Winchester College Publication Winchester College War Cloisters Architecture | Page 3

on the western side of the College grounds. Above all, Rendall wished this to be here so that future generations of young Wykehamists coming down to lessons from the Commoner Boarding Houses, would walk through this “Via Sacra”. The walls are flint faced and knapped, but a number of the old bonding stones in these flint walls are from the original Meads wall, with dates on them such as 1792. Some of the bonding stones on the external walls have “temples” among them for candles. During the Illumina event held in December every year, lit candles are placed in these “temples” as dusk settles. To approach War Cloister from Meads through Angel Gate, with Wheeler’s Madonna and Gleadowe’s bronze sculpted angels above, is to approach the low wall at the cemetery entrance to Tyne Cot in the Ypres Salient. They are remarkably similar and deliberately so. The War Cloister has four ranges corresponding to the directions of the compass. These surround the central garth, with four walkways of London paving slabs leading inwards to Turner’s central cross with the Greek inscription Christos Anesti – Christ Arisen. A small sculpted cross set in a circular stone lozenge sits atop, guarded by two Crusader Knights facing east and west. From above this produces a square shape with the cross in the centre. To return to the inner and outer walls, one sees both below and above Rendall’s inscription knapped flint. The style of the lettering in the inscription is Lombardic. Flint knapping is regarded as a particularly difficult masonry skill, only acquired by long Turner’s central cross and octagon. 4 experience. It is more typical of East Anglian ecclesiastical architecture than that of Hampshire. It involves shaping the flints and settling them into masonry dust to a depth of two to three inches. The Hampshire masons learnt the craft ably and quickly. Most of the flints came from the nearby village of Shawford. Star of India on black marble Each range finishes in a corner known paving slab. architecturally as an ashlar-faced dome. There are therefore four. Once again to produce the dome demands skilful masonry techniques, where squared or dressed stone is finely jointed towards the central key-stone of the dome. Each corner represents the contributions of the Empire towards the great struggle. This starts with the Indian dome in the north east corner, moving to the African dome in the south east corner, along to Australia and New Zealand in the south west, and finishing with Canada, Newfoundland, and Jamaica in the north west. Shields of the provinces of India. Standing in the Indian corner, when one looks up to the key-stone, one sees a carved star of India and the lotus, or sun disk, surrounded by a wreath of lotus flowers. Looking to the ground one stands upon a paving slab of black marble from Budh-Gaya in the state of Bihar, on which is set another Star of India. At the time of construction of War Cloister this marble was being used in many of the buildings of New Delhi. The marble paving inlay was given and transported free of charge to Winchester College. This applies also to the other three Empire and Dominion domes, and their respective stones. 5