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[[File:Row of cottages, St Cross South Elmham - geograph.org.uk - 863835.jpg|right|thumb|300px|St Cross South Elmham]]
{{Infobox town
'''St Cross South Elmham''' is a little village in northern [[Suffolk]]; one of the group of seven villages southwest of [[Bungay]] known as [[South Elmham]], and part of the wider group known as "The Saints".
|name=St Cross South Elmham
|county=Suffolk
|picture=Row of cottages, St Cross South Elmham - geograph.org.uk - 863835.jpg
|picture caption=St Cross South Elmham
|os grid ref=TM299841
|latitude=52.406
|longitude=1.38
|population=217
|census year=2005 est.
|post town=Harleston
|postcode=IP20
|dialling code=01986
|LG district=East Suffolk
|constituency=Waveney
}}
'''St Cross South Elmham''' is a little village in northern [[Suffolk]]; one of the group of seven villages southwest of [[Bungay]] known as [[South Elmham]], and part of the wider group known as "[[The Saints]]".


St Cross is the most westerly of the South Elmham villages, west of [[St Margaret South Elmham|St Margaret]], and on the lane leading down to the bridge over the [[River Waveney]] at [[Homersfield]].
St Cross is the most westerly of the South Elmham villages, west of [[St Margaret South Elmham|St Margaret]], and on the lane leading down to the bridge over the [[River Waveney]] at [[Homersfield]]. Its parish name derives from the medieval name "Saint George Sancroft", from the dedication of the village church to St George. The 'Sancroft' part of the name comes from the sandy nature of the soil in the area surrounding the church of St George.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.british-history.ac.uk/no-series/suffolk-history-antiquities/vol1/pp207-212|title=South Elmham, St George or St Cross|last=Suckling|first=Alfred|date=1864|website=British History Online|publisher=WS Crowell|access-date=2016-03-18}}</ref>


The parish is known as South Elmham St Cross. Its church, St Cross, is a tall, flint-built church with a 14th-century square tower.
==Church==
[[File:St Cross South Elmham - Church of St George.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Church of St George, St Cross]]
The parish church, St George, is a tall, flint-built church with a 14th-century square tower. It was first constructed around a century before the Norman Conquest, though many modifications and added developments were made in the centuries afterwards, such as the addition of the square bell tower in the 14th century. The church is the largest of the churches in the Saints area and has been through several renewals over its history, to restore and renovate areas including the floor, which was replaced with Victorian styled tiles in the 19th century and the benches, which were replaced when the previous ones started to decay. St George's is now open to the public on a daily basis after previously being kept locked for a number of years.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.suffolkchurches.co.uk/selstcross.html|title=St George, South Elmham, St Cross|last=Knott|first=Simon|date=July 2008|website=www.suffolkchurches.co.uk|access-date=2016-03-18}}</ref>


[[File:Church tower and porch, St Cross South Elmham - geograph.org.uk - 863856.jpg|left|thumb|200px|The Church of St Cross]]
===South Elmham Minster===
{{getmap|TM298841}}
[[File:Minster ruins, South Elmham - geograph.org.uk - 863770.jpg|right|thumb|200px|The minster ruins]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:South Elmham Saint Cross}}
Nearby to South Elmham Hall lies the remains of a site known as [[South Elmham Minster]]. Parts of the remains date from Roman times. The building is believed to have been the private chapel of the Bishop of Norwich during his residence at South Elmham Hall.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.suffolkchurches.co.uk/selminster.html|title=South Elmham Minster, South Elmham St Cross|last=Knott|first=Simon|date=22 March 2016|website=Suffolk Churches|access-date=2016-03-22}}</ref> The chapel was built on the remains of a Roman temple that had previously been located there. The exact reasons behind the chapel's disuse and abandonment are unknown, as it fell out of use in the sometime in the 13th century.
 
==History==
St Cross was created as a result of the merger with the lands around Homersfield in 1767. Before this it was part of the lands owned by the See of Norwich until the reign of King Henry VIII, its revenues distributed to the Church. With the dissolution of the monasteries in 1540 the land was transferred back to the Crown. The manor and its surrounding lands were eventually given to the North family in the 17th century valued at £20. After the Norths, the manor and its lands were transferred to the Tasburgh family. Eventually ownership was taken over by the Durrant family in the 19th century. It is not known who owned the land of St Cross from the 17th–19th century before the Durrant family took ownership.
 
