

An artist, engaged in the illustration of the Architectural Antiquities of England, could scarcely do otherwise than often cast a wistful look towards the opposite shores of Normandy; and such would particularly be the case, if, like Mr. Cotman, to a strong attachment to his profession and the subject, he should chance to add a residence in Norfolk. This portion of the kingdom of the East-Angles, in its language and in its customs, but especially in the remains of its ancient ecclesiastical architecture, abounds in vestiges of its Teutonic colonists. The richly ornamented door-ways of its village churches have, in particular, long been the theme of admiration among antiquaries. Bred up in the midst of these, and warmly partaking in the admiration of them, Mr. Cotman devoted his pencil and his graver to the diffusion of their fame. Common report, aided by the suffrages of the learned, and in some degree by locality, designated them as Saxon: at the same time, when they were compared with what is left in Britain, of workmanship avowedly Norman, the points of dissimilarity appeared trifling or altogether vanished. Was it then to be inferred that, between Norman and Saxon architecture, there was really no difference; and, carrying the inference one step farther, that the hordes of barbarians denominated by these different appellations, although they might not have embarked at the same port, were only cognate tribes of one common origin, if not in reality the same? The solution of the first of these questions, the only one immediately in view, seemed best to be sought in that province of France, where the Norman power had been most permanently established, and where it was therefore reasonably to be expected, that genuine productions of Norman art might, if any where, be found. With this view, Mr. Cotman crossed the channel; and the result of three successive journies, in the years 1817, 1818, and 1820, is here submitted to the public.
Those who find pleasure in inquiries of this description, will join in the regret, that an undertaking like the present was so long delayed. Incalculable had been the advantages, had it but commenced previously to the period of the French revolution. That fearful storm burst with tremendous violence upon the castles of barons, the palaces of kings, and the temples of religion. Many of the most sumptuous edifices, which had mocked the hand of time, and had been respected amidst the ravages of foreign or domestic warfare, were then swept from the face of the earth. Others, degraded, deserted, neglected, and dilapidated, are at this moment hastening fast to their decay. Yet no small portion of what is valuable has been happily left. The two royal abbeys of Caen, though shorn of much of their former grandeur, are still nearly entire. Château Gaillard, the pride of Richard's lion heart, and the noble castles of Arques and of Falaise, retain sufficient of their ancient magnificence, to testify what they must have been in the days of their splendor: the towns and châteaus, which were the cradles of the Harcourts, Vernons, Tancarvilles, Gurneys, Bruces, Bohuns, Grenvilles, St. Johns, and many others of the most illustrious English families, are still in existence; and, of more modern date, when the British Edwards and Henrys resumed the Norman sceptre, numerous buildings of the highest beauty are every where to be met with. In his researches after these, Mr. Cotman had the advantage of being assisted by the kindness of three of the most distinguished antiquaries of the present day, M. le Prevost, M. Rondeau, and M. de Gerville, but particularly by the last, whose friendly help has likewise extended towards the preparing of the letter-press for many of the articles from the western part of the province. It were ungrateful not to acknowledge the assistance derived from Mr. Cohen, in the same department. The value of his aid, which has been most freely contributed, can be duly appreciated by those alone who have had opportunities of judging of the accuracy and extent of his knowledge.
In the selection of subjects for engraving, attention has been principally paid to two points, excellence in the objects themselves, and certainty as to dates; but the greatest stress has been laid upon the latter. The author of a work which professes to be in any degree didactic, can never impress too strongly upon his mind the value of the Roman precept, “prodesse quàm delectare;” and an artist, accustomed by his habits to the contemplation of the beautiful and the picturesque, requires above all men to be warned on this head. Many of the buildings here represented, might easily have been exchanged for others, more perfect, more elegant, or more ornamented; but it is hoped that they could not have been exchanged for those that would have been more instructive. The main object of the publication has been to exhibit a series of specimens of Norman architecture, as they actually exist in Normandy itself; and, by taking those whose dates are best defined, to enable the antiquary and the amateur of other countries, not only to know the state of this extraordinary people, as to their arts, at the epoch of their greatest glory, but also to compare what is in Normandy with what they find at home. Another volume, devoted to the illustration of the same description of architecture, in the south of France, in Italy, and in Sicily, would fill a hiatus, whose existence has long been regretted. In Germany, Denmark, and Sweden, it is to be feared that little remains; and, thanks to the spirit of English artists and to the patronage of the English public, what is in this country is already in a great measure recorded. To an Englishman, it is hoped it may be a source of venial self-congratulation, that the first publication upon Norman architecture originates in his own island: he will likewise probably not be displeased to find, that this collection of the finest remaining specimens of Norman art upon the continent, contains nothing which he cannot rival, indeed surpass, at home.
But, at the same time that the principal end proposed in this work has been to set before the public those edifices, whether sacred, military, or domestic, which were erected during the age most properly designated as Norman, the æra anterior to the union of the ducal coronet with the crown of France, it has been felt that, in whatever light the publication might be regarded, it would be incomplete without the addition of other buildings of a subsequent period. A farther number of specimens has therefore been admitted, conducting the series through the style of architecture, commonly termed Gothic, down to the time when that style finally disappeared before an Italian model, more or less debased.
