Monday 24 September 2012

Hannah Gilbert - Swithland

Here lieth the body of
Hannah ye Daughter
of Robert Gilbert who
Departed this life
Decem. ye 4th 1714
 

Last of the Gilbert memorials that I have so far found in the churchyard in the beautiful village of Swithland. I particularly like the lettering and layout on this headstone.

Curiously, this is one of the very few headstones from this period that I have found on which the word 'body' does not start with a capital letter.

Saturday 22 September 2012

Samual Gilbert - Swithland

Here lieth ye Body
of Samual Gilbert
the Son of Robert
Gilbert by Hannah
his wife, He departed
this life Janr: 26.th 1728/9
In ye 10:th year of his Age


Four years after the death of Ann Gilbert, Robert and Hannah seem to have lost another child. This time the 10 year old Samuel. The design of Anne and Samual's memorials is so similar, it seems highly likely to be the work of the same mason.

From this layout it also seems likely that Ann's headstone would have given her age at death, but that part of the stone is now under the soil level and so is unreadable.

This is yet another double dated stone. Another death in the cold month of January.

Friday 21 September 2012

Ann Gilbert - Swithland

Here
lieth the body of
Ann Gilbert the
Daughter of Robert
Gilbert and Hannah
his wife, She departed
this life the 28th day
of January 1724/5



This is another of the Gilbert family graves in the churchyard in Swithland.

Thursday 20 September 2012

John Gilbert - Swithland

Another of the Gilbert family, laid in a row across the beautiful churchyard in Swithland.

John ye Son
of Robert &
Ann Gilbert
died ye 8 th of
Sept: 1690


On the reverse side of the stone is the following inscription:

When living one
of uertues hopfull
branches was he;
 
His conursation
honist delitting in
pious sobriety;
 
G Hv ls
Doner
 
There is some confusion between the letter U and V - I have transcribed it here as U because it is identical to the letter U used in other places. However, in context it should have been a V. Thus the verse could be written as follows:
 
When living, one of virtue's hopeful branches was he;
His conversation honest, delighting in pious sobriety;
 
 
The lettering at the bottom of the stone may possibly refer to a person who paid for the stone or possibly for this inscription - which seems to be the work of a different mason from the one who engraved the front of the stone.
 
  
 


Wednesday 19 September 2012

Robert Gilbert - Swithland

Here is another member of the Gilbert family, who lie in a row at the rear of the church in Swithland.

Here lies ye Body
of Rob:t Gilbert son
of Arther Gilbert
Who died ye 12th
of Feb:ry
Anno Dom:
1697/8
Aged 54 y:rs
 

This really is a beautiful memorial, engraved on a somewhat irregularly shaped stone.

Whereas his father's headstone is single dated, this stone, seven years later, is double dated. This is interesting because it suggests a period of transition during which people in this part of the world started to think of January1st as New Year instead of March 25th.


Arthur Gilbert - Swithland

At the rear of the churchyard in Swithland, lies a row of headstones commemorating members of the Gilbert family. The oldest of these belongs to Arthur Gilbert.

Here Lyes The BOdy
Of Arthvr GILbert WhO
DeparteD ThIS LIFe
ThE 13th dAY OF JAnuAry
ANNO DOM 1683
AEtaHs Sur 83 Yeares

 
In transcribing this stone, I have tried to be faithful to the irregular use of capital letters and to the spelling. 'Arthvr' should clearly be 'Arthur'. We can see the use of the letter U correctly in the final word of the inscription, so it does seem that the V was a mistake. A transcription error perhaps. All this adds weight to the idea that the mason did not have a high level of literacy and was merely transcribing words that had been written by someone else.
 
The words "Aetais Sue" are almost certainly intended to read "Aetatis suae", a Latin phrase meaning "In the year of his age".
 
A death in January after the the Gregorian calendar started to be used but before its official adoption in 1752 is sometimes given a double date, but here only a single date is given. 
 
 
After the year, five dots, are inscribed in a pattern sometimes called a quincunx. I would like to know the meaning of this. Perhaps it is merely a design to make the stone more beautiful, adding to the pattern of arches and crosses that runs along the top. Alternatively, it may have a specific meaning.
 

Monday 17 September 2012

Old graves - spooky or peaceful?

Do you find churchyards spooky or do you find them peaceful? Opinion seems divided on the matter. But perhaps you can guess my feelings.

Saturday 15 September 2012

John Prier - Swithland

HERE . LYETH . IN .
TERRED . THE . BODY
OF . JOHN . PRIER . TH
SON . OF . ROBART
PRIER . WHO . DEPART
ED . THIS . LIFE . THE . 8TH
DAY . OF . MAY . 1673:


A beautiful example of Seventeenth Century headstone from the church in Swithland village.  Although there is ample space below the inscription, the remainder of the inscription is on the reverse of the stone.

BEING OF THE
AGE
OF 15 YEARES


Although the lettering is considerably larger on the reverse side of the stone, the style is so close to that on the front that I have no doubt it was the work of the same mason.  The letters A and R are particularly distinctive.

