Notes on the Architecture of Aldington Church, Kent, and the Chapel at Court-at-Street, called "Bellirica"
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NOTES ON THE ARCHITECTURE OF
ALDINGTON CHURCH, KENT, AND THE
CHAPEL AT COURT-AT-STREET, CALLED
" BELLIRICA."
F. C. ELLISTON ERWOOD, F.S.A.
THESE two buildings, the one intimately connected with
Erasmus (who was presented to the living of Aldington by
Archbishop Warham), the other the scene of several incidents
in the tragic hfe of the holy Maid of Kent, Elizabeth Barton,
have, naturally, an interest beyond their architectural
appeal, but from this latter point alone they are well worth
a visit. The church is situated on the northern slope of the
hill range on the borders of Romney Marsh, its fine recentlycompleted
tower dominating the country around, and being
a landmark from the sea. The building itself is simple in
plan, consisting of a western tower, nave, south aisle, chancel,
south chapel and the lower stages of an earlier tower, now
used as a vestry. The earliest church of which there are any
remains was Norman, of the twehth century. It consisted
of a plain aisleless nave, twenty-one feet by forty-three feet
internally, with a small square chancel of about nineteen feet
internal measurement. To the nave was attached at its
south-west corner a massive tower, nearly nineteen feet
square externally, with walls six feet thick, its west wall
projecting some two feet beyond the west wall of the nave.
The original length of the chancel is indicated by the old
quoins still remaining in the exterior of the north wall,
nineteen feet nine inches from the north-east angle of the
nave. There are similar indications in the south wall, but
these are only discernible from within the chancel. There
is also, in the middle of the north chancel waU, a blocked,
round-headed tweUth century window, showing that the
first chancel was lit by a single light in each of the lateral
walls. The original east wall has been entirely removed,
144 NOTES ON THE ARCHITECTURE
and the chancel arch replaced by a later one. Several of
these features, especially those noted on the north wall,
have been described as " Saxon," but their post-conquest
date is unquestionable. The internal length of the old nave
is indicated by a slight irregularity in the wall near its
north-west end, a position confirmed by the situation of the
fifteenth century diagonal buttress, built as a support to its
north-west angle before the erection of the second tower
(see plan). The north wall of the nave contains a blocked
tweKth century doorway, and there are indications of roundheaded
windows to the east of it. The early tower is pierced
on the ground stage by two deeply splayed narrow windows
in the south and west walls respectively. There is a doorway
on the east face, now opening into a thirteenth century
aisle ; but originally this was the entrance from the churchyard.
There does not seem to be any direct communication
between the church and this tower, unless there is a blockedup
door, of which there is no apparent evidence, concealed
beneath the plaster of the north wall. There was, therefore,
most likely another doorway to the nave on the south wall
opposite to that on the north, pierced through a now
destroyed wall, that stood on the line of the nave arcade.
There was an upper story to this tower, but even with this
addition it would scarcely attain to the fuU height of a normal
Norman tower. Whether it was higher it is difficult to say,
but in all probability it was. It has no structural stairway,
a wooden ladder being the means of access to the upper floor.
On the east waU of this tower, seen from the inside of the
aisle, is a narrow window, with, apparently, a pointed head.
Above it is the weather-mold of the earlier aisle roof. Quite
clearly a thirteenth century window would not open into
the roof of an aisle, and a careful examination of this window
shows that it is not a thhteenth century window at all, but
one of the narrow slits of the Norman tower, with a recently
repahed head in cement. It is clear therefore that, as there
are no signs of a roof-mold below this window, the original
church was aisleless, and this window lit the upper floor of
the tower.
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