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St Mary's Church, Westonzoyland
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| A thousand years ago the Somerset
levels was a swampy peat marsh with several Islands. One of these Island areas became known
as Sowey or Zoy. Glastonbury Abbey owned Sowey by the early 8th
century according to two charters of King Ine dated 725, which described two
large areas of land at Sowey and a Church there. Glastonbury Abbey gradually
drained the peat marsh and developed the area into the “island” parishes of
Weston Zoyland (the western zoy), Middlezoy and Othery. Middlezoy was the
“mother” church until towards the end of the 13th century. Around the end of that century Weston
achieved its independence, largely because of land reclamation and population
growth. The area became very prosperous and Weston was granted the right to
have a weekly market every Tuesday and a fair every year on the day and
day after the feast of the Beheading of St John the Baptist (28th to
30th August). |
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| St
Mary's church, Westonzoyland with its imposing west tower |
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Effigy
of a priest from the north transept
c. 1300 |
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There was a church on Weston Island by
1189, one of seven then placed in the immediate jurisdiction of Glastonbury
Abbey. It was the mother church of Sowey Island with chapels at Middlezoy and
Othery. However the date of the first building on the site of St Mary’s church
is not known, but there was certainly a chapel there in 1268 when the Abbot of
Glastonbury agreed to repair and maintain its chancel. The effigy of the priest
in the north transept, dated to about 1300, is the oldest recognisable part of
the fabric. |
| The current church seems to be a
rebuilding of the late 15th century and early 16th
century, both because of its style and because of the initials RB for Richard
Bere Abbot of Glastonbury 1493 – 1524. There is a bench end still in regular
use clearly carved with the initials RB. The church of St Mary’s was surrounded
by the events of 6th July 1685 when the Battle of Sedgemoor was
enacted, reputedly the last significant battle on English soil. More of the
churches reluctant involvement will be found below.
Major improvements to the fabric of
the church were made in the 17th, mid 18th and 19th
centuries. The tower was partially restored in 1907-8. A national
appeal led to the restoration and refurbishment of the whole church from 1933.
A rood screen was
installed with a rood organ case and
seating. The rood-stair tower was built. Chapels were created in the
transepts, and heraldic glass and an angel corbel introduced from the Court
House site. |
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| Bench
end with the carved initials R.B. |
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The
altar, pulpit and rood screen |
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There are six bells in the tower, the
oldest being medieval from the foundry of Thomas Jeffries of Bristol. Two
others are from the 18th century by founders Thomas Wroth and Thomas
Bayley of Bridgwater. The sixth bell, being the treble, was added in 1934 when the bells were
re-hung lower in the tower and a ringing chamber constructed on the first
stage. The old medieval bell frame of solid oak is still in place above the
current bell chamber. |
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We are now faced with more urgent
and costly repairs, this time to preserve the roof and make the building
weatherproof again. It is during this renovation process that we intend to
introduce and develop a heritage centre in the church to educate the public in
the wonderful history surrounding the area.
See here for the:
Church Development Plan. |
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Features to be seen in
our church:
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The church is notable for the
exceptional height of its splendid tower which is typical of the Somerset
perpendicular style. The tower, along with the whole south front of the
church is richly decorated in Ham stone.
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The nave roof is described as the
most elaborate of its tie-beam type in the country.
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The stone carved effigy of a
priest survives from the late 13th or early 14th
century.
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The font is from the 14th
century.
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The chancel
is enclosed by a rood screen installed in the thirties by W D Caroe and is
an especially good example of fine carving
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The
14th century font |
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The Church and the Battle of
Sedgemoor
The Kings army had been shadowing the
rebel forces and on the evening of July 5th 1685 they were camped on
the edge of Weston “Island” (Westonzoyland) looking towards Chedzoy and the
Polden hills, sheltered behind the now long gone drainage ditch known as the
Bussex Rhine. Four regiments of Infantry were drawn up there, cavalry patrolled
the moor, and officers found quarters in the village. The commander-in-chief,
Lord Faversham stayed in Weston Court opposite the church (now gone). Colonel
Piercy Kirke stayed at the Vicarage. The battle took place in the early hours
of 6th July and resulted in the flight and wholesale slaughter of the
rebels.
Some 500 prisoners, many of them
wounded, were herded into the church. Seventy-nine were wounded and five died
of their wounds in the church. Richard Alford, one of the churchwardens,
recorded in the parish register how several rebels were immediately hanged, and
how sixteen of the king’s men were buried either in the church or the
churchyard. One of the prisoners escaped through the north door of the chancel
and evaded the watch. Later the wardens paid for the repair of the door key and
for frankincense, pitch and “ressom” (resin) with which to fumigate the church
when the prisoners had been removed. On the moor more than a thousand rebels
were buried in huge pits; the modern memorial stands where the fighting was
thickest.
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An Account
of the Battle as recorded in the parish register of St Mary’s Church,
Westonzoyland.
Ann Account of the ffight that was in Langmore the six of July 1685
between the King’s army and the D of M.
The Ingagement began between one and two of the clock in the morning.
It continued nearly one hour and a halfe. There was killed upon the
spott of the King’s soldiers sixteen; five of them buried in the church,
the rest in the churchyard, and they all had Christian burial.
One hundred or more of the Kings souldiers wounded of which many died of
which we have no certaine account.
There were killed of the rebels on the spotte about 300, hanged with us
22 of which four were hanged in gemmasses.
About 500 prisoners brought into our church of which there was 79
wounded and five of them died of their wounds in our church.
The D of M beheaded July 15th A.D. 1685.
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Churchwardens account book in the year 1685
Paid for the King’s
Proklamation and fame
1
shilling
Expended when Monmouth
was taken (upon the
ringers)
8
shillings 8 pence
Ben Page for repairing seat and clock and making
key for north door.
For laying stones in church
5
shillings
Paid for Frankinssense
and pievey (saltpetre)
And resson (resin) and
other things to burn in
The church after ye
prisoners was gone out.
5
shillings 8 pence
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More pictures can be found here in the


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