BINCOMBE . DORSET . HOLY TRINITY – Scratch Dial

Holy Trinity . Bincombe . Dorset

GRADE I Late 12th-century origins (parts of nave & chancel evident). Mainly C15 with later additions; S porch added C17 using old stonework; extensive restoration 1865. C13 font; Purdue bell 1658. Off the beaten track in a valley midway between Dorchester & Weymouth. Hardy-esque. 50.6599 / -2.445 / SY686845

Bincombe Church 1802 (Gentleman’s Magazine)

DIAL

Bincombe is a hidden village in the folds of the hills inland from the pleasures of Weymouth. It’s a mere 20m from our house yet until I visited a church nearby, it wasn’t on my radar at all. I must have passed close by it hundreds of times.

The dial is located on the E jamb of the SW chancel window, about 2m from ground level . GLP describes 4 short lines, with the noon indicator being the gap between two of them. He notes that the dial must have been moved to its position for reuse as part of the window jamb, truncating 2 lines LHS. Finally, he concludes that, the window being C15, the dial predates 1400.

Holy Trinity Bincombe – BSS Record

The dial, small and chunky, is in the top L corner of the dial stone. I haven’t seen one quite like it. The gnomon hole is surprisingly deep for such a little dial. In situ (and in the photos), there are ghosts of 2 or 3 lines LRQ angling towards the hole (but not converging?) Probably best disregarded.

CHURCH MARKS

Holy Trinity has a fine selection of crosses / protection marks drilled into the porch entrance. Here are a couple of examples.

GSS Category: Scratch Dial; Mass Dial

All photos, Keith Salvesen; engraving from Wiki

LILLINGTON . DORSET . ST MARTIN of TOURS – HORIZONTAL MEMORIAL SUNDIAL

ST MARTIN . LILLINGTON . DORSET

GRADE I † C13 origin, chancel & tower C15, porch C17, south chapel C18. Restored 1848. A small hamlet, a fine church, a tithe barn, a manor house. Sir Walter Raleigh prayed here. Perfect rural Dorset – secluded in a valley, reached only by narrow lanes, and very much a longcut for traffic. 2m over the fields from our house, 15+ minutes drive. 50.9127 /  -2.5283 / ST629127

Note: St Martin has 3 scratch dials that are featured HERE

Addendum July 2023 below

DIAL

This is a rather special and unusual dial in a lovely setting. It was installed in 1990, and commemorates Robin Higgin (1928 – 1986), as inscribed around the edge of the circular dial stone. On the top of the stone, the words ‘In Loving Memory’ are inscribed around the dial itself.

The dial has an adjustable gnomon, and the plate was clearly made specially rather than being a standard model. It has a pleasingly rustic look. The lines to the numerals are rays from the central sun. On the dial edge, on either side of the gnomon, are the words dawn and dusk look as if handwritten rather than machine-engraved.

MEMORIAL INSCRIPTION

ADDENDUM

In July 2023 I revisited St Martin to check the orientation of this dial following a query by JF (BSS). Since my last visit, and most regrettably, the gnomon has disappeared and the edge of the dial stone has been damaged. As for orientation, the dial is sited (or re-sited) so that XII points NE, negating a time-passage function.

GSS Category: Horizontal Dial; Memorial Sundial; Churchyard Sundial

All photos: Keith Salvesen

HARDINGTON MANDEVILLE . SOM . ST MARY (revisited) – Scratch Dial

St Mary . Hardington Mandeville . Som

DEDICATION † ST MARY – 1123 (on earlier site)

LISTING † II*

LOCATION † 3m SW of Yeovil, near E & W Coker 50.9048 / -2.6949 / ST512119

An extended village close to the A30 yet approached by lanes (as they are actually named) rather than roads. A peaceful feel to it, especially at dusk when this poor photo was taken. The church had ‘much work’ carried out in C15 and C18. Tower probably of 1123, in three stages, font possibly from same date. BLB.

I visited St Mary a couple of years ago at dusk (it was last on a list), so I have re-photographed the church and updated the post.

DIAL † At the W. end and quite easily overlooked. DEH did not investigate or list it in 1915. A full circle, one clear radial and a square style hole. Possible trace of outer circle top left. Not noted in BLB, HE, nor in TWC extensive list of Somerset dials. I found only one reference to this dial that led me here; since then, one passing reference to a sundial in the porch – perhaps this dial relocated in C15?

NOTES The circular font is thought to be original dating from 1123, and the clock mechanism was built and installed before 1707. There are 6 bells in the tower, 3 of which are from the Purdue (Closworth) foundry, with the earliest being dated 1591

GSS Category – Scratch Dial

All photos: Keith Salvesen

ROSEMOOR GARDENS . TORRINGTON . DEVON – Pillar Dial 2004

The Sundial, Rosemoor Gardens, Devon.

