NAVE
The NAVE (average length and breadth 154 ft.
by 26 ft.) is of eight bays. It is in the main of
the early-12th-century period, although the four
western bays were probably built later than the four
eastern, and their piers, the two westernmost in particular, are of less breadth and the arches of greater
span than those to the east. After the fire of 1187 the
walls of the four eastern bays below the triforium were
refaced with Caen stone, and Purbeck marble shafts
were added to the arcades and clearstory. The four
western bays, perhaps because they were less damaged,
were only partly refaced and the remodelling of the
arches, etc., was apparently not proceeded with until
after the other part was completed as certain changes,
specified below, were made in the details. The orientation of the arches is very irregular, practically no
single bay being in line with its neighbour. The
general tendency of the deflections in the arcades is
to the northwards in the middle bays, but in the
clearstory, judging from the parapets, the deflections
(of both) seem to be to the south
The north arcade has round-headed openings of
two orders divided by solid piers. The easternmost
pier has been broadened (? in the rebuilding of the
19th century); the second, third and fourth piers
average 8 ft. in breadth, but all vary slightly;
the fifth and sixth piers are about 7½ ft. wide, while
the seventh, which is the south-east leg of the tower,
is 11½ ft. wide. Except in the modern eastern bay,
the responds of the piers are of two square orders, the
inner order having half-round attached shafts and
the outer order, towards the aisle, smaller half-round
shafts in the reveals of the angles, the courses of both
ranging with the walling. In the first pier, which
has been broadened, traces of the original respond are
visible towards the aisle. Most of the shafts have
plain cushion capitals or double-scalloped capitals,
with chamfered abaci, but a little more variety is
seen in the three western bays, where cabled ornament
to the neck-moulds and incipient foliage and lines in
the scallops are introduced. The shafts have moulded
original bases on square sub-bases and plinths, which
in the three eastern bays are chamfered in the reveals.
The westernmost moulded base is a later alteration.
In the 12th-century arches (that is, the inner order,
and the outer order towards the aisle) the inner
order is square with small chamfers, and the outer
order has a half-round member that is practically a
continuation of that in the responds; a few of the
edges of this outer order have small chamfers. The
outer order towards the nave is of the late-12th
or early-13th-century period. The responds of
the four eastern bays are fitted with 7 in. detached
shafts of Purbeck marble which have 'hold-water'
bases and square capitals carved with 'stiff-leaf'
foliage. The shafts of the western respond of the
fourth bay and all west of it are generally of smaller
diameter, with wider spreading bases of 'hold-water'
section and, in addition, moulded intermediate bands
to tie them to the masonry. The capitals resemble
the others, but are mostly of wider spread and slightly
more free treatment. The abaci throughout the whole
arcade are continued as string-courses along the
piers and around the vaulting shafts. The outer
orders of the arches are moulded to a section closely
allied to those in the eastern arm. Those to the four
western bays have relieving arches above them.
The south arcade is practically a replica of the
north. The capital of the east respond of the westernmost bay has its scallops treated with scale ornament
in lines, but half the capital has been renewed.
The bases of the original shafts are lower than those
of the Purbeck marble shafts. The latter vary in
height irregularly, but generally from 2 ft. 3 in. at the
east end to about 3 ft. 6 in. at the west, indicating
that the original pavement sloped upwards from east
to west.
The walling above the arcades in the four east bays
is of fine-jointed Caen stone, but in the four west
bays the older 12th-century facing remains unaltered.
The triforium arcades are much the same as those
to the sanctuary, the shafts having cushion or doublescalloped capitals in no regular order. The abaci,
from the middle shafts of the fifth bay westwards,
are of grooved and hollow-chamfered section, but east
of the same point they are plain-chamfered. The four
east bays of the north side have arches of the same
radius as those to the sanctuary, but in all the other
bays the arches are smaller.
The tympana are variously decorated and each bay
is the same north and south, except the easternmost
modern bays, where the north has diagonal checker
work and the south scale-ornament. The second,
third and fourth bays have old diagonal checkers, but
only those of the fourth bay display any diversity in
the tints of the stones, and this chiefly on the north
side, where the stones are of grey, red and yellow.
The fifth bay is treated with rows of scallop-ornament
like tile-hanging. The sixth bay has rows of lozengeshaped facets, the ground work cut back between
them. The north side of this bay is of modern repair.
The seventh bay has a diaper of diamond checkers,
but the edges of each are cut back to form concave
sides; they are in horizontal rows excepting a patch
in the north arch where they are arranged on the slant.
The eighth bay is similar to the fifth; the arches here,
opening into the towers, are of four orders towards the
nave instead of three. The outermost order of the
south arch is of the late-12th or early-13th-century
section seen in the arcades below. The walling about
the arches is the original 12th-century ashlar.
In addition to the repairs next to the central
crossing, there are other later repairs in the triforium;
for instance, the middle shaft of the fifth bay on the
north side is a rather clumsy, heavy one, nearly double
the thickness of the others, and may be a 17th-century restoration. The middle shafts in the sixth
and seventh bays of the north side are modern, the
coupled secondary arches of the sixth bay, north side,
have been rebuilt with old stones reworked, and other
repairs can be observed. Below the triforium is a
moulded Purbeck marble string-course.
The clearstory is more or less a repetition of that in
the transept, but some of the shafts are of modern
black marble instead of Purbeck. It is noticeable
that in many of the bays the outer arches of the triplets differ in span one from the other; some of these
differences are very marked. Externally the lights
have shafted jambs with cushion capitals; the abaci
of the three east bays on the north side and four east
bays on the south side are of plain chamfered section,
but west of them they are of the grooved and hollowed
section. All the windows have billet-moulded labels.
The vaulting again follows the lines of that to the
eastern arm, but the rolls in the vaulting ribs are not
in this instance keeled. The wall-shafts dividing the
bays have triple keeled rolls; they are carried up
vertically, but the main wall face on the south side
leans outwards in places, so that above the five east
piers pilasters have been built out to receive the shafts
in the triforium and clearstory stages. Where the
inner face of the clearstory sets back from the main
lower face (in nearly the whole of the south side and
in the three west bays on the north side), the wallribs of the vault have a break-back at right angles,
some 4 ft. or 5 ft. above the capitals. The webbing
has been all very evenly repointed in modern times.
In the east compartment of the fifth bay is a square
patch of repair where a former trap-hole existed.
The north parapet of the nave has 14th-century corbel-tabling in two rows of trefoiled arches
between the corbels as in the eastern arm. The parapet is apparently in a dead straight line from east to
west, but the walling below has a deflection so that
the lower row of corbelling dies away into it at the
sixth bay.
Between the windows are shallow buttresses as in
the eastern arm, with similar flying buttresses from
the aisle against them. The roof is covered with lead.
That in the second, third and fourth bays is ancient
and the rolls lean westwards; the remainder has been
repaired and the rolls are square with the walls.
The south side of the clearstory resembles the north,
except that here the bend in the main wall is outwards instead of inwards, so that there is only one
row of corbelling. Where necessary the projecting
wall is sloped back in order that the parapet may
preserve its straight line.
The flying buttresses on this side are like the others,
but the arches to the four west buttresses have been
partly filled in or strengthened below by additional
arches.
The west wall of the nave retains very little if anything to denote that it is of 12th-century origin;
it is probable that most of its original masonry has
disappeared during the course of the many alterations
and repairs it has undergone since its first erection.
