Scheduled Monument: Cleulow Cross High Cross, 200M North Of Fourways (1009850)
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| Authority | English Heritage (London) |
|---|---|
| Old Ref | 25645 |
| Date assigned | 30 May 1958 |
| Date last amended | 18 October 1994 |
Description
EXTRACT FROM ENGLISH HERITAGE'S RECORD OF SCHEDULED MONUMENTS
MONUMENT: Cleulow Cross high cross, 200m north of Fourways
PARISH: WINCLE
DISTRICT: MACCLESFIELD
COUNTY: CHESHIRE
NATIONAL MONUMENT NO: 25645
NATIONAL GRID REFERENCE(S): SJ95206739
DESCRIPTION OF THE MONUMENT
The monument includes an Anglo-Saxon high cross on a mound raised from a spur
overlooking the valley of the Shell Brook. The cross survives as a large base and shaft with the remains of a small wheelhead cross on the top. The base is an irregular quadrangular block of fine gritstone measuring 1.1m wide on the south side, 1.14m on the east side, 0.85m on the north side and 1.13m on the west side. The block is 0.47m high. The shaft and head are cut from a single block of gritstone in the form of a tapering column to a collar and then squared up to the wheel shaped head. The columnar shaft is 1.95m to the collar from the base. It is 0.46m in diameter at the bottom tapering to 0.34m at the collar. The collar is a double roll moulding surmounted by a 0.75m squared pillar rising from four shoulders with a simple roll moulding at the corners. The pillar has a roll moulded band supporting the fragment of the head. The cross is weathered which has obscured any trace of decoration on the faces. The type of sculpture is late Anglo-Saxon and is an example of a kind known locally as a late Mercian round shaft, dating from the late ninth or early tenth century. This cross is one of a group of round shafts in this region, including one at Swythamley Hall to the south and three from Ridge Hall Farm to the north, now in Macclesfield West Park. The crosses form markers for a boundary along the hillsides above the Cheshire Plain and define the early medieval estate and parish of Prestbury.
ASSESSMENT OF IMPORTANCE High crosses, frequently heavily decorated, were erected in a variety of locations in the eighth, ninth and tenth centuries AD. They are found throughout northern England with a few examples further south. Surviving examples are of carved stone but it is known that decorated timber crosses were also used for similar purposes and some stone crosses display evidence of carpentry techniques in their creation and adornment, attesting to this tradition. High crosses have shafts supporting carved cross heads which may be either free-armed or infilled with a 'wheel' or disc. They may be set within dressed or rough stone bases called socles. The cross heads were frequently small, the broad cross shaft being the main feature of the cross. High crosses served a variety of functions, some being associated with established churches and monasteries and playing a role in religious services, some acting as cenotaphs or marking burial places, and others marking routes or boundaries and acting as meeting places for local communities. Decoration of high crosses divides into four main types: plant scrolls, plaiting and interlace, birds and animals and, lastly, figural representation which is the rarest category and often takes the form of religious iconography. The carved ornamentation was often painted in a variety of colours though traces of these pigments now survive only rarely. The earliest high crosses were created and erected by the native population, probably under the direction of the Church, but later examples were often commissioned by secular patrons and reflect the art styles and mythology of Viking settlers. Several distinct regional groupings and types of high cross have been identified, some being the product of single schools of craftsmen. There are fewer than 50 high crosses surviving in England and this is likely to represent only a small proportion of those originally erected. Some were defaced or destroyed during bouts of iconoclasm during the 16th and 17th centuries. Others fell out of use and were taken down and reused in new building works. They provide important insights into art traditions and changing art styles during the early medieval period, into religious beliefs during the same era and into the impact of the Scandinavian settlement of the north of England. All well-preserved examples are identified as nationally important. Cleulow Cross high cross is nearly complete in spite of wind erosion and is a good example of a regional type of high cross. It is in its original position and may have been a boundary marker for the early medieval parish of Prestbury.
SCHEDULING HISTORY
Monument included in the Schedule on 30th May 1958 as:
COUNTY/NUMBER: Cheshire 65
NAME: Cleulow Cross
The reference of this monument is now:
NATIONAL MONUMENT NUMBER: 25645
NAME: Cleulow Cross high cross, 200m north of Fourways
SCHEDULING AFFIRMED ON 18th October 1994
External Links (1)
- https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1009850 (National Heritage List for England)
Sources (1)
- SCH2950 Scheduling Record: English Heritage. Various. Schedule Entry (Scheduled Ancient Monuments Amendment). MPP24/ AA 100059/1. [Mapped features: #11180 25645; #11432 25645]
Location
| Grid reference | Centred SJ 9520 6739 (16m by 17m) (2 map features) |
|---|---|
| Map sheet | SJ96NE |
| Civil Parish | WINCLE, MACCLESFIELD, CHESHIRE EAST |
Related Monuments/Buildings (1)
Record last edited
Apr 22 2009 9:48AM