St Stephen's Church, Hackington and its possible connection with Archbishop with Archbishop Baldwin, with an appendix on the Rood
{ 253
ST. STEPHEN'S CHURCH, HACKINGTON,
AND ITS POSSIBLE CONNECTION WITH
ARCHBISHOP BALDWIN.
BY SURGEON-CAPTAIN KENNETH H. JONES, M.B., R.N.
THE first church we know of at Hackington was in part
built by Archbishop Anselm about llOO or a little later,
and of this considerable portions still remain at the west
end and in the nave of the present building. The present
church consists of a nave, with a tower at its western end,
a chancel, north and south transepts and a south porch.
The tower was raised, probably, by Archdeacon Simon
Langton, about 1230, upon the walls of Anselm's Norman
nave. In order that the Norman nave should be able to
carry the weight of the tower, two large buttresses were
placed at its north-west and south-west angles, while a very
thick wall, some twelve feet high and pierced by a pointed
arch, was built from side to side of the nave, inside, to support
its eastern wall. All this is clearly shown on Canon Livett's
excellent plan facing page 268.
The great buttresses form straight joints below the
level of the Norman eaves, and above are slightly bonded
into the tower walls. The windows of the tower, probably
of thirteenth century date, were altered in the fifteenth
century, when trefoil hoods were added. The whole is
surmounted by an octagonal wooden spire dating from the
late seventeenth or early eighteenth century.
An examination of the south side of the church from west
to east shows :first a Norman window in what is now the
ground floor of the tower, next a fifteenth century porch,
built slightly askew on to the Norman nave wall, with a twolight
window in its east and west walls. The nave is entered
from this porch by a Norman door, which is surmounted
by a tympanum with star ornament and a wooden lintel,
254 ST. STEPHEN'S, HACKINGTON.
beautifully illustrated in Canon Livett's drawing. Immediately
above the eastern half of the roof of the porch is a
Norman window, the sill of which was cut down in the
thirteenth century. Further east are two E.E. lancets,
rather close together, and next comes an E.E. south transept,
largely re-built in Elizabethan times and having a fine
four-light window of that period in its south wall, a blockedup
E.E. lancet in its west, and a two-light Dec. window in
its east wall. Lastly there comes a long, well buttressed,
thirteenth century chancel, with three fourteenth century
two-light windows on each side, and in its east wall a large
five-light :fifteenth century window, flanked high up on
either side by a small trefoil ogee-headed window of Dec.
date. The two-light fourteenth century windows in the
chancel replaced thirteenth century lancets in a manner
to be explained when dealing with the interior.
Examining next the north side of the church from east
to west, commencing at the junction of the north transept
and chancel : the east wall of the transept, which is of the
thirteenth century but was largely re-built in the fourteenth
and sixteenth, contains a three-light Tudor window. The
north wall shows a three-light Dec. window, and the rebuilt
wall has angle buttresses east and west, while the west wall
contains a two-light window, possibly modern. As the
examination proceeds westwards on the north side of the
nave, first there occur two E.E. lancets, rather close together
and corresponding with the pair in the south wall. Further
west is a third E.E. lancet, replacing an original Norman
window, and still further west is a Norman window which
has been removed from its original position and reinserted
lower down and further west in order to give light to a vestry
in what is now the ground floor of the tower. This is clearly
shown in Canon Livett's plan.
In an examination of the west end of the church, the
most striking features are the great E.E: buttresses of the
tower. (See Plate I(a).) It is at once evident that these
buttresses are built up largely of flint rub ble with some
pieces of Roman brick and mediooval tile, but also to a very
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,.
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ST. STEPHEN'S CHURCH, HACKINGTON,
From the South.
256 ST. STEPHEN'S, H.ACKINGTON.
large extent of cut and moulded Caen stones, most of them
apparently of late Norman date and some displaying very
characteristic tooling of that period. These many pieces
of Caen stone are used exactly as if they were rubble and of
no value. They comprise many portions of moulding and
arcading, shafts of smaD pillars laid horizontally and on end,
capitals of engaged shafts, and perhaps most abundantly
of all plain voussoirs, of which at least forty can be counted.