The west doorway is of early-14th-century date,
and no doubt displaced a 12th-century doorway
which had survived till then. It has jambs of four
orders, the innermost chamfered; the other three
are recessed square orders with hollow-chamfered
angles containing nook-shafts with round bell-capitals
of Purbeck. The two-centred head is also of four
orders, the innermost moulded, the others moulded
with scroll-rolls and fairly wide hollows; they die on
to stones (tas de charge) of rounded plan above the
capitals, instead of springing directly from the
capitals; the arch has a moulded label with damaged
stops. The shafts, of stone without base-moulds,
and the neck-moulds of the capitals are entirely
modern, but the capitals are old and badly decayed.
Internally the doorway has a single shaft in each
jamb and the rear-arch is of two moulded orders
with a label and head-stops.
Above, in range with the triforium, is a triplet of
lancet windows, of which the intermediate piers are
of two shallow chamfered orders. The jambs externally have, in addition, an outer recessed chamfered order with detached nook-shafts, the capitals of
which are like those of the doorway. The intermediate detached shafts stand in front of the piers
and carry the outer moulded orders of the heads
which have hood-moulds. The windows have been
considerably restored. Inside they have a free
arcade on the inner face of the wall with Purbeck
marble shafts. These shafts have round moulded
capitals and moulded intermediate bands tailed back
to the outer walling as lintels over the wall-passage.
The mouldings of the outer orders of the rear-arches
are carried tas de charge over the intermediate shafts
as in the doorway. The side shafts are shorter than
those in the middle and the arches above are highly
stilted. The arches have moulded labels with head-stops.
The string-course at the base of the triforium is
continued across the west wall, but is dropped about
2 ft. for the wall-passage. A broad band of carved
and coloured diaper ornament below the stringcourse appears to be a modern addition.
The west window, in range with the clearstory,
is of five trefoiled lights and tracery of 14th-century character, but all executed in 1849 from a
design by Richard Carpenter, the architect to the
cathedral. It replaces the austere stonework which
had resulted from the utilitarian repairs of the
17th or 18th century. The jambs are old and
are of two orders; the inner externally has two
half-round rolls or engaged shafts with blended
foliated capitals, and the outer square order has
detached Purbeck marble shafts with stone capitals
of free foliage. The moulded arch has a label with
head-stops. Much of the stonework, besides the
tracery, has been renewed. The inner reveals have
each a detached Purbeck marble shaft with a moulded
bell-capital carrying the rear-arch, which is chamfered and has a hood-mould with head-stops. The
window contains glass by Wailes of Newcastle, to Dean
Chandler, d. 1830. Below the window inside and
out are moulded string-courses; and another outside
above the apex.
The gable-head to the wall has two single wide
pointed lights with stone shafts in the jambs having
moulded capitals of Purbeck marble. The heads are
of two chamfered orders and have hood-moulds with
heads or grotesque stops. The surface of the gablehead is treated with diaper ornament like that in the
tympana of the westernmost bays of the triforium.
At the nave screen, described below, there were on
the north side the altar of St. Augustine and the Holy
Cross, and on the south the altar of St. Mary 'at
Stok.' (fn. 1) Both altars were originally founded by Dean
Thomas de Lichfield (fn. 2) (1232–47), for whose soul there
was a chantry at each altar and also at the altar of
St. Thomas and St. Edmund. (fn. 3) In 1482 the president
and scholars of Magdalen College, Oxford, agreed to
pay an annuity from Sele Priory for the maintenance
of a chaplain at the altar of the Holy Cross and
St. Augustine to pray for the soul of Thomas de
Lichfield, late Dean of Chichester. (fn. 4) At the altar
of St. Mary 'at Stok' there was a chantry for Bishop
John Arundel (d. 1477), who built the screen, which
is described as the 'Chantry of John Arundel, Bishop,
at the Choir Door.' (fn. 5) His tomb stands in the second
bay of the arcade. There also seem to have been
images of St. Augustine (fn. 6) on the north side of the
screen, and of St. Mary on the south. (fn. 7)
The parish altar of St. Peter must have been at or
near the nave screen, but although we have many
references to it, (fn. 8) its exact position is not known.
The North Aisle of the Nave, about 12 ft. wide, has
seven bays of vaulting carried on triple wall-shafts
(the middle shaft being keeled) against the north wall,
and on single shafts of Purbeck marble on the backs
of the arcade-piers on the south side. The moulded
capitals and bases are approximately like those of the
east bays of the south aisle of the eastern arm, but the
capitals differ slightly from them in section and from
each other, although they have the same form of
abacus; the third to the sixth on the north wall,
however, are carved with various kinds of foliage. The
bases of the fourth and fifth shafts are nearly buried
in the stone benches which run along the wall. The
bases of the single shafts on the south side behind the
main piers have mostly round sub-bases that stand on
the remains of the original bases or plinths of the former
cross-arches. The first from the east is a large square
plinth but restored; the third has a small chamfered
square plinth, the fourth has had the plinth roughly
splayed back and the walling behind the shaft has
been patched; the fifth and sixth piers must
have had wider cross-arches of two orders—about
5 ft. thick—which are indicated by straight joints in
the walling and the double-chamfered plinths, still in
place. The shaft, etc., behind the second pier has
been hidden or destroyed for a modern monument.
At the south-east and the west end the ribs spring from
head-corbels. The ribs of the vaulting also resemble
those of the east part of the south aisle of the retroquire, the transverse ribs having a V-shaped member
in the soffit between two rolls, and the diagonal ribs a
filleted central roll between two hollows. The
majority of the bosses are carved with foliage, but the
boss in the first bay has four human heads, the eastern
and western carved (reversely to the others) with
chins outwards.
In the north wall of the easternmost bay is a late12th or early-13th-century window of a single light
like those to the sanctuary aisles. Below the window
is a moulded string-course inside. The walling here
is of rough ashlar mostly wide-jointed. Externally
above the window is a 12th-century window to the
triforium. Below is a triple-hatched string-course
continued from the transept, and the walling is widejointed. The carved corbel-table is like that of the
eastern arm, but mostly altered or restored. The
second to sixth bays have arches appertaining to the
chapels into which they open and are described with
them.
The seventh bay of the north wall contains the doorway from the north porch, inserted east of the centre
line of the bay, being probably an enlargement of an
earlier doorway. This has jambs of two orders, the
inner chamfered, the outer square with rather decayed
nook-shafts of Purbeck marble; the foliated capitals
have square moulded abaci continued along the wall,
and moulded bases on chamfered plinths. The outer
order of the two-centred head and its label are moulded.
Internally the jambs have a recessed order with stone
nook-shafts also with moulded bases and foliated
capitals. They carry a moulded rear-arch with a
hood-mould, like those outside, but set much higher
in the wall. In the reveals are sockets for a draw-bar.
West of it, in the porch, is a moulded base of a shaft,
perhaps of an original 12th-century doorway which
was displaced by the present one. The base is of the
same size as those to the angle-rolls of the towerbuttresses, and may possibly be one of them placed
here afterwards. There are three steps up to the
threshold from the aisle. The doorway seems to be
of much the same period as the other early-13th-century features. In it is a pair of ancient doors,
probably of the 16th century; each leaf is of three
vertical panels divided by moulded ribs and having
raised keel centres; at the springing level is a moulded
rail, below which, in the east leaf, is a wicket door.
Above the doorway, and central with the bay, is the
outline of the former 12th-century window that was
partly destroyed for the doorway or its predecessor.
The original doorway below this window was flanked
by a 12th-century wall-arcade. A portion of the
arcade survives west of the present doorway in the
form of a round arch to a recess and its western
scalloped capital with a grooved and hollowed abacus,
6 ft. 6 in. high; the shaft has disappeared. Owing
to the setback of the wall-face for the arcading the
later doorway is flanked by an east pilaster.