I imagine the spelling of John Prier, could easily be recorded as John Prior in other places, just as Robart Prier might well be written as Robert Prior.

Robert Coleborne

Here Lyeth ye Body of
Robert Coleborne
who departed this life the
27th day of April Anno
Dom. 1732 Aged 63 Years
 
After a short but sharpe affliction here
I take my leave of you my wife so Dear
Lo here I lie in this soft bedof dust
Waiting the Ressurection of the Just


A large and beautifully laid out headstone with regular lettering. But it seems the word 'short' was initially spelled without the 't' which was added afterwards in superscript.

All Saints Churchyard, Newtown Linford.

Elizabeth Smith - Swithland


There is a particularly fine collection of 17th and 18th Century headstones to the rear of the St. Leonard's Church in Swithland. The churchyard is beautifully kept. In the autumn sunshine this morning it was wonderfully peaceful. Hundreds of years having passed, the stories implied by the headstones do not carry the weight of sadness they undoubtedly did when fresh.   
 
Here
lieth the Body of
Eliz: Daughter of
Tho: and Mary
Smith. She de-
-parted this life
Janr: ye 2d 1723/4.
Aged 13: years.

 
This stone memorial to the child Elizabeth Smith, is notable for the double dating and for the skull and crossed bones detail at the top. 
 
 
 
 

Thursday 13 September 2012

Welsh slate headstones

St Mary in the Elms churchyard in Woodhouse has a number of beautifully engraved 18th Century headstones, noticeably different in style from those in Newtown Linford, for example. By 'different' I mean to say that the writing is well laid out on the stone, the capitalisation is regular, and the spelling has not been subsequently corrected.

John Boley's headstone is a good example:

Here lyeth Interred
the Body of John Boley
who departed this life
October the 3rd Ano. Dom
1721 Aged 32 Years



Were the masons in Woodhouse more skilled and literate than those in Newtown Linford? Or were the people of Woodhouse who could not afford a more expensive mason being buried in some other churchyard?

One indication of the money being spent on the Woodhouse burials is the type of stone being used. We can get a clearer look at this on the reverse side.

 
I would need to do a microscopic comparison to be certain, but to my eye this is Welsh slate rather than the local Charnwood Slate. Welsh slate cleaves far more regularly. The unevenness of Charnwood slate gives the roofs of local houses their particular charm, but it must be far harder for the mason to work with.
 
This is certainly Welsh slate:
 
And this is local stone, complete with tool marks:
 
 
 
.

Saturday 8 September 2012

The Riddle of Double Dated Headstones

Why do some early headstones give two years of death for the same person? The headstone of Richard Broadas in Woodhouse is a beautiful example.
 
Here lieth ye Body of
Richard the Son of
Antony Broadas Who
died ye 20th of Feb:1702/3
aged 22 years

 
How could he had died in both 1702 and 1703?

To find the answer we have to look back to the Calendar (New Style) Act, which was adopted by parliament in 1750.

Previously England, Wales, Ireland and the Colonies had used the Julian Calendar and celebrated New Year on March 25th. The Act formally adopted the Gregorian Calendar and set New Year on the now familiar day of January 1st.

One curious byproduct of this change was that the year 1751, was left with only 282 days.

The use of double dates on headstones shows that for a time the two dating systems co-existed. Thus, any day after January 1st and before March 24th might be regarded as being in one of two adjacent years.


This double dated headstone in Newtown Linford is another example. William Poole is said to have died on the 16th of March 1605/6. According to the Old Style calendar he died in 1605 (new year had not yet been reached). But according to the New Style calendar the new year happened in January, so it was already 1606.

The New Style calendar had been adopted in other parts of the world many years before. The changeover took place in Scotland in 1600 and earlier still in Catholic Europe.

From the double dating of headstones and other documents it seems that the change of new year had for some time been seeping into popular usage in England, but that legal documents used the old system until the formal changeover in 1752.

Friday 7 September 2012

Lucy Patchet - Woodhouse

The village of Swithland was supposed to be my destination today, but roadworks and a possible detour of several miles triggered a change of plan. It was by chance then that I came to the delightful village of Woodhouse and the 15th Century church of St Mary-In-The-Elms.
 
 
 
 
Lucy Patchet's headstone was bathed in sunshine.
 
here
lieth Interr'd the Body of
Lucy Daughter of
JOHN & ANNE PATCHET
She departed this Life
June the 5th: 1760
Aged Eleven Weeks
 
This pretty Babe is gone to Rest
With those who liv'd and dy'd ye Best


Saturday 1 September 2012

William Poole - Newtown Linford

Here Lyeth ye Body
of William Poole
who Departed this life
the 16th of March:
Anno Do 1695. 6
Aged 47


This is another of the 17th Century headstones of All Saints Churchyard, Newtown Linford. It is simple but beautifully laid out. Unlike so many of the early stones, this one was clearly sketched out in advance, with each line pleasingly centred.

William died 9 days before the new year, which was counted as March 25th in England and Wales up until 1751.

The thing I don't understand about this stone is the meaning of the small superscript '6' following the date.