HISTORY WHITBY ABBEY HISTORICAL DESCRIPTION TEACHER S KIT

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HISTORY TEACHER S KIT ALSO AVAILABLE TO DOWNLOAD INFORMATION ACTIVITIES IMAGES The imposing abbey remains sit on the headland overlooking the town and sea. With its long history and prominent location carefully selected by the Anglo-Saxons, Whitby later developed into a successful medieval monastery. Whitby Abbey offers the opportunity for historical and geographical studies. An inspiration for artists and authors over the centuries, the site also provides an excellent stimulus for creative writing and art and design projects. HISTORICAL DESCRIPTION The first monastery was founded by King Oswy of Northumbria. He made a vow to found 12 monasteries and give his baby daughter, Elfled, to religious life if he defeated Penda, King of Mercia. This he did at the Battle of Winwaed in 655, and two years later Hilda, Abbess of Hartlepool, took the young princess and established a monastery at Whitby for both men and women. This monastery soon achieved a high reputation and was chosen as the venue for the Synod of Whitby in 664. This was convened by King Oswy to reconcile Celtic and Roman differences and to determine the future direction of the English Church. This monastery was destroyed by the Danes in 867. In 1078 the abbey was re-established by Aelflaed, one of William the Conqueror s knights who became a monk. The first stone buildings went up in the late 11th or early 12th-century. A programme of rebuilding began in the early 13th-century, starting with the east the most important end followed by the north and south transepts, the central tower and, 20 years later, three bays of the nave. By then the cost of the work had driven the abbey into debt. The remainder of the nave was not completed until the 14th-century, and as such, its windows are clearly in a different style. The great west window was inserted in the 15th-century; its shape is indicative of an even later style. In the 12th-century the number of monks reached just over 40 but, after the Black Death hit Whitby in 1349, numbers were reduced to approximately 20. The abbey was surrendered to the King s Commissioners on 14 December 1539, when there were 22 monks and domestic staff in residence. In 1540 the abbey site was leased to Richard Cholmley. He bought it outright in 1555 and his family held it until the end of the 18th-century. Their home was rebuilt several times, using stones from the domestic buildings of the abbey. A fine new wing, the so-called Banqueting House, was added in the 1670s as a major modernisation of the house. Its fine, symmetrical façade still stands. The ruins of the church were probably left because they served as a landmark for sailors. BOOKING AND SITE INFORMATION: 0370 333 0606 bookeducation@english-heritage.org.uk www.english-heritage.org.uk/onlinebooking

TIMELINE 654 70 Oswy, King of Northumbria. 655 Oswy defeats Penda at Battle of Winwaed. 657 Hilda comes to Whitby and establishes double monastery. 664 Synod of Whitby. 7th-century 8th-century 9th-century 867 Danes attack Whitby. Monastery abandoned. 10th-century 1073 Reinfrid re-establishes monastery. New church built. 11th-century 12th-century 1349 Black Death comes to Whitby. 13th-century 14th-century c.1220 Rebuilding work starts with presbytery. 1220 60 Rebuilding of transepts and crossing. 15th-century 1633 36 Hugh Cholmley rebuilds house. c.1670 72 Sir Hugh Cholmley II adds a new wing to the house. 1830 Central tower collapses. 1866 Site passed to Sir Charles Strickland. Extensive alterations. Much of Banqueting House demolished. 16th-century 17th-century 18th-century 19th-century 20th-century 1539 Suppression of Whitby Abbey. 1540 Site leased to Richard Cholmley. 1583 93 Francis Cholmley builds timber-framed house. 1736 South transept collapses. 1762 Nave collapses. 1794 West front collapses. 1914 Church shelled by German warships. 1920 Abbey handed to the Office of Works, which then became part of the Ministry of Works. It subsequently became the Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission for England, and finally English Heritage in 1984. 2 OF 2

