BY THE SAME AUTHOR
Wood Carvings in English Churches
I. MISERICORDS
A Handsome Volume, containing 257 pages, with 241 Illustrations.
Octavo, strongly bound in cloth. Price 7s. 6d. net.
LONDON: HENRY FROWDE, Oxford University Press
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SOME PRESS NOTICES
Morning Post.—"The subject is one of the first importance to mediæval popular history, and we welcome this very admirable and thorough monograph with special gratitude."
Athenæum.—"Mr Bond has put his rare industry in all that pertains to ecclesiology to excellent service in his latest book on Misericords."
Antiquary.—"An authoritative and, at the same time, delightful and instructive volume. Really the first attempt to deal comprehensively with the great variety of carvings on misericords."
New York Herald.—"One of the quaintest, most fascinating, and at the same time most learned volumes that a reader would happen upon in a lifetime."
Church Times.—"An indispensable guide to the subject. The illustrations are worthy of all praise."
Architectural Association Journal.—"The blocks, taken from photographs, are of an excellence really amazing, when the difficulties such subjects present to the camera are considered. A most delightful book."
Yorkshire Post.—"Another of the valuable series of monographs on Church Art in England, and the most entertaining of all."
Architects' and Builders' Journal.—"An exceedingly interesting volume both in illustrations and subject-matter, and full of curious information."
Glasgow Herald.—"Mr Bond's scholarly and most interesting book brings us very near to popular life in the Middle Ages."
Liverpool Courier.—"Another of the admirably written and illustrated art handbooks for which the author is famous."
Birmingham Post.—"This well illustrated volume is not only a valuable technical monograph, but also an important contribution to the history of social life and thought in the Middle Ages. Mr Bond's treatment of the subject is exceptionally charming and successful. The general excellence of the book is great."
Outlook.—"Many there must be to whom Mr Bond's new book will be welcome. Into all the details of this varied and most puzzling subject he goes with thoroughness and a pleasant humour. The bibliography and indexes, as usual in Mr Bond's work, are admirable."
Notes
[1] Harry Sirr in Art Journal, 1883, 329.
[2] Wickenden, Archæological Journal, 1881, pp. 43-61.
[3] Canon Church in Archæologia, lv. 326.
[4] Dictionnaire raisonné, viii. 464.
[5] C. R. Peers in Victoria County History of Northants, ii. 445.
[6] Illustrated in the writer's Screens and Galleries, 2.
[7] Faber's Poems, pp. 227-229.
[8] See the writer's Westminster Abbey, 48.
[9] For plans of St Gall, Kirkstall, Westminster, Canterbury, Exeter, York, see the writer's Gothic Architecture in England.
[10] For an account of the working of the system of Secular Canons in the English cathedrals see Canon Church's paper in Archæologia, lv.; Professor Freeman's Cathedral Church of Wells; Mr A. F. Leach on Beverley Minster in vols. 98 and 100 of the Surtees Society, and on Southwell Minster in the 1891 volume of the Camden Society; and Rev. J. T. Fowler, D.C.L., on Ripon Minster in vols. 64, 74, 78, 81 of the Surtees Society.
[11] See Mr A. F. Leach's Memorials of Beverley Minster, Surtees Society, vols. 98 and 108.
[12] Views of galleried choirs may be seen in Britton's Cathedral Antiquities; Norwich, ii. 13, Oxford, ii. 10.
[13] Illustrated in Maeterlinck, La genre satirique dans la sculpture flamande et wallonne, page 12.
[14] See Viollet-le-Duc's Dictionnaire, viii. 464.
[15] See C. R. B. King in Index to Spring Gardens Sketch Book, ii. 46, and Plate XLVI.
[16] Hope's Rochester Cathedral, pp. 110, 111.
[17] It is illustrated in Professor Lethaby's Westminster Abbey, p. 23, from Sandford's Coronation of James II., and is reproduced above.
[18] Illustrated in Gothic Architecture in England, 481.
[19] See John O'Gaunt's Sketch Book, vol. i.
[20] Here, as always, one has to recognise the technical and artistic excellence of Mr Crossley's photography; he has even reproduced the cobwebs.
[21] They are ascribed to the fourteenth century by Mr Octavius Morgan in Monuments of Abergavenny Church.
[22] My attention was directed to these arms by Mr W. H. St John Hope.
[23] Jones and Freeman's St David's, pp. 87 and 91.
[24] Illustrated in Dart's Canterbury Cathedral, 145 and 160.
[25] E. Mansel Sympson's Lincoln, 277.
[26] Illustrated in the writer's Gothic Architecture in England, p. 269.
[27] A photograph of the north range of the Chester stalls forms the frontispiece of the writer's Misericords.
[28] Mr C. H. Purday.
[29] Illustrated in Murray's Welsh Cathedrals, page 267.
