TEMPLE BALSALL

Temple Balsall
Warwickshire


Temple Balsall takes its name
from the Knights Templar.

Church of St Mary
Church of St Mary Through Trees Temple Balsall lies near the centre of the old Forest of Arden.

Here, in a woodland glade, in an isolated place, you find a church.

But this is no little parish church, more like a cathedral built in a forest.

There are several more pictures of the countryside around Temple Balsall on the Countryside Views page.

Church of St Mary The Knights Templar were formed in 1119, to provide military protection for pilgrims to the Holy Land. There is more about the Templars on my separate page History and Mysteries of The Knights Templar.

Around 1162, the manor of Balsall was given by Roger de Mowbray to the Knights Templar, who built a Hall and chapel on a small hill in wooded meadows here.

Detailed records of the manor exist from a nationwide survey conducted in 1185. By 1308 the Knights' estate included 100 cattle, and 500 sheep. Preceptaries around the country, like the one at Temple Balsall, were run as working farms, and the income derived used to finance the Templars' military operations in the Holy Land.

This picture shows the Old Hall of the Knights Templar.

The external brickwork is 18th Century, but the internal timbers have been dated to around 1180 and are original.

This photo is taken from the churchyard of the Church of St Mary.

Templars Hall
Templars Hall
Hall and Church In 1312 the Knights Templar were disbanded under a papal directive, and their properties were transferred to the Knights Hospitaller, another crusading order of Knights. The Knights Hospitaller built the Church of St Mary.

This picture shows the Old Hall on the left, with the Church of St Mary behind it.

The Knights Hospitaller were disbanded, by Henry VIII as part of his dissolution of monasteries, and the Church fell into neglect.

The manor subsequently came into the ownership of the Crown, and was given by Elizabeth I to Robert Dudley, owner of Kenilworth Castle. It passed to two of his granddaughters, Lady Anne Holbourne and Lady Katherine Leveson, who restored the Church sometime around 1670.


Church of St Mary Interior

In a bequest in her will, in 1674, Lady Katherine Leveson also established this nearby almshouse for elderly ladies, which is still in use today.

Almshouses
Richard Jago, an Edwardian writer, wrote the following poetic description of Temple Balsall:

The Muse of Balsall in her faithfull page
shall celebrate: for long beneath thy roof
A band of warriors bold, of high renown,
To martial deeds and hazardous emprize
Sworn, for defence of Jerusalem's sacred walls,
From Paynim foes and holy pilgrimage
Now other guests thou entertainst
A female band, by female charity sustained.


Saracens Head Inn

The Saracen's Head


The local Inn, which is about 1 mile away, along the road to Coventry, is named the Saracen's Head.

The inn-sign, shown here, depicts a conventional portrait of a moor.

There are also alternative meanings to The Saracen's Head.

Saracens Head Inn Sign



Medieval Road Names
Near Temple Balsall

Two Hob Lanes

On Stephan Defoes Baphomet Page you can see a suggested image of the Templar icon, Baphomet.

The picture at the right shows how a similar character is depicted on the cover of the Oxford edition of Shakespeare's Midsummer Night's Dream (The Dream of St John's Eve).

Puck
Hob Lane, BarstonA name commonly given to this figure in English folklore is Hob.

Two roads quite near Temple Balsall, leading to it from the North and from the East, are both named Hob Lane.

This is the Hob Lane, to the North.

Hob Lane, Burton GreenAnd this is the Hob Lane to the East.

The road from Coventry becomes Hob Lane about 3 miles from Temple Balsall.

See also my page "Instances of Hob in Modern Fiction" (link just below).


There are several more pictures of the countryside around Temple Balsall
on the Countryside Views page.

More Warwickshire Churches


Heart-of-England Main Page

Be sure to visit the
Heart of England Main Page.

This has more about the Forest of Arden, and photos and details of many other attractions in Warwickshire and the Northern Cotswolds, that you will also enjoy visiting.

Heart of England
If you are interested in The Knights Templar you may also like some of our following pages:

The Knights Templar
Symbolism of The Phoenix at Coventry
Myths about Divine Messengers
Hob in Modern Fiction (Tolkien, Quatermass & Superman)
Et in Arcadia Ego (tombs at Preston Bagot)



E-mail John Webb
Heart-of-England Main Page

BBC Coventry and Warwickshire