Font - Church of St.Michael and All Angels, Bruisyard Road, Peasenhall, Suffolk. IP17 2HL.
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member greysman
N 52° 16.237 E 001° 27.046
31U E 394290 N 5792268
A C12th Norman font in this rural parish church.
Waymark Code: WMRH7B
Location: South East England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 06/21/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Dragontree
Views: 1

A Medieval, Grade II* listed parish church, much restored in 1860-1 in the Perpendicular style 'at the sole cost of J.W.Brooke Esq, of Sibton Park'. Consisting of a nave, chancel, west tower, north porch, and south vestry. Built in random flint and stone rubble with stone dressings and a slated roof. The C15th tower is of three-stages, has diagonal buttresses to the west face and a mid C19th crenellated parapet, both with flushwork, there is a two-light west window, The bell chamber openings are of two-lights and there is a large clock face on the north side facing the village main street. The nave is of five-bays with two-light windows. There is a good C15th porch of knapped flint facade with three tiers of flushwork panels, a moulded arch, and a hoodmould with carved spandrels and stops, there are three empty canopied niches above. In the spandrels are Suffolk's best preserved woodwose, to the right, and dragon, in the left, squaring up to each other. (Woodwose, or wild man, is a mythical figure that appears in the artwork and literature of medieval Europe, comparable to the satyr or faun type in classical mythology and to Silvanus, the Roman god of the woodlands).

The two-bay chancel has a five-light east window with Thomas Willement's glass showing, in the 1860s style, the crucifixion [of Our Lord] simple in the centre three lights with the Virgin Mary to Christ's right and an Apostle to his left. There are the gospel writers' symbols, religious texts, arches and foliage in abundance.

Internally both nave and chancel have mid C19th scissor-braced rafter roofs and crenellated wall-plates enriched with fleurons, the chancel wall-plate is C15th. Beneath the organ gallery and to the north and south of the sanctuary is some C16th linenfold panelling taken from the nearby Swan public house. Other furnishings are mid C19th.

The good C12th Norman font is square with convex sides and attached corner shafts to the stem, there is some inscribed chevron decoration on the lower edge of the bowl. The whole font is set on a square stone plinth with chamfered corners. It is on the south side of the nave opposite the north porch entrance. An octagonal wooden cover with central lifting knob has been made for the font.
Approximate Age of Artefact: C12th

Relevant Website: Not listed

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