[30] Illustrated in the writer's Fonts and Font Covers, 296.
[31] Ecclesiastical Architecture of Scotland, ii. 105. Drawings by Mr J. B. Fulton appeared in the Builder, 1st Oct. 1898 and 2nd Dec. 1893; and by Mr A. S. Robertson in the Builders' Journal, 14th Jan. 1903.
[32] Macgibbon and Ross. Castellated and Domestic Architecture of Scotland, v. 543; and Builder, lxxv. 293, in which are measured drawings by Mr J. B. Fulton.
[33] Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries, i. 112.
[34] For information relating to the Windsor stalls I am indebted to Mr W. H. St John Hope: see his paper "On a remarkable series of Wooden Busts surmounting the stall-canopies in St George's chapel, Windsor," in Archæologia, liv. 115, and the building accounts to be published in his forthcoming work on Windsor Castle.
[35] See the writer's Westminster Abbey, 146.
[36] Sacristy, i. 266.
[37] The Hampton Court busts are by Giovanni de Majano, who in 1521 demanded payment for ten "medallions of terra cotta." They cost £2. 6s. 8d. each. R. Blomfield's History of Renaissance Architecture in England, 3.
[38] Illustrated in the writer's Westminster Abbey, 197.
[39] See also the illustration of the chair made c. 1545 for Dorothy Mainwaring, page 123.
[40] See Willis and Clark, i. 516-522.
[41] Gotch's Early English Renaissance, 29, 254.
[42] Annales Caermoclenses, by James Stockdale; Ulverston, 1872, p. 76.
[43] Early Renaissance Architecture in England, 38.
[44] Annals of St Paul's, 447.
[45] Measured drawings of the stalls of St Paul's by Mr C. W. Baker appeared in the Building News, 1891, pages 108 and 358.
[46] The Renaissance woodwork ousted from Worcester cathedral by Sir Gilbert Scott found a resting-place in the church of Sutton Coldfield (R. A. D.).
[47] Willis' Canterbury Cathedral, 107.
[48] These are illustrated in Archæologia Cantiana, vol. xiii.
[49] York Fabric Rolls, 35, 248.
[50] Canon Savage's pamphlet, 369.
[51] Cutts' Parish Priests, 466.
[52] Gasquet's Parish Life in Mediæval England, 96.
[53] Gasquet, Parish Life in Mediæval England, 45.
[54] It is of course possible that both Alan de Alnewyk and Robert Constable sat in the chancel in surplice either as a member of a gild or of the choir.
[55] This, however, may have been for one of the choirmen or choristers.
[56] Reproduced in Gasquet, ibid., 47, from Didron.
[57] Wordsworth's Salisbury Ceremonies and Processions, 20.
[58] Inhibitions of Archbishop William of York in 1308 and 1312 in Rev. Dr Fowler's Memorials of Ripon Minster, Surtees Society, vol. 78.
[59] "South chancel" may mean "the chapel south of the chancel."
[60] Admirably edited by Mr Littlehales for the Early English Text Society; vols. 20 and 24.
[61] At Hambleton (98) the chancel was remodelled, and the simple desks with linen pattern may be of that date. But the seats behind were never more than rough movable benches.—G. H. P.
[62] R. H. Murray on Ancient Church Fittings, 12.
[63] Mr T. Graham Jackson's Dalmatia: iii. 319, 427, 105: i. 272 and ii. 123.
[64] Stewart in Archæological Journal, xxxii. 18.
[65] Jones and Freeman's St David's, 90-93.
[66] Padre Garrucci in Proceedings of Society of Antiquaries, iv. 40, and illustrations in Vetusta Monumenta, vol. vi. The perspective sketch is by Carlo Fontana and is in the Royal Library at Windsor; the measured drawing is by Signor S. A. Scardonelli, and was made in 1784.
[67] Measured drawings of the Hereford chair by Mr W. H. Brierley appeared in the British Architect, xxiii. 114.
[68] Described by Dr Cox in English Church Furniture, p. 250.
[69] Shaw's Ancient Furniture, 31.
[70] Wiltshire Archæological Society's Magazine, vi. 147-149, quoted in English Church Furniture, 253.
[71] Archæologia Æliana, xvii. 47, and Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries, xvii. 238. There are four similar chairs at Kilpeck.
[72] For descriptions and illustrations see Mr J. Hunter's "Edward the First's Spoliations in Scotland, A.D. 1296" in Arch. Journal, vol. xiii.; Mr W. Burges' paper in "Gleanings from Westminster Abbey," p. 121; and Mr Lethaby's Westminster, pp. 18, 265, 297.
[73] Henry Shaw's Ancient Furniture, Plate VI.
[74] Illustrated in Hone's Year Book, 143.
[75] Rev. Arthur Helps from Country Life, 12th March 1910.
[76] Communicated by Rev. R. M. Serjeantson