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Note the Knight- Effigy. Who is it?
The arms on the shield are those of Sir
William Blakiston, married 1575. If, however, the Mason’s mark on the slab: I
OOO is that of John Cheyne, a fourteenth century mason , and if the two shields
of Langton and Fulthorpe ( behind the head ) are considered, the figure is more
likely to be that of Sir Roger Fulthorpe, who died in 1337. Sir William
Blakiston probably took an existing monument, erased the arms on the shield, and
used it as his own!
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The North Transept was originally known as
" The Blakiston Porch" and contains the burial vault of the family,
beneath the floor. A survey of 1555 tells of money given by Sir William
Blakiston at £4 p.a. for twenty years, for a mass priest. This was probably his
chantry chapel where masses would have been offered for his soul.
Note the broken Piscina, or basin and drain
situated near an altar for the emptying of water used in washing sacred vessels.
This is evidence of an altar here, presumably that of the chantry.
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