St Mary's Church, Moulton

St Mary's Church, Moulton

St Mary's Church, Moulton, from the southwest

St Mary's Church, Moulton
Location in Norfolk
OS grid reference TG 403 067
Location Moulton St Mary, Norfolk
Country England
Denomination Anglican
Website Churches Conservation Trust
History
Dedication Saint Mary
Architecture
Functional status Redundant
Heritage designation Grade I
Designated 25 September 1952
Architectural type Church
Style Norman, Gothic
Specifications
Materials Flint and brick, limestone dressings
Roofs tiled and slated

St Mary's Church, Moulton, is a redundant Anglican round-tower church near the village of Moulton St Mary, Norfolk, England. It has been designated by English Heritage as a Grade I listed building,[1] and is under the care of the Churches Conservation Trust.[2] It stands some 4 kilometres (2 mi) to the south of Acle in an isolated position adjacent to a farm.[2]

Contents

History

The tower dates from the 12th century, and the nave and chancel from the 14th century. The south porch was added during the 16th century, and the east wall of the chancel was rebuilt during the 1870s.[1]

Architecture

Exterior

St Mary's is constructed in flint and red brick, with limestone dressings. The tower and nave are tiled, and the chancel and porch are slated. Its plan consists of a nave with a south porch, a chancel, and a west tower.[1] The tower is in Norman style, the nave and most of the chancel are Gothic, the porch is Tudor, and the east wall of the chancel is in Georgian style.[2] The tower is round with a conical roof. It has a slit window high on the south side, on the north side is a louvred bell opening, and on the west side is a blocked two-light Decorated window. The porch has a sundial in the southwest corner, a niche over the doorway, and blocked three-light windows on each side. The south wall of the nave is divided into three bays by stepped buttresses. In the middle bay is a three-light window with Perpendicular tracery. In each of the two lateral bays is a two-light window with Y-tracery. The south wall of the chancel contains two two-light windows and a priest's door. The chancel roof is at a lower level than that of the nave; the east gable of the nave is hung with slates. The east wall of the chancel is brick and contains a three-light window. At the northeast corner of the chancel is a stone and flint buttress. In the north wall of the chancel, and in the eastern bay of the nave, are wide single lancet windows. The other bays of the north wall of the nave contain two- and three-light windows, and a doorway.[1]

Interior

In the south wall of the chancel is a double piscina and a sedilia. The benches in the chancel date from the 17th century and are carved with poppyheads. The communion rail dates from the same period and is carried on turned balusters and posts. At the southeast corner of the nave are the remains of a former stairway that led to a rood loft.[1] On the wall of the nave are 14th-century wall paintings in relatively good condition. Those on the north wall depict Saint Christopher, and on the south wall are paintings representing the Seven Acts of Mercy.[1][2][3] The nave also contains a wall monument to Edmund Anguish who died in 1616. The octagonal pulpit dates from the early 17th century; it is finely carved, and has a backboard and a tester. The font is also octagonal, each face is carved with a pair of blind arches; it dates from the 13th century, and is carried on a central stem and eight shafts.[1]

List of rectors

The following rectors of the church's parish are listed by Francis Blomefield and Charles Parkin in their An essay towards a topographical history of the county of Norfolk [4]

List of vicars

From 1403, parish priests were appointed as vicars, rather than rectors, the rectory having been appropriated by the Dean of St Mary's College, Norwich, which had owned the benefice since about 1361. The following vicars are listed by Blomefield and Parkin.[4]

  • 1403: John Virley
  • 1403: John Bawdre
  • 1403: John Scoole
  • 1420: Thomas Petit
  • 1422: John Man
  • 1427: William Snelling
  • 1427: William Taylor
  • 1429: Clement Welle
  • 1434: Thomas Alfred
  • 1448: Thomas Hanworth
  • 1453: John Domlyn
  • 1461: John Norwich
  • 1574: Roger Beweller
  • 1617: Robert Pepys
  • 1658: Thomas Essex
  • 1668: William Brook
  • 1672: Thomas Wilson
  • 1699: John Sallet
  • 1711: John Pitts
  • 1723: Horace Fawcett
  • 1726: Thomas Carter
  • 1737: Roger Geddings

References

External links