In the descriptive portion of these volumes, attention has been almost exclusively directed to two points, the historical and the architectural. On the latter of these, so much has been said under each separate article, that whatever might be added in this place could be little more than repetition; and the history of Normandy, from the establishment of the dukedom to the beginning of the thirteenth century, is so interwoven with that of England, that it has been considered needless here to insert an epitome of it, as had at first been intended. In lieu of this, a Table is subjoined, exhibiting the succession, marriages and progeny of the Norman Princes, copied from Du Moulin; and such Table can scarcely be regarded otherwise than useful, as bringing the whole under the eye in a single point of view: a Chronological Index, it is hoped, may in a great measure answer the same purpose as to architecture. It is only justice, however, to add, that, in this Index, much has necessarily been left to conjecture; and, where it is so, the author naturally expects that others will occasionally differ from him in opinion; especially as no opportunity is afforded him of detailing the grounds whereby he has formed his own. Upon the subject most likely to create doubts and difficulties, the very early date assigned to the employment of the pointed arch, he begs the attention of the reader to those authorities, which, in his judgment, warrant the conclusion he has drawn. If mistaken in this, or in any other point, he will be most thankful for correction; and, in the language of that author, who is, as he long has been and probably always will be, more than any other the object of quotation, he takes leave, with the well-known valedictory lines,
CHURCH OF QUERQUEVILLE NEAR CHERBOURG.
In the following list, an Obelisk is affixed to the dates which depend upon conjecture. Those preceded by an Asterisk denote the year of the dedication of the building.
| NO. OF PLATES. | DATE. | |
| 53. | Rouen, Crypt in the Church of St. Gervais | before † 1000 |
| 13. | St. Sauveur le Vicomte, Castle | before † 1000 |
| 69. | Lillebonne, Castle | † 1000 |
| 48. | Caen, Chapel in the Castle | † 1000 |
| 89, 90. | Falaise, Castle—Keep of | † 1000 |
| 83. | St. Sanson sur Rille, Church | † 1020 |
| 67. | Anisy, Church | † 1030 |
| 68. | Perriers, Church—Nave of | † 1030 |
| 97. | Cerisy, Abbey Church | 1040 |
| 95. | Mount St. Michael, Abbey Church—Nave of | 1048 |
| 87, 88. | St. Lo, Church of the Holy Cross—(some of the sculpture probably of the ninth century) | † 1050 |
| 1. | Arques, Castle | † 1050 |
| 84. | Foullebec, Western door-way of the Church | † 1050 |
| 70. | Briquebec, Castle—(the multangular tower probably of the fourteenth century) | † 1050 |
| 5-10. | St. Georges de Bocherville, Abbey Church | 1050 |
| 92-94. | Coutances, Cathedral | * 1056 |
| 17. | Tamerville, Church | † 1060 |
| 44-46. | Léry, Church | † 1060 |
| 54. | Rouen, Church of St. Paul | † 1060 |
| 73-75. | Lisieux, Church of St. Peter | 1060 |
| 55, 56. | Caen, Church of St. Nicholas | 1066 |
| 24-33. | Ditto, Abbey Church of the Holy Trinity | * 1066 |
| 82. | Montivilliers, Abbey Church—Towers and door-way | † 1066 |
| 2, 3. | Jumieges, Abbey Church | * 1067 |
| 60, 61. | Fontaine-le-Henri, Church | † 1070 |
| 21-23. | Caen, Abbey Church of St. Stephen | * 1077 |
| 57. | Cheux, Church | † 1080 |
| 98. | Oyestraham, Church | † 1080 |
| 58, 59. | Bieville, Church | † 1080 |
| * 33. | Caen, Tombstone of Queen Matilda | 1083 |
| 37. | Haute Allemagne, Tower of Church | † 1100 |
| 16. | Than, Church | † 1100 |
| 18. | Caen, Tower of the Church of St. Michel de Vaucelles | † 1100 |
| 12. | Grâville, Church | 1100 |
| 99, 100. | Séez, Cathedral | * 1126 |
| 14. | St. Sauveur le Vicomte, Abbey Church | † 1130 |
| 96. | Mount St. Michael, Knights' Hall | 1130 |
| 39-41. | Gournay, Church of St. Hildebert—Interior of the nave, and capitals of columns | † 1140 |
| 20. | Statue of William the Conqueror | † 1150 |
| 91. | Creully, Church | † 1150 |
| 11. | St. Georges de Bocherville, Sculpture in the Chapter House | 1170 |
| 42, 43. | Rouen, Chapel of the Hospital of St. Julien | † 1190 |
| 80, 81. | Château Gaillard | 1195 |
| 51, 52. | Rouen Cathedral, West front—Northern Tower | 1200 |
| 47. | Colomby, Church | † 1200 |
| 68. | Perriers, Church—Choir | † 1230 |
| 38. | Gournay, Church of St. Hildebert—West front | † 1250 |
| 4. | Jumieges, Entrance to the Knights' Hall | † 1280 |
| 76. | Rouen, Church of St. Ouen | 1340 |
| 71. | Fécamp, Southern entrance of the Church of St. Stephen | † 1340 |
| 35. | Dieppe, Church of St. Jacques—Western front—(the tower probably fifty years earlier) | † 1350 |
