Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Battles in England and Normandy, 1066-1154
- Fortress-Policy in Capetian Tradition and Angevin Practice Aspects of the Conquest of Normandy by Philip II
- La Crise de L'ordre de Sempringham Au XIIe Siecle * Nouvelle Approche Du Dossier Des Freres Lais
- The Letters Omftted From Anselm's Collection of Letters
- War and Diplomacy in the Anglo-Norman World the Reign of Henry I
- The Introduction of Knight Service in England
- Scandinavian Influence in Norman Literature of the Eleventh Century
- Notes on the Manuscript Tradition of Dudo of St Quentin's Gesta Normannorum
- The Architectural Implications of the Decreta Lanfranci
- William the Conqueror and the Church of Rome (From the Epistolae)
- The Norman Cathedral at Lincoln
- The ‘Lewes Group’ of Wall Paintings in Sussex
- An Early Church of the Knights Templars at Shipley, Sussex
The ‘Lewes Group’ of Wall Paintings in Sussex
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Battles in England and Normandy, 1066-1154
- Fortress-Policy in Capetian Tradition and Angevin Practice Aspects of the Conquest of Normandy by Philip II
- La Crise de L'ordre de Sempringham Au XIIe Siecle * Nouvelle Approche Du Dossier Des Freres Lais
- The Letters Omftted From Anselm's Collection of Letters
- War and Diplomacy in the Anglo-Norman World the Reign of Henry I
- The Introduction of Knight Service in England
- Scandinavian Influence in Norman Literature of the Eleventh Century
- Notes on the Manuscript Tradition of Dudo of St Quentin's Gesta Normannorum
- The Architectural Implications of the Decreta Lanfranci
- William the Conqueror and the Church of Rome (From the Epistolae)
- The Norman Cathedral at Lincoln
- The ‘Lewes Group’ of Wall Paintings in Sussex
- An Early Church of the Knights Templars at Shipley, Sussex
Summary
The ‘Lewes Group’ comprises five related schemes of wall painting, executed within the period c.1080-1120, in the Sussex parish churches of Clayton, Coombes, Hardham, Plumpton and Westmeston. It is possible that either Clayton or Hardham, or both, were owned by the Cluniac Priory at Lewes when the paintings were executed. The name of the group has arisen from the belief that there was a connection between the paintings and Lewes Priory, and it is retained here for convenience, though it will be argued below that even if the connectian did exist its significance should not be over-emphasised. Three of the five churches - Clayton, Plumpton, and Westmeston, - lie at the foot of the South Downs, near Lewes. Coombes is in the Adur Valley, near Bramber, while Hardham is some distance away from the other churches, on Stane Street, a mile to the south of Pulborough. The churches themselves are all fairly primitive and small, consisting of a rectangular nave and chancel, though Clayton may also originally have had low transepts and Coombes a west tower. The walls are of flint or other rubble, pierced by very small single-splayed windows; these have since been replaced or complemented by larger openings, at some damage to the wall paintings. Although the siting of all the churches now seems rather remote - especially Coombes, which is only reached by crossing a field - at the time the paintings were carried out the Sussex Downs and coastal plain were a prosperous and heavily populated area, with considerable arable farming, a thriving salt industry, and an important port at Shoreham. The present high importance of the Lewes Group paintings derives from their exceptionally early date, the comparatively large amount of painting which still survives; and the fact that they are a group, rather than just isolated survivals like virtually all other Romanesque wall paintings in England.
Unfortunately, although five Lewes Group schemes are known, one of them has been destroyed completely. The paintings discovered beneath post-Reformation layers at Westmeston in 1862 were almost immediately destroyed, and are now known largely from the poor account and copies published by the Revd Heathcote Campion.
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- Anglo-Norman Studies VIProceedings of the battle Conference 1983, pp. 200 - 237Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 1984
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