A Guide to Saint Nicholas' Church, Steventon
By Gerry Dutton - Posted January 2000
Steventon is recorded as a manor in Domesday Book (1086), and there was certainly a manor here in Saxon times,
which may have been in existence for several hundred years. At the time of Doomsday there is no mention of a
church at Steventon although churches were recorded at the nearby villages of Ashe and Deane. It is possible that
there was a Saxon church at Steventon, but we have no record of it. Alternatively there may instead have been a Saxon cross,
around which the villagers would have buried their dead and travelling priests would have held religious services for the
villagers. Part of the shaft of a sandstone Saxon cross, thought to be 9th Century in date, was discovered built into a wall
at Steventon manor, and this is now sited inside the church just in front of the pulpit.
Dedicated to St Nicholas, the church is a small, simple,
Norman building which was originally constructed around 1200. The first recorded evidence for the existence of the church at
Steventon was in 1238 when it was arranged that 'Hugh de Wengham should present a clerk and on his death Phillip de
Sanderville or his heirs should present a clerk.....'
Many other local churches, including those at North Waltham,
Ashe and Deane, were extensively rebuilt in the 19th century. However Steventon church, apart from some limited 13th, 15th
and 19th century alterations, has stayed remarkably the same since it was first built. The building, with walls over a metre
thick in places, is in the main, constructed from local flints set in a soft lime mortar and rendered over. Much of the stone
for the corners and the various door and window surrounds came from Binstead in the Isle of Wight.
In the 13th Century the chancel was partly rebuilt and the main doorway was moved from the south wall of the nave to its
present position, at the base of the tower facing west. The original door would most probably have been where the west window
on the south wall now is. When the doorway was moved it cut into the sill of an existing lancet window which was blocked up.
This cannot be seen from the outside, but the splayed interior of this window can be seen from inside the entrance chamber.
The window which can now be seen directly above the doorway, was subsequently blocked off on the inside of the tower, by a
supporting wall for the wooden frame in which the church bells are hung.
On the right hand surround to the doorway there is a sundial otherwise known as a scratch dial or "Mass Clock". A sundial
in this position, facing west, would not be practical. However the sundial dates from the time when the doorway was in the
south wall and it faced south. Three other such dials, one large and two small, can be seen in various places on the south
facing wall.
On either side of the main doorway are carvings of medieval heads, to the left one with a man's face, and to the right one
with a woman's face.
Steventon church is best known for its associations with Jane Austen. It is the single most important building left
standing in Steventon which relates to her life when she lived here. The Rectory where she lived is now gone, but the
church survives, and apart from a number of largely cosmetic differences, it is little changed from when she did live here.
This church was an everyday part of her life, and she would certainly have no problems in recognising it as the church in
which she worshipped for the first 25 years of her life.
Her father George Austen, two of her brothers James and Henry, and her nephew William Knight (the son of her brother Edward, who
was born Austen and later changed his name to Knight) were all Rectors of Steventon. Prior to the Rev. George Austen taking over
the living, his cousin the Rev. Henry Austen M.A. had been the Rector. Thus members of the Austen family were Rectors of Steventon
from 1759 to 1873, a period of 114 years, more than any other family in the history of the church.
Jane was baptised here as were four of her siblings, Henry, Cassandra, Francis, and Charles. Her grandmother, her eldest brother
James and both his wives, Anne and Mary, are buried here. Jane's nephew William Knight and several members of his family are also
buried here, as are a number of her friends and acquaintances. Every memorial, bar one, inside the church, has a direct connection
to Jane Austen. No doubt several of the graves in the church yard are the graves of people she knew in the village. So please come
and look around this simple village church and enjoy its tranquil peace as no doubt Jane did.
In Victorian times restoration work was carried out on the church, the stained glass windows and much of the roof structure was rebuilt. The pews, pulpit, organ and choir stalls were added and the church was redecorated internally.
The spire was also added so Jane would have known the church without the spire.In the 20th century, restoration work on the church was carried out in 1934 and again in 1975, when to mark the bicentenary of
Jane Austen's birth, the main east window, which was extensively corroded, was restored. The church roof and spire were completely
renovated in 1984 and in 1988 the interior of the church was renovated and redecorated.The church bells were renovated and rehung in 1995
with the generous assistance of the Jane Austen Society of North America.
Mouse over the picture!
|
The south side of Steventon Church.
Mouse over the picture!
|
The main east window
|
Click here to Enter the Church
|
NOTE: These web pages are Copyright Gerry Dutton 2000