ROSEMOOR GARDENS

Renowned RHS gardens near Torrington, Devon. It’s a wonderful place. You can find out all about it HERE. For present purposes, the focus is on the very fine sundial installed in the gardens in 2004. This is a project of the BRITISH SUNDIAL SOCIETY and the description below is from the BSS record:

This is an unusual dial in the form of a triangular section pillar made of Delabole slate and 1820mm high. It was designed by Sir Mark Lennox-Boyd and made by Ben Jones. It carries a motto on the 610mm diameter slate base ‘But only in time can the moment in the rose-garden be remembered’ (T.S.Eliot, modified from a passage in Burnt Norton, the first of the Four Quartets).

On two of the faces are pairs of declining dials one above the other. The upper ones are drawn for December to June and the lower ones for June to December. The hour lines are corrected for the Equation of Time.There are three declination lines on each dial. Arabic numerals are used and the dials show BST. The easterly dial shows 5:30am to 1:30pm in half and quarter hours while the westerly dial shows 12:30pm to 9:30pm similarly divided. The north dial has dedications to V M Dickinson, M J C Wright, H Addy and R Addy.

DIAL IMAGES 1

DIAL IMAGES 2

Images taken from the designer’s magisterial book Sundials: History, Art, People, Science. The design below seems an excellent example of art meeting science.

GSS Category: Pillar Dial; Modern Sundial; Pillar Sundial

Credits: Photos by John Renner; material from the book by Mark Lennox-Boyd; British Sundial Society

KINGSBURY EPISCOPI . SOM . ST MARTIN – Scratch Dial

St Martin . Kingsbury Episcopi . Som

ST MARTIN . KINGSBURY EPISCOPI . SOM

GRADE 1 † C14, C15 with C19 restorations. Predominantly Perp. A large and impressive building in a small community, admired by PEV: ‘of great interest’. A companion to nearby Huish Episcopi. 9m NW of Yeovil. 50.9865 / -2.8042 / ST436210

NOTE: this post has been superseded in April 2024 after a visit in sunshine. The faint dial markings owing to poor light are now legible. The text is much the same. See the new post HERE

DIAL

St Martin . Kingsbury Episcopi . Som – Scratch Dial

The dial is located on the W buttress on the S side, and has a gnomon hole large enough to be seen from the church path. DEH visited in Sept 1912 and noted that, because the dial is about 8′ above ground level, it would have been moved to its present position during reconstruction of the tower (the oldest part of the church).

The dial is very eroded, and it is now hard to make out the details. DEH describes a complete wheel of thin lines without a circle. More than a hundred years later, the design is very faint indeed. Neither inspection nor photos reveal what DEH will have seen.

GSS Category: Scratch Dial

All photos: Keith Salvesen

PENALLT OLD CHURCH . MONMOUTH . ST MARY – Vertical Dial

St Mary . Penallt Old Church . Monmouth

GRADE 1 † Records from 1254; low C14 tower (1st stage) later heightened; mainly C15 / 16. C16 waggon roofs. Bells from C17. Restorations 1870s. BLB notes coped gable with apex cross, but omits the prominent dial. A fine hillside church with wonderful views from high above the Wye valley. 6m S of Monmouth. 51.7932 / -2.6945 / SO521107

St Mary . Penallt Old Church . Monmouth – Vertical Dial

DIAL

An excellent dial, easy to miss. The tree-lined avenue that now leads to the church completely obscures the dial as you approach up the path. Trying to view the dial from other vantage points gives a sideways view. Attempting to take clear shots of the dial is a pleasurable challenge. Move branches aside.

The dial makes for an attractive gable end, and is surmounted by a cross. It is fairly damaged / eroded. A 6-to-6 dial with noon marked by a cross; IIII as IV. The gnomon is modern and rather squiggly / shiny for an old dial.

Dating the dial is not easy. A broad comparison with similar dial designs suggests ± 1800.

The Old Church is in a lovely setting, and besides TRELLECK this is the most rewarding dial to admire in the immediate area. Take a small picnic and sit in the churchyard for peak enjoyment. Other treats include a handsome door (1532) and a walk-though squint.

GSS Category: Vertical Dial

All photos: Keith Salvesen

WIGMORE . HEREFS . ST JAMES – Scratch Dials

St James . Wigmore . Herefs

ST JAMES . WIGMORE . HEREFS

GRADE I On a hilltop overlooking the village, next to the ruins of Wigmore Castle. Saxon origins with good remains of herringbone brickwork visible; early Norman nave c1050. Extended / altered / restored from C14 (tower) on. An impression of a fortified church, esp. tower at W end. 9m from Ludlow. 52.3166 /  -2.8626 / SO412690

DIALS

DIAL 1

Dial 1 is on the SE face of the buttress in NE corner of the chancel (ie at the back of E end of the church), so at some stage re-sited as of little use for its intended purpose it its current position. There are 2 lines radiating from the style hole in the dial stone. In canonical terms, the deeper cut line equates roughly with Nones, and the upper line with Vespers, an unusually specific emphasis on the afternoon and evening, with no line for noon or earlier.

I wondered if, when relocated, the dial stone was rotated by 90º anticlockwise. If ‘corrected’, the short line would be the noon line, and the deeper-cut line would mark Tierce. But it is not very convincing and probably I am overthinking a very simple dial.

