Somerset eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 291 pages of information about Somerset.

Somerset eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 291 pages of information about Somerset.
squints; (2) font (probably once attached to a pillar); (3) vestry behind the E. window (cp.  N. Petherton, Kingsbury, Langport, and Porlock); (4) piscinas in transepts; (5) grotesque corbels.  In the N. transept are the tombs and brasses of (1) Sir William Wadham (d. 1425) and his wife; (2) Nicholas and Dorothy Wadham (1609 and 1618), the founders of Wadham College, Oxford.  In the S. transept is a monument to Humfrey Walrond (d. 1580).  The communion plate includes two Elizabethan chalices.  The only other building in the town of any interest is the Grammar School, N. of the church.  It bears a motto and the date 1586, and owes its origin to Humfrey Walrond.  It is now a girls’ school, the boys having been transferred to new buildings (reached from the street S. of the church).

Ilton, a village on the Ile, 2 m.  N. of Ilminster.  It has a church of some interest.  The windows are partly Dec. and partly Perp., and the tower is on the S. Note (1) piscinas in chancel and chapel; (2) brass of Nicholas Wadham (d. 1508); (3) effigy of “Joan,” wife of another Nicholas Wadham (d. 1557).

Keinton-Mandeville, a large village 4 m.  E.N.E. of Somerton, lying for the most part along the Castle Cary road, with a station on the Castle Cary and Langport loop-line.  The church is in a field at the S. extremity of the village.  The nave was rebuilt in 1800, but the chancel retains some indication of its E.E. origin, and the old Norm. font is still preserved.  The village was the birthplace of Sir Henry Irving, whose real name was Brodribb.

Kelston, a parish 4 m.  N.W. of Bath.  The church, which is reached by a lane to the left, has been rebuilt, with the exception of the tower and N. porch.  The latter has on its left jamb a very small carving of the Crucifixion.  Within note (1) in the chancel some interlaced work on the N. and a piscina on the S.; (2) in the E. corner of the S. aisle a musical epitaph; (3) in one of the N. windows of the nave some fragments of ancient glass (the figure is said to be that of St Barbara:  cp.  Cucklington).

Kenn, on the R. of the road between Yatton and Clevedon, was the original home of Bishop Ken’s family.  The church retains its ancient tower, which has a curious cap.  The nave has been rebuilt, but contains a quaint monument on the interior wall of the tower to Christopher Ken (d. 1593), and a mural tablet to Sir Nicholas Staling, “Gentleman Usher” to Queen Elizabeth and King James I. (d. 1605).

Kewstoke, a village 2 m.  N.E. of Weston-super-Mare.  It is best reached by a delightful road through the woods on the seaward side of Worle Hill.  Its picturesque church is interesting, and, like so many others, illustrates successive styles of architecture.  The S. door is Norm.; there is an E.E. lancet in the chancel, and the font perhaps belongs to the same period; the E. window and some windows on the N. side of the church are Dec. (with foliated rear arches);

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Somerset from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.