Many of these re-used stones can be picked out in the photograph,
Plate I (a), and one of them is shown in detail in
Plate I (b ). The quoin stones of the buttresses are almost
all of Caen stone and many of them show signs of E.E.
tooling. Most of them, it is clear, were never intended for
their present purpose. Some of the quoin stones have
entirely disappeared from weathering and have been replaced
by bricks. Above the line of the eaves of the Norman church,
the faces of the thirteenth century tower display various
pieces of cut and moulded Caen stone, especially voussoirs,
but below that line they are conspicuously absent. This
is clearly shown in the photograph, the dividing line coming
just above the Norman window in what is now the south
wall of the tower. Altogether more than five hundred
pieces of cut and moulded Caen stone, not including quoin
stones, were counted on the faces of the tower and buttresses.
The other quoins of the tower are of Kentish
ragstone.
It may be as well to point out here that the walls of the
chancel and transepts (except where, in the south transept,
Elizabethan rebuilding has taken place), and some parts of
the eastern ends of the nave walls, are full of worked Caen
stone of late Norman date. A specimen is illustrated in
Plate I (c).
The west door next claims attention (see Plate, II).
At first sight it has the appearance of a Transitional doorcase;
and such, in a sense, it is. A close examination of
its component parts, however, presents some unusual
features. The doorcase is pointed in form and consists
of four orders, the outer three being of Norman materials,
Pt,ATF. r.
(a) \\'C't and South walls of towC'r Rhowinir
f'f'·ll<'d C'RC"li t(H1f'.
(b) Bifurcation of arcading and a
fragment of tooled Caen-atone re-used
in E. fa<'e of \V. buttr""s of tower.
(c) Fragment of billet mouldin
rt•-11Rrrl in E. wall of ::-; . tranl•pt.
ST. STEPHEX'R, H,\CKlX(:'l'O.
PLAT,: TT.
(a) West Door.
ST S'J'EPHE'S, HACKTNC:TON.
(b) Sir Roger l\Ianwoorl's Font.
(See page 262.)
ST. STEPHEN'S, HACKINGTON. 257
and the inner of E.E. The outermost order is of plain
Norman voussoirs, lying flush with the surrounding wall,
which have been manipulated into place, so as to give the
arch its pointed form. The next two orders are of Norman
moulded voussoirs of the well-known "zig-zag" pattern.The
order next to the outside one has become almost a
round arch, and as it does not fit into the outer order a
gap occurs and has been filled in with mortar. The third
order from the outside, also of moulded voussoirs, is almost
round but not quite, whilst the innermost of the four is
pointed in shape, of Kentish rag, shows characteristic
E.E. tooling, and the individual voussoirs are much larger
than those of the three outer orders. The two inner orders
of Norman cut voussoirs spring from Norman caps, which
are supported by Norman shafts and ba.ses, set in square
recesses composed of E.E. chiselled stones. Some of these
shafts and square recesses have been replaced by new
stones in modern repairs. The outer and inner orders are
without impost mouldings. An examination of the engaged
shafts, bases and capitals of the imposts of the second and
third orders shows these all to be of different patterns.
It is evident from the situation of the jambs on either side
that they never really fitted into their places, and so badly
do they approximate to one another, and to the church wall,
that great gaps had to be filled in with mortar and cement.
Turning now to the inside of the church, the arches
which separate the north and south transepts from the
nave present points of considerable interest, and display
certain peculiarities of construction (see Plate III, which
shows the southern arch, and also the parclose screen and
rood screen). The span of these arches is just over nineteen
feet, which is unusually wide, especially for a church of
moderate size. They are made up of plain Norman cut
voussoirs, which it appears were intended for arches of a
smaller width, and mortar has been wedged in between them
to make the greater span possible. It is remarkable that the
arches held up. A semi-diagrammatic drawing by EngineerCaptain
J. B. Hewitt, R.N., from materials supplied by
21
258 ST. STEPHEN'S, HAOKINGTON.
Canon Livett, shows the condition very well. Slight
exaggeration has been permitted for the sake of clarity.
a
b
... ·······
,,•···
·•
..
