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A Romanesque Roof at Odda's Chapel, Deerhurst, Gloucestershire?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 November 2011

Summary

Timbers removed from the nave of the chapel in 1965, together with earlier photographs and traces in the surviving masonry, provide evidence of a rafter roof with a tie-beam, and probably a king-post and raking struts, at each couple. Later alterations to it are discussed in the light of what is known or can be deduced about the late- and post-medieval development of the farmhouse to which the chapel is attached. The alterations resulted in a roof largely seventeenth-century in form. It is shown, however, that the earlier timbers cannot be satisfactorily explained as post-medieval intrusions. The earlier design is compared with eleventh- and twelfth-century roofs known in north-west Europe. It was probably that of the original roof of 1056.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1983

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References

Notes

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4 Dept. of Environment, P.S.A. Photographic Library, A 6720/8 (here pl. XIII), 10, 15.

6 Inf. from the occupier (1971).

7 Dept. of Environment, P.S.A. Photographic Library, A 6720/9 and 12 (pls. XIVa and b respectively).

8 Butterworth, G. S., ‘The Saxon chapel at Deerhurst’, Trans. Bristol Glos. Arch. Soc. xi (18861887), 107.Google Scholar

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16 E.g. Westminster Abbey Muniments (hereafter W.A.M.), 8437, 8450–8462, 22211.

17 V.C.H., Glos., VIII, p. 38.

18 The V.C.H. ascribes the rebuilding to the early sixteenth century (ibid.) but the framing, with panels in four heights, curved lozenges, and ogee struts, rather suggests the later date.

19 W.A.M. 8512–8515.

20 Glos. R.O., G.P.S. 112/12.

21 Dept. of Environment, P.S.A. Photo-graphic Library, A 6720/8 (pl. XIII here), 10, 15.

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24 W.A.M. 8512.

25 Fletcher, op. cit. (n. 3).

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27 E.g. , V.C.H., Glos., VIII, p. 48. The nineteenth-century work may even date from the 1885 restoration.Google Scholar

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29 Draper, W. H., Adel and its Norman Church (Leeds, 1908), pp. 230–2.Google Scholar

30 Hewett, op. cit. (n. 2), p. 51.

31 The roof is now being restored by the Department. I am grateful to Mr. Morley for kindly showing it to me.

32 See, e.g., for Germany, Ostendorf, F., Geschichte des Dachwerks (Berlin, 1908), pp. 1213Google Scholar; for the Low Countries, Brigode, S., ‘L'architecture religieuse dans le sud-ouest de la Belgique…’, Bull. Comm. Royale des Monuments et des Sites, n.s., i (1949), 89353Google Scholar; H. Janse and L. Devliegher, ‘Middeleuwse Bekappingen in het vroegere Graafschap Vlaanderen’; ibid. n.s. xiii (1962), 308–21; J. Martens, ‘Leefdaal’, ibid, n.s., v (1954), 162–3; for France, Deneux, H., ‘L'évolution des charpentes du xie au xviiie siècle’, L'architecte (1927)Google Scholar, and Charpentes (Paris, Centre de Recherches des Monuments Historiques, n.d.), i-ii; for Denmark, Møller, Elna, ‘Romanske Tagskon-struktioner’, Aarbøger (19531954), 137–49Google Scholar and Danmarks Kirker, xxi (Copenhagen, National Museum, 19571960), pp. 1171, 1186, 1196, 1264–5, 1267, 1356, 1390, 1407, 1446, 1462–3, 1646Google Scholar; for Norway, and Sweden, , Hauglid, R., ‘The trussed-rafter construction of the stave churches in Norway’, Acta Archaeologica, xliii (1972), esp. pp. 2737.Google Scholar English summary of French and Belgian evidence in Fletcher, J. M. and Spokes, P. S., ‘Origin and development of crown-post roofs’, Med. Arch, vi (1964), 153–6.Google Scholar

33 Aarbøger (1953–4), 139; cf. Ostendorf, op. cit. (n. 32), p. 13, fig. 22 (c. 1100), and Acta Archaeologica, xliii (1972), 27.Google Scholar

34 St.-Germain-des-Près; Maastricht (Bull. Comm. Royale des Monuments et des Sites, n.s., xiii (1962), 315)Google Scholar; Tournai, transepts (ibid., 317).