| 72. | Eu, Screen in the Church of St. Lawrence | † 1360 |
| 66. | Tréport, Church | 1370 |
| 19. | Caen, South Porch of the Church of St. Michel de Vaucelles | † 1380 |
| 82. | Montivilliers, Abbey Church—Chapter-House | 1390 |
| 36. | Dieppe, Eastern end of the Church of St. Jacques | † 1400 |
| 79. | Louviers, South porch of the Church | † 1420 |
| 85, 86. | Tancarville, Castle | † 1420 |
| 89, 90. | Falaise, Castle—Talbot's Tower | 1430 |
| 34. | Dieppe, Castle | † 1450 |
| 51, 52. | Rouen Cathedral, Western front—Southern Tower | 1485 |
| 95. | Mount St. Michael, Abbey Church—Choir | 1500 |
| 78. | Rouen, Palace of Justice | 1500 |
| 77. | Ditto, Fountain of the Stone Cross | 1500 |
| 68. | Caen, House in the Rue St. Jean | † 1500 |
| 62, 63. | Fontaine-le-Henri, Château | † 1500 |
| 49, 50. | Rouen Cathedral, Southern Transept | 1500 |
| 51, 52. | Ditto, Western Front—Porch | 1509 |
| 15. | Andelys, Great House | † 1530 |
| 64. | Rouen, House in the Place de la Pucelle | † 1540 |
| PLATE. | ||
| 1. | Castle of Arques | to face page 1 |
| 2. | Abbey Church of Jumieges, West Front | 2 |
| 3. | ———— Parts of the Nave | 3 |
| 4. | ———— Arch on the West Front | 3 |
| 5. | Abbey Church of St. Georges de Bocherville, West Front | 4 |
| 6. | —————— General View | 4 |
| 7. | —————— West Entrance | 5 |
| 8. | —————— South Transept | 5 |
| 9. | —————— Sculptured Capitals | 5 |
| 10. | —————— Ditto | 6 |
| 11. | —————— Sculptures in the Cloisters | 6 |
| 12. | Church of Grâville | 7 |
| 13. | Castle of St. Sauveur le Vicomte | 8 |
| 14. | Abbey Church of St. Sauveur le Vicomte | 11 |
| 15. | Great House at Andelys | 13 |
| 16. | Church of Than | 16 |
| 17. | Church of Tamerville | 17 |
| 18. | Tower of the Church of St. Michel de Vaucelles, Caen | 18 |
| 19. | North Porch of Ditto | 18 |
| 20. | Statue of William, Duke of Normandy | 20 |
| 21. | } Abbey Church of St. Etienne, Caen, West Front | 21 |
| 22. | ||
| 23. | ————— Compartments of the Nave | 24 |
| 24. | Abbey Church of the Holy Trinity, Caen | 27 |
| 25. | —————— East End | 32 |
| 26. | —————— East End of Interior | 32 |
| 27. | —————— North Side of the Choir | 32 |
| 28. | —————— Arches under the central Tower | 33 |
| 29. | —————— East Side of South Transept | 33 |
| 30. | —————— Interior of the Nave | 33 |
| 31. | —————— South Side of the Nave | 34 |
| 32. | —————— Crypt | 34 |
| 33. | —————— Capitals | 34 |
| *33. | Inscription on the Tomb of Queen Matilda | 35 |
| 34. | Castle of Dieppe | 35 |
| 35. | Church of St. Jacques, at Dieppe, West Front | 38 |
| 36. | ————— East End | 38 |
| 37. | Tower of the Church of Haute Allemagne, near Caen | 39 |
| 38. | Collegiate Church of St. Hildebert, at Gournay, West Front | 39 |
| 39. | ——————— View across the Nave | 41 |
| 40. | ——————— Capitals | 42 |
| 41. | ——————— Capitals | 42 |
| 42. | Chapel in the Hospital of St. Julien, near Rouen, South Side | 43 |
| 43. | ——————— Interior | 44 |
| 44. | Church of Léry, near Pont de l'Arche, General View | 45 |
| 45. | ————— West Front | 46 |
| 46. | ————— Interior | 46 |
| 47. | Elevation of the Church of Colomby, near Valognes | 47 |
| 48. | Chapel in the Castle at Caen | 48 |
| 49. | } Cathedral Church of Notre Dame, of Rouen, South Transept | 50 |
| 50. | ||
| 51. | }—————— West Front | 51 |
| 52. | ||
| 53. | Crypt in the Church of St. Gervais, at Rouen | 56 |
| 54. | Church of St. Paul, at Rouen, East End | 57 |
| N. PRINCE OF LOWER DENMARK. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2nd wife, Poppeia, daughter of Berenger, Count of the Bessin. | == | Rollo, 1st Duke of Normandy. A.D. 911. | == | 1st wife, Gisla, daughter of Charles the Simple, King of France. | Gourin, killed in Denmark. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Sprote, daughter of the Count of Senlis. | == | William, Longa-Spatha, 2nd Duke of Normandy. A.D. 917. | Gerloc, wife to William, Count of Poitiers. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1st wife, Emma, daughter of Hugues le Grand, Duke of France. | == | Richard I. 3rd Duke of Normandy. A.D. 944. | == | 2nd wife, Gonnor, originally his concubine. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2nd wife, Paphie, or Poppea. | == | Richard II. called The Good, 4th Duke of Normandy. A.D. 996. | == | 1st wife, Judith, da. of Geoffrey, Duke of Brittany. | Robert, Archbishop of Rouen, Count of Evreux. | Mauger, Count of Corbeil. | Emma, Queen of England. | Havoise, wife of Geoffrey, Duke of Brittany. | Matilda, wife of Eudes, Count of Chartres. