
Two Kentish Hospitals Re-examined: S. Mary, Ospringe, and SS. Stephen and Thomas, New Romney
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The Purchase of Wickham Court by the Lennards
Men of Kent. I. Boys of Bonnington
Two Kentish Hospitals Re-examined: S. Mary, Ospringe, and SS. Stephen and Thomas, New Romney
TWO KENTISH HOSPITALS RE-EXAMINED:
S. MARY, OSPRINGE, AND SS. STEPHEN AND THOMAS,
NEW ROMNEY*
By S. E. RIGOLD, F.S.A.
THE hospitals here considered were both products of the great age of
medieval hospital-founding, in the late twelfth and early thirteenth
centuries. From that age fifteen out of the twenty-five known hospitals
in Kent originate, five being earlier and five later. Perhaps more than
any other of these (except the unfortunate house of Sweynester in
Sittingbourne), these two were unable to adapt themselves to the
changing conditions of the fourteenth century, yet they differed widely
in purpose and status: Ospringe had royal patronage and performed
several of the various functions later assigned to more specialized
institutions that have inherited the name of hospital; Romney was of
comparatively humble foundation and solely a refuge for lepers.
Both houses have already been the subjects of detailed studies in
Archceologia Cantiana, since when it has been part of the writer's official
duty to investigate their physical remams and he has taken the opportunity
to submit the limited, documentary evidence, as it were, to a
second pressing. I t is this, rather than any attempt to test the relevance
of two such divergent samples to the general problem of the social
history of the medieval hospital, that is the reason for considering them
together here.
THE HOSPITAIL OE ST. MAKY OE OSPRINGE,
COMMONLY GALLED MAISON DIET/
The late Charles H. Drake pubUshed a valuable paper on this house
in Arch. Cant., xxx (1913), pp. 35-78, followed by a shorter supplementary
paper in Arch. Cant., xxxviii (1926), pp. 113-21. He collected an
impressive amount of documentary evidence, some of it difficult of
access, and gave plans and other material descriptions of the buildings
as they were in his day, and particularly at the time (1922) of the
rescue and repair of the building now in Guardianship of the Ministry
* The Ministry of Public Buildmg and Works contributed to the cost of
printing this Paper.
31
TWO KENTISH HOSPITALS RE-EXAMINED
of Works. The historical part was ably summarized in V.C.H. Kent,
Vol. II, p. 222, by R. C. Fowler. The present writer was most indebted
to his predecessor when compiling the official guidebook to this building,
and here offers a second supplement, to be read in the light of Drake's
papers, incorporating: (i) further documentation that he has collected
and suggestions for the interpretation of the whole; (ii) further evidence
about the fabric, which has been repaired since it passed into Guardianship
in 1947; (iii) the discoveries occasioned by a drainage-trench dug
in 1957 across the line of the main range, on the north side of Watling
Street.
I. HISTORIOA4L EVIDENCE
Four questions seem worthy of re-interpretation or amplification:
(A) The precise conditions of the foundation of the Hospital.
(B) The prolonged and intimate connection between the Hospital of
Ospringe and that of St. John without the East Gate of Oxford.
(C) The constitution of the Hospital and the appointment of its staff
and inmates.
(D) The succession of the earlier Wardens.
A. The Foundation
The claim to a royal foundation need not be taken absolutely at its
face value. Henry I I I was fond of taking over and improving existing
rehgious foundations and arrogating to himself the Founder's privileges.
Netley Abbey had been colonized by donation of Bishop Peter
des Roches more than a decade before Henry adopted it,1 and, among
hospitals, the very house of St. John at Oxford (see Section B), had had
an existence of some forty years before Henry gradually refounded it,
commencing with a grant of land in 1231.2 About the same time, beginning
with a Charter of Liberties in 1229, the King assumed the patronage
and 'foundership' of the Maison Dieu at Dover,3 which Hubert
de Burgh had actuaUy founded some ten years earlier and gently
reUnquished, in anticipation of his fall. Hubert had also been Lord of
Ospringe, which he surrendered with his other honours in August, 1232,
having presented the Dover Hospital with the living, which was later
transferred to the Ospringe Hospital. He did not recover Ospringe;
instead, in 1234, the King gave it in dower to his betrothed Queen
1 Founded July, 1239 (Ann. Waverley), adopted by Henry III, March, 1251.
2 V.CH. Oxford ii, p. 158-9; Close Rolls, 1227-31, p. 600 and 1231-34, pp. 35,
74, etc.; Cal. Pat Rolls, 1292-1301, pp. 101-2.
