This relic of the 12th century was painstakingly resurrected from the rubble of the Blitz to stand as a symbol of memory and resilience. Before it became a monument, the chimney was a humble, private fixture. It was part of a grand 12th-century stone house believed to have been the home of Gervaise le Riche, a wealthy port reeve of Southampton.
As the centuries rolled on, the house was repeatedly updated, with new facades and additions built around the ancient core. The chimney itself, with its distinctive diagonal flue, became an invisible part of the structure, hidden from view and largely forgotten. For hundreds of years, it witnessed the changing face of Southampton, its Norman origins obscured by layers of later history.
Then came the devastation of the Second World War. During the Blitz, the Luftwaffe’s bombing raids in 1940 and 1941 laid waste to much of the historic town centre. The house at 79a High Street, along with its neighbours, was reduced to a pile of rubble. But when the dust settled, an incredible sight emerged: the Norman Chimney stood, battered but unbowed, one of the few structures to survive the inferno.
Recognising the immense historical significance of this near-miraculous survival—it is one of only three known Norman chimneys remaining in the country—the Southampton Museums moved quickly to save it. The chimney was carefully dismantled, each stone catalogued and stored away in a depot.
For more than two decades, its pieces lay in limbo, a collection of blocks and mortar with no home. Finally, in 1963, a decision was made to give the chimney a new life. It was meticulously rebuilt, not as part of a new house, but as a free-standing monument in the tranquil setting of the Tudor House Garden.
The Norman Chimney’s journey from a working flue to a hallowed monument speaks to the profound impact chimneys had on domestic life in the Middle Ages.
Before the advent of the chimney, most homes and castles relied on a central open hearth. The fire, used for both heat and cooking, sat in the middle of a large hall, with smoke escaping through a simple hole in the roof, known as a louvre. This meant that the entire hall was constantly filled with smoke, a smoky atmosphere that forced people to live and sleep at floor level to breathe the cleanest air.
The chimney changed everything. It was a luxury, a symbol of immense wealth and status. It allowed the hearth to be moved to a side wall, with the smoke channeled out of the house through a dedicated flue.
This simple innovation had a cascading effect. With the smoke gone, ceilings could be lowered, and rooms could be built on an upper floor for the first time. The great communal hall, once the centre of all activity, began to lose its dominance.
In the new, smokeless rooms, nobles could create private “solar” or “withdrawing” chambers, allowing them to retreat from the bustle of their household. This newfound privacy and comfort, fueled by the chimney, fundamentally altered the social dynamics of medieval life.
The earliest chimneys, like the Southampton and Christchurch Castle examples, featured a “diagonal flue,” a passage that ran at an angle through the thick walls. While an architectural breakthrough, these early flues were prone to downdrafts, and a change in wind direction could send smoke billowing back into the room.
This design was soon replaced by the more efficient vertical flue, but the diagonal flue remains a distinctive and rare feature of Norman architecture.
The Norman Chimney of Southampton, having served its original purpose, now functions as a symbol of this historical revolution. It represents the transition from a smoky, communal existence to a life of private, individualized comfort—saved from destruction and given a new home.
https://www.dailyecho.co.uk/news/25480154.strange-story-southamptons-norman-chimney/?ref=rss
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