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Period

Georgian (1714 - 1837)

Description

The South Side of Lady Roisia's Oratory at Royston. 19 Oct. 1742.One of three plates drawn by William Stukeley (1687-1765); etchings by J Mynde for Stukeley's pamphlet Origines Roystonianae, or an account of the Oratory of Lady Roysia de Vere, Foundress of Royston (1743).In October 1742 the Revd William Stukeley, the pioneering antiquary and discoverer of Avebury, received news of the discovery of a cave full of carved figures in what is now Melbourn Street, Royston. He visited four days later and drew what he saw.The cave (which can still be seen today) is 25 feet deep and 17 feet in diameter. Around its walls are medieval religious carvings in low relief: Saints Katherine, Christopher, and Laurence, and a Crucifixion. Stukeley published a pamphlet full of bogus history on the subject, but in fact the cave is still something of a mystery; it may have been a religious cell or a hermitage.

Type of original

etching

Artist or photographer

Stukeley, William

Location depicted in image

Royston Cave / Lady Riosia's Oratory, Royston.Melbourn Street, Royston, Hertfordshire, UK.

Copyright

1)© St Albans Museums

Photo number

ph8646