Lidwell Chapel
| Lidwell Chapel | |
|---|---|
West wall of the chapel | |
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| Alternative names | St Mary's Chapel, Lithwell Chapel, Luidwell Chapel etc. |
| General information | |
| Type | Chapel |
| Location | Dawlish, England |
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| Grid position | SX923758 |
| Technical details | |
| Material | Granite |
| Designations | Grade II Listed Building |
Lidwell Chapel, also known as St Mary's Chapel, is a medieval chapel, now in ruins, within the parish of Dawlish in Devon, England. The chapel is a Grade II listed building, and was first listed in 1951.[1]
Description
[edit | edit source]The ruins of the chapel are situated in a small wood at the base of Little Haldon, an area of heathland near the towns of Dawlish and Teignmouth. A public footpath leads down from the higher ground to the site. There is an associated holy well[2] close beside the ruin, which is now obscured. Only the west wall of the building remains standing, although the foundations of the others can be seen.[1] The ruin is surrounded with a set of iron railings, with a gate at its eastern end, beside which is a wooden sign naming the chapel.
Further down the hill is Lidwell farm, which is likely to have been named after the well with the chapel.
History
[edit | edit source]The chapel is associated with a 14th-century monk called Robert de Middlecote, whose deeds are recorded in the Register of John Grandisson, Bishop of Exeter. De Middlecote is recorded as having raped a woman in the chapel, broken into and robbed a house, and robbed numerous travellers on the nearby road between Teignmouth and Exeter on the heath.[3] A number of other supposed actions of this man are a part of the local legend which surrounds him. One is that he hosted travellers and fed them food laced with a sleep-inducing substance before killing them; he then stole any valuables that they were carrying and threw their corpses into the well.[4][5]
References
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