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Great Glemham is a quiet, fair-sized and
prosperous village which has the advantage over its
non-identical twin, Little Glemham, of not being bisected
by the A12. The church sits on a wide rise near the
centre of the village, and although it has been heavily
restored in just about every department in the last 150
years, it is still essentially a small 14th century
church, with a slightly earlier chancel. You enter
through the north porch, where there is a rather good
holy water stoup, which may or may not have been there
originally. All Saints is another church which belies the
old saw that the north side of a graveyard was
unconsecrated ground, since virtually all the burials
here are on that side.
Your first sight on entering All Saints is its tremendous
treasure. This is one of Suffolk's thirteen Seven
Sacrament fonts, one of the best of its kind. There are
fewer than forty of these fonts in the whole of the
kingdom. Three of the Suffolk fonts have a unique
feature, for at Denston, Woodbridge and here at Great
Glemham the backgrounds are rayed. They probably did not
come from the same workshop, since there are so many
other differences between them. The fonts date from the
last few decades of the 15th Century and the first few of
the 16th Century, and show the seven sacraments of the
Catholic Church, reminder that our medieval parish
churches were built as Catholic churches, not as Anglican
ones. The Catholic sacraments are Baptism, Confirmation,
Matrimony, Ordination, Confession, Last Rites and the
Mass, or Eucharist. The fonts are eight-sided, each
sacrament taking up a panel and the eighth panel
featuring something else, most often the Baptism of
Christ, but here at Great Glemham it is the Crucifixion.
The fascinating detail that this font shares with the one
a few miles off at Badingham, and with a couple of the
others, is that the holy oils used in Confirmation and
Ordination are contained in a chrismatory, which is
carried by an acolyte. In the Eucharist scene, a
houseling cloth is held by the communicants to prevent
the host being scattered. These give us an instant
insight into liturgical practice in Suffolk churches at
the end of the medieval period.
Great Glemham's font may not be as awesome
as Westhall's, or as characterful as Badingham's, but in
terms of condition it is probably the best single
surviving example in all Suffolk. And the font has yet
another remarkable feature. In one of the niches in the
font's stem you will see, not a simple Marian lily as in
the other three, but a lily crucifix. Only one other
positively identified example survives in Suffolk, at
Long Melford. There are remains of colour on the font,
especially on the lilies. There is also colour on the
contemporary decorative entrance to the rood loft stair,
where the fleurons decorate the arch. What a beautiful
place this must have been half a millennium ago! None of
the rood apparatus survives at all, but with the images
on the font and these traces of colour you might begin to
get a hint, here, of the sheer drama of the medieval
liturgy and life of this place.
The rest of the inside is homely, if not perhaps terribly
exciting. There was a fairly rigorous sequence of 19th
century restorations here. One of them was by J.P. St
Aubyn, who did very little work in Suffolk, but he didn't
leave examples of his unorthodox flair here, which on
this occasion is probably just as well. He left in place
the wooden chancel arch (itself restored by the great
Henry Ringham a few years earlier) which is rather
lovely. And it must be said that this church is dignified
by some very good early 20th Century glass, the best of
which is in the east window. It depicts the Risen Christ
flanked by St Michael and St Gabriel by Powell & Son.
Also up in the chancel, in the south and north windows
are some interesting medieval survivals, fragments of the
Instruments of the Passion and the Chalice and Host which
are set in shields.
All in all, a pleasing place. Perhaps its domesticity
means the church has less high drama than some of its
neighbours, but it feels of a piece with its comfortable
parish, and a fitting home to the precious jewel nestling
here, a touchstone to the past.
Simon Knott, April 2019
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