In the unlikely even that you arrived here unbriefed (and if you are reading this then that is impossible for you, isn’t it?) you would immediately be struck by its odd shape. For this is one of only four churches in the country that has a circular nave. This was not a whim on the part of its builders. Such churches were only built by the Knights Templar and the the Knights Hospitaller - now the Knights of St John - both of which orders were emulating the fourth century Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem which they saw when taking part in the Crusades. Of the four round churches in England, only the Temple Church in London and Little Maplestead are associated with the two orders. As its name implies, the Temple Church was built by the Templars, leaving Little Maplestead as the only round-naved church in England associated with the Hospitallers.
The village and manor were given to the order in 1185. They built a commandery across the road from where the church is situated and then a church for their community to use. It probably replaced an Anglo-Saxon church. The brighter of you will take one look at this church and know that it was not built in 1185 when its style would probably have been Transitional. The building we see dates from around 1335. Even then, there has been much rebuilding since.
It is possible that the round walls - although not, obviously, the windows - are from the original Norman-era church. Or the nave may have been rebuilt on precisely the same ground plan. The apse is contemporary with the rotunda which is very odd. Whoever heard of a fourteenth century apse? Was that also simply rebuilt over an existing floor plan? Logically, it seems more likely then that a good bit of the walling is original but we don’t know.
In the mid-nineteenth century the church was drastically altered. All of the windows were replaced, the exterior was resurfaced. The rather pretty hexagonal wooden belfry was added and the west porch rebuilt.
Pevsner said of all this: “Those who believe in texture and the handiwork of the mediaeval mason will not be pleased with Little Maplestead”. Well, more fool them. They should get over themselves! This little church is a visual delight. Its connections with the Hospitallers are real and it is in its own way unique. To be here on a sunny January morning in 2022 was to fall in love with my England all over again.
|