| The History Of Saint Nicholas' Church DenstonInteriorFew significant alterations have been made to the church since 
  the seventeenth century and it therefore presents a picture, as 
  few others do, of a mediaeval church, with its benches for the parishioners 
  and stalls for the chantry priests. The line stone arcading, original 
  roofs and clerestory culminate in a five-lighted, transomed cast 
  window, filled with many fragments of mediaeval glass. The furnishing 
  of the chancel illustrates the layout of a church designed for the 
  use of chantry priests. The lower part of the screen is in position 
  and extends with its thirty-six panels right across the church: 
  the marks of the hewing down of the upper portion can be seen. At 
  each end are indications that there may have been screen altars, 
  which would probably have been connected with the guilds known to 
  have existed in the parish. From the position of the door of the rood-loft stairs at the second 
  bay from the east and the position of the screen at the third bay, 
  it appears as though a wooden gallery along the north wall gave 
  access to the rood-loft. The detached rood-bean is in position and 
  was probably spared because of its height or because it was felt 
  to be an integral part of the construction of the church. It has 
  three mortices on the upper side, in which were fixed the figures 
  of Our Lord, the Blessed Virgin and St. John. The beam is battlemented 
  in conformity with decoration in other parts of the church. The stalls have traceried and panelled fronts with dwarf seats 
  for the use of the singing boys, and perforated traceried risers, 
  and are returned at the west against the screen, with elbow stalls 
  and four carved misericords. Three of the misericords are carved 
  with foliage and the fourth, which is the nearest to the centre 
  aisle on the north side, with a crane holding a stone in its claw, 
  illustrating the legend that when a flock of cranes was resting 
  at night, one would stand sentinel with a stone in its claw and 
  if it fell asleep the dropping of the stone would wake it. Originally there were no altar rails, for before the Reformation 
  the general laity did not enter the chancel; and the present rails 
  are of the seventeenth century, probably installed in accordance 
  with an order of Archbishop Laud's that rails should be placed before 
  the Holy Table and should be sufficiently close together to prevent 
  dogs from entering the sanctuary-an indication of the state to which 
  had been reduced by the early part of the seventeenth century. The 
  pulpit and the Holy Table are of the same date, but there are indications 
  that the base of the pulpit is earlier than the main part of it. 
  The gates of the chapel in the south aisle are of the "Gothick" 
  era at the end of the eighteenth century and an example of that 
  age's delight in the bogus antique, being wood carved to simulate 
  iron work. They were probably placed in position when the chapel 
  was used as a private burying ground for members of the Robinson 
  family. The benches in the nave were for the use of the parishioners and 
  the skirting round them kept in position by the rushes which householders 
  used to provide for kneeling on. These benches have carved animals 
  on the ends and arm rests, which illustrate the use of symbolism 
  and of manuscript illustrations as well as naturalistic sources 
  by the mediaeval carver. Many of these so-called grotesque carvings 
  had very much more significance for the fifteenth century parishioner 
  than they do for his modern successor, to whom the iconographic 
  conventions of the cartoon may be familial but who has for the most 
  part forgotten the deep meaning of much that now appears trivial 
  or familiar. Two complete benches brave carvings which are modern 
  copies, showing how little is understood nowadays of what was intended, 
  the same applying to the five replacements of the eight original 
  stall terminals. Of the sixty carvings remaining in the nave, ten 
  are either completely cut away or so mutilated as to be unidentifiable 
  but the other can nearly all be identified either with familiar 
  creatures of the countryside, or with the animals, both mythical 
  and real, of the mediaeval Bestiary. This, one of the most fruitful 
  sources for the carver, was a compilation of folklore, natural history 
  and moralising, and was a "best seller", copied and recopied 
  by monastic scribes and illustrated by monastic artists, again and 
  again, from the time in the sixth century when the "Physiologus" 
  wrote, probably in Egypt, and in Greek, a book about beasts. Among 
  the animals which can be recognised are the basilisk, with its cock's 
  head and wings and serpent's tail; a stag, the image of a good Christian, 
  differentiated from the yale by the serrations on its horns; and 
  a unicorn, symbolising the lncarnation. (The full development of 
  the symbolising of the "Holy Hunt" can he seen in late 
  fifteenth century glass in King's College Chapel.) Among the more 
  familiar animals is a fox with a goose across its back. There is 
  a long section on elephants in the Bestiary and with castles on 
  their backs they appear in other churches: but the Denston elephant 
  has only its strangely elongated nose to indicate what the carver 
  was attempting to represent. One of the three remaining stall terminals 
  has on it a griffin with its animal body and eagle's head and wings. On the roof cornices are carved animals, with gaps at the east 
  and over the rood-beam where there would have been a painted "canopy 
  of honour". The roofs are original and must have been painted 
  and gilded as were almost certainly the panels of the screen. A 
  record of a vestry meeting in 1842 (noted in one of the parish registers) 
  states that "it is agreed to have the church pews painted and 
  grained and the rest part oiled and varnished." This would 
  account for the present appearance of stalls, screens and pews. 
  The shields, at present in position on the cornices of the roof, 
  which bear the arms of the Robinson family, are superimposed on 
  larger shields, which may perhaps have borne the arms of the families 
  concerned in the rebuilding of the church - Denstons, Howards and 
  Broughtons - or possibly such devices as the Emblems of the Passion. 
  The Robinson family came into possession of !he manor of Denston 
  in 1617, so their shields cannot be earlier than this date. |