LANGHAM
Langham, Langeham (xiii cent. onwards); Longham (xvi cent.).

Langham: The Village
The parish of Langham lies on the Leicestershire
border of the county and contains 2,920 acres of land.
Ranksborough Hill in the west of the parish rises to a
height of 626 ft., and the land falls from it in a southeasterly and easterly direction about 200 ft. to
the stream called the Dyke, a tributary of the Gwash,
that runs approximately through the middle of the
parish. The land rises very slightly on the south
side of this stream. The soil is sand and the subsoil
Upper and Middle Lias, and nearly the whole of the
parish is pasture land.
The large and somewhat scattered village stands at
a bend in the road from Melton Mowbray to Oakham
about two miles from the latter town. Like many of
the Rutland forest settlements, it is built along roads
forming a rectangular figure with the church on the
north-east side and the stream running through the
south side of the figure. The back premises of the
houses built on the north and south sides of the
original enclosure extend to lanes which form an
outer ring of the village, except on the west side, which
is bounded by the Melton Mowbray-Oakham road.
The houses and cottages are mostly of red brick, but
a few thatched cottages remain. The population is
mainly agricultural, but a brewery, established in
1858, gives employment to a fair number of men.
Langham Institute was founded in 1890 by public
subscription on land given by the Earl of Gainsborough
It has a reading room and library.
Langham House was purchased in 1890 by Col
Clarke-Jervoise (later Sir Henry), a great benefactor to
the church and village. At his death in 1908 it
passed to his cousin, Sir Harry Clarke-Jervoise,
who sold it to Mr. Owen Hugh Smith. The
Old Hall, the residence of Mr. Smith, is a 17thcentury two-story stone building of simple design,
with low mullioned windows, stone-slated roof,
and gabled stone dormers,
to which recent extensive
additions have been made
and the interior modernised.
On the old south front,
which is of rubble and has a
square-headed middle doorway, is the date 1665, but
the principal entrance is now
on the north side. The west
wing dates from 1926.

Smith. Or a cheveron cotised between three demigriffons sable, those in the chief face to face.
Another picturesque but
undated 17th-century house,
known as The Manor, is generally of the same type, but
has a two-story mullioned bay window on each side
of the doorway.
Ranksborough Hill is said to have been the site
of a Roman camp, but there are only very slight traces
of its earthworks. (fn. 1) Near to it is Ranksborough,
the property of the Marquess of Londonderry. A
model farm adjoining, at which pedigree red poll
cattle and Suffolk punches are bred, belongs to Mr.
Owen Hugh Smith.
Simon Langham, Archbishop of Canterbury
(1366–68) and Cardinal of St. Sixtus (1368), is said to
have been born at Langham in 1310. Besides his
public and political career, which culminated in his
appointment as Chancellor, he was a great benefactor
to Westminster Abbey, where he was a monk and abbot.
He is also said to have rebuilt the chapel of Langham,
which belonged to the abbey. (fn. 2)
Manor
LANGHAM may be identified as one of
the five unnamed berewicks which were
attached to Oakham in 1086. (fn. 3) It was held
by the lords of Oakham Castle (q.v.). (fn. 4) In 1360 it
was said to be no manor, but it had a court in 1388. (fn. 5)
On the death of Humphrey de Bohun, Earl
of Hereford, in 1372, Oakham and its members came into the king's hands, but the manor
of Langham was assigned to Joan, Countess of
Hereford, until her death in 1419. (fn. 6) The manor then
reverted to the lords of Oakham, until the death of
Eleanor, Duchess of Buckingham, in 1530. (fn. 7) Owing
to the attainder and execution of Edward, Duke of
Buckingham, in 1521, the reversion of his estates
after her death belonged to the Crown, and in 1531
Henry VIII granted Langham to Henry Norris, an
esquire of the king's body, for life. (fn. 8) Norris, however,
was attainted for treason in 1536, (fn. 9) and in 1538 it was
granted in fee with Oakham to Thomas Cromwell,
Lord Cromwell, afterwards Earl of Essex. Cromwell
immediately settled the manor on his son and heir
Gregory and his wife Elizabeth, with remainder to
their son Henry. (fn. 10) The manor escaped forfeiture on
Cromwell's fall and execution in 1540, and was held
by Gregory. (fn. 11) In the same year the barony was
restored to him and Langham passed to his son Henry
(d. 1592) and grandson Edward. (fn. 12) Edward in 1600
granted a lease of the manor with all its appurtenances
at a rent of 20s. for 200 years to Thomas Philipps and
Ralph Holland. (fn. 13) Philipps and Holland were financiers and the lease was probably made as security
for a loan, which was doubtless repaid when Edward
sold the manor in the same year to Sir Andrew Noel.
