Sherborne Abbey Church

Photo © Jan Lane.

Sherborne Abbey Church at dusk.

Nave and choir of Sherborne Abbey. Photos © Jan Lane.
Interactive satellite map of Sherborne Abbey. For a larger view,
see our England Map or Google Earth download.
Sherborne Abbey Church (officially the Abbey Church of St. Mary the Virgin), in the pretty town of Sherborne in Dorset, is a grand parish church that is considered one of the best examples of Perpendicular architecture in Britain.
Sherborne Abbey is one of only 18 churches to receive five stars in Simon Jenkins' book England's Thousand Best Churches. Jenkins writes:
Abbey and town are both of Ham stone, a glorious material warmer than even the most creamy Cotswold. The church thus sits well in context, its size lightened by windows of the Perpendicular style at its gayest and most confident. ...I would pit Sherborne's roof against any contemporary work of the Italian Renassiance.
Sherborne was once the capital of the Kingdom of Wessex, and its church was a cathedral until Old Sarum (now Salisbury) took over in 1075. The abbey church was founded in 705 AD by St. Aldhelm and later became a Benedictine abbey. Most of what remains today dates from a rebuild in the 15th century.
Sherborne Abbey is famed for its Perpendicular architecture, especially its beautiful fan vaulting that covers virtually the entire interior. The fan vaults are expertly executed and each fan is a complete semicircle.
The vault intersections are decorated with bosses that are masterpieces of medieval carving. They reflect current events and society in 15th-century Sherborne, and include the red and white roses of the civil war, the coat of arms of Henry VII, and simple scenes of domestic life and legends. There are several Green Men with foliage emerging from their mouths. Look for a mermaid holding a mirror and comb high up in the eastern bay of the nave.
More charming medieval carvings are in the choir, where 10 misericords survive intact. Scenes depicted here include a woman beating her husband, a master beating a boy (the welts on his bottom can be seen) and an old man selling cherries.
The church bells ring out clear and strong, led by "Great Tom," a tenor bell given to the abbey by Cardinal Wolsey. The abbey church contains many notable tombs, including those of Alfred the Great's two brothers, Ethelred and Ethelbert, and the Elizabethan poet Thomas Wyatt. All are located in the northeast corner.
Across Abbey Close from the church is an almshouse built in 1437, a rare surviving example of a medieval hospital. One wing provides accomodation for Sherborne's public school. Other sights of interest in Sherborne include two small castles (both associated with Sir Walter Raleigh), and a museum.
Quick Facts
| Location: | Sherborne, Dorset, England |
| Contact: | 01935/812 452; vicar@sherborneabbey.com |
| Website: | www.sherborneabbey.com |
| Hours: | April-Oct: daily 8-6; Nov-March: daily 8-4 |
| Cost: | Free |
- Sherborne Hotels - Expedia.com
- Sherborne Hotel Reviews - TripAdvisor
Sources
- The Rough Guide to England, 7th ed. (May 2006), 301.
- Simon Jenkins, England's Thousand Best Churches (2001), 160-61.
- Official Website of Sherborne Abbey









