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  • Sept. 29, 1860
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  • ARCHITECTURE AND AECHÆOLOGY.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 29, 1860: Page 6

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Architecture And Aechæology.

of their peculiar plan . Wc maj- surely lie ah owed to sympathise with our ' p ilgrim fathers' in their wish to retain such a memorial of Jerusalem and its holy places , and recognise it as a natural feeling of those days ivhen thc land consecrated by our Saviour ' s footsteps ivas an ohjece of devout aspirations to thousands as they left these shores , and of p ious remembcranee to the much smaller number

who returned to worship the King of the New Jerusalem in their own land . Two of the churches thus owing their form , and their very existence , to these facts and feelings , were erected by the Templars and Hospitallers respectively , —tivo religions orders associated under the most solemn vows for the protection of p ilgrims to Jerusalem . These ivere the Temple , in London , so wiled because it belonged to tho

Templars ; and Little Maplcstcnd , in Essex , which was attached to a commander } - ofthe Hospitallers . But if those two churches seem to be more especially interesting , from thc chivalrous orders to which they owed their erection , tho other two have also a peculiar claim , and , perhaps , a higher , on account of their greater antiquity . These are St . Sepulchre ' sin Cambrid and the church in this town of

, ge , tho same consecration . Of these the church in Cambridge , lias perhaps , the priority , having been consecrated in 1101 ; hut that in Northampton followed immediately after , beingassigned with great probability , to Simon do St . Liz , Earl of Northampton , ivho died in 111 . 0 , after having been long absent from this country . The church , then , if erected by himmust bo as old as the formerwithin a very few years

, , , and may be even older ; and there is nothing in the character of its original portion , which at all casts doubt upon the most remote antiquity wc might be inclined to give it . Thus , besides its connection with the history of the Crusades , which ifc shares with all the round churches , wc claim for Sfc . Sepulchre ' s a date scarcely , if at all , less remote than

that of thc oldest of tho other three . And if anything beyond this bo necessary to commend it to the interest of our society , and of thc town and county of Northampton , we may add that its foundation , remote as it is , is assigned to the first Norman who assumed the name of this town as bis title . Ho ivas not , indeed , the first Earl of'Northamptoii , for the title goes back one generation further , and to

another race . Its descent to this Simon de St . Liz , ivith those parts of bis history , which bear on tho subject of a clinrch commemorative of his pilgrim propensities , may fairly bo considered introductory to a few remarks on the history of the church itself . Thc first Earl of Northampton was Walthcof , son of Siward , Earl of Northumberland , a noble and valiant Dane . "Walthcof was one of the most

formidable of the Conqueror ' s opponents ; but William , in respect for the doughty champion of a fallen race , confirmed him iu his former honours , and added to them the earldoms of Northampton , and Huntingdon . He gave him , too ( Ictus hope ifc was not wittingly ) , a teacherous and cruel companion in his greatness . He gave him Judith , his niece , to wife , who afterwards procured Walthcof ' s execution , by base , and probably false , accusation . At the same time there ivas in

"William ' s court one Simon de St . Liz , a noble Norman , but lame in one leg , a defect which turned out greatly to his happiness ; for when William ivould have given him his niece Judith , the teacherous widow of the noble 'Walthcof , with all his possessions , thc lady refused to ratify her part of the bargain ou account of his lameness . Simon , happy to lie thus rejected , married the daughter of Judith instead ,

and so succeeded to thc greater part of Walthcof ' sestatcsand his titles . Soon after this , Simon de St . Liz , built the Castle of Northampton ; ancl , about the year 108-1 , he largelyendowed the Convent of St . Andrew , making it , however , unhappily , an alien priory , subject to the Cluniac Abbey of St . Mary cle Caritate , on thc banks of the Loire . As ' he advanced in years , his zeal for the faith advanced also ,- and ,

towards the close of bis life , he took the cross and went to the Holy City . He ivas fortunate enough to return , and zealous enough to repeat his journey ; but , being seized with an illness on his homeward way , he died about the year lllo , at the foresaid Abbey of St . Mary de Caritate , and ' ivas there buried . The condition in which he left thc church of St . Sepulchre ' s may be very probably inferred from several indications still remaining , ft seems certain that it consisted of the present round , together with the chancel , terminating