Immediately west of this relic of arcading is a halfround shaft which is carried up to the springing of the
vault where it finishes abruptly; it bears no relation
to the west arch of the aisle into the tower, for
which the north wall face was cut back next to the
shaft.
The South Aisle of the Nave (about 11 ft. wide) has
vaulting resembling that of the north aisle. The
triple shafts on the south wall have carved capitals, all
of foliage only, except the fifth, which has three human
heads and fleurs de lis. The Purbeck single shafts
behind the main piers stand on the plinths of the
original 12th-century responds and the walling
behind them is patched where the responds have
been removed, except at the first and second piers.
These early bases vary in size, that behind the third
pier being shortened to 2 ft. 1 in. wide, the fourth
is 2 ft. 9 in., the fifth 3 ft., and the sixth 3 ft., with
an additional setback on each side as though this
respond was of two orders and much wider than the
others. The fifth retains a part of the original actual
respond, projecting a few inches at the base, but dying
out at the capital level. West of the sixth respond is a
half-round wall-shaft which has no relation to the
archway into the tower; this shaft may be a relic of
the former groined-vaulting or barrel-vaulting. The
corresponding south shaft has been cut away.
The vault-ribs, which are like those of the north
aisle, spring at the east end from human head corbels,
of which the northern is modern. At the west end
they spring from a moulded corbel on the south wall
and from the above-mentioned 12th-century shaft on
the north side. All the bosses are foliated.
In the south wall the easternmost bay contains the
much restored doorway of the stair to the chapter
house, and a loop-light above it. Next to the latter
is the outline of an early-12th-century window walled
up with rough ashlar. A similar blocked window exists
in the second bay. In the third bay is the doorway
from the south porch; this is later than the north
doorway, approaching more nearly the middle of the
13th century. It has a pointed head of three moulded
orders, the outer two with filleted rolls and hollows,
the innermost with keeled rolls and dog-tooth ornament. The two outer orders are carried on free
Purbeck marble shafts which have moulded bases
(of three rounds) and moulded bell capitals (rather
defaced) with Purbeck moulded abaci. The shafts
stand in front of splayed jambs in which are smaller
engaged shafts cut out of the solid, between the free
shafts. The innermost order has a plain edge-roll.
The hood-mould has head-stops, the western a priest.
Internally the jambs have a recessed order with
chamfered edges, and Purbeck nook-shafts with similar
capitals and bases. The high segmental-pointed
rear-arch is moulded and has a moulded label cut off
square at the ends. The doors, of two leaves, are
medieval: they have chamfered and moulded framing
and fillets planted on the outside, and at the back
(inside) are horizontal battens; in the west leaf is a
wicket.
In the walling of this bay inside are approximately
straight joints or seams about 15 in. from the vaultshafts, perhaps where the 12th-century responds of the
cross-arches were cut away.
The fourth to the seventh bays have the arches
into the south chapels with which they are described.
The Triforium Galleries are approached by stairs in
the north-west and south-west angles of the towers.
Above the north aisle the main piers retain the
responds and the broken springing stones of the
former cross-arches as in the eastern arm, and the
north wall against the further north aisle or chapels
still contains the original small windows; they are
fitted with doors and give access to the roof spaces
above the chapels. Also the corbel-tabling is preserved
inside these roof spaces.
The two western bays of the north wall seem to have
been thinned at some later period and have a corbeltable on the inside: the corbels are plain except two
which are 13th-century foliated capitals reset.
The south triforium has remains of the responds
of the former cross-arches, but on the south wall at the
first and sixth piers they have been completely cut
away. At the third and fourth piers there are traces
of the former cross-arches and above them, partly
below the roof, are the arches of the flying buttresses.
The stonework at the fifth and sixth piers has been
newly repaired. The original windows remain in the
four west bays with doors opening into the roof space
over the south chapels. In the two east bays the
round heads of blocked windows can be seen rising
above the aisle vaulting.
In the third bay, which is against the south porch,
is a round-headed recess 7 ft. 3 in. wide.
The Outer North Aisle (about 13 ft. wide) flanks the
third, fourth, fifth and sixth bays of the inner aisle, and
consists of the former chapels of St. Theobald and
St. Anne: they were each of two bays, but the
dividing wall was subsequently removed and the aisle
formed.
East of them, opening from the second bay of the
inner aisle, is the chapel of SS. Thomas of Canterbury
(fn. 9)
and Edmund (Rich). (fn. 10) This chapel was refitted in
memory of Lieut. Noel Abbey, Grenadier Guards,
who was killed in the Great War in 1918, as recorded
on a wall-tablet west of the chapel. There were
three chantries at this altar, namely to John, Bishop
of Chichester, (fn. 11) who must be identified as John de
Climping (d. 1262) or John de Langton (d. 1337),
Thomas the Dean, (fn. 12) probably Thomas de Lichfield
(c. 1232) or Thomas de Berksted (c. 1296), and to
William the Dean, probably William de Brakelsham
(c. 1296) (fn. 13) or William de Grenefeld (c. 1302).
The chapel is about 14½ ft. from east to west, by
12½ ft. wide. Its south archway towards the aisle
is of three moulded orders with keeled-rolls and
hollows; the innermost order is carried on detached
Purbeck marble shafts which have moulded bases of
'hold-water' type and foliated square capitals of a
fairly primitive kind with abaci of simple section; the
other orders are carried on splayed responds with
engaged shafts, alternating with smaller rolls, all cut
out of the solid; the shafts have similar bases and
capitals to those of the Purbeck shafts, but the rolls
stop below the main capitals and are brought out to
square at the bases. There are splayed sub-bases.
The east wall has a short length of string-course
externally with 12th-century hatched ornament at its
south end, returned from the aisle wall; probably
there was a buttress here originally.
The chapel is lighted by a north window of two
plain pointed lights and a quatrefoil in plate-tracery
form. Outside the head is of two moulded orders and
is carried on shafted jambs of two orders with foliated
square capitals and moulded round bases. The inner
shafts have moulded edges and a recessed order with
Purbeck shafts under a moulded rear-arch. The jambs
and arch are of the 13th century, but the mullion
and tracery have been restored. Below the sill inside
is a moulded string-course which is carried round the
north-east vault-shaft and returns at the west wall.
Above the window outside is a sexfoiled bull's-eye
window lighting the roof space.
The west wall has a plain pointed arch, a much later
piercing of the formerly solid wall; the square jambs
have been much restored.
The vaulting of the chapel has diagonal ribs of
filleted roll-and-hollow section, and east and west
wall-ribs to correspond. The north wall-ribs rise
to the level of the abaci of the window and mitre with
them. In the north angles are single stone shafts
with foliated capitals and round abaci of slightly
differing sections. The western has a moulded base
at the floor, but the eastern is cut short above a
blocked doorway of the 15th century which formerly
pierced the wall. At the south angles are carved
head corbels. The central boss is carved with foliage.
The chapel has a modern altar table. The reredos
in the east wall is contemporary with the chapel and
consists of an arcade of three niches with moulded
arches, the middle arch trefoiled and the other two
pointed, carried on Purbeck marble shafts which have
carved square capitals of stone and moulded bases.
Above the spandrels are two other niches of quatrefoil
form. Above the whole is a moulded string-course serving as a label. The three niches have been fitted with
modern figures of the Crucifixion and SS. Thomas
and Edmund, while the quatrefoils have demi-figures
of angels holding shields with the emblems of the
Passion.
The blocked doorway to the north of the reredos
has a four-centred arch and is partly hidden behind
modern panelling which lines the east and north
walls. The reveals on the east face are rebated and
the four-centred rear-arch chamfered. The blocking
forms a recess outside.
