I Location

Site Location
Pettaugh
National Grid Reference
TM 168 596
County
traditional: Suffolk
now: Suffolk
Diocese
medieval: North Elmham c.950-1071 ; Thetford 1071-94 ; Norwich from 1094 .
now: St Edmundsbury and Ipswich since 1914.
Dedication
medieval: not confirmed
now (or name of monument): St Catherine
Type of building/monument
Parish church

II General Description

Exterior from SW.

Exterior from SW.

Interior to E.

Interior to E.

Pettaugh lies on the A1120, midway between Stowmarket and Framlingham, and 9 miles N of the centre of Ipswich. The village clusters around a staggered crossroad on the A1120, but it is not a busy road and the settlement retains its village character. The church stands alongside the main road at the E end of this compact village. The landscape is the typical arable farmland of the East Anglian plain, and a stream runs past the E end of the church, eventually joining the river Deben SE of Debenham.

St Catherine's has a nave, a chancel with a N vestry, and a W tower. The flint nave has a plain c.1300 S doorway under a modern knapped flint and brick porch. The plainc.1300 N doorway is blocked. The windows have cusped Y-tracery,c.1300 in style but all replaced. At the W end on the N side is a flint stair repaired with brick, and on the S wall towards the E end is a piscina set in a rectangular niche, probably 13thc. but described below. The chancel itself is as wide as the nave and the chancel arch is broad and tall; 15thc. in style but probably 19thc. in fact, and extending the full width of the chancel. If the nave piscina served an altar in its present position, therefore, the chancel arch must have been widened. The chancel E window has cusped intersecting tracery, and the S windows and priest's doorway are Perpendicular in style, but all are replacements. Set in the S wall alongside the altar is a crude pillar piscina in a tall, round-headed niche (described below). The chancel and the modern N vestry are mortar rendered: the vestry doubles as an organ chamber. The unbuttressed three-storey 14thc. W tower is of knapped flint with a reticulated W window and a high plinth. The tower arch is tall and plain with a chamfer, and the bell-openings are of brick, except for the E which has 15thc. tracery. The embattled parapet is decorated with flushwork. There was a comprehensive restoration in 1863; the builder was J. Jessop of Helmingham and the architect apparently the vicar. The two piscinas are described below.

V Furnishings

3. Piscinae/Pillar Piscinae

(i) Pillar piscina

Chancel, S wall, pillar piscina.

Chancel, S wall, pillar piscina.

Pillar piscina.

Pillar piscina.

Situated at the E end of the S chancel wall, alongside the altar. It is set in a tall, round-headed niche, splayed out towards the interior of the church. It consists of two roughly-shaped stones; a shaft set in the wall at the bottom of the niche, with only its front surface exposed, and an upper block in the form of a flat-faced block, smaller at the top than the bottom and with its angles roughly chamfered. The upper surface is not dished but has a small hole, like a drain, in the centre. This block is irregularly tooled.

Dimensions
overall h. of piscine 0.32 m
h. of shaft 0.22 m
h. of upper block 0.10 m
max. w. of upper block (E-W) 0.15 m
d. of upper block at top (N-S) 0.14 m

(ii) Piscina

Nave, S wall, piscina.

Nave, S wall, piscina.

, Nave, S wall, E end. The piscina consists of a roughly cuboid slab, dished on its upper surface with a central drain, set in a rectangular niche lined with thin stone slabs at top, sides and back.

Dimensions
Internal dimensions of niche
h. 0.42 m
w. 0.27 m
d. 0.27 m
Dimensions of piscina block
h. 0.11 m
w. 0.27 m
d. 0.27 m

VII History

The manor of Pettaugh was held by Beorhtweald before the Conquest and consisted of one carucate of ploughland plus 30 acres, and three acres of meadow, and in the same place five free men held 18 acres. There was a church here with 2½ acres of land. In 1086 this was held by Hervey de Bourges. Before the Conquest Thorkil held 20 acres in Pettaugh, with an acre of meadow. In 1086 this was held by Hervey from the Abbot of Ely. Siward held five acres here before the Conquest, held in 1086 by Warenger from the Bishop of Bayeux.

Debenham and Helmingham benefice, i.e. Aspall, Debenham and Kenton and Framsden, Helmingham, Pettaugh and Winston.

VIII Comments/Opinions

Mortlock and Pevsner both label the pillar piscina Norman; neither mentions the nave piscina.

IX Bibliography

  • H. M. Cautley, Suffolk Churches and their Treasures. London 1937, 304.
  • D. P. Mortlock, The Popular Guide to Suffolk Churches: 2 Central Suffolk. Cambridge 1990, 181-82.
  • N. Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Suffolk. Harmondsworth 1961, rev. E. Radcliffe 1975, 392-93.