The problem with Billesley is that the comprehensive rebuilding leaves us totally in the dark about what form the original church took. This wonderful tympanum was recovered from rubble in the walls!
It seems extraordinary that the same man carved Eardisley font. Eardisley is at the far west of the area within which we find the Herefordshire School of carving. Billesley is at the extreme east. The intervening distance is 65 miles. It’s not an impossible distance even in Norman times. That he was able to do so demonstrates that he was “free” at a time when so many were serfs. How and by whom was he commissioned? Malcolm Thurlby’s definitive book “The Herefordshire School of Romanesque Sculpture” (Logaston Press 1999) specifically tackles this theme and is able to make educated theories for most Herefordshire School sculptures. Eardisley font he attributes squarely to the patronage of Ralph de Baskerville as he does the Romanesque carving at Stretton Sugwas 12 miles to the west of Eardisley. The lands at both those locations were known to have been owned by him. Malcolm, however, does not advance any theories about the Billesley patron.
On my own website for Bredwardine in Herefordshire, itself only 5 miles from Eardisley, I hypothesise that the door lintels were moved there from Eardisley when the latter was re-built in around 1200; and one of the facts underpinning that theory was that Bredwardine too was acquired by the de Baskervilles.
I can find no historic connection between Billesley and the de Baskervilles. What is also significant is that the CCT believes Billesley to have been built in the eleventh century - that is, it is early Norman. Yet the first church at Eardisley is believed to have been built in 1100 and the font to date from around 1150. It seems clear, therefore, that if all this is true then this tympanum could not have been part of the original Billesley church. It must have been added later in the Norman era.
Let’s now throw in the issue of the fragment of a second tympanum at Billesley. Is it by the same sculptor? It seems likely.
So where is this leading? Well, the tympanum here would not have looked out of place at Eardisley. I already believe that when Eardisley was rebuilt in 1200 its door lintels were re-used at Bredwardine that had acquired a de Baskerville connection. Billesley has no obvious connection with the de Baskervilles so there are two possibilities. One is that the Eardisley carver had the freedom to travel sixty five miles to carve a tympanum at Billesley for a different patron. Masons were “free” so this is perfectly plausible. Thurlby goes as far as to suggest the that tympana here are the work of the “Chief Mason” of the Herefordshire School. The other is that two tympana were originally carved by that man at Eardisley and moved 65 miles to Billesley perhaps 50 years later when Eardisley was rebuilt.
I have seen no discussion of this issue elsewhere or of my theory that door lintels were moved from Eardisley to Bredwardine. The obvious answer is that the church at Billesley needed two new doorways and our man was asked to travel sixty five miles to carve them. Perhaps the de Baskervilles recommended him? But look at that stone. It looks like it is sandstone, the same as that used at Eardisley. What stone is Billesley built from? Blue lias! If Eardisley Man carved here he must have brought his stone with him! Alternatively he might have carved the tympana in Herefordshire and brought them to Billesley as finished products. I feel that it unlikely and the cost of carriage of stone over distance of sixty-odd miles would probably have been prohibitive for a tiny out of the way church. Nor am I aware of any other examples of the Herefordshire School doing this. It is a mystery but I really do think there is a possibility that the two tympana were originally at Eardisley.
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