In the north wall is an original locker below the
window; it has rebated and moulded jambs and a trefoiled head.
The south and west arches of the chapel are fitted
with modern wrought-iron grilles, the western with a
gateway; the top rails bear the motto 'Loyal au
mort' and there are medallions with the sacred monogram, grenades and a shield of arms.
The next two bays westward formed originally the
chapel of St. Theobald. (fn. 14) The dedication to St. Theobald was probably to the Cistercian abbot of Vaux de
Cernay (d. 1247). (fn. 15) In 1278 the dean moved the
image of St. Richard from the saint's chapel of
St. Mary Magdalene to the chapel of St. Theobald, and
placed the image of St. Theobald outside the door of
the chapel of St. John Baptist, whereby the offerings at
the saint's image were prejudiced. (fn. 16) The two bays of
the chapel have south arches from the third and fourth
bays of the north aisle resembling the first in general
character but with details of a later period. The
Purbeck marble inner shafts have bases of three roll
section and moulded bell-capitals, below which the
small intermediate rolls die. The bases stand on subbases, which, except the easternmost, have projecting
chamfered ledges as benches. The moulded arches
have filleted rolls and there are hood-moulds on the
north face only, with head or foliage stops. The
east wall, in which is the plain archway cut through at
a later date, retains north of it the remains of a former
reredos which probably resembled that in the other
chapel. They consist of the original northernmost
engaged stone shaft having a 'hold-water' base and
foliated capital with a moulded square abacus, and
also a fragment of the arch above it, besides a portion
of the string-course which served as a label. The
transverse arch between the two bays resembles the
south arches, but the shafts in the north respond have
capitals carved with foliage and half- or quarteroctagonal moulded abaci, and (all but one) 'hold-water'
bases on square sub-bases; also the Purbeck marble
shaft is provided with a moulded intermediate band
which the others lack. From these slight differences
it may perhaps be inferred that the outer wall and
respond were built before the north aisle wall was
pierced and the south respond and south arches were
inserted.
The two bays farther west, flanking the fifth and
sixth bays of the north aisle, formed the chapel of
St. Anne, where there was a chantry at the altar to
pray for the soul of Walter de Gloucester, dean
(1262–80). (fn. 17) The arches on the south side of the
chapel are similar to those adjoining to the east.
The transverse archway between the two chapels is
also similar, without the intermediate rolls, and has
carved northern capitals and moulded round southern
capitals; it had originally a closing wall about
11 ft. high for the reredos of St. Anne's Chapel.
This was afterwards cut away, but the stumps of its
two ends remain in the responds. It has a moulded
coping. On its west face, towards St. Anne's Chapel,
are the outermost stone shafts of the former reredos,
with carved capitals of fairly free foliage and round
abaci and bases; also the springers of former arched
niches, which are of later mouldings than the others
and have filleted rolls and hollows, on the latter of
which are remains of red colouring.
The middle cross-arch of St. Anne's Chapel is
similar in detail to that of the other chapel.
The vaulting of the four bays is of like detail. The
section of the diagonal ribs includes a triple-filleted
roll and is of later contour than any of the others
hitherto mentioned in the main building; its nearest
counterparts are in the ribs in the early 14th-century Lady Chapel, but these are rather less
developed. The ribs are carried on carved corbels in
the angles, except that at the north-east of St. Theobald's Chapel, where there is a stone shaft cut out of
the solid having a foliated capital and moulded round
abacus. The corbels have diverse carvings including
the heads of a king, a priest and a woman in a wimple.
The central bosses are of foliage. The webbing is
plastered; the north compartments are raised for the
windows.
Both chapels have lockers with trefoiled heads like
that in SS. Thomas and Edmund's Chapel, and there
are stone benches along the north wall.
The windows in the four bays resemble each other
and are of three plain pointed lights and tracery of
foiled circles in two-centred heads. In all, the tracery
is of 19th-century restoration (they had no foils
previously), (fn. 18) but the jambs, mullions and arches are
mostly old. Externally the arches are of three moulded
orders, and the recessed jambs have inner detached
and outer engaged stone shafts, with foliated capitals
and moulded bases; the mullions, also shafted, are
wholly restored in the first and fourth windows, and
partly in the second and third. Internally they are
moulded and have a recessed order in which are Purbeck marble shafts with moulded bases and intermediate bands. The capitals are carved with fairly
free conventional foliage and the mouldings of the
heads and rear-arches have filleted rolls of later
character than those to St. Thomas's Chapel.
In the west wall are two straight joints which
appear to coincide with the jambs of the recess in the
north porch (q.v.), but the northern is carried up to
the vaulting and the southern to about half the height,
where it breaks to the south.
Each of the five bays—of the three chapels—was
gabled originally and the walling still retains the lower
ends of the weather-courses. The wall now has plain
horizontal parapets, that to the east chapel lower than
the other, with moulded string-courses (the four west
bays with paterae), and a battering plinth with a
moulded top member.
The buttresses dividing the bays have similar
plinths, but the battering is on the outer faces only.
Above this they are continued up in one plane, but
are divided by string-courses into three stages. The
top stage of each has, sloping down its two sides,
projecting stone water-channels which were originally
employed to carry away the rain water from the
valleys of the gabled roofs.
Higher in the buttresses are projecting spouts which
serve to discharge the water brought down from the
nave-roof in the channels of the sloping tops of the
flying buttresses and through piercings in the buttresses
themselves. The spouts are carved as monsters and
grotesque human heads; the penultimate west spout
is partly missing, the westernmost is a non-grotesque
half-figure of a man looking westwards. The easternmost buttress is finished with a moulded gabled head.
The four intermediate buttresses are capped by
octagonal turrets, the top corners of the buttresses
being splayed back for them; their edges are moulded
and the lower points carved with heads or grotesques,
some restored, some much decayed. The second
buttress does not retain the mouldings, being cut back
abruptly from a square to octagon; the turret above
is modern. The other turrets, much restored, have
angle-shafts with moulded capitals and bases and the
faces have foiled panels under moulded gablets.
Between the heads of the foiled panels the angles have
bosses of foliage and above these are corbels carrying
the gabled mouldings, mostly carved as men's heads,
and mostly restored. Above the turrets are modern
tall pointed pinnacles.
The westernmost buttress has the splayed corners
like the others, but the turret on it is square with
triple angle-shafts and single intermediate shafts,
all with perished capitals and bases. The turret is
covered by a plain square slab of stone. On the west
face of this buttress is a double-headed niche coeval
with it; it has two trefoiled recesses, over which is a
large quatrefoil and again above that a smaller quatrefoil, all below a foiled and gabled hood-mould. The
jambs have engaged shafts with foliated capitals and
moulded bases; between them is a free shaft with a
foliated capital. The base of the niche is level with
the lower string-course and the (perished) finial at
the apex of the gable just reaches the upper stringcourse. There is nothing to show what the niche
contained. A little higher, south of the niche, is
another short length of moulded string-course, but the
purpose of this is not evident. The central shaft and
possibly the south jamb are old restorations.
The North Porch, at the westernmost bay of the
north aisle, between St. Anne's Chapel and the northwest tower, projects flush with the north-east angle
of the tower. The entrance archway has recessed
square jambs of three orders externally, the innermost
with detached Purbeck shafts and the outer two with
detached stone nook-shafts, the bases of 'hold-water'
type, and the capitals with 'stiff-leaf' foliage and
moulded square abaci: each jamb has a shaft inside
the porch. The head, of three orders, has coupled
pointed arches to the inner order, carried on a central
Purbeck shaft, below a two-centred main head formed
by the two outer orders. The latter are of the usual
keeled roll and hollow form of the early-13th-century period, but the inner order has wider hollows
in the soffit and outer faces filled with dog-tooth
ornament. In the tympanum is a trefoil-niche with a
moulded frame.
