Volume 10: The West Midlands

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Current Display: Atcham 3, Shropshire Forward button Back button
Overview
National Grid Reference of Place of Discovery
SJ 541091
Present Location
Evidence for Discovery
Church Dedication
St Eata
Present Condition
Description
Discussion

Appendix B item (stones wrongly associated with pre-Conquest period)

Tapering grave-cover, found at St Eata's church, now outside the south porch, weathered and broken into two halves. Carved with a fairly high-relief, ring-headed staff cross, type B6. The arms of the cross are 'capped' with squared terminals that are wider than the arms themselves (cf. type A3). There is a rounded collar around the neck of the shaft. The shaft is flanked by two creatures standing rampant with their forefeet against the shaft. One creature had a rounded head (lion or leopard?) while the other has a long square jaw like a dog or wolf. The creatures stand on, or grow out of, columns of circular or slightly elliptical shapes, like a two-strand plait. The surface of this grave-cover is very heavily weathered and the details of the design are difficult to see. However, the ring-headed staff cross and the flanking rampant creatures seem to be more closely related to the developed heraldry of the thirteenth century and later than to Anglo-Saxon carvings.

Date
References
Leighton 1882, 252, fig. 4; Cox 1997, 9
Endnotes

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