3 V.C.H. Kent ii, pp. 217-19; Cal. Chart. Rolls, 1226-57, pp. 91 and 141, 191
(re rectory of Ospringe).
32
TWO KENTISH HOSPITALS RE-EXAMINED
during the term of his mother's life,4 after a short occupancy by one
Joldewin de Doe (Douai?).5
Drake prints in full (Appendix V) a list of private benefactions to
the Hospital, confirmed by royal charter in April, 1247,6 but in his
commentary he elaborates on one donor, Adam de Tamie of Sheppey,
giving an unwarrantedly precise date for the royal foundation, namely
1235, as though this were given in the preamble, or elsewhere in the
charter. I have examined the Charter Roll and the date is not there; it
is a mere gloss by Daly in his History of Sheppey. The royal donations
are in fact numerous in the years 1235 to 1240, there being confirmed by
charter, and all are noticed by Drake, as also is the earliest recorded
gift,7 in 1234. But the full implication of this earliest benefaction has
not been appreciated, since it grants all the surplus corn from the
Manor of Ospringe ad emendationem hospitalis, i.e. for the repair of
something already in existence. In any case, these months of crisis and
rapid change of tenure would hardly seem propitious for a new foundation.
The inference is that the Hospital had already stood in embryonic
form for some years (Drake's 'very soon after 1230' may well be correct)
and that the real founder may have been Hubert, possibly to compensate
himself for the loss of the Hospital at Dover. Again, the royal
adoption was gradual, commencing in 1234. The Charter of Liberties of
1246 (abbreviated by Drake, op. cit., p. 41), enlarged and confirmed in
1267, was evidently the consummation of the process: it, and no earlier
charter, is confirmed by an inspeximus of 1338, issued at the same time
as the confirmation of the charter granted to Dover in 1229.8
B. The Link with Oxford
Drake records how the errant Master, Nicholas of Staple, was sent
to the Oxford Hospital in 1314 and his place as a brother taken by an
Oxford man, William of Dewesbury;9 likewise, in 1332, the offending
brother Thomas Urre was sent to Oxford.10 But he does not notice the
4 Hasted, 1798, vi, p. 505; it was also granted to Queen Margaret of France
and the capital tenement is still called Queen Court; Cal. Chart. Rolls, 1226-57,
p. 218; Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1272-81, pp. 348-9 and 1292-1301, p. 453.
5 Not Dol, pace Drake. Joldewin, or Joldan, was a French knight who had
somehow forfeited his lands and was granted Wrestlingworth (Beds.) and Piddington
(Oxon.) for a term of three years from 1232, to defray his expenses on a crusade
(Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1225-32, p. 158); he probably held Ospringe on the same terms and
evidently died on active service, as his brother resigned any claim to Ospringe in
1234 (Close Rolls, 1231-34, p. 488 and 1234-37, p. 31).
6 Cal. Chart. Rolls, 1226-67, p. 315; Drake's appendix, no. 5; it is strange that
the careful Drake should not have checked Daly's obscure and journalistic little
book.
7 Close Rolls, 1231-34, pp. 488, 492.
s Cal. Chart. Rolls, 1226-57, pp. 91, 294-5, 1257-1300, p. 70, 1327-41, p. 44.