·• . ...
a Semi •Circular arch, showing voussolrs
properly shaped and fitted.
b The same voussolrs used to make a.
semi-circular arch of double the span of
above, showing how the joints would
" gaJ)e " on the under side, and would
need to be well packed with morta.r, for
the arch to austa.fn itself and ca.rry a.
load.
Measurement of the responds of these arches shows
that the width is seven inches greater on the south side than
on the north, and the latter is about that of the Norman
nave wall on that side; the west respond on this side has
a modern shaft with base and cap. The other responds
have Norman bases, caps and impost mouldings.
The east respond has a late Norman cap, highly ornamented,
which is well shown in Canon Livett's beautiful
drawing. The greater thickness of the responds on the south
side accounts for the presence of the peculiar little pilasters
to be seen both inside and outside of the church.
Before leaving the inside of the church it may be as
well to explain here how the two-light Dec. windows replaced
the E.E. lancets in the chancel. The engaged shafts and
rear arches of thirteenth century date were left in position
and the splays of the lancets cut back in the north and south
walls.
In the case of the five-light east window, it is probable
that there were originally two E.E. lancets in this position,
surmounted by a round window, and that these were removed,
and the splays cut back at each side, leaving the thirteenth
century engaged shafts in position.
ST. STEPHEN'S, HACKINGTON. 259
These changes are well shown on Canon Livett's plan.
On each side of the great east window is a small ogee trefoilheaded
window rather high up and of Dec. date. The
function of these two small windows is doubtful.
It now remains to consider the unusual features of the
church and to see if it is possible to explain them. In the
first place an immense number of cut and moulded Caen
stones,1 chiefly of late Norman date, is used in the tower
buttresses, the tower, chancel, and transept walls and elsewhere.
This great mass of cut Caen stone is used as rubble,
or " build up " material, as if it were of little or no value.
It seems reasonable to suppose that there must have been
a large store of such stone to be had for nothing, or for very
little, not far away.
The way in which the west door, evidently an insertion
into the Norman wall, is made up of odd pieces, chiefly of
late Norman date, which do not fit accurately together,
renders it probable that they too are derived from the same
source as the cut Caen stones in the tower and buttresses.
Lastly the presence of two unusually wide transeptal
arches, made up of Norman voussoirs, cut for others of
smaller span, together with their adaptation in a situation
for which they were not intended, requires explanation.
It is hoped that it will be possible to show a probable
connection between these unusual constructional features
and Archbishop Baldwin. No attempt can be made to
follow through its intricacies Archbishop Baldwin's classic
quarrel with the monks of Christ Church. Excellent accounts
of this dispute are to be found in Memorials of Canterbury
Cathedral, by Messrs. Woodruff and Danks, and in The
Story of Lambeth Palace, by Mrs. Dorothy Gardiner, and
elsewhere.
Briefly, the Archbishop proposed to build a church and
a college for seventy Canons in the churchyard at Hackington,
a proceeding viewed with alarm by the monks of
Christ Church, who appealed to the Pope to restrain Baldwin's
proceedings. The Archbishop is then said to have shifted
1 See Plate I (a).
260 ST. STEPHEN'S, HACKINGTON.
the scene of his activities to a spot near St. Dunstan's
Church, about a thousand yards away as the crow flies.
Here apparently, first a wooden church was erected and later
pulled down, after which the Archbishop gathered together
stone for a fresh building both of a church and of houses
for his Canons, and he also entrenched the site. Eventually
after several years Baldwin gave up the struggle, patched
up a peace with the monks and departed to the Holy Land
as a pilgrim and there he died, at Acre, in 1190. With
Baldwin's successor, Archbishop Hubert Walter, the struggle
went on, but eventually by order of the Pope the church
wa.s definitely and finally demolished.
