News

02/06/2023

Blanket of turf saves one of medieval England’s most important buildings

Lincoln Medieval Bishop’s Palace reopens after extensive conservation work.

The delicate limestone walls of a medieval palace have been saved for the future by laying a blanket of turf on top of them. Lincoln Medieval Bishops’ Palace reopens after an extensive conservation project.

‘Soft capping’ the wall-heads is just one of a range of conservation techniques employed by the charity to halt the decline of the building’s historic stonework at the former home of the Bishops’ of Lincoln, the centre of power for the largest diocese in medieval England for nearly five hundred years. Though the palace housed bishops and their households between the 12th and the 17th centuries, the site spans a much longer history, containing part of the Roman city wall, which also needed conservation. Significant decorative features, including the marble columns in the west porch have also been preserved.

From a laser scan of the buildings – ruined and exposed to the elements since the Civil War - the most appropriate method of repair for each area of the palace was planned using computer modelling software. A team of specialist stonemasons then removed damaging vegetation from the ruins, repairing the masonry with traditional lime-based mortar and local Lincoln limestone and capping the wall-heads. This involved ‘soft capping’ with soil and grass in some areas, as well as lead or stone slate capping, capping with new stone slabs and ‘rough racking’ – a process used to create a new wall-head in rubble masonry, so that water runs off it without pooling and causing water damage to the building. In the undercroft of the historic palace kitchen, a medieval arch was found to be unstable, requiring complete reonstruction.

Jeremy Ashbee Head Properties Curator, at English Heritage commented: “This conservation project will ensure the protection of the remains of the building and safeguard some of its unique decorative treasures - including the arches and marble columns in the west porch. Lincoln Medieval Bishops’ Palace was once one of the most important buildings in England, and in its day, just as magnificent as the lovely cathedral in whose shadow it stands. That’s the reason why conservation here is so important, because the fragments of what survive are witness to a long and illustrious history.”

The historic palace of the Bishops’ of Lincoln was occupied between the 12th and 17th centuries. Terraced into a steep hill, the principal remains of the property are two north-south ranges, the open hall of Bishop Hugh of Avalon (St Hugh) and the remains of a two storey building attributed to Bishop de Chesney (thought to be a chamber block) the under-croft of a very large kitchen at the south end of St Hugh’s hall, and buildings on the north side of the 14th and 15th centuries.

The palace has been a ruin for over 350 years since it suffered damage in the Civil War in the 1640s. The 15th-century Alnwick Tower was restored in the 19th century and is roofed, as is the 19th-century stable block in a Tudor revival style. At the southern extreme of the site lie a vineyard and a contemporary heritage garden.

Lincoln Bishops’ Medieval Palace opens to the public on Friday, 2 June 2023 and will be open on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays throughout the summer. Tickets can be booked online here.