Barras Bridge, possible cemetery
Barras Bridge, possible cemetery
HER Number
299
District
Newcastle
Site Name
Barras Bridge, possible cemetery
Place
Newcastle
Map Sheet
NZ26NW
Class
Religious Ritual and Funerary
Site Type: Broad
Cemetery
Site Type: Specific
Mixed Cemetery
General Period
MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Medieval 1066 to 1540
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Description
The antiquarian writer, Bourne suggests that the Maudlin-Barrows are the tombs of those that died of leprosy, and he and others site the burial ground in 'Sick-Man's Close' on the north side of Barras Bridge. A later writer, Mackenzie equated 'Sick-Man's Close' with St. James' Close (now the site of the Hancock Museum and terraces to the north as far as Park Terrace), and reported that great quantities of human bones had been found during building operations there. However, a 1732 map of the hospital lands shows 'Sick Mens Close' where Brandling village is now, and 'Dead Men's Graves' on the site of the 19th century All Saints Cemetery.
Easting
424900
Northing
565100
Grid Reference
NZ424900565100
Sources
<< HER 299 >> H. Bourne, 1736, History of Newcastle, p. 152
J. Brand, 1789, History of Newcastle, p. 431
E. Mackenzie, 1827, History of Newcastle, pp. 148-9
F.W. Dendy, 1904, An Account of Jesmond, Archaeologia Aeliana, 3, I, pp. 22-24, 150, 172
J. Brand, 1789, History of Newcastle, p. 431
E. Mackenzie, 1827, History of Newcastle, pp. 148-9
F.W. Dendy, 1904, An Account of Jesmond, Archaeologia Aeliana, 3, I, pp. 22-24, 150, 172