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St Mary, Melbury Bubb, Dorset

Location
(50°51′25″N, 2°34′32″W)
Melbury Bubb
ST 5958 0654
pre-1974 traditional (England and Wales) Dorset
now Dorset
medieval Salisbury
now Salisbury
medieval St Mary
now St Mary
15 July 2013

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Feature Sets
Description

There are no visible remains of the 12thc church. The present building consists of a late 15thc chancel and nave, both extensively rebuilt in 1854, and a S tower-entrance, also probably of c.1470-80.

The church contains a font made from a drum carved in the pre-Conquest period. The drum was turned upside down and repurposed probably in the 12thc.

History

Noted as ‘Meleberie’ in the Domesday Book. No mention of a church. Melbury Bubb and Melbury Osmund were combined in the Book to make up a large manor of 46 households, worth £4 and taxable at 6 geld units. The lord in TRE was Brictnoth, and by 1086 the manor was held by Roger Arundel.

Features

Furnishings

Fonts

Comments/Opinions

The font bowl is covered with mildew and algal slime, but, interestingly, the base and plinth are not affected.

Bibliography

F. Bond, Fonts and Font Covers, OUP (1908) pp.106 & 138 & ill., 104.

J. Newman and N. Pevsner, The Buildings of England, Dorset (2002) pp. 14, 272-273.

Royal Commission on Historical Monuments: Historical Monuments in the County of Dorset, Vol. I: West (1952) pp.158-159 & plate 15.