in an eastern apse . Tho principal entrance was most likcly through a highly-enriched doorway ut the west-end of the round , ivhieh has given way to the present tower . Instead of a tower or other steeple to the original church , the round ivas crowned with a lofty clerestory or lantern , with a conical roof of high pitch ; and , as there was a tril ' oi-ium over the aisles of the round , which has now disappeared , tho

ivhole elevation would not bo deficient in height . The chancel , I imagine , hacl no aisles : ancl , like that of Little Maplcstcad , which was also without aisles , terminated iu an apse . In the interior , the central circle of ei ght pillars and arches was surrounded by an aisle with a groined roof , over which was a triforium opening into the church by a series of archesprobably little inferior in heiht to thoso below .

, g Resting on these , and rising to some considerable height above them , was the clerestory or lantern , doubtless of eig ht , lights , with appropriate decorations . A richly-moulded arch , ivould lead to the chancel , the details of which can bo supplied only by probable analogy . This , at least , there can be no reason to doubt , ivas both externally and internally a structure of very considerable eleganceaud

one-, which would excite the admiration , as well as the interest , of all who looked on it as a legacy from the deceased Crusader to those who had not been privilcdgcd to sec its prototype in thc Holy City . It did not , however , satisfy more than , tivo or three generations in the state in ivhieh Simon de St .. Liz left it ; and probably it was then , as it was often again , and now , perhaps for tho last timeto be enlarged in

con-, sequence of want of space for those who would worship in it . It was probably about 1180 , during the time of the gradual introduction of the Pointed arch , but ivhile the old Norman details were generally retained ( thus forming a transition era ) , that the northern wall of the chancel ivas cut through , to form an arcade , for the addition of a northern

aisle . The work does not seem to havo boon judiciously or even carefully conducted , for the changes about this time originated a series of failures in the fabric , which led first to the necessary erection of certain unsightly buttresses , and ultimately , perhaps , to thc failure of the round , and the sacrifice of the old triforium and clerestoiy . Thc twelfth century , however , probably closed upon a church scarcely

differing from that which Sfc . Liz had finished before 1115 , except that a northern aisle had been added to tho chancel . Thus , so far as at thc present appears , thc church remained for upwards of a century , for it is not till earl y in the fourteenth century that there are any indications of a south chancel aisle . And it was before the close of the same century that thc present tower and spire were erected . This

ivas not ivithout a purpose ; for the round had probably suffered so much b y former changes as to require great repairs . The aisle vaults and thc triforium were probably sacrifice ! at tin ' s time , and the clerestoiy rebuilt on a much more meagre scale , though certainly not so wretchedl y as at present . A tower and spire were therefore required to give character to thc church . I need hardly tell you that this last feature is of great beauty ; and long may it remain an

ornament , not to this church only , but to the town of Northampton . "Whatever lias happened to St . Sepulchre ' s since the erection of thc spire has been by way of destruction and deterioration . The only comfort wo can derive from an inspection of it is this , that ' tho very fact that matters have been getting worse aud worse for two hundred years necessitates so entire a reconstruction , that we destroy , ivithout

compunction and regret , ivhat the exigencies of restoration and enlargement require to be swept aivay ; and that wc are certain , under the direction of our very * able architect , to hand over the remodelled edifice to the parish , and to tho people generally , as greatly increased in beaut y as in usefulness , and not diminished in interest . " Sir Henry Drydon , bart ,, in proposing " That the historial

interest of St . Sepulchre ' s Church recommends its preservation , " said nothing was truer than a remark made by Mr . James , that restoration not unfrcquentl y meant destruction . More mischief had been done in the last twent y-five years than in any previous half-century , and tho time ivould come ivhen loud and greivous would be thc lamentations . They could not do more mischief than to set about knockin g down right and left and then to commence the work of restoration according to their oivn fancy . Those old churches worn left