In 1870–72, St Cross South Elmham was described by John Marius Wilson's ''Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales'' as:
 
<blockquote>'''"St. Cross''', or Sandcroft, a parish in Wangford district, Suffolk; adjacent to the river Waveney, and to the Waveney Valley railway, near Homersfield r. station, 5 miles SW of Bungay. The church is tolerable. Some remains exist of a moated minster, with nave 42 feet by 27, and apsidal chancel 24 feet."<ref>{{Cite book|title = Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales|last = Wilson|first = John Marius|publisher = A. Fullerton & Co.|date = 1870{{ndash}}72|location = Edinburgh|url = http://visionofbritain.org.uk/place/7144/writing}}</ref></blockquote>
 
[[File:Church tower and porch, St Cross South Elmham - geograph.org.uk - 863856.jpg|right|thumb|200px|The Church of St Cross]]
In 1868 ''The National Gazetteer of Great Britain and Ireland'' described St Cross as:
 
<blockquote>'''"South Elmham St.Cross''', (or Sandcroft), a parish in the hundred of Wangford, county Suffolk, as above, 5 miles S.W. of Bungay, and 4 N.E. of Harleston, its post town. There was formerly a monastic establishment here, the remains of which are surrounded by a moat. The living is a rectory annexed to that of Homersfield, in the diocese of Norwich. The church is a neatly built edifice with square embattled tower, and Norman arch at the S. entrance. St. Margaret's Hall is the principal residence. Sir R. Adair is lord of the manor."<ref>{{Cite book|title=The National Gazetteer of Great Britain and Ireland (1868)|last=Hamilton|first=N. E. S. A|publisher=Virtue|year=1868|isbn=978-1861508782|location=London}}</ref></blockquote>
 
===South Elmham Hall===
{{main|South Elmham Hall}}
The parish contains South Elmham Hall, surrounded by a four-acre moat and which was formerly the country residence of the Bishop of Norwich. The hall is currently known as 'Bateman's Barn' and offers guided historic tours of the house and its grounds during the summer months.<ref>{{Cite web|title = Historic Venue, Conference and Wedding Facility at South Elmham Hall, Suffolk|url = http://www.batemansbarn.co.uk/|website = www.batemansbarn.co.uk|access-date = 20 February 2016}}</ref> South Elmham Hall is a Grade I listed building.<ref>{{NHLE|1031966|South Elmham Hall|grade=I}}</ref> The building contains primarily 16th century architecture, alongside 15th century arches constructed during the Bishops ownership of South Elmham Hall.
 
The primary attraction of the South Elmham area to the Bishops was the hunting opportunities provided by a deer park established in the local area.<ref name=h>{{Cite web|url=http://www.batemansbarn.co.uk/hall.php|title=History of the Hall|last=Sanderson|first=John|date=22 March 2016|website=Bateman's Barn}}</ref> This was not without problems with reports of the deer being poached by the residents of St Cross in 1315. The Hall also hosted royal family members on several occasions, most notably in 1326 when Edward II stayed for ten days on his way to Norwich, carrying out government business during his stay there.<ref name=h/> The remains of previous buildings and settlements nearby to the hall have long since decayed, although around 45 detailed surviving records in the Suffolk Record Office indicate the area used to contain stables, mews and gatehouses.<ref name=h/> The ruins of one of the gatehouses survives and can be still be seen today. South Elmham Hall also has the earliest domestic wall paintings in Suffolk, dating from 1270.<ref name=h/>
 
{{The Saints, Suffolk}}
[[Category:South Elmham|Cross]]
[[Category:South Elmham|Cross]]

Latest revision as of 22:48, 5 December 2024

St Cross South Elmham
Suffolk

St Cross South Elmham
Location
Grid reference: TM299841
Location: 52°24’22"N, 1°22’48"E
Data
Population: 217  (2005 est.)
Post town: Harleston
Postcode: IP20
Dialling code: 01986
Local Government
Council: East Suffolk
Parliamentary
constituency:
Waveney

St Cross South Elmham is a little village in northern Suffolk; one of the group of seven villages southwest of Bungay known as South Elmham, and part of the wider group known as "The Saints".

