St Laurence's church - Leaveland, Kent
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member SMacB
N 51° 15.442 E 000° 52.314
31U E 351507 N 5680597
Anglican church of St Laurence, Leaveland.
Waymark Code: WM119WZ
Location: South East England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 09/14/2019
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member pmaupin
Views: 1

"St Laurence Church Leaveland sits in the heart of rural and farming Kent and has done since recordings in the Domesday Book in the 11th Century. It is delightfully small, simple and still. The church is used twice monthly for Common Worship Holy Communion Services on the 1st and 3rd Sunday of the month at 9.30am. The church takes part in God's Acre Project and has won 2 awards for it's contribution to the care of the churchyard's natural beauty plus an award from Kent Life. With a local artist often in residence midweek and other occasional events like The Chilli Festival in early September the space is well loved by our lively congregation. It has been linked with St Leonard's Church, Badlesmere for many years forming one parish. We are now also part of the benefice of Shepherds Lees. Our two churches are always open, welcoming and well worth visiting!"

SOURCE - (visit link)

"The church, which is dedicated to St. Laurence, is a small mean building, consisting of one isle and a chancel, with a low pointed wooden turrent on it.

Against the north wall of the chancel, there is a monument for Mrs. Katherine Rooper, married first to Thomas Herdson, esq. and secondly to Edward Rooper, esq. with her figure kneeling at a desk, behind her a man in armour, and these two escutcheons of arms, Argent, a cross, sable, between four fleurs de lis, gules, impaling, Per chevron embattled, argent, and sable, in chief, two castles, in base, an escallop, or; the second, Paly of six, sable, and or, in the first, third, and fifth, a buck's head erased of the second, impaling as before.

Archbishop Lanfranc, in the reign of the Conqueror, on his founding the priory of St. Gregory, gave to it, among other premises, the tithes of the lordship of Leveland, which he had granted to Richard. How long these tithes remained with the priory, I have not found, but as they are not inserted among the possessions of it in archbishop Hubert's confirmation of them, in the reign of king Richard I. it is reasonable to suppose they did not belong to it at that time; and it appears that they were possessed by the said Richard's descendants, one of whom, Nathaniel de Leveland, lord of the manor of Leveland in the year 1206, gave the chapel of Leveland, with five acres of land, to the Benedictine monastery of St. Bertin, at St. Omers, the capital of Artois, in Flanders; but I think it could not be under the cognizance of their cell established at the adjoining parish of Throwley, as there is no mention made of it in the several taxations and valuations of its revenues.

In the 7th year of king Henry III. anno 1222, this church having been newly erected, was consecrated, but how long it continued among the revenues of St. Bertin's, I have not seen, but it is probable, till the 2d year of Henry V. when the possessions of all the alien priories throughout England were given to the king. After which, I have not found any account of it till the reign of queen Elizabeth, when it was come into the possession of the family of Sondes, of Throwley, in the descendants of which the patronage of this rectory has continued, in like manner as the manor of Leveland, down to the right hon. Lewis-Thomas, lord Sondes, the present patron of it.

This rectory is a discharged living in the king's books, of the clear yearly certified value of thirty pounds, the yearly tenths of which are eight shillings.

In 1598 the communicants here were twenty-one; in 1640 they were thirty-six, and the yearly value of it forty pounds."

SOURCE - (visit link)
Active Church: Yes

School on property: No

Service Times: https://www.achurchnearyou.com/church/11976/service-and-events/events-regular/

Website: [Web Link]

Date Built: Not listed

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