The vaulting has moulded ribs of the early-13th-century characteristics of those in the sanctuary,
but differing slightly in section; they are carried on
foliated corbels in the angles, and have a plain disc
as the central boss. Against the side walls are stone
benches. These walls are of tooled ashlar, the western
of wide-jointed masonry except where the courses of
the inner and outer archways bond into it; in the
north half of the eastern wall is a recessed arcade of two
pointed bays with hollow-chamfered heads and square
jambs; the latter have moulded abaci in their reveals
which may have been cut back on the faces. The
middle stone shaft has a foliated capital of early
form and a moulded base on the stone bench. The
walling at the back does not course with the jambs.
On the west wall are the remains of a 15th-century memorial tablet; the frame is moulded, and it
contained apparently a carving of two or three figures
kneeling to a crucifix (?), but it seems to have been
purposely defaced; below was an inscription cut
on a representation of a linen band, but only a few
meaningless letters are visible.
There is an inaccessible upper story to the porch
with a moulded string-course at its base and a plain
parapet partly restored. In it is a rectangular light
to the east of the centre-line and to the west of the
centre-line is a small cross-loop now blocked.
The front wall of the porch forms a straight joint
with the tower west of it, by the upper part of the
jamb of the entrance, but the lower part is the widejointed masonry of the tower continued eastwards
beyond the real east angle of the tower. It may be
inferred from this that there was originally a 12th-century porch or other structure which had its
masonry bonded in with that of the tower.
The South Porch between the sacristy and the
chapel of St. Clement leads from the west walk of the
cloister into the third bay of the south aisle. The
entrance archway of the porch is of three orders,
the innermost forming coupled pointed arches on a
central shaft and the outer two the main two-centred
head. The moulding of the coupled arches is a series
of rolls and hollows. A touch of the early craftsman
is shown in the curious monsters' heads carved as
springing stones above the capitals. They are cut
upside-down so that the mouldings appear to issue
from their mouths. The main arch is of two moulded
square orders with keeled edge rolls. The arches are
carried in the jambs on Purbeck marble shafts with
'hold-water' bases and foliated capitals of stone;
they stand free in front of the splayed jambs, and
have Purbeck marble abaci, square to the outer orders
and splayed to the innermost order. The foliage
in the capitals seems to be a little more advanced
in type than the simple 'stiff-leaf' foliage of the
12th to 13th-century period. In the tympanum
of the head is a foiled niche with a moulded frame
and a foliated and a moulded bracket, on which stands
a modern figure of St. Richard with crozier and
mitre.
Internally the main arch is of one order on similar
shafts; the masonry of the tympanum is jointed to
indicate the back of the niche. The archway has a
moulded label outside.
The vaulting has moulded diagonal and wall-ribs
springing in the angles from corbels with Purbeck
abaci; those in the north angles are carved to represent little crouching men with belted tunics, and
foliage, the southern have rather crudely carved men's
heads.
There are stone benches against the east and west
walls. The west wall has, mostly in the south half,
a recessed arcade of four bays with moulded twocentred heads and labels carried on square capitals
and free shafts of Purbeck marble standing directly
on the stone bench without bases. The second
capital from the south is carved with bird-like monsters, the others with foliage.
In the north wall, containing the south doorway
of the aisle already described, is a short length of
straight joint 15 in. from the east wall, and a more
broken seam west of the doorway.
The exterior face of the outer south wall flanking
the entrance and above it is of smooth ashlar, the
courses of which range with those of the west wall
of the sacristy, and are probably of one date with it.
But the internal faces of the east and west walls show
a great deal of the diagonally tooled masonry characteristic of the 12th century, and are therefore earlier
than the external ashlar. The buttress which flanks
the west side of the entrance is mostly straight-jointed
or unbonded where it meets the porch wall.
In the upper story of the porch are small lights
concealed by the cloister roof, but visible inside the
chamber. This chamber is entered from the chapter
house by the doorway behind the 'secret panel,'
and is thought to have been the ancient treasury
of the cathedral.
The lights above mentioned in the south wall
are a central rectangular loop and a small cross-loop
west of it, like those over the north porch. There
are also traces of another cross-loop, now blocked,
east of the middle light. Above these lights
there is sufficient evidence in the masonry to show
that the porch was originally gabled, in the existence
of a partly destroyed weather-course in the west half
of the wall. The north side of the chamber retains
the 12th-century carved corbels of the aisle parapet.
The floor is not paved, and is considerably lower than
that of the chapter house; there are steps down
through the wall and in addition an ancient ladder of
solid oak balks. The present roof is a nearly flat
lean-to with a heavy central beam from east to west
and a few old rafters.
The door in the east entrance is an ancient nailstudded one of oak vertical battens on the east face
and horizontal battens at the back. It is hung on
plain hinges and is fitted with a heavy oak lock.
The chapels of St. Clement and St. George, which
were altered into an outer south aisle (about 12½ ft.
wide), have now been reconverted to their original
use as chapels: St. Clement's at the end of the last
century in memory of Bishop Durnford, whose canopied
tomb occupies its north archway; St. George's
Chapel was refitted in 1921 as a memorial to the men
of the Royal Sussex Regiment who died in the Great
War (1914–19).
At the altar of St. Clement was a chantry for Dean
Cloos (d. 1500). (fn. 19) At the chapel of St. George,
William Hoore, citizen of Chichester, and others,
had licence in 1446 (fn. 20) to found the Guild of St. George,
to maintain a chaplain in the chapel of St. George in
the Cathedral Church, or elsewhere in the city,
for the good estate of the king and for the souls of the
brethren and sisters of the Guild and for the maintenance of the poor brethren and sisters. (fn. 21) In 1481
we find there was a chaplain celebrating here for the
soul of James, formerly mayor of Chichester. (fn. 22) There
was also at this altar a chantry founded in 1467 by
John Goryng, Humphrey Heuster, and Thomas
Best, where a priest should pray for the good estate
of the king and Elizabeth, the queen, of the said John,
Humphrey and Thomas, and the souls of William
Okehurst, John Okehurst and Cicely his wife, to be
called the Chantry of William Okehurst. (fn. 23) The chantry was subsequently known as the Okehurst Chantry.
Walcott says that the Charnel House Chantry was
also at this altar.
Each chapel is of two bays. The four arches from
the fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh bays of the south
aisle are almost precisely of the same detail as the
archway to the chapel of SS. Thomas and Edmund,
but the capitals and bases are of Purbeck marble and
the free shafts of the three western bays are tied in
with intermediate moulded bands. The easternmost
bay has 'hold-water' bases; the others are of threeround section. The westernmost bay is much narrower
than the others because of the proximity of the southwest tower; this and the next arch differ slightly in
section from the others and their bases have leaf-spurs.
The two transverse arches, one in each chapel,
have similar details, but the capitals have much freer
foliage than those of the arcade and the responds and
arches are not symmetrical, the eastern arch being of
only two orders on its west face and three orders on
the east face, while in the western arch this arrangement is reversed, the three orders being on the west
face. Both arches have hood-moulds on their east and
west faces, with foliage or head-stops, and both have
been partly restored, especially that in St. Clement's
Chapel. Their bases, mostly of 'hold-water' section,
are carried on wide sub-bases fashioned as benches.
There are stone benches against the south wall, but
the bench has been cut away in the east bay of
St. Clement's Chapel.