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Mauger, Archbishop of Rouen. | William of Arques, Count of Talou. | Richard III. 5th Duke of Normandy. A.D. 1026. | Robert, 6th Duke of Normandy. A.D. 1028. | == | Arlette, daughter of Foubert, citizen of Falaise. | William, monk at Fécamp. | Alice, wife of Rinaldo, Count of Burgundy. | Eleanor, wife of Baldwin, Count of Flanders. | Papie, wife of Guibert of St. Vallery. | N. died unmarried. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Nicolas, Abbot of St. Ouen: and two daughters, one of them married to Walter of St. Vallery, the other to the Viscount of Bayeux:—all illegitimate. | William the Conqueror, 7th Duke of Normandy, and King of England. A.D. 1035. | == | Matilda, daughter of Baldwin, Count of Flanders. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| N. his Mistress. | == | Robert, Court-Hose, 8th Duke of Normandy. A.D. 1087. | == | Sibilla, daughter of William, Count of Conversans. | Richard, killed in the New Forest. | William Rufus, King of England. | 1st wife, Matilda, da. of Malcolm, King of Scotland. | == | Henry I. King of England, and 9th Duke of Normandy. A.D. 1107. | == | 2nd wife, Adeliza, daughter of the Duke of Louvain. | Cecilia. | Constance. | Alice. | Agatha. | Adela. | == | Stephen, Count of Blois. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Richard, died from a surfeit, in hunting. | William, killed in the Crusades. | N. wife to Hélie de St. Saen. | N. da. of Marquis Renier, and sister to the Queen of France. | == | William, Count of Flanders. | William Adelin, drowned after his marriage. | 1st hus. Henry V. Emperor. | == | Matilda. | == | 2nd hus. Geoffrey, Count of Anjou, and 11th Duke of Normandy. A.D. 1143. | William. | Theobald, Earl of Blois. | Henry, Bishop of Winchester. | Stephen, King of England. | == | Matilda of Boulogne. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Eleanor, Countess of Poitiers and Duchess of Aquitaine. | == | Henry Plantagenet, 12th Duke of Normandy. A.D. 1150: Count of Anjou, Touraine, and Maine, and King of England. | Geoffrey, Count of Nantes. | William. | Eustace, 10th Duke of Normandy. A.D. 1135. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| William. | Margaret, of France. | == | Henry the Young, crowned King of England. | Richard Cœur-de-Lion, King of England, and 13th Duke of Normandy. A.D. 1189. | Geoffrey, Count of Brittany. | == | Constance, daughter of Conan, Duke of Brittany. | John Lackland, King of England, 14th and last Duke of Normandy. A.D. 1199. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Arthur, Duke of Brittany, killed by his uncle John. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Plate 1. Castle of Arques.
The town of Arques, situated in the immediate vicinity of Dieppe, is a spot consecrated by the historical muse, and one upon which a Frenchman always dwells with pleasure, as the place that fixed the sceptre in the hands of the most popular monarch of the nation, Henry IV.
The sovereign, fleeing from the superior forces of the league, here, in the very confines of his kingdom, finally resolved to make his last stand; urged to the measure by the Marshal de Biron, but doubtful in his own mind, whether it would not be the wisest as well as the safest plan, to seek refuge in the friendly ports of England. Reduced to the utmost extremity, “a king without a kingdom, a husband without a wife, and a warrior without money,” he stopped at Arques, in a state bordering upon despair; and yet, when the Count de Belin, who was brought in prisoner shortly before the battle, assured his majesty, that, in two hours, an army of forty thousand men would be upon him, and that he saw no forces there to resist them, the king replied, with that gaity of mind that never forsook him, “You see not all, M. Belin, for you reckon not God, and my just claim, who fight for me.”
Henry's whole army consisted of only three thousand infantry and six hundred cavalry: the hostile forces amounted to more than thirty thousand, commanded by the Duke of Mayenne, one of the ablest leaders of the league, but the Fabius rather than the Marcellus of the party. The occasion, however, needed the sword rather than the buckler: Henry's soldiers fought with the courage of desperation; but every thing seemed lost, when, according to the account given by Sully, the fog, which had been very thick all the morning, cleared suddenly away, and afforded the garrison in the castle of Arques a full view of the enemy's army, against which they discharged four pieces of artillery with such effect, as to kill great numbers of them. Their progress was thus effectually stopped; and the guns from the castle continuing to play upon them, they were soon thrown into disorder, and retreated to their original position.