INFORMATION TEACHER S KIT ALSO AVAILABLE TO DOWNLOAD HISTORY ACTIVITIES IMAGES LOCATION North Yorkshire YO22 4JT. On the cliff top, east of Whitby. OS Map 94, OL27: NZ903112. HOW TO GET THERE Bus Moorsbus M17, Esk Valley 27, X40, X56, 56, Arriva X93, 93, 95, Coastal & Country 26, 96, MDM 99, Yorkshire Coastliner 840. Rail Whitby station 0.5 mile. FACILITIES Parking Council-run car parks nearby (charge payable). The site entrance by the car park is seasonal (it is only open April to October at present). Between November and March visitors must use the north entrance. Shop Guidebooks, souvenirs, etc. Refreshments Tearoom (managed by Youth Hostel Association). Toilets Available in car park, WC adapted for wheelchair users. These are public toilets owned and managed by Scarborough Borough Council. Visitor centre Maximum 20 students at any one time in Cholmley s House visitor centre. Subject to availability; pre-booking required. LEARNERS GO FREE Educational visits are free to English Heritage properties and should be booked at least 14 days in advance via the Education Bookings Team: 0370 333 0606 bookeducation@english-heritage.org.uk www.english-heritage.org.uk/onlinebooking Limit on party number 80. Required teacher/adult helper to pupil ratio 1:5 for KS1 and below, 1:8 for KS2, and 1:15 for KS3 and above. Pupils must be supervised at all times. Please remember that you are responsible for completing your own risk assessment. Hazard information is available on the website when booking. NEARBY AND RELATED SITES Scarborough Castle, North Yorkshire YO11 1HY. BOOKING AND SITE INFORMATION: 0370 333 0606 bookeducation@english-heritage.org.uk www.english-heritage.org.uk/onlinebooking

2 OF 4

THE NAVE The three bays at the eastern end were built in the mid 13th-century and have lancet windows. The fourth and fifth bays were completed in the 14th-century and have more elaborate windows with ornate tracery. The doorway in the sixth bay is also decorated and was the main entrance into the church for visitors. Three arches from the nave have been reconstructed at the edge of the site and one of the nave columns was reconstructed in the 18th-century. THE WEST WALL This wall has the ceremonial doorway into the church. Above it are the remains of the great west window, inserted in the 15th-century in the Perpendicular style (flatter arches). On each side of the door are wall arches with modern stonework. This is repair work after damage caused by bombardment from the Imperial German Navy in the First World War. A doorway in the north corner leads to a spiral staircase. Above it is a diamond-shaped window with four quatrefoils (four-leafed lights). THE TOWER The only remains of this are the four pillars which supported it. They needed to be much larger than the pillars along the aisles due to the heavy weight of the tower. THE NIGHT STAIRS Only fragments remain. They led up to the dormitory which adjoined the south transept. Below the stairs is a large recess believed to be a book cupboard. THE NORTH TRANSEPT The north wall of the transept is similar to the east wall of the church but is more decorated. The columns have foliage capitals and there are leaves and flowers carved on the inside and the outside. The butresses (which support the outside wall) are more elaborate and have many niches with carved canopies. There are also more carved heads on the north wall. Unlike the east wall of the church the lancets of the top tier are all the same height, leaving space for a large rose window. Inside the transept is a doorway leading to a spiral staircase and there is an aumbry for storing sacred vessels. THE LATE 11TH-CENTURY CHURCH The foundations of the east end of this church are exposed. Like many abbey churches built in the 11th-century, the east end consisted of a central apse (semi-circular end wall) with a smaller apse on each side. This church also had chapels with apses in the transepts. THE EAST WALL Outside This has three tiers of lancet (tall and thin) windows, typical of the early Gothic period, many with dog-tooth decoration. The windows on the top tier are graduated to fill the gable. On either side are octagonal turrets. Inside The square recesses on either side of the site of the altar are aumbries, where sacred vessels were kept. At the corner of the east wall there is another recess with a channel above it, which was a piscina or container for Holy Water. The windows are flanked by blind arcading (decorative arches placed against a solid wall). 3 OF 4

THE CHOIR This was where the monks worshipped. The lay brothers used the nave. THE SACRISTY Only the foundations remain. It was used for storing the church s devotional objects, vessels and furnishings. THE PRESBYTERY This contained the high altar and major shrines. It had aisles on either side. In the north aisle is a vaulted roof with bosses (where the ribs meet) carved with a lion and a serpent. The presbytery is divided into seven bays with three tiers of arches. The middle row is called the triforium. It has two pointed arches under one large round arch with dog-tooth ornament. The top row is called the clerestory. It has a single pointed window flanked by pairs of wall arches. There is also a walkway running around the clerestory. 4 OF 4

