MEM24465 - St George's Churchyard, Dunster (Building)
Summary
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Type and Period (1)
Protected Status
Full Description
The church is built of red sandstone and was the priory church for the Benedictine priory of Dunster, which was a cell of Bath. It was conveyed to Bath by William de Mohun at the end of the 11th Century. [1] Was the priory church. The graveyard has been in use since medieval times. [2] Photograph showing southeast view of church. [3] [SS 9904 4366] St. George's Church (Vicarage) and (NAT) Priory Church (NR). [4] In 1498, an agreement was arbitrated in Glastonbury where the church was effectively divided into two parts; the east was for the monks and the vicar and parish had the west end, with a new and separate choir. The dual use of the church ended with the Dissolution and the lands then passed into the use of the Luttrells, though at one stage the rectory, tithe receipts and responsibility for appointing a vicar was conveyed to Hugh Stewkley. [5] The churchyard was included in a plan of Dunster Priory dated from c.1770. The space to the southeast was occupied by abutting buildings at this time. The southern of these was labelled "H Thomas's House" and the northern "Poor Houses belonging to H J Luttrell Esq". The southeastern end of this building range is now occupued by 18, Church Street (MSO12068). [6] A watching brief was undertaken to the south and southeast of the Church in December 2017. The southern area is known to have served as a cemetery for both the medieval priory and wider community, probably since the foundation of the monastery in the later 11th Century. The southeastern corner is not thought to have been employed for burial until the Luttrell family vault beneath the chancel became full in the later 19th Century. The area excavated did not contain any evidence for the medieval monastery, which accorded with what is known about the site. An east to west aligned linear feature (MEM24460) was noted; while its full extent was not visible, it was interpreted as the possible original southern boundary ditch of the medieval priory. Throughout the northern and central areas where the trench passed through the raised area of churchyard retained by masonry wall the majority of the exposed profile appeared to include the fills of numerous intercutting graves. As well as quantities of stone rubble and mortar the deposit contained pottery of post-medieval date and disarticulated human bone, the occurrence of which appeared to increase towards the north. This evidence of intensive overburial throughout much of the area clearly extended into at least the 18th Century. In the centre of the area a broad depression infilled with crushed lime mortar and soil was identified. To the south of the church a brick-lined grave structure of coffin-shaped plan was recorded. Internally two tiers of iron supports were visible which once supported coffins; these had decayed and their remains and contents, consisting of the disordered bones of at least two individuals, were found to be deposited on the base of the structure. Quantities of medieval and post-medieval pottery and tiles, post-medieval clay pipe and glass bottles, animal bones and a Morte Slate roof tile were recovered. [7]
Sources/Archives (7)
- <1> SMO5711 Monograph: Pevsner, N.. 1958. The Buildings of England: South and West Somerset. Penguin Books. 154-6.
- <2> SMO5308 Verbal communication: Various. Various. Oral Information. M. Aston, Somerset County Council, 29 November 1978.
- <3> SSO734 Article in serial: Anon. The Builder. P. 169 and plates.
- <4> SMO5112 Map: Ordnance Survey. Various. Ordnance Survey Map (Scale / Date) . OS 25" 1929.
- <5> SEM7516 Monograph: Binding, H.. Discovering Dunster. The Exmoor Press. p38-53.
- <6> SEM8457 Map: Unknown. c.1770. Plan of the Priory, Dunster. Pen and Ink.
- <7> SEM8581 Report: Brigers, J.L.. 2018. The Parish Church of St George, Dunster, Somerset: A watching brief in the churchyard.
External Links (0)
Other Statuses/References
- Church Heritage Record ID: 601463
- Exmoor National Park Authority HER number: MSO9435
- Exmoor National Park HER Number (now deleted): MSO11232
- Exmoor National Park HER Number (now deleted): MSO12069
- Local List Status (Unassessed)
- National Monuments Record reference: SS 94 SE84
- National Park: Exmoor National Park
- NRHE HOB UID (Pastscape): 36948
- Somerset SMR PRN: 33569
- Somerset SMR PRN: 34928
Location
Grid reference | Centred SS 9901 4365 (121m by 72m) |
---|---|
Map sheet | SS94SE |
Civil Parish | DUNSTER, WEST SOMERSET, SOMERSET |
Finds (12)
- SHERD (AD 15th Century to AD 18th Century - 1400 AD to 1799 AD)
- CLAY PIPE (SMOKING) (AD 15th Century to AD 18th Century - 1400 AD to 1799 AD)
- TILE (AD 14th Century to AD 15th Century - 1300 AD to 1499 AD)
- ROOF TILE (Medieval to Post Medieval - 1066 AD to 1900 AD)
- WINE BOTTLE (AD 18th Century - 1720 AD to 1730 AD)
- SHERD (AD 18th Century to AD 19th Century - 1700 AD to 1899 AD)
- SHERD (AD 14th Century to AD 18th Century - 1300 AD to 1799 AD)
- BIRD REMAINS (Post Medieval - 1540 AD to 1900 AD)
- BOTTLE (AD 18th Century - 1700 AD to 1760 AD)
- SHERD (AD 17th Century - 1600 AD to 1699 AD)
- SHERD (AD 17th Century - 1600 AD to 1699 AD)
- CLAY PIPE (SMOKING) (Post Medieval - 1540 AD to 1900 AD)
Related Monuments/Buildings (8)
- Parent of: Medieval churchyard cross in St George's Churchyard (Building) (MSO9417)
- Parent of: Possible medieval boundary ditch south of St George's Church (Monument) (MEM24460)
- Parent of: Post-medieval brick lined grave in St George's Churchyard (Building) (MEM24474)
- Parent of: Post-medieval southern wall of Dunster Churchyard (Building) (MSO12071)
- Part of: Dunster Priory (Monument) (MSO9407)
- Part of: St George's Church, Dunster (Building) (MSO9435)
- Related to: No 18, Church Street, Dunster (Building) (MSO12068)
- Related to: Possible post-medieval building south of St George's Church (Monument) (MEM24488)
Related Events/Activities (2)
Record last edited
Oct 13 2021 1:59PM
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