St Wulfran's Church, Ovingdean

St Wulfran's Church, Ovingdean

Parish church
name=St Wulfran's Church


caption=The church from the northwest
dedication=St Wulfran
denomination=Church of England
parish=Ovingdean
deanery=Rural Deanery of Brighton
archdeaconry=Chichester
diocese=Chichester
province=Canterbury
vicar=Canon Dr Andrew Mayes AKC
website= [http://www.stwulfrans.com/ www.stwulfrans.com]

St Wulfran's Church, dedicated to Wulfram of Sens, a 7th-century French archbishop,cite book |last=Dale |first=Antony |title=Brighton Churches |origyear=1989 |publisher=Routledge |location=London EC4 |isbn=0-415-00863-8 |pages=p205 ] is an Anglican church in Ovingdean, a rural village now within the English city of Brighton and Hove. Parts of the structure date from the early 12th century, and the church is listed at Grade I,cite web|title=Images of England — detailed record, Church of St Wulfran, Greenways (west side), Brighton|url=http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Details/Default.aspx?id=480790&mode=quick|work=Images of England|publisher=English Heritage|year=2007|accessdate=2008-08-31] a designation used for buildings "of outstanding architectural or historic interest".

History

A church existed in Ovingdean at the time of the Domesday Book, which recorded it as an ("little church").cite book |last=Whitman |first=Ken |coauthors=Joyce Whitman |title=Ancient Churches of Sussex |origyear=1994 |publisher=Roedale Books |location=Brighton |isbn=0-9522560-0-2 |pages=p116 ] This was rebuilt in the early 12th century, and most sources agree that no trace of the Saxon-era building remains. The 12th-century chancel and nave form the basis of the present structure. A tower was added at the west end in the 13th century, as was an aisle on the south side (reached by twin archways cut through from the nave). This aisle no longer exists, and its fate is uncertain; however, ancient scorch marks and discoloured brickwork in the south wall of the nave suggest fire damage by the same French raiders who destroyed neighbouring Rottingdean's St Margaret's in 1377. (A stone tablet in the church also makes this claim.)

There were no significant alterations for several centuries after the tower was added, apart from a porch on the south side in the early 19th century, but like many ancient churches in the Brighton area St Wulfran's was subjected to a major restoration in the Victorian era. This took place from 1865 to 1867, and involved the rebuilding of the chancel arches to form one large central arch flanked by two smaller ones, replacement of all the pews, and new panelling and roof timbers in the chancel.cite book |last=Dale |first=Antony |title=Brighton Churches |origyear=1989 |publisher=Routledge |location=London EC4 |isbn=0-415-00863-8 |pages=p206 ] These were designed and painted by Charles Eamer Kempe, who had been born in the village and who later became a noted stained glass designer. Before his death in 1907, he provided seven windows for the church; he also designed a rood screen for the chancel, which was carved in the German village of Oberammergau. (The village, famous for its woodcarving tradition, also supplied an intricately carved reredos to St Martin's Church in Brighton's Round Hill district.)cite book |last=Dale |first=Antony |title=Brighton Churches |origyear=1989 |publisher=Routledge |location=London EC4 |isbn=0-415-00863-8 |pages=p140 ] There are other painted and stencilled panels from the 19th century throughout the church, representing various Biblical scenes. The reredos was also designed in the late 19th century, and depicts various figures including St Richard of Chichester.cite book |last=Dale |first=Antony |title=Brighton Churches |origyear=1989 |publisher=Routledge |location=London EC4 |isbn=0-415-00863-8 |pages=p207 ]

A chapel was built on the south side in 1907. One had been planned since the 12th-century rebuild, when an archway intended to lead to it was provided in the wall of the chancel. A vestry was added in an architecturally complementary style in the mid-1980s.

