The Corpus of ROMANESQUE SCULPTURE in Britain & Ireland
Cumberland (pre-1974 traditional (England and Wales))
Parish church
The church is of of rectangular plan, with a bell-gable at the W end, a N transept and a N vestry. There is a S doorway off the nave (thought to be of 12thc. date), with a porch in front of it. There had also been a N doorway, found in the early 20thc., but this was walled up and plastered over. In 1858 the N transept and new windows were added and various repairs on the church undertaken. In 1901-2, further repairs were carried out, the vestry added, and three new windows installed in the nave.
After the Dissolution of the Monasteries, the patronage of Whicham Church was in the hands of Hugh Askew. After his death, his widow married one of the Penningtons of Muncaster. In 1717, it was held by the Penningtons, but later it was soled to Lord Lonsdale.
Parish church
The church of St Michael is sometimes listed under Glassonby and sometimes under Addingham, as the medieval church of Addingham was destroyed by the River Eden at an unknown date, and a new church built closer to the village of Glassonby, probably in the 16thC. but registers of the church go back only to 1602. The village of Addingham, itself, no longer exists. There are older carved stones used in the church structure which are thought to have come from the earlier church. Alterations were made in 1786 and 1898. In 1786, it was decided that a W porch be built and the N doorway filled in. The roof of the vestry was raised in 1898. Possibly at the same time, but almost certainly after 1840, the S porch was built, forming a new entrance into the church. This was likely carried out when the 18thC. W porch was taken down. Built into the S porch gable is a voussoir carved with chevron, and built into the N gable of the vestry is a voussoir carved with beakhead. These are the only known stones of Romanesque form. A number of Anglo-Saxon stones survive, most of which are known to have been recovered nearby from the River Eden and its bank.
Parish church
The church of St Mary is of dressed and rubble sandstone and comprises a W tower, nave with N aisle, and chancel with N vestry. Little of the 12thc church remains. Repairs were undertaken in the 17thc and the baptismal font is dated 1662, but the church was largely rebuilt in the early 19thc. A chevron voussoir remains built into the exterior of the south wall of the nave and the head of a cross, decorated on one side, is kept inside the church.
Parish church
Dalston is situated about four miles S of Carlisle, and the church is located in the village square. The church of St Michael consists of a nave, chancel and small transept on the S side. In 1923, Collingwood wrote that the lower courses of the church of St Michael’s were of 12thc date and that the chancel was 13thc. The church was partly rebuilt in 1749 and restorations on the chancel carried out in 1873. In 1890, the nave was restored and a N porch added.
Surviving from the 12thc is a single capital, now built into an interior wall in the former N porch (now a toilet facility).
Parish church
The present church consists of a square-ended chancel and a nave with a S aisle and a S porch. Over the chancel arch is a double bellcote, and N of the chancel a vestry. It is thought that the lower courses of the N nave wall may be 12thc, but the church was re-built in the 13thc and again in the 14thc. There were 14thc, 15thc, 16thc and 17thc changes to the structure, and renovations were carried out in 1967 to 1973, including a vestry. The earliest surviving carved work in the church is the 12thc bowl of the baptismal font.
Parish church
Situated in the former ward of Allerdale below Derwent, Caldbeck is located on the Caldbeck River, which flows into the Caldew and onwards into the Eden River, which then empties into the Solway. Dedicated to St Kentigern, the church consists of a rectangular aisled nave, with a rectangular chancel. This chancel, built off of the east end of the church, has a width equal to the central space of the nave. On the interior side of the S wall of this is part of an early window. A chantry was built off the S side of the chancel in the early-16thC. and is now used as the vestry. At the W end of the church is a tower. A stone porch in front of the S nave doorway contains re-used Romanesque carved stones. 12thC. stones have also been built into the W interior nave wall. Kept inside the church are a few loose voussoirs, similar in detail to those found in certain other Romanesque churches. Later building works on the church are known to have occurred in the early 16thC, early 18thC., 1880 and 1932-3.
Parish church
In 1860 Whellan wrote that the church of Nether Denton was ‘a small unpretending structure’. Between 1868 and 1870 the church was rebuilt on the same site. In 1941, during clearance work in the churchyard, a stone cross carved with a figure in full-length attire was found embedded in the soil. This is now set up on the W interior wall of the nave.
Parish church
St Leonard's Church reflects a number of changes over the past several centuries, but the E apse and W arch survive from the Norman period. The present church consists of a chancel with semi-circular end, a wider nave and a narthex, divided from the nave by an arch. There is also a S porch. William Thornton, prior of Wetheral and later abbot of St Mary’s, York, seems to have been responsible for certain changes to the church in the early 16thc, as his rebus appears on the S buttress of the chancel. In 1703, the church was in a poor condition. In the same report, Bishop Nicolson made mention of a supposed W tower, said to have been removed at some earlier but unknown date. Pennant, in 1772, wrote that the nave of the church had previously been extended at the west end and that at that time there was still ‘a good rounded arch, now filled up’. Some work was carried out on the church in 1807. The nave was rebuilt in 1869 and some stained glass windows put in the apse in the 1870s. A stone-built S porch and narthex were added in 1908. In 2017, the church was made redundant and put up for sale.
Parish church
Bromfield is located in NW Cumbria, in the ward of Allerdale below Dewent (i.e. Allerdale north of the river Derwent). The present church comprises a nave with N aisle, and a long rectangular chancel. Built off of the S side of the chancel is a chantry chapel, founded in 1395 (restored in 1925). The N transept/chapel was rebuilt in 1861 as a private family chapel. Built in front of the Romanesque S nave doorway is a later porch. Restorations on the church were undertaken in 1861-2, 1893-4 and 1926. The 12th-century church appears to have been aisleless with a shorter chancel than at present. The S doorway remains from this early church, as do sections of carved stones flanking the chancel arch, which was rebuilt in the late-14th century. Several medieval carved grave covers, a few of which are likely to be of 12th-century date, are kept inside the church. Two cross heads, which had been re-used in an outbuilding of the vicarage, are also documented, but the building no longer remains and the present location of the stones, if they still exist, has not been found.
Parish church
St James’ Church was built in the village of Ireby in 1845-6 to replace the old church, which is located about a mile away from the village centre. The baptismal font and a few other carved stones from the old church were taken to the new church.