9 Cal. 01. Rolls, 1313-18, p. 55.
10 Cot. CI. RoUs, 1330-33, p. 551.
3
33
TWO KENTISH HOSPITALS RE-EXAMINED
numerous instances under Henry III, when the two hospitals are
mentioned in the Rolls simultaneously,11 and under precisely the same
conditions. The possible implications of this will be drawn below:
meanwhile a brief table of references follows in chronological order:
1. 1234—.Geoffrey, the Royal Almoner, is receiving gifts for both,
though named as custos of Ospringe only.12
2. 1237.—Injunction against over-taxation of both, eodem modo.13
3. 1238—Contribution to both, for infirmaries (£10 to Ospringe, £20
to Oxford).14
4. 1238—A chaplain at both, at £2 10s. Od, per annum, for the soul of
Wilham de Valence.15
5. 1241—Protection to both, not quite simultaneous.16
6. 1242—25,000(1) poor to be fed at each, at Id. per head.17
7. 1244—A silver cup to each.18
8. 1244—-Fifteen cows to each, from the goods of the vacant See of
Winchester.19
9. 1245—A chaplain at both, for William de Valence's widow, on the
same terms as her husband's (No. 4).20
10. 1246—Charters of Liberties to each, enrolled in sequence.21
11. 1253—-Three milliaria allecis (brine or salt fish) to both.22
12. 1253—William of Kilkenny custos of both, doubtless temporarily,
but concurrently.23
13. 1266—Six oaks to each.24
14. 1266—A robe for the Master of each.25
11 On occasion the house of conversi (converted Jews) in London makes a third.
12 Close Rolls, 1231-34, pp. 394, 488.
13 Close Rolls, 1234-37, p. 569.
" Cal. Lib. Rolls, 1226-40, p. 347.
16 Cal. Lib. Rolls, 1226-40, p. 436.
10 Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1232-47, pp. 248, 249.
17 Cal. Lib. Rolls, 1240-45, p. 124.
i8 Cal. Lib. Rolls, 1240-46, p. 268.
19 Close Rolls, 1242-47, p. 214.
20 Cal. Lib. Rolls, 1245-51, p. 10.
21 Cal. Chart. Rolls, 1226-57, pp. 294-5; the consolidation of private donations
by charter follows closely—ibid, pp. 296-304 (Oxon.), pp. 315-18 (Ospringe).
22 Close Rolls, 1253-54, p. 33.
23 Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1247-58, p. 185.
24 Close RoUs, 1264-68, p. 271.
20 Close Rolls, 1264-68, p. 278.
34
TWO KENTISH HOSPITALS RE-EXAMINED
Furthermore, Henry of Wingham, a royal clerk, became vicar of
Headcorn, a benefice of the Ospringe brethren, in 1251, and master of
the Oxford hospital in 1254.26
Oxford was the senior, both in original foundation and royal adoption,
and always the larger house,27 in matters of discipline she behaved
much as a mother-house to Ospringe, but 'elder sister' will better
symbolize the relationship. The names of the early masters of Ospringe
include too many Kentish ones to allow that all the first brethren under
the royal dispensation migrated from Oxford, but one or two at least
may have formed the cadre. Neither the Chaplain, Adam of Worcester,
admitted in 1243,28 nor the unfortunate Henry of Buckingham were
local men. Their origins suggest they may have possibly come via
Oxford.
C. The Constitution
The source of the account of the establishment given by Drake
(Arch. Cant., xxx, p. 36, note 4) is quoted more fully in V.C.H. It
comes from the registers of .Archbishop Warham29 and contains the
depositions of two who remembered the last time a proper convent had
existed, under Master Robert Darell (1458-70). At that time there were
the Master, three professed fellow priests, wearing the habit of the
Holy Cross,30 and two secular chantry priests, presumably successors of
those appointed, in the first instance, for the souls of the de Valences31
—no mention of the sisters, of whom we hear in the earlier records and
who seem to have been active members, not mere alms women.
Fortunately, though no early constitution survives for Ospringe,
there is one for Oxford,32 which, in the light of the preceding section,
may be relevant, allowing perhaps, in the case of Ospringe, for fewer
lay members. Again we have a Master (or prior) and three professed
brethren (or chaplains), besides six lay brethren and six lay sisters, to
attend the poor and infirm. This supports the inference that the
Ospringe sisters were attendants, or nurses of a primitive sort, no
20 Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1247-58, p. 121, and Macray, Notes from the Muniments of
Magdalen Coll., Oxford, p. 2; he was either the Henry of Wingham who died as
Bishop of London in 1262 or, more probably, his namesake who died as Archdeacon
of Middlesex in 1269; both apparently began as royal clerks and the
Bishop has an article in D.N.B.