The chief authority for all the various phases of this
quarrel is Gervase, a monk of Christ Church, and naturally
not altogether unbiassed.
It is recorded that the Archbishop transported his
material to Lambeth, there to build a church and college.
It is hardly likely that he actually did so, the journey being
a long one.
It has also been suggested that the little late Norman
church at Barfreston was built out of material intended for
Baldwin's church at Hackington, or St. Dunstan's. But an
examination of the church at Barfreston does not favour
the view that it is built up of oddments of Caen stone.
Stephen Langton followed Hubert Walter as archbishop
and in 1227 he made his brother, Simon Langton, archdeacon
of Canterbury and it is on record that the latter built for
himself a church, or was then about to build one, and also a
residence, at Hackington, and that he took up his abode
there ; from that time also the revenues of Hack:ington and
Tenham were attached to it.1
Simon Langton also gave an undertaking to the monks
of Christ Church that nothing in any way prejudicial to their
interests should be done by him, or by his successors, in the
church at Hackington.
The archdeacons of Canterbury did, as a matter of fact.
reside at Hackington from this time until the Reformation,
1 Batteley's Somner: Antiq. of Gant., p. 156.
ST. STEPHEN'S, HACKINGTON. 261
and a large irregular building, shown in a map of 1769
(published by Joseph Andrews, Andrew Dury and Wm.
Herbert, London), situated in the field between the
church and the present rectory, but demolished before 1800,
was probably their residence. From the architectural
evidence it appears that the Norman church of Anselm at
Hackington, was greatly extended in E.E. times. On the
west end of the nave the thirteenth century tower was built
and supported by great E.E. buttresses. The ea.stern ends
of the nave walls were pierced for E.E. lancets and the sites
where this took place can easily be made out, especially on
the north side where much refacing of the wall with pieces of
Norman cut Caen stone is to be seen.
Lastly, round the Norman chancel were built the
thirteenth century transepts and chancel and the Norman
chancel was then demolished.
All this is best appreciated by reference to the plan
made by Canon Livett where the destroyed Norman work is
shown in pale tint. It is submitted that all this new E.E.
building was the work of Simon Langton and that the huge
quantity of late Norman Caen stone, used by him, is material
collected by Archbishop Baldwin for his proposed collegiate
church.
The tooling and form of the Norman materials fits the
date of Baldwin and the style of the later architecture that
of Simon Langton, viz., about 1230. Whether Baldwin
built, or did not build, and whether at Hackington, or near
St. Dunstan's, does not appear to matter much, provided
the strong probability of the use of his material in the present
church be admitted.
It has been suggested that the stones discarded after
the great fire at the Cathedral in 1174 were those used in the
extension of the church of St. Stephen, against which is the
fact that very few of them show any signs of burning.
It may be as well here to mention that some of the older
antiquaries appear to have thought that part of the church
of St. Stephen at Hackington, as we see it, was actually built
by Archbishop Baldwin.
262 ST. STEPHEN'S, HACKINGTON.
William Lambarde, in his Perarnbul,ation of Kent (1570),
says that Archbishop Baldwin pulled down an old timber
chapel and began to raise in its place a fine church of hewed
stone. Kilburne, in the Survey of Kent (1659), says much
the same. Both writers, however, state that Baldwin was
not allowed to finish his building.
Other features, both ancient and modern, of this
interesting church, call for a passing notice. The font, of
late fourteenth century date (see Plate II (b)), was presented
to the church by Sir Roger Manwood, as mentioned
in his will. Where he obtained it is not known.
