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The Sheela on Kilpeck Church near Hereford is probably the most famous sheela image. The sheela is not above a door like the sheelas in Tugford, Holdgate and Church Stretton but it does lie adjacent to one. Of all the sheela images this is the one that is most copied.
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Folklore Roy Palmer in his book Herefordshire Folklore (Logaston Press 2002) relates the story of an old man in the 1920's who was apparently present at the destruction of a number of obscene figures. "Ah that wur Miss - - -. A never could suffer that un, so a get her a pole and a pothered un off" Palmer speculates that the figures may have been male exhibitionist figures "in a state of arousal" which led to their destruction by the unnamed Miss - - - A Phallic Counterpart? The above story begs the question what offended the Victorian lady so greatly? The Roy Palmer conjectures that the corbel held a male exhibitionist possibly in a state of arousal which would be incredibly offensive to the Victorian mindset. This raises another question. Why did the Sheela survive? Again this might be down to the Victorian mindset. Who did a study of the church in blah blah described the figure as a fool opening his heart to the devil. It may well be that the somewhat destructive Victorian lady simply understand what she was looking at. |
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The famous Kilpeck door |
The church from the road. The sheela na gig figure is located just to the right of the middle drain pipe.
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Ibex corbel. |
Dog and hare corbel |
Rib swallowers in the chancel. Compare these to the rib figures at Elkstone |
Bear head eating two people. Compare this bear head to the worn one at Diddlebury. Malcolm Thurlby makes a connection between Kilpeck and a head very similar to this one at English Bicknor in his book "The Herefordshire School of Romanesque Sculpture" |