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Ruins. Winchelsea Church. St Thomas The Martyr. Sussex, Uk. The First Recorded Mention Of The Church Of St. Thomas In Old Winchelsea Came In 1215.
The Town Was Then A Flourishing Seaport On The Shingle, But In 1250 It Was Battered By A Phenomenally High Tide Which €˜Flowed Twice Without Ebbing With A Horrible Roaring And A Glint As Of Fire On The Waves.’ Thirty-Seven Years Later Further Floods Virtually Destroyed The Town And Changed The Course Of The River Rother.
When Old Winchelsea Was Washed Away, King Edward I Wasted No Time In Finding A Safer Site On The Hilltop Of Iham, Where The Present Town And Its Church Still Stand.
The Town Was Planned On A Gridiron Pattern With The Church Occupying A Dominant Two-Acre Site Near The Centre. It Was Planned On A Grand Scale And Work Started In 1288 To Erect A Magnificent Gothic Edifice, With A Chancel And Choir, Two Side Chapels, A Central Tower, Transepts And A Great Nave.