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LYDDEN CHURCH FROM THE NORTH-EAST.
Drawn by H. Petrie, F.S.A., in 1807.
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Photo. R. C. D. Boger.
LYDDEN CHURCH FROM THE SOUTH.
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LYDDEN CHURCH.
BY AYMER VALLANCE.
THE building, which is dedicated to St. Mary, and consists
of chancel, nave, west tower and south porch, is of flint
with ashlar quoins. The roofs throughout are tiled. It is
obvious that the flint surface, being, as it is, rough and
irregular, in contrast to the evenness of knapped work,
was designed to be plastered over. From Henry Petrie's
water-colour drawing, giving a view of the church from
the north, as it was in 1807, it will be seen that at that date
the exterior had not yet been stripped of its plaster coat.
Only a smaU amount of thin plastering, mixed with grit,
survives in patches here and there. Considering, however,
that the building was subjected to " restoration " in 1868-9
and again in 1899, (according to the statement in KeUy's
Directory) it is reaUy surprising how much of antiquity it
stiU retains.
The existing building (notably the closed north door and
the tower) dates from the close of the eleventh century, with
windows inserted in the first half of the thirteenth century,
and sUghtly later south porch added. None of the windows
is splayed externaUy. The thirteenth century windows have
narrow rear arches, or, as one writer terms them, " hoodings,"
on the inner surface of the arched opening in the waU. The
most ancient window seen in the interior of the church is
one of early Norman work, a single light, with wide splays
and pecuUarly oblique north jamb, which is pierced in the
east waU of the nave to south of the chancel opening.
There is no tracery in any of the windows.
The western tower is square on plan, and is capped
by a low pyramidal roof with sUghtly overhanging eaves.
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2 LYDDEN CHURCH.
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LYDDEN CHURCH FROM THK SOUTH-EAST.
Photo. R. C. D. Boger.
LYDDEN CHURCH. 3
I t consists of two stages, the division between them being
defined by a rude string-course, not moulded, but formed
by the insertion of long horizontal stones. On the west face
of the tower below the string-course are the remains of two
rude arched openings, one above the other, and so close
together that they cannot have been built contemporaneously,
for either would have precluded the other from
being made complete. Both are waUed up, and in the lower
arch's filUng is embedded a Greek cross of stone, with a
concave-sided lozenge sunk in the middle of the intersection.
This ornament would most hkely have been a gable-cross.
The lowest stage possibly had a western door, which is
now waHed up both externaUy and internaUy, if ever it
did exist; but embedded in the waU may be seen two or
three worked stones, which look as though they might have
formed part of the jambs of a doorway.
The uppermost stage of the tower is Ut on the north
and south by a long rectangular loop'; and on the west face,
just beneath the eaves, is a pair of semi-circular headed
windows, side by side, and now blocked. The north and
south faces of the lower stage of the tower have each a
rectangular window with a deep lintel, having a trefoiled
head sunk in it—a most effective device. These two windows,
which have conspicuously large and heavy jambstones,
may be insertions of the late thirteenth or perhaps
early fourteenth century.
As originaUy erected the tower was of early type, i.e.,
it had no buttresses ; but it is evident, however, that a
subsidence or other accident must have occurred at some
past date to disturb the south-west part of the building.
For, beside the clasping buttress, of uncertain age, possibly
of the late fourteenth century, at the south-west angle of the
tower, the remains of rough rubble work projecting southward
from the western extremity of the south waU of the
nave, show where a buttress has at one time been built on
for the strengthening of this portion of the edifice.
The south porch, which is entered through a plain
two-centred archway, without capitals or any device to
4 LYDDEN CHURCH.
mark the springing, and has an equaUy plain two-centred
window on either side of it, appears to be of the latter half of
the thirteenth century. The south doorway of the nave may
be dated about 1200. It is flanked by a pair of shafts,
cylindrical on plan, which are capped by a severely simple
impost moulding of early character, and have a heavy rollmoulding,
of the same profile as the shafts themselves,
continuing from the impost round the upper part of the arch
to its somewhat obtuse-pointed apex. The south door, of
feather-edge oak boarding, fitted with massive iron straphinges,
is unquestionably antique (perhaps as old as the latter
part of the fourteenth century) but its ogee outhne, which
culminates in a high point at the top, not fitting but overlapping
the opening, shows that this door cannot have been
intended in the first instance for its present situation.
Exactly opposite to the existing south door is a
narrower recess, like a niche, in the north waU of the nave.
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NAVE. NORTH NWALL.
LYDDEN CHURCH.
Easternmost recess in north wall of the nave.
Drawn by Miss Margaret Boger.
LYDDEN CHURCH. 5
This is aU that remains of the north door, which is now
waUed up externaUy. The paired entrance and exit in an
aisleless nave constitute a feature characteristic of Saxon
as also of early Norman work, but such, however, that
rarely, if ever, occurs
in buildings erected
subsequently to the
twelfth century.
The nave is
about 45 feet in
length. The towerarch
at its west
end "is low and
pointed." In the
interior of the tower
there is no stair, the
only means of access
to the upper chamber
being by ladder.
There is one bell.
In the east end
of the south waU of
the nave is hoUowed
out the segment of
an arch, which has a
flat soffit 14 inches
wide, and abuts on
to the east waU of
the nave at its south-east angle. This recess is a puzzle,
not easily accounted for, unless it may have been
utihsed to accommodate within the hoUow of the wall
the steps which led, up to the rood-loft, and to minimise
their otherwise inevitable encroachment upon the area of
the nave.
The present chancel-arch is modern, built, writes Mr.
Thomas H. Oyler, F.S.A., in 1866 ; and is said to take the
place of one which was lower and is described as having been
quite plain, " without moulding or bevel." The chancel,
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