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St George, South Elmham St Cross, Suffolk

Location
(52°24′30″N, 1°22′43″E)
South Elmham St Cross
TM 299 843
pre-1974 traditional (England and Wales) Suffolk
now Suffolk
medieval St George
now St George
  • Ron Baxter

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Feature Sets
Description

The seven South Elmham villages; St James, All Saints, St Nicholas, St Cross, St Margaret, St Michael and St Peter, to which may be added Homersfield, sometimes referred to as South Elmham St Mary, lie in a scattered group between Bungay and Halesworth in NE Suffolk, to the W of the Roman road known as Stone Street. North Elmham (the centre of the see until 1071) is over 30 miles away, to the NW of Norwich, and both apparently took their name from Aethelmaer (bishop of E Anglia 1047-1070) the landholder before the Conquest. This is not certain; Tricker suggests that the name meant villages where elm trees grew. The land here is flat, generally arable and sparsely populated; the villages rarely more than a few houses clustered around the church without shops or pubs.

St Cross consists of a loose cluster of houses around a crossing of The Beck, a stream that runs into the Waveney. The church is on rising ground on the N side of the stream, with a moated hall site 500 yards to the E. It consists of nave, chancel and W tower; both nave and chancel being very tall. The aisleless nave is 12thc. with original doorways surviving on the N and S. The S is under a 14thc. -15thc. porch, and the N is badly damaged and blocked. The original nave windows are all gone, having been replaced by 15thc. windows at upper and lower levels (i.e. effectively a clerestory above the main lateral windows). The E gable of the nave is crow-stepped. The chancel arch is 19thc, but there are windows with intersecting tracery at the N and E of the chancel, suggesting a date ofc.1300. The S chancel windows and the brick S doorway are 15thc. The W tower is 14thc., of knapped flint with chequerwork on the buttresses similar to that at South Elmham St Peter. The parapet battlement is 15thc. and decorated with tracery patterns in flushwork, also similar to St Peter's. Construction is otherwise of flint with traces of render remaining on the nave and chancel, and knapped flint for the S porch. Work on reseating the nave and a W gallery were carried out by J. D. Botwright of Bungay in 1840-41. The two nave doorways are the only Romanesque features.

History

The land that became the South Elmhams was part of an ancient deanery given to the bishops of East Anglia while they were at Dunwich in the 7thc., and the ruins of the ancient minster that served the area survive in the parish of St Cross. The South Elmhams, known variously as Almaham, Almeham, Elmeham and Halmeham in the Domesday Survey, were still held by the Bishops of East Anglia immediately before the Conquest and in 1086. They remained in the possession of the bishops throughout the middle ages. The Domesday Survey does not allow the different manors to be distinguished with any certainty.

The minster lies a mile to the S of the church, and estimates of the date of the ruins vary between the 7thc. and the 11thc. The Taylors argue for a date in their periods A3 or B (700-950). Between the church of St Cross and the minster, closer to the latter, is the site of South Elmham Hall. The present building is largely 16thc., but it contains 15thc. arches dating from the period when the hall was occupied by the bishops of Norwich.

Benefice of South Elmham and Ilketshall.

Features

Exterior Features

Doorways

Comments/Opinions

The tall proportions of the doorways, their capital, impost and base forms and the simple angle roll profile of the arch point to a date before 1150, perhapsc.1120-40.

Bibliography
H. M. Cautley, Suffolk Churches and their Treasures. London 1937.
D. P. Mortlock, The Popular Guide to Suffolk Churches: 3 E Suffolk. Cambridge 1992.
N. Pevsner, The Buildings of England: Suffolk. Harmondsworth 1961, rev. E. Radcliffe 1975, 427.
H. M. and J. Taylor, Anglo-Saxon Architecture. Cambridge, 3 vols, I, 1965, 231-33 (on South Elmham Minster).
R. Tricker, All Saints' Church South Elmham Suffolk. London (Churches Conservation Trust) 1996, 1.