ACTIVITIES TEACHER S KIT ALSO AVAILABLE TO DOWNLOAD HISTORY INFORMATION IMAGES PREPARING FOR YOUR VISIT To prepare your students for the visit they should: n Know why monasteries were founded and where their income came from. n Be familiar with the Rule of St Benedict and how this determined the life of a monk. n Be able to identify architectural features and styles in a church. n Understand the reasons for the Suppression of the Monasteries. To do this your students could: n Look at photographs and artists impressions to see how the interior of the church might have appeared. n Analyse the layout of a typical Benedictine abbey to find out how many other buildings would have been there and how they were grouped in relation to the church. n Study the ground plan of Whitby Abbey to distinguish between the remains of the 13th-century and 14th-century churches. n Research the daily routine of a monk and then construct a daily timetable to follow on site. n Learn the names of different parts of a church by making visual glossaries or labelling a photograph or site plan. If your visit includes a geographic element it will help if students can recognise and explain geographic features which they will see around the abbey. Similarly, for a science focus it will be useful if students can explain why buildings decay, why historic buildings are conserved and the problems which this creates. Take photographs during your planning visit for followup work which can be used on interactive whiteboards, etc. Measuring equipment and cameras will help students record and interpret the physical remains. ON-SITE AND FOLLOW-UP WORK Many of the suggested activities have a clear historical emphasis but there are opportunities within them for cross-curricular work. All approaches will allow KS1 and KS2 teachers to develop students literacy and numeracy skills. n Look at the location of the abbey. Ask students to list the advantages and disadvantages of building an abbey on this site. Consider the seclusion of the site, access to a harbour, high vantage point, space for building, association with a past religious community, supply of food, availability of building materials (the local landscape would have been a lot different then). Relate students findings to a map of the area when you return to school. n Draw attention to the sheer size of the church. Ask students why the monks wanted such a large church building. Was it for the glory of God, a place of pilgrimage, to accommodate large numbers of people for worship, to stage religious ceremonies or to compete with other abbeys? n Find evidence to show how the design of the church reflects Christian traditions. Important points include its east west alignment, its cross shape, tombs, space for altars and chapels, attention to cleanliness and sacrificial washing, the importance of divine light flowing into the church, strong verticals and arches pointing to heaven, space for ceremonial processions and separation of the monks and lay people during worship (people deemed purer could sit closer to God at the east end). BOOKING AND SITE INFORMATION: 0370 333 0606 bookeducation@english-heritage.org.uk www.english-heritage.org.uk/onlinebooking

n Devise an audio tour around the church for a visitor with visual impairment which explains what different parts of the church were used for. Give directions and count paces. Describe what features look like, indicate how big they are and suggest what visitors could touch. What sound effects might be appropriate for different parts of the church? Prepare a rough draft on site for working on back at school. n Make drawings of different areas of the site for backdrops for role-play back at school. Drawings can be scanned and then used on an interactive whiteboard for instant scenery. Puppet shows are simple but creative means of telling a story and often involve group work. Develop stories around a fictitious event in the abbey or to illustrate the life of a monk. n Ask students to find and draw examples of shapes (square, triangle, rectangle, circle, diamond, octagon, cross, arches, trefoil, quatrefoil). The design of the church has also created many examples of rotation, repetition and reflection. Get students to record examples of these transformations or photograph them yourself. Back at school use students own drawings of shapes on site to develop patternmaking exercises. These could be applied to a range of decorative souvenirs. COMPARE AND CONTRAST Give students enlarged photocopies of the Buck engraving made in 1711 and the print by F Gibson showing the abbey in 1789. On site, ask students to colour those parts of the abbey which have disappeared and, in another colour, those parts which still remain. These two prints, along with students own elevation drawings and detailed studies, will enable them to make a model of the church as it might have looked when it was complete. COMMUNITY BUILDINGS Compare the size of the abbey with buildings in Whitby which can be seen from the site. Make a note of the largest buildings and what their functions are. Follow this up back at school by comparing a plan of a complete abbey with your own town plan. Work out which buildings have medieval counterparts (hospital, churches, guest houses, eating places, memorials, production units, storehouses, transport facilities, leisure amenities or places of learning). Students may begin to appreciate how a monastic community aimed to provide for itself and could be seen as a microcosm of a much larger settlement. ARCHITECTURAL RECORDING Use the inserted A4 line drawing of the north front as a frame for developing students observation skills and to focus on significant details. Before you photocopy this drawing you could delete sections which students have to sketch in during their visit. 2 OF 4