Lambarde mentions the absence of a font. Manwood's
font is octagonal and made in two pieces, the dividing line
coming in the middle of the stem. The bowl, unlined,
has a central drain, whilst two pairs of holes on opposite
sides of the flattened lip were for the hinges and staples of
the pre-Reformation font cover. Round the top of the font,
above the arcading, Sir Roger Manwood had cut and inlaid
with red paint the following inscription, which fits in the
eight sides : ROGERUS I MANWOOD I MILES I CAPITALIS I BA.RO l
SCACCARII I 15911 D. IX. 00.
The almsbox bears the date 1634 and is in the form of
a Doric pillar of wood surmounted by a square top of the
same material on which rests a little iron chest with a trunk
lid and three locks, the efficiency of which has been proved
by various vain attempts by thieves to break into the box.
The words " Remember the poor " are painted on two sides
of the square wooden top.
The early seventeenth century pulpit rests on a modern
base ; it is nicely carved in the style of the period, and is
surmounted by a cornice ornamented with lions' heads,
perhaps of the eighteenth century.
A carved screen dated 1626 shuts off the E.E. arch
dividing the nave from the tower space, and of this the central
mullion can be removed in order that at a funeral the coffin
may be carried from the west door directly into the nave.
The two doors of this screen, one on either side of the central
mullion, have rather the appearance of having been removed
ST. STEPHEN'S, H.ACKINGTON. 263
from the screen at the end of the dining hall in some large
dwelling house.
The rood-screen which replaced an earlier one in the
first quarter of the sixteenth century is described by Mr.
Aymer Vallance, F.S.A., in an appendix to this paper.
A rather plain oak communion table of Jacobean date
is now used as a side table inside the communion rails.
Outside the west door of the church there is a wrought
iron ornamental scraper, and a bracket and lamp case of the
same make and material is placed on the wall of the buttress
just north of it. These beautiful specimens of handicraftsmanship
were made by Mr. A. Chambers, a member of the
choir, who presented them to the church.
The four lights of the Elizabethan window in the south
transept are filled with very beautiful modern painted glass
by an artist, Muriel Minter Cooper, who did the whole of the
work from her own designs. The subject, the Annunciation
of the Blessed Virgin, was chosen by the Advisory Committee.
The Manwood monument in the south transept is a fine
example of the monumental art of the late sixteenth century
and I am informed by Mrs. Arundell Esdaile, that it is
attributable to Maximilian Colt, or Coulte, alias Poutrain or
Powtran, and is an early specimen of his work. The bust of
Sir Roger Manwood is undoubtedly a portrait and he is
shown as wearing the S.S. collar which he was the first Chief
Baron of the Exchequer to be allowed to use. In a vault
made.by Sir Roger under the floor of this transept are buried
members of the Man wood family.
In conclusion it only remains for the writer to express
his great indebtedness to Mr. V. J. B. Torr and to Canon
G. M. Livett for assistance in preparing this paper and
especially to the last named who prepared the admirable plan
which accompanies this article and renders clear much that
without it would be very obscure.
264 ST. STEPHEN'S, HACKINGTON.
APPENDIX.
THE Roon-SCREEN AT ST. STEPHEN'S, HACKINGTON.
BY AYMER VALLANCE.
THE contract for supplying a rood-loft at Hackington is of peculiar
interest ; such documents being none too common. In the first
place it should be noted, as Rev. C. E. Woodruff points out,
that it would be more usual for the churchwardens to be parties
to the contract. Why, in this instance, the Vicar took the
responsibility instead, does not appear. It is clear that the
rood-loft in question was not the first loft to be erected in the
church, but that it was designed to supersede an already existing
loft. The stipulation that the new loft was to be fa.c:;hioned like
a given example (in this case the loft at Holy Cross church, by
the Westgate, a church due to the generosity of Archbishop
Sudbury) is a familiar one in similar contracts. The rood-loft
and screen of Holy Cross church have been torn down, but a
portion, which survives, of the panelling of the wainscot, now
made up into a seat for the organist in front of the organ,shows,
if the two be compared, that the direction to copy for Hackington
the work at Holy Cross church was duly observed. The
parapet of the new loft was to be adorned, as was not unusual,
with "howses," i.e. niches of tabernacle work to contain images.