St Cross is the most westerly of the South Elmham villages, west of St Margaret, and on the lane leading down to the bridge over the River Waveney at Homersfield. Its parish name derives from the medieval name "Saint George Sancroft", from the dedication of the village church to St George. The 'Sancroft' part of the name comes from the sandy nature of the soil in the area surrounding the church of St George.[1]

Church

Church of St George, St Cross

The parish church, St George, is a tall, flint-built church with a 14th-century square tower. It was first constructed around a century before the Norman Conquest, though many modifications and added developments were made in the centuries afterwards, such as the addition of the square bell tower in the 14th century. The church is the largest of the churches in the Saints area and has been through several renewals over its history, to restore and renovate areas including the floor, which was replaced with Victorian styled tiles in the 19th century and the benches, which were replaced when the previous ones started to decay. St George's is now open to the public on a daily basis after previously being kept locked for a number of years.[2]

South Elmham Minster

The minster ruins

Nearby to South Elmham Hall lies the remains of a site known as South Elmham Minster. Parts of the remains date from Roman times. The building is believed to have been the private chapel of the Bishop of Norwich during his residence at South Elmham Hall.[3] The chapel was built on the remains of a Roman temple that had previously been located there. The exact reasons behind the chapel's disuse and abandonment are unknown, as it fell out of use in the sometime in the 13th century.

History

St Cross was created as a result of the merger with the lands around Homersfield in 1767. Before this it was part of the lands owned by the See of Norwich until the reign of King Henry VIII, its revenues distributed to the Church. With the dissolution of the monasteries in 1540 the land was transferred back to the Crown. The manor and its surrounding lands were eventually given to the North family in the 17th century valued at £20. After the Norths, the manor and its lands were transferred to the Tasburgh family. Eventually ownership was taken over by the Durrant family in the 19th century. It is not known who owned the land of St Cross from the 17th–19th century before the Durrant family took ownership.

In 1870–72, St Cross South Elmham was described by John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales as:

"St. Cross, or Sandcroft, a parish in Wangford district, Suffolk; adjacent to the river Waveney, and to the Waveney Valley railway, near Homersfield r. station, 5 miles SW of Bungay. The church is tolerable. Some remains exist of a moated minster, with nave 42 feet by 27, and apsidal chancel 24 feet."[4]

The Church of St Cross

In 1868 The National Gazetteer of Great Britain and Ireland described St Cross as:

"South Elmham St.Cross, (or Sandcroft), a parish in the hundred of Wangford, county Suffolk, as above, 5 miles S.W. of Bungay, and 4 N.E. of Harleston, its post town. There was formerly a monastic establishment here, the remains of which are surrounded by a moat. The living is a rectory annexed to that of Homersfield, in the diocese of Norwich. The church is a neatly built edifice with square embattled tower, and Norman arch at the S. entrance. St. Margaret's Hall is the principal residence. Sir R. Adair is lord of the manor."[5]

South Elmham Hall

Main article: South Elmham Hall

The parish contains South Elmham Hall, surrounded by a four-acre moat and which was formerly the country residence of the Bishop of Norwich. The hall is currently known as 'Bateman's Barn' and offers guided historic tours of the house and its grounds during the summer months.[6] South Elmham Hall is a Grade I listed building.[7] The building contains primarily 16th century architecture, alongside 15th century arches constructed during the Bishops ownership of South Elmham Hall.

The primary attraction of the South Elmham area to the Bishops was the hunting opportunities provided by a deer park established in the local area.[8] This was not without problems with reports of the deer being poached by the residents of St Cross in 1315. The Hall also hosted royal family members on several occasions, most notably in 1326 when Edward II stayed for ten days on his way to Norwich, carrying out government business during his stay there.[8] The remains of previous buildings and settlements nearby to the hall have long since decayed, although around 45 detailed surviving records in the Suffolk Record Office indicate the area used to contain stables, mews and gatehouses.[8] The ruins of one of the gatehouses survives and can be still be seen today. South Elmham Hall also has the earliest domestic wall paintings in Suffolk, dating from 1270.[8]


The Saints, Suffolk

South Elmham:   All SaintsSt CrossSt JamesSt MargaretSt MichaelSt NicholasSt PeterHomersfield
Ilketshall:   Ilketshall St AndrewIlketshall St JohnIlketshall St LawrenceIlketshall St Margaret