From this time, the aspect of the king's affairs changed: his well-known laconic epistle to Crillon, “hang thyself, brave Crillon, for we have fought at Arques without thee,” shewed his own sense of the important results that might be expected from the battle. The most important of all was, that he was immediately joined by an auxiliary force of four thousand English and Scotch, sent by Queen Elizabeth to his aid; and that, almost immediately afterwards, another, still more considerable reinforcement, was brought him by the Count of Soissons, Henry of Orleans, Duke of Longueville, D'Aumont, and Biron; so that the Duke of Mayenne was obliged to retreat in his turn, and Henry saw himself within a few days under the walls of the capital; in a situation to dictate terms to his rebellious subjects.
The castle of Arques had on this occasion essentially served the royal cause; but it seems to have been suffered from that time forwards to fall into decay. All mouldering, however, and ruined as it is, its walls and towers may yet for many centuries bid defiance to wind and weather, unless active measures are used for their demolition.
At the revolution the castle became national property, and as such was sold: it has now fallen into the hands of a lady who resides in the neighbouring town.
The present plate, which represents the principal entrance, will serve to convey some idea of the general character of the building, as well as of the immense size of the massy towers, and of the crumbling appearance of their surface. Two piers only remain of the draw-bridge, by which they were approached; and the three successive arches of the gateway are torn into little more than shapeless rents. It would be very difficult to convey, by means of any engraving, an adequate idea of the grand character of the whole ruin, or of its imposing situation. Still more difficult would be the attempt to represent its masonry. The walls have certainly been in most places, and probably in all, covered with a facing of brick, of comparatively modern date; and in some parts this facing still remains, or, where it is torn off, nothing but rubble is visible. In other places they appear to have been constructed of alternate layers of brick and flint, disposed with the same regularity as in Roman buildings; and the thin form of these bricks leads also to the impression that they are of Roman workmanship.
If such a supposition may be allowed to be well founded, the first establishment of a fortress in this situation is probably but little posterior to the Christian æra; and many antiquarians are disposed to believe that such was really the case. At the same time, even allowing the truth of this surmise in its fullest extent, it is most probable that the Roman castle had fallen into ruin and disuse long before the Norman conquest.
Both William of Jumieges and the chronicle of St. Wandrille expressly mention, that William, son to Duke Richard II. received from his nephew, the conqueror, the earldom of Arques, and built a castle there. Other writers ascribe the origin of the fortress to the eighth century, and others to the latter part of the twelfth. Nothing is now left sufficiently perfect to determine the point, nor any thing that can justly be considered decisive of the style of its architecture.
The situation of the castle is very bold: it crowns the extremity of a ridge of chalk hills of considerable height, which commencing to the west of Dieppe, and terminating at this spot, have full command of the valley below. The fosse which surrounds the walls is wide and deep. The outline of the fortress is oval, but not regularly so; and it is varied by towers of uncertain shape, placed at unequal distances. The two entrance towers, and those nearest to them to the north and south, are considerably larger than the rest. One of these larger lateral towers[1] is of a most unusual form. It appears as if the original intention of the architect had been to make it circular; but that, changing his design in the middle of his work, he had attached to it a triangular appendage, probably by way of a bastion. Three others adjoining this are square, and indeed appear to partake as much of the character of buttresses as of towers.
The castle is internally divided into two wards, the first of which, on entering, is every where rough with the remains of foundations: the inner, which is by far the largest, is approached by a square gate-house with high embattled walls, and contains towards its farther end the quadrangular keep, whose shell alone is standing. The walls of this are of great height: in their perfect state they were carefully faced with large square stones, but these are principally torn away. The crypts beneath the castle are spacious, and may still be traversed for a considerable length.
[1] See Account of a Tour in Normandy, I. p. 37, t. 3.
Before the revolution despoiled France of her monastic institutions, the right bank of the Seine, from Rouen to the British Channel, displayed an almost uninterrupted line of establishments of this nature. Within a space of little more than forty miles, were included the abbeys of St. Wandrille, Jumieges, Ducler, and St. Georges de Bocherville.
Plate 2. Abbey Church of Jumieges.
West Front.
The most illustrious of these was Jumieges; it occupied a delightful situation in a peninsula, formed by the curvature of the stream, where the convent had existed from the reign of Clovis II. and had, with only a temporary interruption, caused by the invasion of the Normans, maintained, for eleven centuries, an even course of renown; celebrated alike for the beauty of its buildings, the extent of its possessions, and the number and sanctity of its inmates. Philibert, second abbot of Rebais, in the diocese of Meaux, was the founder of this monastery. He migrated hither with only a handfull of monks; but the community increased with such surprising rapidity, that in the time of Alcadrus, his immediate successor, the number was already swelled to nine hundred, and, except upon the occasion just mentioned, this amount never appears to have experienced any sensible diminution.