27. Compare, for instance, item 3, above; Oxford even acquired a maternity
ward in 1240 (Cal. Lib. Rolls, 1226-40, p. 455)!
28 Close Rolls, 1242-47, p. 44.
29 Reg. Abp. Warham, f. 40b (not printed).
30 Reg. Abp. Robert Winchelsey (ed. R. Graham, Cant, and York Soc), p. 79,
contains an injunction that they should make their profession after the manner of
the Templars and Hospitallers.
31 v.s. section B, items 3 and 9.
32 Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1232-47, p. 38 (Oct., 1234).
35
TWO KENTISH HOSPITALS RE-EXAMINED
matter that one was bUnd.33 There were probably lay brethren at
Ospringe as weU. By the fifteenth century the lay establishment had
evidently lapsed: after the final retrenchment, under the last two
masters, only the secular priests remained.34
Though there may not have been an absolute distinction between
the working lay members and the 'enforced corrodians'—old royal
servants sent to the hospital for maintenance during their retirement,
no doubt in much better comfort than the local sick fokk—the latter did
not earn their keep and soon became a particular burden on the hospital.
Admittedly other houses had the same trouble without the excuse of
royal foundation.
The first 'enforced corrodian' we hear of, in 1258, is a nephew of a
royal waiting-woman, unnamed.35 Possibly she is the same as Juliana,
a former maid of Queen Eleanor of Provence, who was herseU already in
residence in 1278, when she received logs for her own private fireside.36
This Juliana is quite probably identical with Juliana of Wye, who had
recently died in 1307, when her pension was taken over by a man,
Robert of Ridware (Staffs.),37 at the King's nomination. If so, she had
lived here in comfort for nearly thirty years. I t is tempting to guess that
she may even be the same as the Juliana, sister of the Hospital, who was
rewarded for gifts of milk and butter (?for ointments) in 1241.38 Did the
young sister pass into the Queen's service at the Manor (Queen Court)
and then return to the Hospital as a privileged pensioner?
Ralph the Beadle, presented in 1292,39 was another of the Queen
Mother's men, probably from Queen Court. There were certainly two
pensioners at this time, and the two appointed in 1314, one from
Bedfordshire and the other, perhaps from Queen Court,40 may replace
these, but the number had risen to three if John Toght, recently
deceased in 1335,41 is correctly reported as having been presented under
Edward I and is not the same as John de Tot, presented in 1314. In
1330 it was agreed not to fill one vacant place.42
33 Helen of Faversham (Close Rolls, 1234-37, p. 48); Oxford had a blind
chaplain, William of Faringdon (Close Rolls, 1254-56, p. 44).
34 v.s. note 29; Drake quotes the relevant part of Abp. Warham's visitation,
Arch. Cant., xxx, p. 57.
36 Close Rolls, 1256-59, p. 337.
36 Cal. CI. Rolls, 1272-79, p. 445.
37 Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1307-13, p. 9; if it is the same Juliana she was admitted after
1272, i.e. under Edward I.
38 Drake, ibid., p. 39, without exact reference; it does not appear to be enrolled.
39 Cal. CI. Rolls, 1288-96, p. 250.
40 John de Tot, yeoman to Margaret the Queen Mother, possibly a Frenchman
—they first thought of retiring him to Evreux (Cal. CI. Rolls, 1313-18, pp. 83, 90)
and Henry le Lounge of Flitwick (Beds.) (Cal.Cl. Rolls, 1313-18, p.. 192); another
man was retired to Oxford.
41 Cal. CI. Rolls, 1333-37, p. 606; the calendar says Edward I.
« Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1327-30, p. 494 (Robert the Messenger, of Newington).
