHITECTURAL
NOTES.
BY ]?. C. ELLISTON ERWOOD.
TEYNHAM CHURCH, dedicated to St. Mary, and situated
approximately in the centre of the parish, occupies a somewhat
prominent position between the Dover road to the
south and the Swale northwards. The building consists of a
nave, with north and south aisles, north and south transepts,
a chancel, and a western tower, which last is peculiar in that it
is flanked north and south by unusual westward extensions
of both aisles.
The general impression gathered by a superficial survey
is that of a thirteenth-century cruciform building, with a
few later additions, and thus it is described in most of the
published accounts. A more careful investigation, however,
reveals details that, if not affording absolutely complete
evidence on all points, at any rate indicate a structure of
earlier date; and this evidence, joined to the fact that a
considerable proportion of English thirteenth-century cruciform
churches has evolved from a much simpler building,
is sufficient to establish a twelfth-century church, whose
plans and details can be laid down with some degree of
certainty. The suggested development of the church is
illustrated by the small block plans (Fig. 1), and may be
briefly outlined before proceeding to detail the data on
which they are based.
12th Century (early).—The church consisted of a simple
nave and square-ended chancel. The existing arcades preserve
the lines of the north and south walls of the church,
and the portions of wall above these arcades may conceivably
be of this early date, though there is nothing save theory to
substantiate it. The chancel would occupy the interior of
the present crossing, while the west wall of the nave would
TEYNHAM CtlVRCh
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TEYNHAM CHURCH: ARCHITECTURAL NOTES. 147
occupy the site of the present west wall, part of which may
well be original (see G-eneral Plan, Fig. 3). This small
church conforms fairly well in general proportion with those
dealt with by Canon Livett in his paper on Early Norman
Churches in Archceologia Cantiana, Vol. XXI.; the original
church at Teynham being, however, about one-third larger
in most dimensions than those of Paddlesworth and Dode
described therein.
12th Century (later).—Aisles were added north and south
to the earlier building, necessitating the piercing of the
original walls with arches, forming thus an arcade of three
bays. Two buttresses were built, masking the junction of
the extensions to the west front, and serving also to support
the* weakened arcade walls. These aisles were 9 feet wide—
somewhat in excess of the usual dimension for early aisles
—but from the fabric it is evident they were constructed
before the transepts. The appearance of the church at this
stage may be gathered from Pig. 2, where the building is
shewn with low aisle walls and roof, covering in one continuous
span, nave and both aisles.
18th Century.—The normal development of the thirteenth
century produced a cruciform church, practically that which
remains now. An extended chancel and north and south
transepts were built around the small twelfth-century
chancel, and, in addition, a tower was erected at the west end
between the two early buttresses.
Later Worh.—Subsequent additions were chiefly in thenature
of insertions, but the two flanking additions to the
tower require further consideration, which will be afforded
later.
I t now remains to examine the structural and other
evidence for this development theory.
One of the most noteworthy features about the building
is the extraordinary variety of building material used in its
construction. Besides the ordinary flint nodules, tufa,
Eeigate stone, Kentish marble, Caen stone (one piece in
the north wall of the transept bearing typical twelfthcentury
chevron moulding, and another a roughly incised
148 TEYNHAM CHURCH: ARCHITECTURAL NOTES.
"scratch" dial), ragstone, sarsen, beach pebbles, Eoman
and Medieeval brick, are found in varying degrees of
abundance.
Some of these obviously point to Norman work, and
afford the strongest piece of evidence for the early church,
for of any wall that can beyond doubt be assigned to this
period on the strength of its architectural details, there is
none. Nor is this remarkable; for the disappearance of all
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Kg. 2.—TEYNHAM CHUBCJHC.
Reconstruction of the west end, as it probably appeared at the end
of the 12th century.
of the early walls would have been achieved by the end of
the thirteenth century, when the enlargement was complete,
and the old material absorbed and re-used in the later work.
I t is doubtful even whether the wall above the nave arcade is
original. This arcade was rebuilt certainly in the fifteenth
century, and from the thinness of the wall above (2 feet only,
as compared with 2 feet 9 inches, the normal width of an
early wall) it seems that it was rebuilt in its entirety.