A water-colour drawing of the interior of the church by Aaron
Penley, in 1857, shows the rood-screen as it then was. Standing
in the chancel arch, it comprised, as now, three arched openings
or bays between one half-bay at each extremity, the whole being
surmounted by a frieze of pierced quatrefoils. The doors do
not appear. It is evident, therefore, that they had been taken
down, though happily, as it transpired, they were not destroyed.
The head-tracery of the other parts of the screen remained
practically complete. As the aforesaid drawing shows, a slight
and perfectly plain parclose divided the south transept from the
body of the church. This parclose, however, was abolished by
Rev. John White some time between 1857 and 1878, to make
way for a new organ; and also the summit of the rood-screen
(including the upper ends of all the structural standards) was
cut away, reducing it to an invected outline along the top. A
photograph, taken of the interior about 1887, is preserved in the
PLATE III.
(a) Showing the rood-screen and the parclose.
From a drawing by Aaron Penley, 1857.
{b) Showing the rood-screen mutilated and the parcloso gone, subsequently to 1857.
From a photograph in the Ve;itry.
ST. STEPHEN'S CHURCH, HACKINGTON.
ST. STEPHEN'S, HACKINGTON. 265
vestry, and shows what the rood-screen then looked like. In
this condition it remained until 1896, when it was altered once
more, and given its present shape. The most commendable
item of this last restoration is that the screen doors, which had
been stored away, were brought back, and re-hung in their proper
place. The existence of the old boutels and caps, both in the
east and west faces of the screen, show that it originally overhung
with vaulting toward the chancel as well as toward the nave.
The new vaulting is correct inasmuch as it projects both toward
the chancel and the nave, but incorrect ina.gmuch as unfortunately
its overhang is too meagre and shallow. The boutel-shafts are
-0ylindrical, with crested polygonal caps, and polygonal bases.
The latter are of very effective design, and have a somewhat
unusual height of l' l}". The rood-screen, standing under the
western outer order of the chancel arch, measures 15' 6" long.
The bay on each side of the entrance centres at 3' 8", while
the middle bay centres at 4', with a clear opening of 3' 8½".
The fenestration is 4' 7" high from the middle rail to the crown
of the arch. Along the face of the middle-rail runs a traceryband
of quatrefoils. The wainscot comprises four panels to the
bay, corresponding to the divisions of the fenestration. The
panelling of the wainscot is enriched with skirting traceries and
head-traceries. The latter are not quite uniform in design from
end to end of the screen. They resemble some of the German
motifs which occur in the screenwork of, among other churches,
Holy Cross in Canterbury, Graveney and Newington-next-
Sittingbourne for example.
The springers of the chancel-arch have been mutilated,
notably on the south side, for the insertion of timberwork of a
tympanum, or to form part of the rood-loft. There is no trace
of a rood-stair. Two iron hooks or loops in the nave's east wall,
one to right the other to left of the chancel-arch, and slightly
above the level of the capitals of the said arch, may have been
provided for the cord o the rood-veil or of the light before the
Rood. (March, 1929.)
Surgeon-Captain K. H. Jones writes, early in August, 1932,
to say that the presence of the death watch beetle having been
discovered in the woodwork of the screen, the latter consequently
had to be placed under repab:. It had been thickly coated with
varnish, all of which had to be removed. In the process it was
found that several parts had been mended with deal, including
266 ST. STEPHEN'S, RACKINGTON.
one entire mullion. There was also discovered evidence that the
original screen had been coloured, traces of blue and red, and
perhaps green, and even, on the capitals of the boutels, gilding,
being discernible. This showed how literally the contractor
carried out his undertaking to model the screen at Hackington
upon that of Holy Cross church, even including its polychrome
decoration ; for though no distinctive colour can be made out in
the remains of screenwork at Holy Cross church, unmistakeable
evidence of ancient paint remains in parts. There is another
feature common to the screenwork at Holy Cross and St. Stephen's
churches. The .flat groundwork to the traceries at the top of the
wainscot is pierced in each panel with six little round holes
arranged in a triangle, two and one. The purpose of these holes
is unknown. They are so small, only about ¼ inch each in
diameter, that they can scarcely have been intended for elevation
squints. Perhaps, as their distribution is quite symmetrical, they
were designed merely for ornament. It would be interesting to
learn whether similar perforations have been noted in any other
screen.