Edward, son of Sir Andrew Noel, became the second
Viscount Campden by marriage with Juliana, eldest
daughter and heir of Baptist Hicks, first Viscount
Campden. (fn. 14) In 1630 Juliana and her sister Mary,
with their respective husbands, granted a rent of
£100 received from the manor to Henry Noel of
North Luffenham, (fn. 15) the younger son of Juliana,
who died a prisoner in the hands of Parliament, leaving
no children. (fn. 16) It appears to have passed to Henry
Noel, the second son of Baptist, third Viscount
Campden, whose daughter and heir Juliana married
Charles Boyle, Earl of Burlington. They owned the
rent of £100 from the manor of Langham in 1693 (fn. 17)
and their son Richard, the third Earl, in 1721. (fn. 18) The
latter died in 1753 and his daughter Charlotte was
his heir. (fn. 19) Langham passed
to the Earl of Gainsborough (fn. 20)
and the manor now belongs
to the trustees of the present
Earl, who is a minor.

Boyle. Party bendwise and battled argent and gules.
The lords of the manor of
Oakham held a view of frankpledge for Langham and also
had infangthief and outfangthief in the soke. (fn. 21) The villein
tenants in Langham paid an
aid to their lord called 'scorfe,'
which in 1392 amounted to
£13 6s. 8d. a year. This aid
was expressly excepted from the grant of Langham
manor to Joan, Countess of Hereford. (fn. 22) As late as
1846 the copyholds of the manor were subject to
arbitrary fines. (fn. 23)
In 1536 certain mills at Langham were let at farm
at a rent of £13 16s. 4d. One was a windmill, which
needed repair while the manor was in the king's
hands after the attainder of Henry Norris. At the
same period a new kiln-house was built. (fn. 24) Two
mills were attached to the manor when it was sold to
Sir Andrew Noel. (fn. 25)

Plan of Langham Church
Church
The church of ST. PETER AND
ST. PAUL was formerly cruciform, but
now consists of chancel 33 ft. by 19 ft.,
clearstoried nave 68 ft. 6 in. by 20 ft., north and south
aisles, south transept 27 ft. 6 in. by 17 ft. 6 in. with
west aisle 11 ft. 6 in. wide, south porch, and west
tower 10 ft. square, all these measurements being
internal. The tower is surmounted by a broach spire.
The north aisle of the nave is 12 ft. 6 in. wide and the
south aisle 11 ft., the width across nave and aisles
being 47 ft. 6 in. The north transept, which seems to
have been of equal size to that on the south, is said to
have been taken down in 1802, when the outer wall
of the aisle was carried eastward in its present form.
The chancel and the east wall of the transept are
of coursed local ironstone interspersed with bands
of freestone, (fn. 26) but elsewhere the walls are faced with
grey ashlar, (fn. 27) and all the roofs are of low pitch and
leaded. Internally, with the exception of the tower,
the walls are plastered.
The existing plan may have developed from a cruciform 12th-century building with tower at the crossing,
but of this older fabric no part remains, the earliest
parts of the present building being the chancel and
tower, which are of 13th-century date, at which period
probably the whole church was rebuilt, the central
tower, if such existed, being removed either when the
new tower at the west end was begun or at its completion. The south transept appears to have been
added, or an existing transept remodelled c. 1280–90,
and a further rebuilding of the whole fabric took
place in the 14th century, to which period the present
nave arcades, the chancel arch and the porch belong.
