Volume I: County Durham and Northumberland

Select a site alphabetically from the choices shown in the box below. Alternatively, browse sculptural examples using the Forward/Back buttons.

Chapters for this volume, along with copies of original in-text images, are available here.

Current Display: Haughton-le-Skerne 05, Durham Forward button Back button
Overview
Present Location
Eastern niche in north wall of nave
Evidence for Discovery
Some of stones in nave taken from walls of chancel in enlargement and restoration of church in 1890. Hodges (1905, 232-3), who records their removal, also implies that some found already built into north wall of nave. No description of any stone earlier than 1905, so that only possible to say that all found reused as building stones.
Church Dedication
St Andrew
Present Condition
Damaged but relatively unworn in places
Description

Only one carved face is visible.

A (broad): Part of a panel with a narrow punch-outlined border at the top and much wider ones at the sides and below. These enclose two closed circuit loops in grooved and punch-outlined technique.

Discussion

The technique and the simple closed circuit device indicate a late date.

Date
Early eleventh century
References
Hodges 1905, 233; Hodgkin 1913, 157
Endnotes
1. The following are general references to the Haughton-le-Skerne stones: Longstaff 1858, 82; Hodgson 1862-8a, 146-7; Hodgson 1889-90; Hodges 1894, 78; Pevsner 1953, 164.

Forward button Back button
mouseover