The vaulting of the chapels is like that of the
opposite double-bayed chapels. Against the south
wall, except in two angles, the ribs spring from single
shafts with foliated capitals and with moulded bases
on the stone benches except the south-east shaft in
St. Clement's, which stops at the string-course below
the sill level on a man's-head corbel. The other
angles have corbels carved with foliage or human
heads. The southern compartments are lifted to clear
the south windows.
The cross-wall between the two chapels was
originally solid, but was afterwards pierced by the
existing archway, which has plain chamfered jambs and
imposts; on the north reveal are traces of colouring.
The archway has now been closed with a thinner wall
to take the reredos of St. George's Chapel.
St. Clement's Chapel retains the ancient arcade,
partly repaired, and niches forming the reredos. It is
similar in design to that of SS. Thomas and Edmund,
but the intermediate Purbeck marble shafts (modern)
have old foliated stone capitals with round moulded
abaci. In the three niches are images of SS. Alphege,
Clement and Anselm and in the quatrefoils above
are standing figures of angels holding shields with
emblems of the Passion. The string-course above the
niches is a continuation of the abacus of the north
main arch. South of the reredos is a moulded square
bracket for an image. There are a piscina and a locker,
both with trefoiled heads and rebated jambs in the
south wall.
St. George's Chapel has a new altar and stone reredos
with a figure of the patron saint. It is set in the
recess, against the modern thin wall, formed by the
old cutting through the solid wall. North of this
cutting the old wall retains one engaged shaft of the
former reredos that was destroyed for the piercing; it
has a damaged foliated capital. In the south wall
are a piscina and locker as in the other chapel.
The four windows to the chapels are each of two
plain pointed lights and a cinquefoil in plate-masonry
under a two-centred head. All the mullions and
tracery are modern. The reveals inside have one
recessed order with Purbeck marble shafts which have
moulded bases, intermediate moulded bands and
foliated square capitals; the rear-arches are of keeled
edge-roll and hollow section. Externally the arches
are of two moulded orders carried on shafted jambs;
the restored inner shafts are detached, the outer shafts
course in with the masonry.
The walling of this side also bears evidence of having
been gabled above each bay as on the north side, and
the four intermediate buttresses also have the sloping
water channels and the grotesque spouts, except where
the westernmost spout has been removed and the place
repaired. The octagonal shafts are also similar but
are covered with flat stone slabs just above the capitals
of the angle shafts.
The South-West Tower (about 19 ft. square inside)
is divided externally by string-courses into four stages.
The lower part of the tower is of the early-12th-century period, but either because it suffered from the
fire of 1187 or more probably because of its innate
weakness, it was found necessary to strengthen it
with new buttresses early in the 13th century, when
also the third stage was remodelled and the top stage
added. This was probably one of the two towers which
suffered after the great storm of 1210.
There are shallow clasping buttresses at the angles,
which are complete at the north-west angle, but at the
south-west and south-east angles are concealed by the
later deeper buttresses projecting south and west
and reaching to the third stage; only the angle shafts
on their inner sides are here left exposed to view.
These shafts are cut out of the solid and reach nearly
to the top of the third stage, where they finish with
foliated capitals, and the breadth of the buttresses is
diminished by tabling on their inner sides. The outer
edge-rolls or shafts are continued up to near the top
of the fourth stage, where they also terminate with
foliated capitals. There are looplights to the southwest and the upper half of the south-east stair turrets.
The parapet, flush with the shallow buttresses, has
moulded corbels.
The archway from the nave is a part of the south
arcade. That in the east wall from the south aisle has
double-shafted responds to the inner order with
moulded bases and cushion capitals which have grooved
and hollowed abaci; the outer order has single shafts
and all are of half-round plan. The round arch is of two
orders, the inner chamfered, the outer with a halfround like the arcades.
In the south wall is a blocked early doorway; its
jambs are of two orders, the inner square, the outer
with modern shafts but original carved capitals, that
in the eastern jamb has voluted leaves and the western
spear-shaped foliage and diaper ornament; both have
cabled neck-moulds. The round head is of two orders,
both with zigzag ornament; the inner of two-roll
section, the outer of three with a small V-shaped member between the two orders with cheveron ornament.
The label is hollow chamfered and on its flat surface it
is treated with a tiny zigzag pattern. Inside, the doorway has square jambs and round head. Above the
doorway is a window of the same period with shafted
jambs having cushion capitals and abaci continued as
string-courses; the outer order of the round head has
a roll-mould and the label is enriched with billet ornament. The splays inside have similar shafts. Below the
window are string-courses; that outside is carved with
triple-hatched ornament; the other inside is plainchamfered. The west face is unpierced, but at the
south end inside is a round - headed doorway into
the south-west stair turret.
The lowest stage is treated inside with a large
arched recess in each face, with half-round shafts
having moulded bases and grooved cushion capitals,
and grooved and hollowed abaci. The recess in the
east wall has its south jamb cut back square, and
there is an additional shaft next it. The south-west
angle has two shafts, the north-west angle only one;
and there is one nearly buried in the north wall near
the north-east angle, as though the wall containing
the archway from the nave had been thickened subsequently. The last has a voluted capital, and east of
the capital and level with it up to the east wall is a
short band carved with scallop and volute ornament,
perhaps part of a design which was afterwards altered
or never proceeded with. There are string-courses
in the east recess, one about 8 ft. high and the other
level with its abaci, in line with those below the south
and west windows. Above all these shafts and
capitals each angle has a shaft continued upwards,
the string-courses being carried round them. The
north-east shaft stops at the base of the clearstory
and the north-west a little higher, but the other two
reach the top of the third stage. None of the upper
floors is left, the tower being open from ground floor
to roof.
The second stage has a south window like that
below, but taller, and there is a similar window in
the west wall, set midway between the shallow buttresses and level with the triforium of the main
body. There are string-courses below the windows,
a plain one outside carried round the shallow
buttresses; that inside is carved with zigzag and billet
ornament.
The third stage, level with the clearstory, has east,
west and south windows of early-13th-century date,
each of a single pointed light with a moulded arch of two
orders: the jambs have each two engaged shafts with
foliated square capitals and continued abaci. The north
wall is pierced by the three clearstory arches having
Purbeck marble free shafts with foliated round capitals, and stone respond-shafts with foliated square
capitals, the middle arch being stilted like those to
the nave. Similar arcades stand in front of the windows
in the other three walls; each is of three bays with
Purbeck marble shafts which have their round foliated
capitals tailed back to the outer wall. The stringcourses below the windows are plain outside and
moulded inside: the string-course level with them,
on the north wall, has hatched ornament.
The fourth or top stage is pierced on each side by
coupled pointed windows with triple-shafted jambs
having foliated capitals similar to the others, but all
of stone; the arches have 13th-century mouldings.
The windows are also shafted inside and have chamfered rear-arches. The tower has a modern flat panelled
ceiling.
The North-West Tower is of similar detail to the
other, excepting the lower parts of the shallow buttresses that adjoin the nave and the north porch and
some of the wall adjoining them; the outer walls and
the upper part are modern, copied from the other
tower in 1901 by John L. Pearson, the architect. (fn. 24)
The West Porch is a single-storied structure with
buttresses at the outer angles, those to the west being
of one stage. In the front of each is a modern patching, probably where niches formerly existed. The north
and south walls have shallow buttresses reaching
nearly to the top of the wall, and against them are lower
buttresses, but partly covering both are deeper buttresses added later. The walls have plain copings.
The side walls and outer faces of the buttresses have
battering plinths with a moulded top member (similar
to those of the outer aisles or chapels) which goes all
round the porch; it is partly restored as a chamfer
against the north buttress.