The churchyard surrounds the church on three sides, and is home to an ancient yew tree which may be up to 1,000 years old. William Willett, the inventor of Daylight saving time, and Brighton-born inventor Magnus Volk—a pioneering electrical engineer who built an early electric car and the Volk's Railway, the world's oldest surviving electric railwaycite web|title=Welcome to Volk's Electric Railway—the official site of the Volk's Electric Railway Association|url=http://volkselectricrailway.co.uk/|accessdate=2008-09-04|publisher=Volk's Electric Railway Association|year=2008|work=Volk's Electric Railway Association website] —are buried in the churchyard. Members of the Kemp(e) family,Charles was born with the surname "Kemp", but added the "e" later.] including Charles Eamer Kempe himself, are also buried there. Nathaniel Kemp, who built the 18th-century Ovingdean Hall, the main building in the village, and his wife Martha share a tomb on the south side of the church; the tombstone was designed by Charles, who was later buried in the same tomb. The grave of Helena Normanton, the first woman to practise as a barrister in the United Kingdom, can also be found. Resident in Brighton since the age of four, she campaigned for various rights for women, such as advocating the use of maiden names professionally and recommending that women save any spare housekeeping money for their own use. She was also the first benefactor of the nearby University of Sussex. The Jex-Blake family, who lived in Brighton for a time, have a large, ornate tomb in the churchyard, although their most notable member is not buried there. Sophia Jex-Blake is commemorated on the memorial stone, however. She overcame opposition to train as one of the first female doctors in the United Kingdom, helped to found the London and Edinburgh Schools of Medicine for Women, and started a women's and children's hospital in Edinburgh.cite web|title=St Wulfran's churchyard|url=http://www.mybrightonandhove.org.uk/page_id__6599.aspx|accessdate=2008-09-06|publisher=My Brighton and Hove (c/o QueensPark Books)|date=2006-03-22|work=My Brighton and Hove website]

The dedication to Wulfram of Sens (in any spelling) is very rare. Only one other extant church in England bears it: the parish church of Grantham in Lincolnshire.cite web|title=A Little History|url=http://www.stwulfrans.com/history.php|accessdate=2008-09-03|publisher=St. Wulfran's PCC|year=2005|work=St Wulfran's Church website] A connection between the two may lie with Norman nobleman William de Warenne, one of England's main landowners in the 11th century, who owned land in both Ovingdean and Grantham. Another Lincolnshire church with the same dedication, at Dorrington,cite web|title=St Wulfran's Church, Ovingdean|url=http://www.mybrightonandhove.org.uk/page_id__6600_path__0p115p187p784p.aspx|accessdate=2008-09-03|publisher=My Brighton and Hove (c/o QueensPark Books)|date=2007-09-12|work=My Brighton and Hove website] is no longer in use.cite web|title=Dorrington|url=http://www.achurchnearyou.com/result.php?query=Dorrington&type=place|accessdate=2008-09-03|publisher=Oxford Diocesan Publications Ltd|year=2007|work=A Church Near You website]

Architecture

St Wulfran's Church is built entirely of flint, other than narrow stone quoins at the corners of walls. Although churches incorporating some flint are common in Sussex, St Wulfran's is the only all-flint church in the historic county. The roof was originally slate, but tiles have replaced most of the slate slabs. The two-stage tower is topped with a shallow pyramid-shaped spire of a design known as the "Sussex Cap", and has a circular corbel of similar height in its southeastern corner.

There are lancet windows of various sizes on all sides of the church and in the tower. Kempe's stained glass can be found in one of the tower windows, the south chapel, the north wall (three windows) and the south wall (two). Internally, there are several arches, some with pointed tops and chamfering; in particular, there are three arched entrances to the chapel on the south side, and a blocked entrance to the former south aisle.

The churchyard is entered on the east side through a steep-roofed lychgate with recessed seating. "Holiness unto the Lord" is carved on one of the wooden beams.

The church today

St Wulfran's received its Grade I listing on 13 October 1952. The [http://www.achurchnearyou.com/parish.php?p=10/109 parish] covers a rural area; Ovingdean village is the only significant area of housing. It reaches the southern boundary of Woodingdean, the eastern boundary of the Whitehawk estate and the northern edge of Rottingdean, and incorporates East Brighton Golf Club and surrounding areas of downland.

There are two Eucharistic services on Sunday mornings and another every Wednesday, and prayer groups and study groups meet at the church monthly.cite web|title=Welcome to St Wulfran's Parish Church|url=http://www.stwulfrans.com/what.php|accessdate=2008-09-04|publisher=St. Wulfran's PCC|year=2005|work=St Wulfran's Church website]

Notes

References


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