The monastery of Jumieges reckoned among its abbots men of the most illustrious families of France. In early times, Hugh, the grandson of Charlemagne, held the pastoral staff: it afterwards passed through the hands of Louis d'Amboise, brother to the cardinal, and of different members of the houses of Clermont, Luxembourg, d'Este, and Bourbon.
The abbatial church, as it now stands, (if indeed it does now stand, for in 1818, when drawings were made for these plates, its demolition was proceeding with rapidity,) was chiefly built in the eleventh century, by Robert the Abbot, who was translated from Jumieges to the bishopric of London, and thence to the archiepiscopal throne of Canterbury. The western front (see plate 2) is supposed to be certainly of that period, and all very nearly of the same æra, though the southern tower is known to be somewhat the most modern. The striking difference in the plan of these towers, might justly lead to the inference, that there was also a material difference in their dates, and that they were not both of them part of the original plan; but there do not appear to be any grounds for such a supposition. On the other hand, the contrary seems to be well established; and those who are best acquainted with the productions of Norman architects, will scarcely be surprised at anomalies of this nature.
Plate 3. Abbey Church of Jumieges.
Parts of the Nave.
The interior of the nave (plate 3) is also a work of the same period, except the lofty pillars that support the cornice, and the symbols of the evangelists that are placed near the windows of the clerestory. These were additions made towards the latter end of the seventeenth century. The pillars were rendered necessary by the bad state of the roof: the symbols were added only by way of ornament. They are of beautiful sculpture, and, as such, have lately been engraved upon a larger scale, in an Account of a Tour in Normandy, in 1818, (II. p. 27) which work also contains a general view of the ruins of Jumieges, and a representation of some ancient trefoil arches that are very remarkable.
Of the square central tower one side only is now remaining. This tower was despoiled of its spire in 1557. The Choir and Lady-Chapel are almost entirely gone. They were of pointed architecture; and it appears that they were erected during some of the latter years of the thirteenth century, or at the commencement of the fourteenth.
In the Lady-Chapel lay the heart of Agnes Sorel, who died at the neighbouring village of Mesnil, on the ninth of February, 1450, while her royal lover, Charles VII. was residing at Jumieges, intent upon the siege of Honfleur. Her body was interred in the collegiate church of Loches in Touraine. Upon her monument at Jumieges was originally placed her effigy, in the act of offering her heart to the Virgin. But this statue was destroyed by the Huguenots, who are said to have been guilty of the most culpable excesses in this monastery. Agnes' tomb remained till the revolution, when it was swept away with all the rest, and, among others, with one of great historical curiosity in the neighbouring church dedicated to St. Peter; for the convent of Jumieges contained two churches, the larger under the invocation of the Holy Virgin, and a smaller by its side, sacred to the chief of the apostles.
The tomb here alluded to was called by the name of le tombeau des Enerves, or de Gemellis; and so much importance was attached to it, that it has even been supposed that the Latin name of Jumieges, Gemeticum, was a corruption from the word gemellis. Upon the monument were figures of two young noblemen, intended, as it is said, to represent twin sons of Clovis and Bathilda, who, for sedition, were punished by being hamstrung and confined in this monastery.
Plate 4. Abbey of Jumieges.
Arch on the West Front.
The third plate of Jumieges, which is copied from a drawing by Miss Elizabeth Turner, represents a noble arch-way, the entrance to a porch that leads to a gallery adjoining the former cloisters, and known by the name of the Knight's Hall. It is a remarkably fine specimen of a very early pointed arch, still preserving all the ornaments of the semi-circular style, and displaying them in great richness and beauty. There is no authority for the date of this gallery: nor does it appear that any historical record is preserved respecting it. The style of the architecture would lead to the referring of it, without much hesitation, to the latter part of the thirteenth century.
Plate 5. Abbey Church of St. Georges de Bocherville.
West Front.
In a work like the present, devoted expressly to the elucidation of the Architectural Antiquities of Normandy, and more particularly intended to illustrate that style of architecture which prevailed during the time when the province was governed by its own Dukes, it has appeared desirable to select one or two objects, and to exhibit them, as far as possible, in their various details.
Under this idea, the abbey church of St. Georges de Bocherville has been taken from the upper division of the province, and that of the Holy Trinity at Caen from the lower. Both of these are noble edifices; both are in nearly the same state in which they were left by the Norman architects; and both of them are buildings whose dates may be cited with positive certainty.
The abbey of St. Georges was situated upon an eminence on the right bank of the Seine, two leagues below Rouen. It owed its origin to Ralph de Tancarville, lord of the village, about the year 1050. A rage for the building and endowing of monastic establishments prevailed at that period throughout Normandy; and this nobleman, who had been the preceptor to Duke William in his youth, and was afterwards his chamberlain, unwilling to be outdone by his compeers in deeds of piety and magnificence, founded this monastery and built the church in honor of the Virgin and St. George. Both the conqueror and his queen assisted the pious labour by endowments to the convent; and Ordericus Vitalis relates how, upon the decease of the monarch, the monks of St. Gervais, at Rouen, where he died, made a solemn procession to the church of St. Georges de Bocherville, there to offer up their prayers for the soul of their departed sovereign.