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1860-09-29, Page 6” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_29091860/page/6/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE PRINCE OF WALES AND THE FREEMASONS OF CANADA. Article 1
THE PRINCIPLES OF FREEMASONRY. Article 2
MASONIC RAMBLES.—II. Article 4
ARCHITECTURE AND AECHÆOLOGY. Article 5
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 8
Literature. Article 10
Poetry. Article 12
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 13
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 13
AMERICAN FREEMASONRY. Article 14
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 14
ROYAL ARCH. Article 17
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 18
TURKEY. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 19
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Architecture And Aechæology.

of their peculiar plan . Wc maj- surely lie ah owed to sympathise with our ' p ilgrim fathers' in their wish to retain such a memorial of Jerusalem and its holy places , and recognise it as a natural feeling of those days ivhen thc land consecrated by our Saviour ' s footsteps ivas an ohjece of devout aspirations to thousands as they left these shores , and of p ious remembcranee to the much smaller number

who returned to worship the King of the New Jerusalem in their own land . Two of the churches thus owing their form , and their very existence , to these facts and feelings , were erected by the Templars and Hospitallers respectively , —tivo religions orders associated under the most solemn vows for the protection of p ilgrims to Jerusalem . These ivere the Temple , in London , so wiled because it belonged to tho

Templars ; and Little Maplcstcnd , in Essex , which was attached to a commander } - ofthe Hospitallers . But if those two churches seem to be more especially interesting , from thc chivalrous orders to which they owed their erection , tho other two have also a peculiar claim , and , perhaps , a higher , on account of their greater antiquity . These are St . Sepulchre ' sin Cambrid and the church in this town of

, ge , tho same consecration . Of these the church in Cambridge , lias perhaps , the priority , having been consecrated in 1101 ; hut that in Northampton followed immediately after , beingassigned with great probability , to Simon do St . Liz , Earl of Northampton , ivho died in 111 . 0 , after having been long absent from this country . The church , then , if erected by himmust bo as old as the formerwithin a very few years

, , , and may be even older ; and there is nothing in the character of its original portion , which at all casts doubt upon the most remote antiquity wc might be inclined to give it . Thus , besides its connection with the history of the Crusades , which ifc shares with all the round churches , wc claim for Sfc . Sepulchre ' s a date scarcely , if at all , less remote than

that of thc oldest of tho other three . And if anything beyond this bo necessary to commend it to the interest of our society , and of thc town and county of Northampton , we may add that its foundation , remote as it is , is assigned to the first Norman who assumed the name of this town as bis title . Ho ivas not , indeed , the first Earl of'Northamptoii , for the title goes back one generation further , and to

another race . Its descent to this Simon de St . Liz , ivith those parts of bis history , which bear on tho subject of a clinrch commemorative of his pilgrim propensities , may fairly bo considered introductory to a few remarks on the history of the church itself . Thc first Earl of Northampton was Walthcof , son of Siward , Earl of Northumberland , a noble and valiant Dane . "Walthcof was one of the most

formidable of the Conqueror ' s opponents ; but William , in respect for the doughty champion of a fallen race , confirmed him iu his former honours , and added to them the earldoms of Northampton , and Huntingdon . He gave him , too ( Ictus hope ifc was not wittingly ) , a teacherous and cruel companion in his greatness . He gave him Judith , his niece , to wife , who afterwards procured Walthcof ' s execution , by base , and probably false , accusation . At the same time there ivas in

"William ' s court one Simon de St . Liz , a noble Norman , but lame in one leg , a defect which turned out greatly to his happiness ; for when William ivould have given him his niece Judith , the teacherous widow of the noble 'Walthcof , with all his possessions , thc lady refused to ratify her part of the bargain ou account of his lameness . Simon , happy to lie thus rejected , married the daughter of Judith instead ,

and so succeeded to thc greater part of Walthcof ' sestatcsand his titles . Soon after this , Simon de St . Liz , built the Castle of Northampton ; ancl , about the year 108-1 , he largelyendowed the Convent of St . Andrew , making it , however , unhappily , an alien priory , subject to the Cluniac Abbey of St . Mary cle Caritate , on thc banks of the Loire . As ' he advanced in years , his zeal for the faith advanced also ,- and ,