The entrance archway is of four orders: the outermost is very deeply recessed and with the two intermediate orders forms the main pointed head, while the
innermost has coupled pointed arches on a central
shaft. The last are moulded (including triple-filleted
rolls) and have wide hollows in the soffits in which are
two rows of nail-head ornament. The other three
orders are moulded. The arch has a small label with
decayed head-stops. The jambs have recessed orders
with filleted angle-rolls and in the nooks are stone
shafts with bases, which have leaf-spurs, and moulded
bell-capitals. The reveals of the innermost order
have triple shafts, and the central pillar, which is of
quatrefoil plan, matches them. In the tympanum is
an elongated quatrefoil niche containing a seated
figure of Christ, representing the arms of the see, and
side quatrefoil niches with figures of censing angels.
The entrance has been very much restored, all the
shafts and the innermost order and tympanum being
modern.
The vaulting of the porch has moulded ribs of much
the same type as those to the north and south aisle
chapels, but a little more elaborately moulded. They
spring from stone angle shafts, with moulded capitals
and bases like those of the entrance. The north shafts
are partly modern. There is no central boss. Against
the north and south walls are stone benches.
Both north and south sides of the porch are treated
with wall-arcading of three bays and tracery up to the
string-courses about 20 in. above the level of the vault
shafts. The recesses have trefoiled heads, and
above them is a range of whole and half quatrefoils
all of a moulding resembling those of the entrance;
they are carried on Purbeck marble shafts which have
rather badly perished bases, on the stone benches, and
moulded bell capitals. The east shafts are modern.
Both arcades have been partly destroyed for later
funeral monuments. That on the south side is nearly
contemporary, judging from its mouldings. It has a
segmental-pointed moulded arch, originally cinquefoiled but now robbed of its cusping, under a gabled
hood-mould, enriched with crockets but many missing.
The arch is carried on jambs with engaged shafts
having perished capitals and bases, and flanked by square
pilasters or buttresses with panelled faces and gabled
heads and (truncated) pointed pinnacles. In the recess
is set a stone coffin with a plain tapering lid. It was
probably brought from elsewhere in the church, and
the jambs have had to be cut into to receive it. Gordon Hills assigns the tomb to Seffrid II (d. 1204)
because the eastern part of the church was incomplete at the time of the bishop's death. (fn. 25) Mackenzie
Walcott, however, allots it to Bishop Berghsted
(d. 1287). (fn. 26)
The monument on the north side is later, probably
of the 15th century, and is attributed to Dean Milton (d. 1424). (fn. 27) It has a base with a moulded top
slab, and a panelled front. The recess has moulded
jambs and a four-centred arch with a wide hollow in
the reveals. The jambs project from the wall-face and
their exterior sides are also panelled. At the top is a
modern frieze with shields, etc.
The Monuments in the nave and aisles include the
following: under the arch between the second bay of
the north aisle and the chapel of SS. Thomas and
Edmund are the tomb and effigy of an unidentified
lady. The tomb is panelled on its long sides with
quatrefoils in which are figures of female 'weepers'
(three each side) alternating with blank shields and
foliage; in the spandrels above the quatrefoils are tiny
human busts and in the lower spandrels foliated carvings. The effigy of the lady wears a flat head-dress
with a wimple and veil, gown with tight sleeves and
loose cloak; her hands, in prayer, have lost their
fingers. Her head rests on a cushion 'supported' by
(headless) angels; her feet rest on a dog. The figure has
been badly maltreated.
Under the arch between the fourth bay of the north
aisle and the outer aisle is a tomb with effigies of a
knight and a lady, attributed to Richard Fitz Alan,
14th Earl of Arundel (d. 1376), and his Countess (d.
1372), or to his son of the same name (d. 1397), the
15th earl, and his wife, but probably the former from
the armour. The base has panelled sides of narrow and
square quatrefoiled panels alternating, all of limestone,
and probably modern. The knight is represented in full
armour—bascinet and camail, a close-fitting gypon
carved with the heraldic charge of a lion, and having
a scalloped lower edge, plate brassarts and elbow cops,
a baudric, the lower edge of a hauberk, plate cuisses
and greaves, knee cops and pointed sollerets with
spurs. His left hand rests on the pommel of a
sheathed sword, most of which is missing; the hand
has a gauntlet and also holds his other gauntlet; his
right hand holds that of his wife. On the right side
are the remains of a short dagger or misericord, his
head rests on his lion-crested helm and his feet on a
lion. The lady wears a wimple and long head veil,
dress with fairly tight sleeves and full skirt, her left
hand to her breast, her right hand holding that of
the knight; her feet rest against a dog. Round the
tomb is an iron railing, the strikes with fleur de lis
heads. (fn. 28)
In the nave there is a marble floor tablet with
brasses missing and others to Capt. James Alms,
1791; to Ann, wife of Thomas Lane, 1735; to Joshua
le Marchant, 1751 (a black marble slab with shield of
arms). There are also many undecipherable floor slabs,
some with indents for brasses. (fn. 29)
In the north aisle of the nave there are mural
monuments to Thomas Hayley, dean, 1739, and his
wife Sarah, daughter of Thomas Harlowe, 1736; to
Henry Baker, 1730, Penelope, his wife, 1734, and
Penelope, their daughter, wife of Thomas Hayley,
1740; to Edmund Woods, 1833, Katherine, his first
wife, Caroline Sophia, his second wife, Mary Ann
Woodrooffe, Emma Woods, Frances Woods and Charlotte Woods, his daughters.
There are floor slabs to John Barnard, 1715,
and Mary, his wife, 1746; to James Reeves, 1790;
to Emma Jane, daughter of S. S. Heming, 1819,
and Amelia Elizabeth Heming, 1832; to Ann Steele,
1750; to Thomas Ball, 1770; to Barbara Briggs,
1735; to W. H. Evans, 1833; to Mary, daughter
of John Briggs, 1733; to John Briggs, 1723; to
J. S. M. D., 1721; to Mary Lee, 1774; to Mrs.
Amelia Phripp (n.d.), and many others that are indecipherable.
Over the altar in the chapel of SS. Thomas and
Edmund is a mural monument to Lieut. George
Pigot Alms, 1782; and outside the gates is a tablet
mentioning the restoration of the chapel in memory
of Noel Roland Abbey, 1918.
There are also mural monuments in the outer
north aisle to John Mackie [1831]; to Major-General
John Henry Fraser, 1804, and Maria Anne Hobart,
his widow, 1846; to Sir George Murray, 1819, and
Ann, his widow, 1859; to Major-General Sir George
Teesdale, 1840; to Alicia, wife of George Murray,
1853; to Dean Thomas Ball, 1770, and Margaret
(Mill), his wife, 1783 (by Flaxman); to John Quantock and Mary, his wife, 1820 (with arms); to
Edward Madden, 1819; to Vice-Admiral Henry
Frankland, 1814 (by Flaxman); to Charles Sinclair
Cullen, 1830; to Matthew Heather Quantock, 1812;
to William Huskisson, M.P., 1830 (statue holding a
scroll); and to Joseph Baker, 1789 (by T. Hickey).
In the north-west tower, to Lt.-Col. Sir Edward
Wheeler, 1903; to Lt. Edward Humphrey Tyacke,
1918; to Col. Arthur Sampson Hector Gem, 1918;
to William Collins, 1759 (by Flaxman); and to Lt.Col. George Leonard Thomson, 1898.
In the south wall of the south aisle opposite the
first pier is a late-15th or early-16th century tomb of
Petworth marble. The base has a panelled front of
quatrefoils, etc., and the top slab a moulded edge.