DIAL 1 ROTATED 90º

BSS DIAGRAM

DIAL 2

Dial 2 on the wall of S aisle is similarly simple with 2 lines only. One does not actually meet the gnomon. Of the sort that can be read more easily in B&W

DIAL 3

Dial 3 is low down on chancel, S doorway. There are 7 pocks in a semicircle, with the gnomon hole top centre. When I visited there were various obstacles in the supposed location. I found nothing to match the diagram below, and having moved a large planter to one side, this is the nearest pattern I could find.

SAXON HERRINGBONE PATTERN

GSS Category: Scratch Dial

All photos Keith Salvesen except Dial 2 (BSS records)

LLANGARRON . HEREFS . ST DEINST – Pillar Dial; Scratch Dial(?); Consecration Cross

St Deinst . Llangarron . Herefs

ST DEINST . LLANGARRON . HEREFS

GRADE 1 † C14 & C15; records of C11 origins; trace Norman interlace patterns. Restorations ±1900; later replacement of the top of the spire, repurposed as sundial pillar. Only 1 other church (Itton, nearby) with this Dedication.  7m N of Monmouth; 7m SW of Ross-on-Wye. 51.8871 / -2.6838 /  SO530211

PILLAR (STEEPLE) DIAL

GV II Tip of spire C14 adapted as horizontal sundial pillar late C19. In churchyard SW of the tower in an ideal place for admiration. Coursed & squared sandstone rubble, circular base. C14 masonry BLB

1. CHURCHYARD VIEW

2. HORIZONTAL DIAL

The dial is octagonal, with quarter-hours marked. IV as IIII. The inscription seems to be Llangarron Parish; and the maker’s name Counsell (though I can find no reference). The Roman numerals are conventional.

SCRATCH DIAL

BSS records a scratch dial with 3 lines on the buttress to W of S porch, in a poor state. Notes include Max. length lines, mm 80. Hard as I looked, I couldn’t find a dial in the given location, or at any height on the buttress. Or elsewhere. Possibly the stonework has deteriorated since the original record was made. The best I can offer is the BSS sketch; and the most promising dial-like area of the buttress.

CONSECRATION CROSS

A fine consecration cross, one of the largest I have seen. One puzzle is that the cross is too large for the stone, so that LHS is cut off at the edge. It seems unlikely that the designer mis-measured to that extent. Possibly the stone was moved and trimmed to fit its present position during restoration.

St Deinst is well described in an online page LLANGARRON HISTORY

GSS Category: Horizontal Dial; Pillar Dial; Scratch Dial; Consecration Cross

All photos: Keith Salvesen

CHARTREUSE DE MÉLAN . TANINGES . FRANCE – Vertical Dial on C13 Abbey

Chartreuse de Mélan . Taninges . France – Vertical Dial

Cat / Salamander Hunky Punk

The Chartreuse was founded in 1285 as a Carthusian nunnery and continued its religious functions until the French Revolution. Thereafter it became a school and in due course an orphanage. A disastrous fire in 1967 destroyed almost all the buildings on the site, with loss of life. Only the church and its cloister now remain. The church is an exhibition space and the lawns around it feature examples of modern art, from interesting via enjoyable to a few that are a matter of personal taste.

Chartreuse de Mélan . Taninges . France – Vertical Dial

The dial is included by MICHEL LALOS in his excellent French Cadrans Solaires site. Anyone who has in interest in sundials in France will benefit hugely by using this free resource. It is accessible, informative, and easy to use – not least because the dials are featured by Départment with a map for dial locations. The entry for Mélan is :

Cadran peu déclinant de l’après-midi, gravé et peint sur enduit, très dégradé, fines lignes, demies, plus de chiffres dans bandeaux, traces de blason et décor

Dial slightly declining in the afternoon, engraved, painted on rendering, very degraded, fine lines, half-hour lines, numbers within a frame, traces of coat of arms and decoration.

There are paint remnants at the top of the dial, where (presumably) it has been protected by the eaves. The gnomon hole at the top of the coat of arms is square. The dial is obviously old and I wondered if it might be dateable. Checking the apparent shape of the escutcheon, I discovered that it was first recorded as an armorial design in late C17 and (conveniently) turns out to be known as French-style. Overall, one might reasonably conclude that this dial is C18.

MEMORIAL STONE 1690

Chartreuse de Mélan . Taninges . France – Memorial Tablet 1690

GSS Category: Vertical Dial; France Sundial; Cadrans Solaires; Dials Abroad

All photos: Keith Salvesen; source used MICHEL LALOS

MORZINE . FRANCE . A Rustic & Rusty Alpine Dial 2021

A charming rustic dial incorporated into an iron balcony in Morzine – a surprise find. It seems accurately designed for its specific location and aspect. Included are its longitude and latitude. The hours marked are (most unusually) from 6 to 17: a dial based on the 24-hour clock. The design includes the sun shining cheerfully above the gnomon with a star on either side. A most enjoyable dial to come across by chance. The motto is one we should all abide by…


GSS Category: Rustic Alpine Sundial; Vertical Dial; New Dial; Sundial Motto

All photos: Keith Salvesen