36
TWO KENTISH HOSPITALS RE-EXAMINED
D. The Early Wardens
The titles of 'Warden' (custos) or 'Master' seem generally to be interchangeable,
but the temporary custodes may not have been 'masters'.
'Prior' is not found (compare Oxford, above).
The lists given by Drake and by Fowler, including his appendix,43
as far as the mid-fourteenth century (after which they agree completely
and I, in turn, have nothing to add) can now be amended and enlarged.
Previously published evidence is briefly summarized.
1. GEOFFREY of SUTTON, the King's Almoner, occ. 1234.
Clearly a temporary appointment, to put the house in order.44
2. HERVEY of COBHAM, occ. 1235.45
3. WILLIAM GRACYEN, occ. 1237-47.46
4. WILLIAM of KILKENNY, appointed warden of Oxford and
Ospringe in 1253. An outside appointment and, it is to be hoped,
temporary. He was a royal clerk, archdeacon of Coventry and in
December, 1254, elected bishop of Ely. If these two custodies
were already being disposed of as life emoluments for a high
civil servant, like sinecure prebends, it speaks ill for the King's
solicitude for his Hospitals. William would have, in effect, to
appoint a deputy. Anyway, he died in September, 1256.47
5. ROGER of LYNSTED, Chaplain and apparently acting master
(called proctor) in 1253-55, would have succeeded to the title,
at latest, in 1256; certainly resigned in 1263, as his successor was
appointed in October of that year; still alive in 1268 when he
received a tenement as a pension.48
6. ELLIS (ELIAS) son of HERVEY, appointed 1263, previously
a chaplain, i.e. professed brother. Still in office late in 1267.49
43 V.C.H. Kent, ii, p. 242.
44 A Templar, Almoner from 1229, Keeper of the Wardrobe from 1236; an
efficient but rapacious official, deposed early in 1240; died soon afterwards,
certainly by 1244. See L. E. Tanner, 'Lord High Almoners' in Journal of the
British Archaeol. Ass., 3rd ser. xx-xxi (1957-58), pp. 72ff., where his colleague
John Lewknor is wrongly named as warden of Ospringe; also Tout, Chapters in the
Administrative History of England, I, p. 34. For his relations with Ospringe, Close
Rolls, 1231-34, pp. 488, 492.
46 Feet of Fines to 1272 (Kent Records Soc, 1956), p. 123.
48 Close Rolls, 1234-37, p. 493 (1237); Cal. Lib. Rolls, 1240-45, p. 96, F. Fines
to 1272 (v.s.), p. 172 (1242); Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1232-47, p. 496 (1247).
47 Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1247-58, p. 185; he is well documented and something of him
is entombed beneath a fine Purbeck effigy at Ely and an article in D.N.B.
48 Cal. Lib. Rolls, 1251-60, p. 118 (1253); F. Fines to 1272 (v.s.), p. 257, acting
on behalf of Brethren of St. John (1254); Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1247-58, p. 395—-for
'Reynold' read 'Roger'—(1255); Cal. Chart. Rolls, 1257-1300, p. 9, giving lands to
the Hospital (1258); Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1258-66, pp. 284, 304 (1263); Cal. Pat Rolls,
1266-72, p. 182 (1268).
49 Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1258-66, pp. 284, 304 (1263); Cal. Chart. Rolls, 1257-1300,
p. 70 and Lewis, History of Faversham . . . , p. 81 (1267).