The reredos has a middle trefoiled panel on either
side of which are indents of the kneeling figures of
a man and woman with scroll-prayers, and four shields.
It is flanked by concave faced semi-octagonal pilasters
and has a moulded cornice.
West of it is a plain raised projection, perhaps the
base of a tomb, 8 ft. 9 in. long. This supposed tomb
has been attributed to Dean Cloos (d. 1500). (fn. 30)
On the south face of the third pier of the south
arcade is a stone mural monument of early Renaissance design of c. 1530–40. It has a plain ashlar
rectangular panel surrounded by a narrow splayed
frame with a Tudor arch, the splays panelled with
quatrefoiled circles. It is flanked by diagonal pilasters
with miniature carvings in low relief on the faces
including a shield with a rose, naked figures, a demon
playing a guitar, putti playing lutes, etc. Above is
a frieze carved with scrolls and trefoiled leaves; it
has in the middle a diagonal pilaster key block carved
with grotesque heads and figures: the side pilasters
have moulded pendants; the top pinnacles or finials
are gone.
Under the second arch of the south arcade is
a plain altar-tomb said to be of Bishop Arundel
(1459–1477). (fn. 31) The top slab has a moulded edge and
has the indents of the figure of a bishop, two shields,
scrolls, and quatrefoils which probably contained
symbols of the Evangelists.
On the south wall west of the doorway is a brass
to William Bradbridge, d. 1546, erected in July 1592.
It has the kneeling figures of a man and woman,
the man in a ruff and gown, the woman with a flat
cap, ruff, padded and slashed sleeves, close corsage
and full skirt; their hands are in prayer, and there is
a desk with books between them. Behind the man
are the figures of six sons and behind the woman eight
daughters. It has an architectural background, above
which is a shield of the arms, [azure] a pheon [or].
The inscription reads: 'Here under lyeth the bodies
of Mr. William Bradbridge | who was thrice Maior of
this Cittie, and Alice, his wife, who | had vi sonnes
and viii daughters, which Wm. deceased 1546 | and
this stone was finished at ye charges of ye worshI
Mrs. Alice Barn | ham widow one of ye dautrs of ye
said Wm. Bradbridge and wife of the | worshI Mr.
Francis Barnham, deceased, shrive and Aldermã of
Londõ in 1570. Fynyshed in July 1592.' (fn. 32)
On the pier opposite St. George's Chapel is a blackand-white marble mural monument to Archbould
Udny, of the Bengal Civil Service, 1828.
On the south wall of the south aisle in the westernmost bay is a mural monument with a brass to Henry
Blaxton, S.T.D., chancellor and J.P., 1606, and Joan,
his wife; and to a descendant Edward Blaxton,
'pharmacopola,' 1770. The brass inscription is set in
a grey marble panel which has flanking pilasters with
capitals and bases: the brass is round-headed and
the spandrels of the square head are carved with
foliage. The pilasters have panels carved in relief
with foliage and the names of the sons and daughters.
The entablature has a carved frieze and supports a
crest with a shield of arms, Argent two bars with
three cocks gules in chief and a molet gules for
difference.
Under the archway between the fourth bay of the
south aisle and St. Clement's Chapel is the marble
monument of Bishop Richard Durnford, 1895: it
has a panelled altar-tomb with an effigy of the bishop
and a vaulted canopy with enriched arches, cornice
and cresting.
In the chapel of St. Clement are the following
mural monuments: to Francis Dear, Alderman, and
his wife, Bridget (Ashburnham) 1802: a white marble
tablet by Flaxman sculptured with figures of Hope
and Faith; to Sarah Udny, 1811: of white marble,
by Flaxman, with a niche or recess in which is sculptured the figure of a reclining lady with a book in
her lap; to Agnes Sarah Harriet Cromwell, 1797, a
white marble tablet by Flaxman, sculptured with
figure of girl ascending to Paradise, attended by three
angels; to James Alms (19th century, no date);
to Bishop Charles John Ridgeway, D.D., 1927; to
Admiral Swinton Colthurst Holland, 1922 (with
arms).
There are also floor slabs to Joane, wife of Stephen
Briggs, 1729; to Stephen Briggs, 1728; to Mrs.
Elizabeth Hurdis, 1775; to Naomi Hurdis, 1781;
to Thomas Hurdis, 1784; to Agnes Sarah Harriet
Cromwell, 1797; to Henry Frankland, 1814; to
William Floyd, 1716; to Frances, wife of William
Fowler, 1801; to Mary Frances, her daughter,
1781; to Mrs. Mary Cholmeley, 1740; to Judith
Harriot Williams, 1730; to Mrs. Anna Maria Watts,
1744; Mrs. Dorothy Dunster, 1771; to Thomas
Kelway, organist, 1719; to Richard Libbard, 1660,
and Dorothy, his wife, 1692; to William Coates,
1726; to E. M. R., 1772; to John Slaterford (n.d.),
and to Agnes Booker, 1710.
In St. George's Chapel there are floor slabs to
John Smith, 1742–3; to Jane, wife of John Smith,
1750; to W. E. Nembhard, 1829; to Thomas, son
of Thomas and Mary Cootte, 1723; to Sarah West,
1711; to Thomas Withers, 1706; to Peggy Young,
1808; to A. F., 1729; to Mary, 1729, and Ann,
1734, daughters of John and Ann Clement; to Mrs.
Mary Rosewell, 1776; to Harriott Ashburnham,
eldest daughter to William Ashburnham, 1712; to
Rev. Charles Ashburnham, 1800, Ann Ashburnham,
his wife, 1825, Ann Frances, daughter, 1827, and
Charles, son, 1810; and to James Charles Young,
1926.
In the south-west tower there are mural monuments to: Alfred Ingram Bostock, 1902; to Emma
Durnford, 1884; to Lt. Jack Ronald Lewes Mackenzie, 1917; to Lt.-Gen. J. E. Tannatt Nicolls, 1900,
and Louisa Ross, wife, 1876; to Lt.-Col. G. Green
Nicolls, 1874; to Lt.-Gen. Sir Jasper Nicolls, 1849,
and Anne Bythia, 1844, Miriam Arabella, 1865, and
Louisa Rachel, 1885, daughters of Gen. Nicolls;
to Gen. Oliver Nicolls, 1829, and Miriam, his wife,
1853; to Maj.-Gen. O. H. A. Nicolls, 1920, Harriet
Maria Crawley, first wife, 1881, Mary Lee, second
wife, 1891; to Georgina Harriet, 1881, and Guy
Justly, 1890; to Henrietta, wife of Lt.-Col. G. G.
Nicolls, 1857, and Harriet Mary Nicolls, daughter,
1857; to Ernest Augustus Udny, 1808 (by Henry
Westmacott); to Jane Smith, 1780 (by Flaxman).
There are floor slabs to Rev. Roland Duer, 1791;
to Stephen Beale, 1756; to W. K., 1746; to Robert
Sharp, 1761; to Elizabeth, wife of Thomas Cole,
1723; to John Arnold, 1718; and to Anthony
West, 1719.
In the nave on the south side is a modern pulpit
(designed by Sir G. Scott) of stone and Sussex marble;
it has an open arcaded side with figures of saints,
and a cylindrical stem and triple shafts.
In the middle before the quire screen is a brass
lectern with an eagle book-rest.
The modern font which stands in the south-west
tower has a square bowl on a cylindrical stem and
four marble shafts; it has a flat lid with arched iron
framing over and a medallion in gilded metal, on a
central stanchion. It stands under a tall oak canopy
provided in 1913, which has arched sides and a
pinnacle in several diminishing stages with traceried
sides and carvings and a foliated finial.