St George Tombland - Norwich, Norfolk
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member SMacB
N 52° 37.879 E 001° 17.910
31U E 384845 N 5832617
One of two mediæval churches dedicated to St George in Norwich, which may indicate a late foundation date. The ‘surname’ Tombland is from Old English words meaning ‘empty land or space’, referring to the site of the late Saxon market.
Waymark Code: WMN09X
Location: Eastern England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 12/01/2014
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Dorcadion Team
Views: 6

" This is as pretty a church as you'll find in Norwich, and the setting is unsurpassed. Hemmed in by 17th and 18th century houses, the church is set back in one corner of the city's famous Tombland, just across the road from the Cathedral of the Great and Undivided Holy Trinity. Indeed, the church was once known as St George at Trinity Gate. If you approach the church from Princes Street, the cathedral spire appears unnervingly as if it is a little spirelet at the top of St George. As you reach it, you find it set back behind mature trees, tight in its little graveyard.

Bequests from the tower date from the early part of the 15th century, and the rest is probably broadly contemporary. The very top of the tower is a 17th century repair in the Gothic tradition.

Coming from low church Suffolk, St George appears exotic to my eyes, because it is on one of the highest rungs of the Anglo-catholic ladder. Statues and stations abound, and both aisles end in the east at Marian altars. The furnishings are largely 19th century, but the chancel retains its gorgeous 18th century reredos, which is fitting in a city which was at the height of its power and influence at that time. Also 18th century is the pulpit with its high tester, both elegant and awe-inspiring. The font cover is a hundred years earlier, the St George and the dragon motif on its top a hundred years later. The font itself is an arcaded job in Purbeck marble, familiar from hundreds of rural East Anglian churches. This one has been urbanised somewhat by the Victorians, placed on grand marble pillars.
St George has two notable early 17th century memorials. Up in the chancel is the marvellously named Alderman Anguish. His monument is by Nicholas Stone. It is highly coloured, and he kneels opposite his wife, their family living and dead around them.

Another former mayor is remembered at the west end. John Symonds died in 1609, and left unto the poore of this parish two shillings a week to be continued forever. Well, ten pence won't go far these days, but if you are one of the Tombland poor you might consider looking on the shelf below it, for this is the original dole table on which charity payments may be made.

Despite being a small church in a small parish, St George has provided its fair share of mayors, and in common with many other city churches retains its sword and mace holders in the north aisle, decorated with some of their names. Not far off is a rather naive bas-relief of St George and the Dragon, which I take to be 16th or 17th century in style."

SOURCE - (visit link)
Building Materials: Stone

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Recent Visits/Logs:
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CEO44 visited St George Tombland - Norwich, Norfolk 08/25/2019 CEO44 visited it
MeerRescue visited St George Tombland - Norwich, Norfolk 06/16/2016 MeerRescue visited it
Master Mariner visited St George Tombland - Norwich, Norfolk 11/04/2015 Master Mariner visited it

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