37
TWO KENTISH HOSPITALS RE-EXAMINED
7. JOHN of STAPLE, appointed 1268, previously gate-keeper of
Hyde Abbey, but apparently a man of Kent and the first of his
family to be associated with the Hospital.50
8. HENRY OF BUCKINGHAM, professed brother in 1262,
master, at latest, by 1271 when he was receiving a pardon
(repeated in 1290), for trespasses—dilapidations and alienations
—committed in that office. If the grant to Roger of Lynsted
was the beginning of the rot, he may have become master in
1268. Apparently still misbehaving in August, but deposed by
September, 1272.51
9. WALTER of THANET (Taneth), appointed 1272. Occ. 1274-
81, in the latter year with Brother Roger (?R. of Lynsted still
active).52
10. PETER, occ. 1287-94.63
11. ALEXANDER of STAPLE, appointed 1295 and only ordained
acolyte that year(!). Occ. 1309(?).54
12. NICHOLAS of STAPLE, appointed 1310 (acolyte in 1296);
deposed and sent to Oxford, 1314.55
13. HENRY of TEYNHAM, appointed 1314. Died, at latest, 1319.56
14. ADAM of ASH (Esshe), appointed 1319. Died, at latest, 1330.67
15. JOHN of LENHAM, appointed 1330. Died 1349.58
The impression is one of a close community of local men, with more
than a hint of nepotism and conspiracy. The complaints about the
masters never come from the brethren, and, except in the appointment
of WiUiam of KiUtenny, the King shows a pathetic willingness to trust
yet another of the already compromised little group. Herein, above all,
50 Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1266-72, pp. 177, 232, 265.
81 Close Rolls, 1261-64, p. 152 (1261) and 1268-72, p. 384 (1271); Cal. Pat.
Rolls, 1266-72, pp. 683, 707 (1272); Cal. CI. Rolls, 1288-96, p. 83 (1290).
62 Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1266-72, p. 683 (1272); Feet of Fines, Kent, C.98, file 56,
no. 20—not yet printed (1274); Cal. CI. RoUs, 1279-88, p. 119 (1281).
e3 Cal. CI. Rolls, 1327-30, p. 480 (refers back to 15 Ed. I, 1286-87); Cal. Pat.
Rolls, 1292-1301, p. 117 (1294); Cal. CI. Rolls, 1330-33, p. 496 (posthumous).
64 Reg. Abp. Robert Winchelsey, p. 906; Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1292-1301, p. 148; the
reference of 1309, given in V.C.H. cannot be traced.
00 Reg. Abp. Robert Winchelsey, p. 910; Cal. Pat. RoUs, 1307-13, p. 285;
Cal. CI. Rolls, 1313-18, p. 55.
08 Cal. CI. Rolls, 1313-18, 55; Cal. Pat. RoUs, 1313-17, p. 105; Cal. CI. Rolls,
1318-23, p. 12; Placit. Abbreviatio. T.R. Ric. I-Ed. II, p. 322 (1316).
07 Cal. CI. Rolls, 1318-23, p. 12 (1319); Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1327-30, pp. 58 (appointment
confirmed for new reign, 1327) and 600 (1330).
08 Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1327-31, p. 600 and 1348-50, p. 260.
38
TWO KENTISH HOSPITALS RE-EXAMINED
rather than in the economic difficulties of the age, lies the sad failure of
the Hospital to maintain its originally ample endowments.
The inspeximus of charters, made in 1338 in favour of John of
Lenham and. his brethren, makes a point that non-user shall not have
rendered any liberties invalid.59 There bad already been a commission
to enquire into abuses in 1331,60 the forerunner of many others,
including three between 1414 and 1422.
II. THE PRESENT STATE OE THE FABRIC
Everything above ground of the main complex on the north side of
Watling Street has disappeared. The only upstanding relics of the
Hospital are the stone walls of two undercrofts on the south side. The
name 'leper house' has become attached to one of these subsidiary
buildings, but the tradition is most questionable, if only because, in a
well ordered semi-monastic plan, lepers should not receive the watercourse
before the uninfected.6011 They were, in fact, domestic undercrofts,
built either to carry first floor halls, or, as they were later used,
to carry solars of ground floor halls. They may have formed part of the
residences of the secular priests.
Drake published plans and elevations of both undercrofts, and,
subsequently, photographs and details of the sixteenth century additions
to the western building, which was preserved from destruction in 1922
and converted to a museum, in the care of trustees. When this building
(Fig. 1) came into Guardianship of the Ministry of Works (1947) it was
temporarily safeguarded, and then thoroughly repaired between 1952
and 1955. The north-east corner of the stone wall, removed in 1894 to
accommodate a shop, was restored, using a corner post from a demolished
wing of Temple Manor, Strood, and re-setting the original stone
door-case, which had fortunately been preserved. Several concealed
windows on the upper floor were re-opened. A more detailed analysis
of the buildings is now possible.