The west wall of the nave has been obscured by the
TEYNHAM CHURCH
General view from the South-West.
F. C. Etliston Erwood
H S n H H
TEYNHAM CHURCH
Tomb in the Churchyard near the West End of the Building.
F. C. Elliston Erwood
TEYNHAM CHURCH: ARCHITECTURAL NOTES. 149
erection of the tower externally and by plastering internally.
Nothing, therefore, can be argued from this source.
Por the later twelfth-century development there is more
substantial evidence, sufficient indeed to establish and
justify the plan as given in Pig. 1. In the northern vestry
can be seen, in its south-east corner, a cement rendered
projection, which suggests a modern chimney flue, but an
examination of the corresponding position, the north-east
corner of the southern or choir vestry, reveals a sixnilar
projection, well hidden from view below by a dark and dirty
cupboard devoted to the church cleaner's materials, and
equally masked above by piles of miscellaneous rubbish.
This feature is, fortunately, not covered with cement, and
at once indicates its character, and that of the corresponding
feature on the north, as a late twelfth-century buttress,
with a somewhat greater projection than the earliest type,
but still not of the full depth of later times. Its coins are of
Eeigate stone, and it seems to have been without off-seis,
but with a plain sloping head. Quite evidently these were
designed in some measure to resist the thrust of the arches
inserted in the walls when the aisles were built. These
aisle walls, both north and south, shew straight joints
against the west walls of the transepts, and in each case
retain at both ends sufficient indication of their original
coins in situ to make their extent certain. The fact that
these external walls shew signs of having been heightened
in a succeeding century tends to confirm the accuracy of the
small sketch (Pig. 2), where the building at this time is
shewn as covered by one plain gable roof. Again, no doors
nor windows of this period remain, and their positions are
either obscured or occupied by later insertions. The arcades
of the nave were, in all likelihood, in three bays (rather
than two, as now), each supported by two full piers with
responds east and west. One other feature remains in the
traces of an internal plinth throughout the greater part of
the south wall and the eastern portion of the north wall.
This plinth is quite rough—without any moulding, or chamfer,
and may be an original offset of the wall, now much obscured
150 TEYNHAM CHURCH: ARCHITECTURAL NOTES.
-by plaster. The character of the church was entirely altered
in the thirteenth century by the addition of a considerably
larger chancel and two deep transepts, the latter in their
combined length from north to south being almost equal
to the length of the new church from east to west. These
enlargements surrounded the old chancel, which was ultimately
taken down, the space being thrown into the nave
and forming the crossing, which frequently, in larger
churches of this type, was crowned with a tower. No such
tower was ever erected here, the abutments being of far too
weak a character to support the additional weight. Instead,
a tower was built at the west end of the nave.
The chancel is practically complete save for the insertion
of a five-light window in a later style, and for the fact that
the chancel arch has been rebuilt. Also the two corner
buttresses at the west end are modern additions. Externally
the walling has been in great part restored; but on the
north, near to its junction with the transept, there is a patch
of walling of early character, very suggestive of herringbone
work. Most of the other windows are original and
form two finely-proportioned, though simple, series of
lancets, with broad internal splays quite in keeping with
the spacious character of the interior. Below the eastern
window, on the south side, the string-course is original;
elsewhere it is modern restoration, as is a great deal of the
internal stonework. A contemporary piscina, with a trefoiled
head and stopped chamfered reveals, is situated
beneath the same window. Its position, much too low down
for convenience, shews that the chancel floor has been raised
Considerably above its proper level. In the east wall of the
chancel, to south of the communion table, is an aumbry,
or cupboard, perhaps of the fourteenth century.
Both arms of the transept were originally similar, lit by
ten windows, four in each east wall and three in the west
wall, while the gable walls, north and south, contained each
two lancets, with a circular or very slightly vesica-shaped
quatrefoiled light above them. These early arrangements
have been much disturbed. In both transepts the eastern
F. C. Elliston Erwood
TEYNHAM CHURCH
View from the Crossing into the South Transept.
t . C Elliston Erwood
TEYNHAM CHURCH
South Arcade and Aisle of the Nave, looking South-West.
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