TALKING HEADS Choose five words to describe moods, expressions or personalities. Ask students to go around the site deciding which carved head best fits each word. Afterwards, get students to select one head and think of five more words to describe it. Write these on cards and redistribute them to students, asking them to identify which head the descriptions refer to. Now, ask students to imagine that these heads have feelings and to suggest what they might feel about the present use of the site, the influx of tourists rather than pilgrims and worshippers. How do they feel about the present state of the abbey compared with its former use? These responses can be used to stimulate language work back at school such as poetry, storytelling and drama (especially meaningful if students can make masks to step into role). ARCHITECTURAL ORNAMENT The present church is much larger and more elaborate than its predecessor. Help students to appreciate this by focusing on the architectural detail of the east front and the north front. Ask students to compare them and, by identifying what is different and what is the same, you will encourage them to look closely. Answers can be recorded verbally (using MP3 recorders) or as annotated drawings. To give students a starting point, give them sheets with a pre-drawn outline or photocopies of the line drawings of the two elevations with sections deleted. Get them to look for ways in which the human form, animal forms and plants inspired decoration in the church (binoculars may be needed as some very good examples are in high positions). Site sketches can be used to inspire art work back at school. MONASTIC MURDER An excellent activity is to ask students to work in groups to devise a game about the murder of one of the monks at Whitby Abbey. This will refine students descriptive skills. Each group needs to supply a set of statements outlining where different monks were when the crime was committed and what they were doing. One statement in the group has to be incorrect. Give these sets of descriptions to other groups and ask them to work out whose statement is false. INTERVIEWING A MONK Ask students to imagine that the abbot has granted them an interview (TV, radio or newspaper) with one of the monks. Time will be short and students want the monk to convey as much information as possible. With adequate preparation beforehand about life in an abbey and the results of their on-site investigation, students should be able to devise informed questions to help the monk explain the layout of the church, the various functions of each area and what it is like to live only to serve God. Only ten questions are permitted so students must choose their questions carefully. Practise this on site by working in pairs, one partner being the monk and the other the interviewer. 3 OF 4

AN ENTERTAINING EVENT As a group activity, get students to create an event which English Heritage could stage to enhance the visitor experience. To advertise the event students need to prepare text and adapt language for different formats. These include large posters intending to attract attention, leaflets providing more detailed information, short summaries for entries in a What s on column in the local press and scripts for radio adverts. Students could also consider site constraints such as wet weather contingency, basic conservation issues, visitor flow, etc. BUILDING TECHNOLOGY There are excellent examples of arches, vaulting and buttresses which students can investigate using annotated sketches. Look also at the size of the bases of the four columns at the crossing. Why are they so much larger than the bases of other columns? What does this evidence mean? Ask students to look for parts of the abbey where better quality stone and less finished stone was used. Can they explain why? DESIGNING A CAFÉ This is an excellent cross-curricular exercise for groups of pupils. They use and adapt evidence recorded on site and then supplement it with research back at school. Tell your pupils that they are designers commissioned to create a café in a new building. Ask them to: n Plan the layout of the café. They should take into account the needs of less mobile and visually impaired visitors and young children. n Design the internal decoration in a monastic style. Pupils should pay particular attention to windows, floor surfaces, soft furnishings and decorative panels. n Design furniture for it. Base this on drawings of architectural elements from the site. n Devise a range of patterned crockery, table coverings, place mats and napkins. n Research recipes of the time which could be part of the catering and then produce decorative menus. 4 OF 4

IMAGES TEACHER S KIT Visit www.heritage-explorer.org.uk for more copyright-cleared images ALSO AVAILABLE TO DOWNLOAD HISTORY INFORMATION ACTIVITIES View of arches. English Heritage Photo Library BOOKING AND SITE INFORMATION: 0370 333 0606 bookeducation@english-heritage.org.uk www.english-heritage.org.uk/onlinebooking

View of the abbey at sunset from across the pond. Peter Dunn. Source: English Heritage Photo Library 2 OF 7

Top: Interior of the abbey from the west. Bottom: Sunrise view from the north-west. English Heritage Photo Library English Heritage Photo Library 3 OF 7

Evening sunlight on the west door looking along axis of church. English Heritage Photo Library 4 OF 7

Reconstruction drawing of the church presbytery (or choir) in 1500. English Heritage Photo Library 5 OF 7

The North View of Whitby Abbey in the North Riding of Yorkshire. Engraving by Samuel Buck, 1711. English Heritage Photo Library 6 OF 7

Print showing the abbey in 1789 by F Gibson. English Heritage Photo Library 7 OF 7