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Where Bembridge slopes southward to the sea
the small church and the stately 17th century manor house of Yaverland stand
side by side, both with something from the past. Yaverland was an island until
the 13th century, when the lord of the manor made a causeway to Yarbridge. The
church was built about 1150 as the private chapel of the manor. The house, with
tall wide gables and an imposing front, is one of the finest on the island. Part
of the 12th century walls are left; the side wings were added in 1620. Its chief
beauty is in the carving of the fine door and the oak staircase with grotesque
corbels on the wall.
The best part of the church is in the doorway and the chancel arch, which are
counted the best Norman craftsmanship in the island. The doorway (near which is
a mass dial) has a lovely tympanum of diapered pattern, and wide mouldings of
short pilasters and zigzags. A friendly face smiles from above it, and the two
pillars are rich in a shell-like pattern. The chancel arch is not surpassed for
its impressiveness in any Hampshire church. Its slender pillars are completely
covered with similar designs, and the deeply cut mouldings are exquisitely
carved. There is a small movable holy water stoup with a broken bowl which was
found when the church was restored in the 19th century; it is 15th century, and
preserved with it is another vessel discovered at that time, a big Celtic urn
that must have seen twenty centuries. It rests on a carved bracket which was
once part of the ancient roof. The font is 14th century. There is a 15th century
holy water stoup, and the rood stairs have survived the Reformation.
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