Daily Mail

Couple chop down their leylandii and find a Norman chapel in their garden

- By David Wilkes

ALL they wanted was to get rid of the leylandii blocking sunlight to their cottage.

When Mary and Mike Hudd took an axe to the tree, however, they ended up shedding light on a centurieso­ld mystery.

For buried beneath their front garden was a long-lost medieval chapel.

And despite their entire front garden being reduced to a series of muddy trenches, archaeolog­y enthusiast Mrs Hudd is delighted with the find.

The retired teacher, who has lived in the cottage since 1968, said: ‘How we have managed to miss it in our garden I don’t know. We had a drive put in in the 1970s and it missed the southwest corner by inches. The east corner just misses the road.’

The foundation­s of the 12th century building were discovered after the leylandii and several other trees were removed from the couple’s garden in the Wiltshire hamlet of Bincknoll.

Archaeolog­ists were called in to investigat­e and are convinced they have found the early Norman chapel, the exact location of which had been a mystery for centuries.

The 19ft by 52ft building comprised two rooms – a chancel and a knave – believed to have been built around 1100 after the Norman conquest.

Archaeolog­ists say it had religious significan­ce long before that too. Evidence was also uncovered of an earlier Anglo Saxon ‘cell’ measuring 16ft by 16ft. This could have been used by a priest to lead ceremonies while the worshipper­s stood outside.

The last official mention of Bincknoll’s medieval chapel was in 1609, when it was described as ‘decayed’. Mrs Hudd, 68, said: ‘ It’s been brilliant. I’m interested in history and archaeolog­y anyway so to have a bunch of people here has been fantastic.

‘I’ve certainly been helping out. I have been in the trenches on my knees. I have never spent so much time on my knees in a chapel before.’

With the excavation now nearly complete, however, Mrs Hudd faces the prospect of having to cover the site over again to protect it from deteriorat­ion. She said: ‘I will be disappoint­ed to cover it up.’

Emma Elton of the Broad Town Archaeolog­y Project, a group of volunteers who carried out 40 days of excavation­s on the site, said: ‘It was amazing to find what everyone thought was lost. It’s not what you expect to find in someone’s garden.’

 ??  ?? Buried treasure: Mary Hudd on a Norman wall in her garden. Inset: Early Saxon part of the chapel
Buried treasure: Mary Hudd on a Norman wall in her garden. Inset: Early Saxon part of the chapel
 ??  ?? Before the dig: Front lawn with the leylandii and chapel hidden beneath
Before the dig: Front lawn with the leylandii and chapel hidden beneath

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