This site is entirely user-supported. See how you can help.
We don't have any photos of this monument yet. Why don't you be the first to send us one?
If Google Street View is available, the image is from the best available vantage point looking, if possible, towards the location of the monument. Where it is not available, the satellite view is shown instead.
Latitude: 53.5877 / 53°35'15"N
Longitude: -1.2001 / 1°12'0"W
OS Eastings: 453049.846245
OS Northings: 410417.710141
OS Grid: SE530104
Mapcode National: GBR NV1Y.ZN
Mapcode Global: WHDCV.J2RY
Entry Name: Skellow market cross
Scheduled Date: 20 June 1995
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1011853
English Heritage Legacy ID: 27206
County: Doncaster
Electoral Ward/Division: Norton & Askern
Built-Up Area: Adwick le Street
Traditional County: Yorkshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): South Yorkshire
Church of England Parish: Owston All Saints
Church of England Diocese: Sheffield
The monument is located on Cross Hill at the junction of Buttercross and
Skellow Road and includes the calvary or stepped base of a late medieval or
early post-medieval market cross. The calvary comprises three magnesian
limestone steps and measures approximately 2.5m square by 60cm high. There is
no socket hole in the top step suggesting either that there was a socket stone
(socle) which is now missing or, alternatively, that the cross had a canopy
rather than a simple cross shaft and head. The latter is feasible since the
monument is known locally as the Butter Cross. The cross is Listed Grade II.
MAP EXTRACT
The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract.
Source: Historic England
A standing cross is a free standing upright structure, usually of stone,
mostly erected during the medieval period (mid 10th to mid 16th centuries AD).
Standing crosses served a variety of functions. In churchyards they served as
stations for outdoor processions, particularly in the observance of Palm
Sunday. Elsewhere, standing crosses were used within settlements as places for
preaching, public proclamation and penance, as well as defining rights of
sanctuary. Standing crosses were also employed to mark boundaries between
parishes, property, or settlements. A few crosses were erected to commemorate
battles. Some crosses were linked to particular saints, whose support and
protection their presence would have helped to invoke. Crosses in market
places may have helped to validate transactions. After the Reformation, some
crosses continued in use as foci for municipal or borough ceremonies, for
example as places for official proclamations and announcements; some were the
scenes of games or recreational activity.
Standing crosses were distributed throughout England and are thought to have
numbered in excess of 12,000. However, their survival since the Reformation
has been variable, being much affected by local conditions, attitudes and
religious sentiment. In particular, many cross-heads were destroyed by
iconoclasts during the 16th and 17th centuries. Less than 2,000 medieval
standing crosses, with or without cross-heads, are now thought to exist. The
oldest and most basic form of standing cross is the monolith, a stone shaft
often set directly in the ground without a base. The most common form is the
stepped cross, in which the shaft is set in a socket stone and raised upon a
flight of steps; this type of cross remained current from the 11th to 12th
centuries until after the Reformation. Where the cross-head survives it may
take a variety of forms, from a lantern-like structure to a crucifix; the more
elaborate examples date from the 15th century. Much less common than stepped
crosses are spire-shaped crosses, often composed of three or four receding
stages with elaborate architectural decoration and/or sculptured figures; the
most famous of these include the Eleanor crosses, erected by Edward I at the
stopping places of the funeral cortege of his wife, who died in 1290. Also
uncommon are the preaching crosses which were built in public places from the
13th century, typically in the cemeteries of religious communities and
cathedrals, market places and wide thoroughfares; they include a stepped base,
buttresses supporting a vaulted canopy, in turn carrying either a shaft and
head or a pinnacled spire. Standing crosses contribute significantly to our
understanding of medieval customs, both secular and religious, and to our
knowledge of medieval parishes and settlement patterns. All crosses which
survive as standing monuments, especially those which stand in or near their
original location, are considered worthy of protection.
Though missing its original shaft or canopy, the base of Skellow market cross
is a reasonably well preserved example whose importance is enhanced by its
survival in its original location where it will preserve the old land surface
underneath.
Source: Historic England
Other
On EH file, Angela Shackleton Hill, Skellow Market Cross, (1994)
South Yorkshire SMR, PI 299, Skellow Market Cross,
Source: Historic England
Other nearby scheduled monuments