towards the close of bis life , he took the cross and went to the Holy City . He ivas fortunate enough to return , and zealous enough to repeat his journey ; but , being seized with an illness on his homeward way , he died about the year lllo , at the foresaid Abbey of St . Mary de Caritate , and ' ivas there buried . The condition in which he left thc church of St . Sepulchre ' s may be very probably inferred from several indications still remaining , ft seems certain that it consisted of the present round , together with the chancel , terminating

in an eastern apse . Tho principal entrance was most likcly through a highly-enriched doorway ut the west-end of the round , ivhieh has given way to the present tower . Instead of a tower or other steeple to the original church , the round ivas crowned with a lofty clerestory or lantern , with a conical roof of high pitch ; and , as there was a tril ' oi-ium over the aisles of the round , which has now disappeared , tho

ivhole elevation would not bo deficient in height . The chancel , I imagine , hacl no aisles : ancl , like that of Little Maplcstcad , which was also without aisles , terminated iu an apse . In the interior , the central circle of ei ght pillars and arches was surrounded by an aisle with a groined roof , over which was a triforium opening into the church by a series of archesprobably little inferior in heiht to thoso below .

, g Resting on these , and rising to some considerable height above them , was the clerestory or lantern , doubtless of eig ht , lights , with appropriate decorations . A richly-moulded arch , ivould lead to the chancel , the details of which can bo supplied only by probable analogy . This , at least , there can be no reason to doubt , ivas both externally and internally a structure of very considerable eleganceaud

one-, which would excite the admiration , as well as the interest , of all who looked on it as a legacy from the deceased Crusader to those who had not been privilcdgcd to sec its prototype in thc Holy City . It did not , however , satisfy more than , tivo or three generations in the state in ivhieh Simon de St .. Liz left it ; and probably it was then , as it was often again , and now , perhaps for tho last timeto be enlarged in

con-, sequence of want of space for those who would worship in it . It was probably about 1180 , during the time of the gradual introduction of the Pointed arch , but ivhile the old Norman details were generally retained ( thus forming a transition era ) , that the northern wall of the chancel ivas cut through , to form an arcade , for the addition of a northern

aisle . The work does not seem to havo boon judiciously or even carefully conducted , for the changes about this time originated a series of failures in the fabric , which led first to the necessary erection of certain unsightly buttresses , and ultimately , perhaps , to thc failure of the round , and the sacrifice of the old triforium and clerestoiy . Thc twelfth century , however , probably closed upon a church scarcely

differing from that which Sfc . Liz had finished before 1115 , except that a northern aisle had been added to tho chancel . Thus , so far as at thc present appears , thc church remained for upwards of a century , for it is not till earl y in the fourteenth century that there are any indications of a south chancel aisle . And it was before the close of the same century that thc present tower and spire were erected . This

ivas not ivithout a purpose ; for the round had probably suffered so much b y former changes as to require great repairs . The aisle vaults and thc triforium were probably sacrifice ! at tin ' s time , and the clerestoiy rebuilt on a much more meagre scale , though certainly not so wretchedl y as at present . A tower and spire were therefore required to give character to thc church . I need hardly tell you that this last feature is of great beauty ; and long may it remain an

ornament , not to this church only , but to the town of Northampton . "Whatever lias happened to St . Sepulchre ' s since the erection of thc spire has been by way of destruction and deterioration . The only comfort wo can derive from an inspection of it is this , that ' tho very fact that matters have been getting worse aud worse for two hundred years necessitates so entire a reconstruction , that we destroy , ivithout

compunction and regret , ivhat the exigencies of restoration and enlargement require to be swept aivay ; and that wc are certain , under the direction of our very * able architect , to hand over the remodelled edifice to the parish , and to tho people generally , as greatly increased in beaut y as in usefulness , and not diminished in interest . " Sir Henry Drydon , bart ,, in proposing " That the historial

interest of St . Sepulchre ' s Church recommends its preservation , " said nothing was truer than a remark made by Mr . James , that restoration not unfrcquentl y meant destruction . More mischief had been done in the last twent y-five years than in any previous half-century , and tho time ivould come ivhen loud and greivous would be thc lamentations . They could not do more mischief than to set about knockin g down right and left and then to commence the work of restoration according to their oivn fancy . Those old churches worn left

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