Witham
Essex
813/3/1 CHIPPING HILL 01-MAR-50 (North side) CHURCH OF ST NICOLAS (Formerly listed as: CHIPPINGHILL THE PARISH CHURCH OF ST NICHOLAS) I DATES/ARCHITECTS: C1330, retaining some earlier fabric
C15 additions.
MATERIALS: Flint and pebble rubble with some Roman brick.
EXTERIOR The exterior is largely a consistent design of the C14, except for the chancel chapels and vestry.
The embattled N vestry was originally two storied, and has in the E wall a restored 2-light window in the lower part and C14 window in the upper part.
The N wall of the vestry has a late C14 lower window and two C14 windows in the upper part, and an entrance to the former stair turret.
The N wall of the N chapel has a very large, late C15 window of four traceried lights.
The embattled S chapel has a late C15 E window and three late C15 windows and a contemporary door in its S wall.
The N aisle has three N windows of c.1330 with Decorated tracery and a blocked C14 door with a moulded arch and hood mould.
The western two are similar to those in the N aisle, but the eastern is late C14 and has three lights with dropped ogee tracery.
The nave clerestory has four windows on each side, the eastern two early C16 with two foiled lights in a square head, while the western pairs are circular
There is a single C15 light in the nave E gable.
The outer opening is late C14 and has many small mouldings
The W door is C14 and has moulded jambs.
The second stage has a single C14 light in the N, S and W walls and there are two-light C14 openings in each face of the upper stage.
INTERIOR The interior is plastered and painted, and like the outside, is mainly C14, with some later work in the chapels.
The c.1330 chancel arch is of two orders on attached shafts with moulded capitals and bases.
The C15 doors to the former rood stair survive in the NE corner of the nave by the chancel arch.
The C15 arch to the N chapel is four centred and has two orders, the inner on attached shafts with moulded capitals and bases, the outer continuous
The 2-bay arcade to the S chapel is C15 and has four-centred arches of two orders on a quatrefoil pier.
The N and S nave arcades are c.1330 and have two moulded orders on piers with four attached shafts with moulded capitals and bases.
The narrow C14 tower arch is of three moulded orders on rounded shafts with moulded capitals and bases.
There is reused C12 work in the responds
reused C13 work in the outer orders of the arch.
PRINCIPAL FIXTURES There is a C15 square-headed piscina in the chancel, and another C15 with a cinquefoiled head in the S chapel.
The fine chancel screen is late C15 and was modified in the C19, when the cross and canopy were added to designs by Ernest Geldart in 1891.
Royal arms of William III, carved in the round.
Good C19 and C20 glass, including the W window by Wailes, 1850, given by noted architect Sir Gilbert Scott in memory of his clerk of workers, Henry Mortimer, killed in 1849 working on Scott¿s Nikolakirche building in Hamburg.
The N and S aisles have C14 pent roofs with moulded tie beams and struts above the ties.
The N chapel roof is C15, of a flat, pent design with moulded principals, purlins and wall plates.
The N vestry roof is plain, C15.
The S chapel roof is late C15 of a pent design with moulded principals and purlin.
Other woodwork: The door to the N vestry is late C14 and has moulded ribs and strap hinges.
The S chapel S door has a reset C17 door.
There is late C17 panelling in the vestry.
There are many good monuments.
There is a C12 coffin lid,
another of the C13.
a floor slab to Elizabeth --, d. 1664.
Robert Barwell, d. 1697 and his wife Sarah, a white marble table with cherubs and an achievement of arms attributed to John Nost
and George Lisle, rector of Rivenhall, d. 1687, of black and white marble with a shield of arms.
William East, d. 1726, a large monument filling the blocked window in the N chapel, a bust above an inscription tablet by Stanton and Horsnaile.
Four helms of the C15-17 are preserved in the S chapel, including one assembled from parts for use as a funeral display.
Around 1330, the whole church, including the nave, aisles, chancel and W tower was rebuilt.
The N vestry and S porch were added in the late C14,
the N chapel was built between the vestry and the aisle in the C15.
The S chapel is also C15.
There were interior alterations, including the construction of galleries, in the post medieval period, but these were removed during the two C19 restoration programmes in 1849-50 and 1877, both by Joseph Clarke.
There was also Roman settlement in the area.
The Anglo-Saxon settlement at Witham was at Chipping Hill, in the vicinity of the parish church, and included a royal holding, a mill and a market.
The church is not mentioned in the Domesday book of 1086, but it is probable that there was a church, most likely on or near the site of the present church.
The very irregular plan of the late medieval church suggests that it was constructed around a large, early core.
In the mid C12, Witham was given to the Templars, who established a new market some distance from the church, near the old Roman road.
Its rebuilding in the C14
C15 reflects the prosperity of the town as a centre of cloth production and as a market town.
SOURCES RCHME Essex II , 263-5 Bettley, J and Pevsner, N., Buildings of Essex , 843-4 REASONS FOR DESIGNATION The church of St Nicolas, Chipping Hill, Witham, Essex is designated at Grade I for the following principal reasons: * A very complete parish church of the C14 with excellent surviving fabric, with some C15