Gussage St Andrew |
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Gussage St Andrew, formerly a little tithing, hamlet
and manor 6 miles West by North from Cranborne and two miles South-West of
Sixpenny Handley, now essentially consists of a couple of farms and a few
outlying cottages. The word 'Gussage' has been formed from two Saxon
words, 'gyse' for 'water breaking forth' and 'sic' for 'watercourse',
and refers to the gushing stream that rises here and eventually flows
into the River Allen. 'St Andrew' comes from the dedication of the
12th-century chapel, the building itself being all that remains of a
convent belonging to Shaftesbury Abbey that once existed on this site.
The stone edifice replaced an earlier wooden chapel built by King Alfred
that, like his cakes, was unfortunately burnt to a crisp. |
The exterior of the chapel is unimpressive and one could be forgiven for mistaking it for an outbuilding of Chapel Farm, situated as it is on a slight elevation at the end of the 18th century farmhouse's back- garden. Although services are still celebrated here, the chapel is kept locked when not in use, for inside is one of Dorset's little known treasures: 13th century wall-paintings of the Passion featuring the Betrayal of Christ, the Scourging, the Crucifixion, the Deposition and the Suicide of Judas. Being too crude for Victorian tastes, the mural had been plastered over in the 19th century and was only rediscovered in the 1950s, then painstakingly restored over several years by Eve Baker. The chapel also contains a 12th century Norman nave and 13th century chancel, as well as a 'weeping dais' supporting a font, which seems to be positioned over a spring. This may be another example of placing a Christian building on a sacred pagan site, as springs and marshy ground were thought to be supernatural threshold locations by Iron Age Britons. |
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Census | 1841 Census (ED18 for Sixpenny Handley) |
Parish Registers |
Baptisms 1751-1920 [PR/BT] [Kim
Parker] Marriages 1751-1753 [BT] [Kim Parker] Burials 1775-1819 [PR/BT] [Kim Parker] |
Trade & Postal Directories | |
Other Records |
St Andrews Chapel Passion Cycle: Gussage St. Andrew, Dorset |
Photographs | |
Monumental Inscriptions | |
Maps | |
Records held at the Dorset History Centre |
Registers Christenings 1785-1992. |
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