Markenfield Hall, south of
Ripon, reputably the oldest, complete moated house in the country, opens up to
the public under the Historic Houses scheme for a few days a year. I visited the place for one of their “Mop-Up Monday” tours, arranged to cope
with the growing flood of interested visitors.
Only the name on a
gate-post hints at the Hall’s existence: a tight turn takes the car on to a long track
which runs through fields for almost a mile before the present Hall
and its cluster of farm barns and buildings appears.
The Markenfield estate
borders the Fountains Abbey lands and the Hall, built in 1310, situated close
to the mediaeval Ripley to Ripon
Road. Back then, any passing traveller would be aware of the
Hall’s imposing presence while those within had early warning of interesting people
or troublesome groups using that stretch of road.
The builder was John De Markenfield, Canon of
Ripon Cathedral. He was also Chancellor to King Edward II, who granted John permission to
crenellate and fortify the walls as defence against powerful Northern barons
and marauding Scots. On the outer
wall of original hall, one can see where the stone staircase once led up to the living
quarters on the first floor of the square tower, providing more safety. Not only did the Markenfields
defend themselves well: they married well and wealthily, adding the coats of arms of
several heiresses to the outer south wall of the great kitchen block.
However, on that fine
autumn morning of my visit, the setting seemed idyllic and peaceful. We gathered in the
car-park beside the impressive Victorian farm buildings, admiring the pair of
black swans and the ducklings on the moat, before being led across
the wooden drawbridge and through the Tudor gatehouse. Through the kitchen we
went and up to the lofty Great Hall, scented with wood-smoke, and which
contained sofas and tables stacked with relevant books and histories, as well
as several objects and portraits relating to the family.
Generation by generation,
the Markenfields had risen, surviving Lancastrian and Yorkist loyalties and fighting
for the King at Agincourt, Flodden Field and
other battles. However, it was in the Chapel of St Michael the Archangel, a space so small we could only crowd in twelve
at a time, that one saw the emblem of their downfall.
The Markenfields were once a fiercely Catholic household and masses had
been said in this chapel for over two and a half centuries. Signs of faith are set into
the walls there. Beside the altar is a double piscina, a kind of basin used by
priests for ceremonially washing vessels after communion. A squint is cut through the corner-stones
of another wall so that daily mass could be observed from the lord’s private chamber.
Then, on the far wall,
hangs particularly doleful treasure : a scarlet banner embroidered in
gold with the Five Wounds of Christ, which was once a famous devotional image,
especially in the strongly Catholic North of England.
The deeply revered
standard is rather luridly decorated with a sacred heart and chalice, the wounded
hands and feet of Christ and a crown of thorns, and it testifies to the family’s faith
and their role during two rebellions against the Crown, and to the loss of
Markenfield itself.
The first, The Pilgrimage of Grace, was in 1536. This rebellion
was led by Robert Aske, brother-in law to the Sir Thomas Markenfield of the
time. The Northern lords and people rose against Henry VIII, petitioning
him to halt the Dissolution of the Monasteries and raising other grievances. Henry and
his Commissioners appeared to be deliberating: a long game which weakened the rebel’s hands and which
finally led to the fierce suppression of Fountains Abbey and other religious establishments
in 1539. Robert Aske was executed on Clifford’s Tower in York, but Sir Thomas and his family survived, at least for a generation.
Then came
the second rebellion - The Rising of the
North - led by the first Sir Thomas’s son Thomas. Richard Norton
of Norton Conyers, his uncle, was standard bearer, charged with carrying the famous and gory
banner.
On 20th
November 1569, a host of rebels gathered in the courtyard of Markenfield
Hall itself. After hearing Mass in the chapel, the leaders set out on
their mission. Their plan was to remove Queen Elizabeth – the "illegitimate heir" –
and replace her with Mary Queen of Scots who would restore the practice of the
Catholic faith. Defeated by the Queen’s troops, most
of the rebels were killed or executed. Thomas and Richard fled the country and died in
poverty.
Markenfield, both house and estate, were confiscated for High
Treason. The Hall passed out of the
family and into other hands, becoming an insignificant tenanted farmhouse with absentee
landlords. In 1777, the turnpike and new toll road (now the A61) shifted all passing traffic a
mile further away and Markenfield Hall disappeared from public life. However, this very
neglect and insignificant income meant that the property was not improved, the great
hall was largely unaltered, the moat left un-drained and all the original features unchanged.
In 1761, the Hall
was brought into the hands of Grantleys of Markenfield, descendants of the
original owners, who took more care of the property. Gradually - and especially recently - the Hall was restored
to comfort and use again, from the Courtyard and Lodgings to the Undercroft,
the Great Hall and even the Four Poster bedroom (once part of the solar.)
The
Chapel too, feels peaceful in its restoration, with a rare portrait of Sir Richard
Norton now looking down from the wooden panelling, and candles lit below the
small array of icons in a devotional alcove. Services and masses are
sometimes held here and each August, a Tridentine Requiem Mass is said in
commemoration of Sir Thomas Markenfield and three other members of the family –
Anne, Isabel and Elizabeth – who were all witnesses to the passions and suffering aroused
by that sacred scarlet banner and the Five Wounds.
The Chapel of St Michael
was also used for the wedding of the writer Ian Curteis and Lady Deidre
Curteis, widow of the seventh Lord Grantley – a Protestant and a Catholic - who
have made Markenfield Hall their home.
P.S. After my visit to Markenfield, I bought myself a replacement copy of H.F.M.
Prescott’s 1952 work, THE MAN ON A DONKEY, her wonderful novel about the
Pilgrimage of Grace that first introduced me to the history of Yorkshire and
the North several years ago.
This copy will not be borrowed!
Penny
Dolan
I enjoyed this - and thanks for the book tip!
ReplyDeleteIf anyone can't get as far north as Markenfield, there's also Stokesey Castle on the borders of Wales, near Ludlow. It was built in the 13th Century and still has its great hall, wall and defensive tower. The moat's dried up, though.
I was reminded of it by your account of Markenfield because Stokesay survived for much the same reason - it was abandoned, forgotten and used for centuries as a byre. Only in the 19th Century did a keen historian recognise what it was.
The wedding of a Protestant and a Catholic - that is good to read after all the horror. Looks like an amazing place to visit - thanks, Penny!
ReplyDeleteI'd never heard of Markenfield before. These old houses are so good at making history come alive.
ReplyDeleteHello Penny - Markenfield calling! Thank you so much for a wonderful write-up and lovely comments. I think we may have spoken at the desk after the tour - if we did then it was lovely to meet you.
ReplyDelete