The aisles also appear to have been rebuilt above sill
level at this time, and the transept remodelled. (fn. 28) The
difference in character between the east windows of the
transept and that at the end of its west aisle, which
is of fully developed 14th-century character, suggests
that all this work was spread over a considerable period,
or was perhaps executed at two separate times. In the
15th century the roofs of the chancel, nave and aisles
were taken down and new ones erected, a clearstory
being added to the nave: new windows were inserted
in the chancel and aisles and at the end of the transept,
and battlemented parapets with enriched cornices and
curved finials on the gables, similar in style to those
at Oakham Church, (fn. 29) were erected throughout.
The chancel was restored in 1876–8, (fn. 30) under the
direction of Mr. Ewan Christian, and the nave in
1880 by Bodley and Garner. In 1890 the floors were
renewed, and in 1899 the north aisle roof. There were
other repairs of the roofs in 1903. (fn. 31)
The chancel is without buttresses, and retains a
widely splayed lancet window (fn. 32) at the east end of the
north wall, and at the west end of the south wall a
wider single-light pointed window with soffit cusping,
the sill of which is dropped, and the lower portion
divided by a transom and mullion to form two small
low-side openings. (fn. 33) The round-headed piscina recess
is also of the 13th century, (fn. 34) and there is a rectangular
aumbry in the north wall. The four-centred east
window is a 15th-century insertion, and is of five lights
with battlemented transom, and two other windows,
one at the east end of the south wall of three lights,
and the other at the west end of the north wall of two
lights, are of the same period. The square-headed
middle window on the south side is of the 14th century,
but the priest's doorway, which has plain chamfered
imposts, may be rather earlier. A doorway (fn. 35) in the
north wall, now blocked, appears to have served a
former vestry.
The arch to the nave, which is contemporary with
the nave arcades, is the full width of the chancel, its
two moulded orders dying into the wall on either side.
The stairway to the rood-loft remains at the north
end, entered by a 15th-century doorway, now blocked,
from the former north transept. (fn. 36) The roof and all the
chancel fittings are modern. (fn. 37) The altar and reredos
date from 1895.
The 14th-century nave arcades are of five bays, with
pointed arches of two orders, springing from octagonal piers with moulded capitals and bases, and
from responds of similar character. The outer hollow
chamfer of the arches is divided from the inner
moulded order by a deep hollow; and the hoodmoulds have good head-stops, alternately male and
female. The eastern arch on each side is wider and
higher than the others, its size being determined by
the width of the transept, but the arcade is all of
one build and design.
The south transept is of two bays marked externally by a buttress, and has pairs of buttresses at the
angles. Each bay is lighted from the east by a large
pointed window of three lights with uncusped intersecting tracery, and hood-moulds with notch-stops.
These windows date from c. 1290, and may indicate
the period when the transept was first built on its
existing plan, its dividing arcade, which is also mainly
of late 13th-century date, indicating that its west aisle
belongs to the original design. There is a keelshaped string at sill level inside along the east and
south walls, and between the two east windows a
wide 13th-century wall recess with moulded arch on
attached jamb-shafts with fillet on face. The
piscina in the south wall is also of the 13th century,
with moulded trefoil arch, shafted jambs with
moulded capitals and bases and fluted bowl. (fn. 38) The
dividing arcade is of two bays with arches of two
hollow-chamfered orders springing from an octagonal
pier and south respond with moulded capitals and
bases; the arches are apparently later than the pier
and respond, and are probably contemporary with the
nave arcade, from the adjoining pier of which the
north arch springs on that side. (fn. 39) There is also a
transverse arch from the transept pier westward
across the aisle. The great south window of the
transept occupies nearly the whole of the wall and is a
good example of 15th-century work, of five cinquefoiled lights with transom and Perpendicular tracery,
though the hollow-chamfered jambs (fn. 40) point to its
being an insertion in an earlier opening. The aisle is
4 ft. less in length than the transept proper and has
a lean-to roof; it is lighted at the end by a beautiful
14th-century pointed window of three trefoiled
lights with reticulated tracery, its inner moulded
order being enriched with a profusion of ball-flower,
and smaller ball-flowers occur in the hood-mould. The
fine late 14th-century oak roof of the transept,
though much restored, retains some good carved
bosses, and is supported by boldly carved head
corbels.
