Russell Chamberlain

In search of Alfred

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In 1788, a bridewell (or prison) was being constructed in part of the abbey grounds. The governor wanted a garden and ordered that the huge lumps of masonry which littered the area be removed. The easiest way to do this was to dig a series of pits and simply push the lumps into them. During the digging, three stone coffins were found, one of which had been completely — and expensively — encased in lead. The lead was stripped off and sold for three guineas, and the coffins were broken up and, together with the human remains, dumped back in the hole. An antiquarian, Captain Howard, interviewed the governor and became convinced that the coffins had been those of the royal family.

When the bridewell was demolished in 1850, John Mellor, an amateur local antiquarian, conducted digs on the site. He claimed to have discovered the royal remains, together with the lead tablets, and displayed them for payment. His reputation was such that someone quipped, ‘It is surprising that he did not find the burnt cakes.’ There was considerable local uproar, and Mellor was constrained to bury the fragments in the graveyard of the nearby Saxon church of St Bartholomew; their site is marked by a slab with an incised cross.

Today Hyde is a suburb of Winchester, and, though barely ten minutes’ walk from the city centre, is a world in itself. Hyde Street, the Roman road to London, is still a main artery, but leading off it are tranquil roads winding through hidden gardens. A modern estate nestles among the abbey ruins, with a small stream burbling between green banks. A blacksmith works his forge as his predecessors have done for centuries (one of them forged Mellor’s lead tablets). The Historic Resources Centre, which organised the recent archaeological excavations, occupies the kitchen block of a long-vanished mansion.

In 1985 British Telecom excavated a trench in the area to lay a fibre-optic cable, and uncovered an angle of ancient stone. Graham Scobie, the ebullient French– Canadian archaeologist based at the Centre, who organised the excavations, takes up the story. ‘We began looking not for a grave, but for a church in order to find the grave.’ The excavations went on for five years. ‘It was an entirely community affair. Altogether we drew in some 3,000 volunteers.’ Most of the area had been built over in the late 19th century and there was a dead-end road running through. ‘We traced the outline by a series of trial pits, then joined up the dots, so to speak.’

The ‘joined-up dots’ disclosed an immense church, fully as big as the great cathedral itself, its total destruction evidence of the religious fervour that wrought such changes. Henry VIII’s Commissioner, who was responsible for its ruin, had boasted in a letter to Thomas Cromwell: ‘We intend both at Hyde and St Mary’s to sweep away all the rotten bones that be called relics.’

Among the recent finds was that piece of stone I held in my hand. ‘It’s oolitic limestone. Oolitic was never used in Winchester after the Norman Conquest. The abbey was built in 1109. Therefore,’ Scobie confirmed, ‘that piece of stone must have come from one of the three coffins containing the royal remains, brought from Winchester.’

The foundations of the most important part of the church, the chancel, fortunately lie under open ground. This fact has been utilised by the landscape architect Kim Wilkie in his brilliantly simple archaeological park that now marks the spot. It is situated at the end of the road where a glass engraving by Tracey Sheppard depicts, in a suitably ghostly manner, the chancel as it would probably have appeared. Beyond is a gravel area, with a line of tiles marking the outline of the foundations. The sites of the great pillars are marked by shrubs held within metal railings. And in the very centre are three immense grave slabs, each marked with a cross, indicating the last resting places of Alfred the Great, his wife Ealhswith and their son Edward.

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