A4. The Eastern Undercroft
This remains in private hands. I t probably occupies a plot of land,
the conveyance of which was confirmed to the Hospital in 1255.61 The
well coursed, knapped flint rubble, and the accurate ashlar are consistent
with this date. The door arch has many short voussoirs and a
simple chamfer. The moulded corbels for the jetty seem to be original,
but not the present upper storey.
69 Cat. Chart. Rolls, 1327-41, p. 444.
89 Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1330-34, p. 207.
ooa Xhere is no evidence for the presence of lepers at Ospringe, the idea of a
leper-house seems to originate with J. Lewis Hist, and Antiq. of Faversham, p. 81.
81 Cal. Pat. Rolls, 1247-58, p. 393.
39
FIRST
FLOOR
MAISON DIEU
Osprinae
G r e a t
crotim-post~i
Chamber
(d)
§ T f «—*.
* o
I f e e t 4 metres
GROUND
FLOOR
• Titahar Upright
C (3oo
16 th Centuru
*i ED c )7oo
Restored or
.window a t '. R e s e t
touer level v
Under
Croft
;7vw
:h$
1*
Fia. I.
40
TWO KENTISH HOSPITALS RE-EXAMINED
B. The Western Undercroft
This is a deep cellar, floored over at the rear at ground level but open
to the first floor at the front. The intact walling is of rougher rubble
than in A.—the flint often unbroken, and the ashlar of inferior ragstone.
The depressed door arch has long voussoirs and a coarse ovolo
within the chamfer. The narrow slit lights have less internal splay than
those in the other undercroft, and are grilled and rebated for shutters
within. A window, not shown on Drake's plan, opens below street level,
between the other two surviving windows, and shows that the flood-line
was formerly lower than at present. Everything points to a date not
earlier than c. 1300, when the fortunes of the Hospital were already in
decline.
C. Post-Dissolution Work
The rest of the building is entirely subsequent to the dissolution of
the Hospital in 1516, but it is not much later. The inserted plaster
ceiling indeed dates from the later sixteenth century, to which Drake
ascribed the whole, and there are also modifications of c. 1700, but,
substantially, the work represents part only of a large house of the
early sixteenth century, incorporating the older undercroft. (Plate IB;
plans on Fig. 1.)
The method of framing may be compared with a doubly jettied
block in Canterbury, Nos. 40-44 Burgate, at the corner with the Buttermarket,
62 or, in less sophisticated form, No. 39 Strand Street, Sandwich.
It is still allied to the earlier 'open frame' type, having exposed braces
and widely spaced studs, but the braces are set very low,63 foreshadowing
the small quadrant braces of the late sixteenth century; taken in
pairs they form four-centred arches. This fashion is both cheaper and
more conservative than the more widely distributed close-studded
form, with which it runs concurrently in east Kent, both forms having
their derivatives late in the century. This example may be conveniently
contrasted with the buildings, including Arden's House, built on the
site of the approaches to Faversham Abbey, probably immediately
following the dissolution of 1538; these are close-studded and generally
more elaborately finished, having heavily moulded fascias to the jetties,
but have small four-centred windows like those in the south extension
at Ospringe.
The moulding on the tie, braces and wall posts spanning the Great
Chamber is of usual late Gothic form—a hollow-chamfered fillet flanked
by cymas (a more elaborate form would have a roll on the fillet); the
82 The frame recently exposed; on the site of the 'Great Stone House' identified
by Dr. Urry from early rent-rolls.
03 Low-pitched tension-braces are laiown in Kent on rather earlier buildings,
e.g. no. 124 High Street, Tonbridge.
41
TWO KENTISH HOSPITALS RE-EXAMINED
crown-post64 they support is again of a typical late form, with high
octagonal bell-base and plinth, a long cavetto above the neck-roll
(Fig. 2 and Plate IIA). It is typologically less advanced than the
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