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[GRAVESTONE NO. 2.]

"Here lies the body
of Adam Sadler who
departed this Life
the 7th of October 1765
aged 83.

"Here also lies the Body of Mr
John Sadler from Liverpool who
departed this life the 10th of
December 1789 aged 69.

"Here also lies the Body of James
son of the said Mr John Sadler
who departed this Life the 27th
of December 1794 aged 81 years.

"Also the body of Elizabeth widow of Mr John Sadler who departed this life. the 25th of May 1842 aged 88 years.

"Also of Elizabeth Mary Sadler
of Aintree Daughter of the above
who departed this life the 19th of
June 1857 aged 75 years.
Requiescant in Pace.

"No more to be buried in this grave."

NORMAN REMAINS FOUND AT

SEPHTON CHURCH.

The Norman capital found in 1896 outside the northern wall of the churchyard of Sephton, proves to be of exceptional interest for the decipherment of the structure that preceded the earliest portions of the present building, which belong to the style usually called "Decorated." The capital was found in a pile of debris from the ancient schoolhouse, which stood within the churchyard, to the

[graphic][merged small][subsumed]

north of the church, and which was taken down about eight years ago. In the first place, its style enables us to date the Norman church with some accuracy as about 1170. The fragment has been re-used for a building stone, and the upper surface has been set (as the weathering shows) as the face of the ashlar, the projection of the upper member of the abacus having been cut away at each side, so as to square the stone, which was then set in the wall with the capital turned inwards and lying on its side.

The capital, as we find it at present, is adapted for a single shaft. There is no trace of mitreing of the abacus moulding at the sides that would indicate that it formed part of a clustered pillar or respond, composed of three or more shafts, though the paring down at the sides may possibly have removed some such indications. The probability is that it was from the first made as the capital of a single wall pillar, the rear part of the stone being left square and set in the wall. The abacus is square, and the first member of it is a flat vertical one, below which is a scotia or hollow moulding, slightly undercut. The third member is a plain bead moulding. This forms the front of the abacus. On the proper right of the capital the hollow and bead are not continued, but are changed for a nail-head ornament of seven pyramidal nailheads. Below the abacus is a small square member, and below this the square is brought down to the round necking, which is broken away, by four large leaves springing from it, each terminating in a depressed ogee form, which at each point is curved again to right and left into a small volute. In the space between the bell moulding and the large leaves are set small lozenge-shaped and triangular leaves, clearly and boldly cut, completing the foliated ornament of the capital.

These features are minutely detailed, because they appear to give good evidence of date. The slightly undercut hollow mould, the conventional yet flowing lines of the large leaves, and the decorative suggestion of the smaller ones, combine to show the coming influence of the early pointed style, and to place this capital within the period of the transition from Norman to the Pointed style. Capitals of similar type are to be found, with slightly later features, in Furness Abbey; also, with a further development, at Cartmel Priory, circa 1188.

If, as is probable, this capital was made for a single column, and not for a grouped or clustered one, its use would be adapted either for a wall arcade or it could have formed a dividing column between a group of windows. The former is its most probable purpose, as windows and doorways were most commonly furnished with nook shafts, set in the re-entering angles of the orders or recessings of the arches. In either case, the presence of this capital would indicate a church of considerable richness of decorative detail. There is reason to think that part of the foundations of the church tower are Norman, and if this Norman church had a tower, wall arcades would not be used at the west end. They would be appropriate to the exterior of the chancel, at the east end, or to the internal side walls of the nave and chancel, at their lower stage. Some further evidence of the elaborate decoration of the Norman church is to be found in the fragments of string courses, with the star ornament, built into the tower and south aisle of the existing structure. The discovery of the foundations of a cross wall, a few feet to the westward of the chancel screen, most likely indicates the eastward extent of the Norman church, which was extended by lengthening the

chancel in the fourteenth century, and subsequently further extended in the fifteenth and early sixteenth

centuries.

There are also indications on the tower that the south side of the church was without an aisle until the latest alteration, and that the external wall was on the line of the present south arcade. Thus it is possible that a portion of the south Norman. wall remained, with fourteenth century alterations, until the latest rebuilding, and that this was the position of the arcade to which the capital belonged; and during the fifteenth or sixteenth century, when the present south aisle was added, it was used for wall ashlar in building the schoolhouse.

Until further investigation is made, the dimensions and plan of the Norman church are to a great extent conjectural, but their indications may be more fully discussed when the whole architectural history of the structure is properly considered.

EDWARD W. Cox.

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