At the revolution the abbatial church was fortunate enough to become parochial, and it thus escaped the ruin in which nearly the whole of the monastic buildings throughout France were at that time involved. Its previous good fortune in having been so very little exposed to injury or to alteration, is even more to be wondered at.
Plate 6. Abbey Church of St. Georges de Bocherville.
General view.
The general view of the church, (plate 6) for the drawing of which the author is indebted to Miss Elizabeth Turner, is calculated to convey a faithful idea of the effect of the whole. Whatever is here seen is purely Norman, except the spire; and upon the subject of spires antiquaries are far from being agreed: some regarding them as a comparatively modern invention, while others, on the contrary, believe that the use of them may be traced to a very remote period. The semi-circular east end, with a roof of high pitch, the windows separated by shallow buttresses, or by slender cylindrical pillars, and the grotesque corbel-table, are, all of them, characteristics of the early Norman style: a greater peculiarity of the present building, and one indeed that is found in but few others, lies in the small semi-circular chapels attached to the sides of the transepts.
The west front (plate 5) exhibits a deviation from the general style of the church, in the two towers with which it is flanked. The shape of the arches in these plainly indicates a later æra; but they are early instances of pointed architecture. The grand entrance is displayed upon a larger scale in the seventh plate. The ornaments to this door-way are rich and varied, and there are but few finer portals in Normandy. But in specimens of this description the duchy is far from being able to bear a comparison with England. It would be difficult, perhaps impossible, to assign a satisfactory reason for this circumstance; and yet the fact is so obvious, that it cannot fail to have occurred to every one who has paid any attention to the architecture of the two countries.
In the interior of the church there is scarcely an architectural anomaly to be discovered. The only alterations are those which were rendered necessary by the injuries done to the building in the religious wars, during the sixteenth century; and the repairs on that occasion extended only to a portion of the roof, and of the upper part of the wall on the south side of the nave. As a satisfactory specimen of the character of the whole of the inside, the south transept has been selected for the subject of the eighth plate. In this, however, as well as in the opposite one, there is a peculiarity which requires to be noticed; that, within the church, at the distance of a few feet from the end wall, is placed a column, from which an arch springs on either side, occupying the whole width of the transept, and thus forming an open screen. The screen terminates, above, in a plain flat wall, which is carried to but a very short distance higher than the arches, so as to be nearly on a line with the triforium. The same arrangement exists also in some other churches in Normandy; as in that of the royal abbey of St. Stephen at Caen, in the abbey church at Cerisy, in the abbey church at Fécamp, and in the cathedral at Séez. In the two last mentioned buildings, it is found connected with the pointed architecture. At Cerisy, a church, erected a.d. 1030, by Robert, father to the Conqueror, the screen is surmounted by a row of seventeen semi-circular arches, which rise to about half the height of the columns of the triforium, and form an elegant parapet. It is possible that there may have been originally some decoration of the same kind at St. Georges. At Fécamp, the screen is carried up to the roof by three tiers, each consisting of three arches; and the recess thus made, is still used as a chapel, having an altar at the east end, and, in the centre, an ancient font. Such may have been originally the case at St. Georges; and thus we may account for the small semi-circular additions to the transepts, one of which is visible in the general view of the church. Mr. Cotman, however, suggests another idea, which may have entered into the mind of the architect of St. Georges; that, by means of this screen at the end of the transepts, the aisles of the nave would receive apparent length; from the columns, which form the screen, ranging in a line with those of the outer walls of the church. Among our English ecclesiastical buildings, there are similar screens in the transepts of Winchester cathedral[2], where the portion of the church that remains in its original state, greatly resembles, in its architecture, the church of St. Georges de Bocherville, and is known to have been erected at nearly the same date[3].
Plate 7. Abbey Church of St. Georges de Bocherville.
West entrance.
Plate 8. Abbey Church of St. Georges de Bocherville.
South Transept.
Plate 9. Abbey Church of St. Georges de Bocherville.
Sculptured Capitals.
Within the spandrils of the arches, just mentioned, are two highly curious bas-reliefs, figured here in the tenth plate, and marked A and B. They are on square tablets, cut out of the solid stone, in the same manner as the blocks of a stone engraving; the rims being left elevated, so as to form rude frames. One of them represents a prelate, who holds a crozier in his left hand, while the first two fingers of the right are elevated in the action of giving the blessing. Below him are two small heads; but it would be as difficult to conjecture what they are intended to typify, or why they are placed there, as it would be to state the meaning of the artist, in having represented the whole of his vestment as composed of parallel diagonal lines. In the opposite bas-relief, are seen two knights on horseback, in the act of jousting; as rude a piece of sculpture, especially with respect to the size and form of the steeds, as can well be imagined; and yet it possesses a degree of spirit, worthy of a better age. The shields of the riders are oblong; their tilting spears pointless; their conical helmets terminate in a nasal below, like the figures in the Bayeux tapestry. “This coincidence,” as has been observed elsewhere[4], “is interesting, as deciding a point of some moment towards establishing the antiquity of that celebrated relic, by setting it beyond a doubt, that such helmets were used anterior to the conquest; for it is certain, that these basso-relievos are coeval with the building that contains them.”
