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Grave cover – John of Dalton
grave-cover | stonework
stone
Intact tapering slab, one long side rougher than other. Incised inscription set centrally preceded by a cross and bordered by a line on either side
☩IOHES⁝DE⁝DALTONA⁝
John of Dalton
Found in 1830. From the Canons' Cemetery.
1865: “Six interesting monumental slabs are now preserved in the south transept, all of them disinterred within the last few years, having been found on the south side of the church. … valuable examples of incised Longobardic letters of the 13th century. They taper but slightly from head to foot, and three of them have plain margins; another is beaded slightly. All the inscriptions run down the middle of the stones, enclosed within parallel lines, and are as follows … ☩IOHES⁝DE⁝DALTONA⁝ … ” [Raine, Preface IIp.lxxx]
In the Slype in 1888.
May not be relevant but: ‘Adam of Dalton is recorded as prior at Wetherill in 1319, 1330 and 1341’ [N Lever; Wetheral Priory, a house of the Benedictine Order, and dedicated to the Holy Trinity and St Constantine, was founded in 1106 from its mother-house of St Mary's Abbey in York.]
2012: “It is proposed that seven gravestones of the canons of Hexham be mounted on the west wall of the new link cloister building between the Abbey and the Carnaby building. This gives acknowledgment to the lives of the Canons who, over a period of 400 years, built the Priory buildings largely as we know them today. Currently randomly scattered around the floors of the Abbey, these inscribed stones represent the most important group from any mediæval monastery in the north of England. These 10th to 12th-century grave markers are rare and impressive carvings.” [Hexham Abbey collection faculty document.pdf, §16]
1.76 m long; 0.41 > 0.36 m wide; 0.20 m thick
north side
Chancel/North Aisle
CND: CNAF3; Drawing: Hodges 1888, Plate 35; Ryder 1995 no.4 pp 115–116