Medieval History
An old friend, but who is he?
Yesterday I drove to York in the snow to my old haunt All Saints, North Street. For those of you who don't know it All Saints is a glorious little church beside the river Ouse in the heart of the medieval city. It has a vibrant Anglo-Catholic tradition, where mass is offered according to the 'English Missal' and I was very pleased to be able to deacon for the high mass for Candlemas. The church has a fine collection of fourteenth and fifteenth century stained glass, and three very glorious late fifteenth century ceilings.
All Saints also houses a rather eclectic collection of religious object d'art brought together, in the main, during the fifty year incumbency of Fr Patrick Shaw. Among the interesting pieces he collected is this wooden statue. Until recently this stood on a corbel in front of the rood screen, but it has now been replaced with a resin replica. The figure, which still has traces of polychromy, dates from the fifteenth century and is a rare and important piece of late medieval wood carving. At All Saints this statue is venerated as an image of St William of York, William Fitzherbert, who was archbishop of York from. However, I'm not sure that makes much sense.
The vesture of the statue is rather interesting. Over his alb and apparelled amice he wears a pontifical dalmatic and a well-cut chasuble. The chasuble is decorated with a y-shaped orphrey, but he doesn't appear to have a pallium, so presumably is not an archbishop and therefore not St William of York. Interestingly he doesn't wear a mitre either, so perhas he a sainted abbot. Also what is that object he is holding in his hands? Sadly this part of the image is rather badly damaged so that is a bit unclear. A chalice or a monstrance perhaps?
So who is he? At one point I wondered if this was statue of St Norbert, the founder of the Premonstratensian order, who is usually shown holding a monstrance. However, he was archbishop of Magdeburg for a time. Any other suggestions?
BTW if you fancy buying a resin copy of the statue All Saints seem to be selling them on their website.
-
All Saints North Street Church To Be Restored To 15th Century Form
Restoration work has begun at one of York?s finest medieval churches to return a chapel to the way it was almost 600 years ago. Officials at All Saints North Street want to restore the Lady Chapel to the form it took in 1421, when a hermit-like ?anchoress?...
-
The Lampeter Chasuble
When I arrived here as Chaplain to the University Campus in Lampeter in May, I had no idea what riches awaited me. The Chapel has a wonderful collection of historic vestments dating from the fifteenth to the nineteenth century. Among the...
-
More Shadows Of Former Things
Theddlethorpe All Saints, Lincolnshire, originally uploaded by Vitrearum.All Saints, Theddlethorpe is in the remote coastal fringe of Lincolnshire. Many of the churches in this area are relatively unrestored and retain a lot of medieval fittings and...
-
Medieval Spectacles
While I'm on the theme of All Saints North Street, here is a fragment of glass from another window in the church. It is a detail of the mid fifteenth century window portraying the Nine Orders of Angels. In this window each of the orders of angels...
-
Pilfered Glass From Manchester And Elsewhere
Messingham, Lincolnshire, originally uploaded by Vitrearum.This lovely little figure is in the east window of Messingham church in Lincolnshire, where it sits among a whole host of fascinating fragments of medieval stained glass. When I first saw this...
Medieval History