Medieval Fragments

  Medieval Fragments

Photo © Martin Crampin

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about 1460 and 1500
Two lights mounted in front of a two-light window composed of fragments.

technique: stained glass


Church of Corpus Christi, Tremeirchion, Denbighshire
south wall of the nave

A range of fragments which suggest a number of subjects. Most prominent is a female figure in the right-hand light, thought to be St Anne. The figure has been put forward as the mirror image of a depiction of St Anne at All Saints, York, in a scene where she is teaching Mary to read. The York window is dated 1440, and this fragment is probably later than this date. The similarity with the mid-fifteenth century work at Over Peover (Cheshire) is more certain.

Also present are bones from the foot of a crucifixion, a devil from either a doom scene or depiction of Michael, a wheel perhaps suggesting Catherine, fragments of the creed suggesting the presence of apostles, and angels.





 

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Medieval FragmentsMedieval FragmentsHead of a Cleric with Angels: Medieval FragmentsMedieval FragmentsSt Anne: Medieval Fragments
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Further reading

Mostyn Lewis, Stained Glass in North Wales up to 1850 (Altrincham: John Sherratt and Son Ltd, 1970), pp. 93-4.

Penny Hebgin-Barnes, The Medieval Stained Glass of Cheshire (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010), pp. clxi-iii.

Painton Cowen, A Guide to Stained Glass in Britain (London: Michael Joseph, 1985), p. 221.

References

Martin Crampin, Stained Glass from Welsh Churches (Talybont: Y Lolfa, 2014), pp. 32–3.

Edward Hubbard, The Buildings of Wales: Clwyd (Harmondsworth/Cardiff: Penguin/University of Wales Press, 1986), p. 448.




View this object on the Stained Glass in Wales Catalogue
View this object on the Imaging the Saints of Wales database


  Medieval Fragments

Photo © Martin Crampin


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