P.S.-Since the above was printed Surgeon-Captain K. H.
,Jones writes to say that he has discovered an entry in the old
church books, recording that, in 1695, the Ten Commandments
and Lord's Prayer were " curiously painted and fixed up in three
severall frames upon the screen between the chancell and the
nave." He also tells me of an important find by Mr. W. Halward,
Hub-librarian of the Cathedral Chapter Library. The latter,
having picked up in Canterbury market au early drawing of the
interior of St. Stephen's, presented it to the Rector, Rev. Wilfred
E. Watkins, who is depositing it in the vestry. The drawing is in
pencil, and, though unsigned and undated, is proved by internal
evidence to have been made about 1845. At that period, as the
drawing shows, the uppermost portion of the screen (the Ten
Commandments, etc., already taken down) extended across the
entire width of the nave, from lateral wall to lateral wall. There
shortly followed, in 1846-7, a " restoration " of the building ;
and, by 1857, as Aaron Penley's drawing proves, the long beam
on the top of the screen, above the quatrefoiled frieze, had been
removed, and no part of the screen exceeded the width of the
chancel-arch opening. It should be remarked further that the
low parclose, depicted by Penley as dividing the south t,ransept
from the nave, is only just discernible in the 1845 drawing.
PLATE TY.
ST. STEPHEN'S CHURCH, HACKINQTON, SHOWING THE ROOD-SCREEN,
from a pencil drawing of about 1846.
ST. STEPHEN'S, HAOKINGTON. 267
TRANSCRIPT OF THE INDENTURE
[Oct. 6, 1519.] ADD. MS. 38139, folio 236.
THE RoODE .A.TT WESTGAT.
This Indenture made the vj. daie of October in eleaventh1
yea.re of the reigne of King Henry the eight after the Conquest
of England Betweene Iohn Rooe,2 Olerke vickare of the pishe
Churche of St Stephen the Martir of Hakinton besids Canterburye
of ye one partie and Michaell Boneversall of the towne of Heth
Carver of the other partie Witnesseth that the saide Michaell
hath Covenanted and graunted and by this Indenture Coven nnteth
and graunteth to make for ye saide Iohn Roo a newe Roodeloft
of seasonable, cleane and substanciall Tymber and boords for the
parishe Chu.robe of St Stephen beforesaide wt11 howses & Images
in the same And the same Roodlofte in good proporcon sui·ely
woorkmanly and substancia.lly wrought to bee sett and builded
in the saide pishe Church of Hackenton in the place where the
ould loft nowe is there sett, & of the same lenght the same newe
Roodeloft to bee made Carven & wrought in every forme of
woorkemanship or better as nowe is wrought & made after
the newe Roodeloft nowe sett and being in the parishe Churche
of the holie Crosse of Westgate of the Citie of Canterburie And
the saide newe Roodelofte and other the premisses well curiouslie
and arteficially to bee made and wrought wtll all things thervnto
ptayning by the saide Micha.ell in mannr and forme aforesaide
to bee sett vpp & full garnished wth in the saide parishe Church
of Hackington at the proper Costs and chardges of the aid
Michaell a thisside the Fen.at of Easter the well shalbee in the
yeare of or lorde God 1522.
And furthermore yt is Covenanted and agreed betweene
the saide pties and the same Michaell Covennnteth and graunteth
by theis prsenta that the same Micha.ell at his proper Costs an