The nave of the church of St. Georges is, in its height, divided into three compartments: the lowest consists of a row of square, massy piers, varied only by a few small columns attached to their angles, and connected by wide arches, which are generally without any other ornament than plain fluted mouldings; the second compartment, or triforium, is composed of a uniform series of small arches, broken, at intervals, by the truncated columns; which, supporting the groinings of the roof above, terminate abruptly below, nearly upon a level with the capitals of the lowest arches; in the clerestory, the arches are also simple and unornamented; their size nearly intermediate between those of the first and second tiers. It is almost needless to mention, that, in a perfect building, of such a date, the whole of the arches are semi-circular. The same is equally the case in the choir; but this part of the edifice is considerably richer in its architectural decorations; and the noble arch, which separates it from the nave, is surrounded with a broad band of the embattled moulding, inclosing two others of the chevron moulding. A string-course, of unusual size, formed of what is called the cable ornament, goes round the whole interior of the building.
The general effect of the semi-circular east end, shews a striking resemblance between the church of St. Georges and Norwich cathedral; and those who take pleasure in researches of this description, will do well to trace the points of similarity through other parts of the edifices. The two kingdoms can scarcely boast more noble, or more perfect buildings, of the Norman style; and there is the farther advantage, that the difference between the periods of their respective erection is but small. Our English cathedral rose in the early part of the reign of William Rufus, when his follower, Herbert de Losinga, who, not content with having purchased the bishopric for £1900, bought also the abbacy of Winchester for his father, for £1000, was cited before the Pope for this double act of simony, and, with difficulty, retained his mitre, upon the condition of building sundry churches and monasteries. Norwich has, indeed, a superiority in its tower, in regard to which, it may safely be put in competition with any edifice of the same style, in Normandy or in England. For beauty, richness, variety, and purity of ornament, there is nothing like it. On the other hand, Norwich has undergone various alterations, as well in its interior, as its exterior[5], and it has no decoration of the same description comparable with the capitals in the church of St. Georges. These are so curious, that it has been thought right to devote to them the ninth and tenth plates of this work[6]. The capitals near the west end of the church, are comparatively simple: they become considerably more elaborate on advancing towards the choir; and it is most interesting to observe in them, how the Norman architects appear, in some instances, to have been intent upon copying the Roman model, or even adding to it a luxury of ornament, which it never knew, yet still preserving a classical feeling and a style of beauty, of which the proudest ages of architecture need not be ashamed; while, in other cases, the rudeness of the design and execution is such, that it can scarcely be conceived, but that they were executed by a barbarous people, just emerged from their hyperborean woods, and equally strangers to the cultivation of art, and the finer feelings of humanity. And yet, even in some of those of the latter description, attentive observation may lead to traces of classical fables, or representations of the holy mysteries of Christianity. Thus, one of the capitals[7] seems designed to portray the good Shepherd and the Lamb; another[8] appears to allude to the battle between the followers of Æneas and the Harpies. It would not, perhaps, be going too far, to say, that many of the others have reference to the northern mythology, and some of them, probably, to Scandinavian history.
Plate 10. Capitals in the Abbey Church of St. Georges de Bocherville.
Plate 11. Abbey Church of St. Georges de Bocherville.
Sculpture in the Cloisters.
In the chapter-house, which stands between the church and the monastic buildings, the capitals are decidedly historical, and exhibit an apparent connection very unusual in similar cases. The eleventh plate contains some of these[9]. Another, and of the greatest curiosity, now lost, has been etched in Mr. Turner's Tour in Normandy, from a drawing by M. Langlois, a very able and indefatigable artist of Rouen. It represents a series of royal minstrels, playing upon different musical instruments. This part of the building is known to have been erected towards the close of the twelfth century, and is consequently an hundred years posterior to the church. It is now extremely dilapidated, and employed as a mill. The capitals here figured, are taken from three arches that formed the western front. The sculpture in the upper line, and in a portion of the second, most probably refers to some of the legends of Norman story: the remainder seems intended to represent the miraculous passage of Jordan and the capture of Jericho, by the Israelites, under the command of Joshua. The detached moulding on the same plate, is copied from the archivolt of one of these arches: the style of its ornament is altogether peculiar. To the pillars that support the same arches, are attached whole-length figures, in high relief, of less than the natural size. Two of them represent females; the third, a man; and one of the former has her hair disposed in long braided tresses, that reach on either side to a girdle. All of them hold labels with inscriptions, which fall down to their feet in front. The braided locks, and the general style of sculpture, shew a resemblance between these statues and those on the portals of the churches of St. Denys and Chartres, as well as those which stood formerly at the entrance of St. Germain des Prés, at Paris, all which are figured by Montfaucon, in his Monumens de la Monarchie Française, and by him referred to the sovereigns of the Merovingian dynasty; but have been believed, by subsequent writers, to be the productions of the eleventh or twelfth century, an opinion which the statues at St. Georges may be considered to confirm.