Volume I: County Durham and Northumberland
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Current Display: Sockburn 10, Durham
Overview
Object type: Rough-out of cross-shaft [1]
Measurements: H. 101.75 cm (40 in); W. 33 > 28.5 cm (13 > 11.25 in); D. 25 cm (9.75 in)
Stone type: Medium-grained yellow sandstone
Plate numbers in printed volume: Pls. 138.743-744, 139.747-748
Corpus volume reference: Vol 1 p. 139
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Present Location
Conyers Chapel
Evidence for Discovery
Church unroofed and abandoned in 1838. Before this, carved stones noticed built into walls (Surtees 1823, 249). After abandonment of church several references to carved stones lying either in church or in Sockburn Hall, but very few described until after Knowles's excavation and bringing together of all known fragments in re-roofed Conyers Chapel in 1900.
Church Dedication
All Saints
Present Condition
Damaged but generally unworn
Description
The cross has been cut into the block of the shaft and the pointed overhanging neck. Its surface is dressed but there is no sign of carving.
Discussion
In shape this seems to be the same as 3 or 6, but since it is uncarved, it is uncertain whether or not the piece is unfinished.
Date
Uncertain. Tenth century(?)
References
Knowles 1896-1905b, 116, no. 7; Hodges 1905, 237
Endnotes
1. The following are general references to the Sockburn stones: Surtees 1823, 249; Longstaffe 1858, 82; (—) 1869-79f, liv; Allen and Browne 1885, 352; (—) 1887c; Eastwood 1887, 347; Allen 1889, 229; (—) 1889-90b, 132; (—) 1899-1900a, 60; (—) 1903, xiii; (—) 1909-10c, 239; Collingwood 1927, 148, 166, 169; (—) 1951-6a, 213; Pevsner 1953, 211; Lang 1972, 235-6; Schmidt 1973, 68-77; Morris 1976, 144; Bailey 1980, 91.