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OLD ENGLISH ABBEY

BUILDING AT WALTHAM

Although it has long been known that the Abbey at Waltham, about 12 miles from London on the Hertfordshire and Essex border, had been an important one dating back to the days of King Harold, the full realisation of the original size has only recently been discovered. The first church on the site was built in 1030 A.D. b:/ a nobleman named T'ovi, who was standard-bearer to King Canute. This gave place in 1060 to a mue.h larger building erected by Har--1 old, the last of the English Kings before the Norman Conquest at the Baltic of Hastings in 1066. It is believed that it is the nave of this church which exists to-day as the Abbey and Parish Church of XValtham Holy Cross (says the “Christian Science MoniAbout a century later in 1177 Henry 11. changed the status of Waltham Collegiate Church to that of an Augustinian Priory. Repairs and extensions were made with all the buildings

necessary to House an auuuh, and Monks. What has not been known, however, is that the extension made the building into one some 400 feet in length, this too not taking into account any chapels which may yet be discovered at the' east end. . A curious architectural feature laid | bare by the excavations is that there were two large central towers, both witii transepts, and separated by a nave about 160 feet long. After the passing of Thomas a Becket, Henry 11. i made a vow of penance to found some religious houses, one of them being at Waltham. But except for details which are extant giving the cost of materials used in the building, no plan has been found to show what a splendid edifice it must have been. It is strange to read of the cost of

building in those days, the total expenditure for the great Abbey spread over about seven years being something over £l4OO. This included the cost of bringing the lead for the roof from Derbyshire, 2G5 cart-loads of it. by road and water, and timber from the Gloucestershire forests. Why the Essex forests close ny should not have been selected to s up' ply it must remain a mystery. SUCJ a, building in these days might inn into hundreds of thousands ot .PomuU ! But the wage of a labourer in those days was only a penny a day, and pennies bought much more than tney do now.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GEST19381214.2.13

Bibliographic details

Greymouth Evening Star, 14 December 1938, Page 3

Word Count
408

OLD ENGLISH ABBEY Greymouth Evening Star, 14 December 1938, Page 3

OLD ENGLISH ABBEY Greymouth Evening Star, 14 December 1938, Page 3