Sunday, 15 September 2024

Pulpit and Rood Screen, Holy Trinity Church, Long Sutton

Holy Trinity Church in Long Sutton has an unusual coloured wooden pulpit on a wine-glass stem with a fly approach stair.  It dates from c1455-58 and is older than the church, which dates from 1493.  The pulpit was restored and re-coloured in 1872 by Mr W King Lucas.  It took him 13 weeks to restore it. The wooden statues of the apostles in the niches were obtained by Mr W. King Lucas and put into the niches in 1910. The pulpit bears the initials of Abbot John Petherton of Athelney and Vicar William Singleton.

The wooden rood screen, which runs across the chancel and aisles, is ornately carved and dates from the late 15th century.  It has been painted in red and blue with the slender tracery painted dark blue and white.  There is a small green owl in the vine above the centre arch.  This may be a pagan symbol relating to the Athena/Minerva, who was the goddess of wisdom.  Alternatively, it may be there to frighten bats.

Pulpit

Pulpit

Statues in niches on the pulpit

Rood screen

Side of the rood screen

Green owl in the centre of the rood screen

Angel roof

Holy Trinity Church

Sunday, 1 September 2024

Sundials

A sundial is an instrument used outdoors for determining the hour of the day, when the sun is shining.  The shadow of an upright object (known as a gnomon) falls on a flat or curved surface, which is marked with the hours.  The earliest known sundials were used by the Egyptians in around 1500 BC.  In medieval and early modern Europe the sundial was the most popular way of telling the time.

Sundials can be either altitude dials or direction dials.   With altitude dials the time of day is determined by the altitude of the sun.  Altitude dials can be sub-divided into plane, cylinder, scaphe and ring.  With direction dials, the time is determined by the sun's azimuth (compass direction) or hour angle.  Direction dials can be sub-divided into horizontal (including analemmatic), vertical, polar, equinoctial/equatorial (including armillary spheres), azimuthal and multiple/polyhedral.

Piles Mill near Allerford
This double-sided equatorial sundial was given by the Minehead and West Somerset Centre of the National Trust in 1984 to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Richard Dyke Acland's gift of the Holnicote Estate to the National Trust in 1944. It was unveiled by his son Sir John Acland.  It is made from Limpley Stoke limestone and was designed by David Brown to look like a millstone and carved by the National Trust's stonemason John Salter. 


Piles Mill Sundial

Scratch dial, East Stoke Church
Scratch dials are also known as mass dials.  They are medieval (1100-1600) sundials found on the south side of many churches.  They are thought to have shown the times of mass and other church services.  There would once have been a metal or wooden rod or gnomon in the hole in the centre of the dial, which would have cast a shadow.

Scratch dial, East Stoke Church

Scratch dial, St Mary's Church, East Brent

Scratch dial, St Michael's Church, Creech St Michael

Scratch dial, St Michael's Church, Creech St Michael



Barrington Court
This is a dodecahedron dial with pentagonal faces. 


Barrington Court

Barrington Court

Armillary Sphere, Tintinhull Gardens
This is a type of equinoctial/equatorial sundial.

Analemmatic sundial, Peile Drive, Taunton
The inscription on the sundial reads "The light of learning cast its shadow here from 1939-1994.  Stand facing your shadow with toes on the date scale."  Bishop Fox School was located here until it moved to its present site on Calway Road in September 1994. Analemmatic sundials are a type of horizontal sundial in which the gnomon (in this case a human being) is vertical and hour markings are marked in an elliptical pattern. The position of the gnomon varies, depending on the month of the year.

Analemmatic sundial, Peile Drive, Taunton

Analemmatic sundial on Minehead seafront
This sundial was provided by West Somerset District Council with the support of Minehead Town Council to commemorate the Golden Jubilee of Her Majesty, The Queen in June 2002. The names of the towns in West Somerset (Minehead, Williton, Watchet and Dulverton) are arranged around the centre and further out the names of all the parishes in West Somerset are listed in alphabetical order in a ring.

Close-up view of the centre of the Minehead analemmatic sundial

Scratch dial, East Quantoxhead Church

Vertical sundial, Stapley Mill

Sundial House, Wheddon Cross

Vertical declining sundial on Sundial House at Wheddon Cross
This sundial dates from c1850.  It shows the hours from 5aqm to 4pm and the half hours are shown by fleur de lys symbols.  The Latin motto shown on it is tempus edax rerum, which means time devours all things.

Lady Smith Memorial Institute/Parish Rooms, Somerton
This vertical sundial was commissioned by Somerton U3A to mark the new millennium and was unveiled on 8th July 2000.  It was made by Peter Walker and features a dragon at the centre. It shows the hours from 7am to 5pm in hours and half hours.

Vertical sundial, St George's Church, Ruishton
The Latin motto engraved at the top of the sundial says "concito gradu", which means "with hurried step".

Scaphe sundials, Church of St Peter & St Paul, Bleadon

Vertical sundial on Ilminster Old Grammar School
This sundial is dated 1586.  The Latin motto above it says "Sic transeunt dies tui", which means "So passeth your days".

Vertical sundial above the porch of St Augustine's Church, West Monkton
This sundial is dated 1725

Horizontal dial in the Dunster Village Garden

Vertical dial over the porch door of St Nicholas's Church in Brushford
This sundial is a memorial to William Wood.  It shows the hours from 6am to 6pm, with 30, 15 and 5 minute intervals shown.  The motto Memor esto brevis aevi, which means "Bear in mind how short life is" is inscribed on it.

Market Cross, Ilchester
This is made of Ham stone and also features a weather vane and a sundial at the top of a Doric column.  The original sundial dated from 1792.  This was damaged in a gale in 1990 and was replaced in 1991.  The original motto was indecipherable and the current one is tempus orbis.