At the west end of the north aisle is a good 14thcentury window of three lights, with reticulated
tracery and shafted jambs with moulded capitals,
and the east window is of two lights with modern
Decorated tracery. (fn. 41) Elsewhere in the aisles, however,
the windows are 15th-century insertions of three
cinquefoiled lights and Perpendicular tracery, except
two (fn. 42) in the rebuilt eastern portion of the north aisle,
where all the work is modern. The line of the former
north transept roof is on the wall of the nave below
the clearstory windows. The north and south doorways are of 14th-century date, that on the north
being apparently the earlier, of two moulded orders,
the outer on nook-shafts with moulded capitals.
The south doorway is of two hollow-chamfered orders
with moulded imposts, and is covered by the porch,
originally of two stories, but now open to the roof.
Access to the porch chamber was by a stair from the
transept aisle, (fn. 43) where the wall is thickened. The
chamber was lighted by a square-headed window of
two lights, the hood-mould of which is enriched with
ball-flower. (fn. 44) The pointed outer doorway is of three
hollow-chamfered orders, with moulded imposts,
the inner order on responds with moulded capitals,
which in the 18th century were mutilated to allow
for the introduction of wooden gates. (fn. 45) In the northeast angle of the porch is a plain pointed niche. (fn. 46)
The clearstory has five pointed windows on each
side, of two trefoiled lights, with alternate quatrefoils
and sexfoils in the head. There are also two similar
windows in the east wall above the chancel arch. All
the parapets follow the rakes of the gables, and the
lower hollow moulding is everywhere enriched with a
profusion of late type of ball-flower, heads, fourleaved flowers, and other ornaments, (fn. 47) animals
occurring only on the transept. The buttresses of
the south aisle and porch are carried up as pinnacles,
and there are also pinnacles at the angles of the
transepts.
The tower is of three stages, and has a moulded
plinth and pairs of wide but very shallow angle
buttresses. The west window is a single widely
splayed lancet and there is a similar window in the
middle stage on the south side, but otherwise the
two lower stages are blank. The vice is in the southwest angle. The deeply recessed bell-chamber windows
are of two lancet lights, with arches of four orders
and shafted jambs enriched with dog-tooth; (fn. 48) the
spandrels are pierced on three sides by a pointed
quatrefoil and on the north by an octofoil opening.
The contemporary spire rises from a cornice of heads
and flowers and has short broaches and plain angles.
There are three tiers of gabled spire lights on the
cardinal faces, each of two openings, the middle
group enriched with dog-tooth. The larger lower
lights were altered in the 14th century, when curvilinear tracery was introduced. Internally the tower
opens to the nave by a pointed arch of three chamfered orders, the innermost on half-octagonal responds
with moulded bases and capitals enriched with nailhead ornament. There is a square-headed opening
above the arch.
The 14th-century font has a plain octagonal bowl
moulded on the underside, and square stem with
attached shafts with fillets and moulded bases, on
an octagonal plinth. It has a modern flat oak cover.
The wooden pulpit and the seating are modern.
There is an old iron-bound chest with one lock in the
nave, which was given to the church by Mr. Owen H.
Smith.
In the floor of the transept is an alabaster slab with
incised effigies of a man and wife, the inscription on
which reads 'Of your charity pray for [the sol]ls of
John Clarke, Jane and Anys his wyves the which John
decessyd the iii day of February in [the yere of] owre
lord God MCCCCCXXXII [1532] on whose solls Jhū
have mercy Amē.' The slab is broken, and the
middle part (fn. 49) is missing: below the effigies are the
smaller figures of eight children.
None of the heraldic glass mentioned by Wright in
1684 now remains. (fn. 50)
There are six bells in the tower, the two trebles by
Taylor of Loughborough, 1900; the third by Thomas
Norris of Stamford, 1636; the fourth a late mediæval
bell inscribed 'Sit Nomen Domini Benedictum'; the
fifth by Thomas Hedderley of Nottingham, 1771; and
the tenor by Thomas Norris, 1660. (fn. 51)
The plate consists of a cup and cover paten of
1679–80, and a flagon of 1724–5 given by Hannah
Willes, widow. (fn. 52)
The registers before 1812 are as follows: (i) all
entries 1559–1633; (ii) 1633–54; (iii) 1658–87; (iv)
baptisms and burials 1687–1769, marriages 1687–
1754; (v) marriages 1754–93; (vi) baptisms 1770–98,
burials 1770–99; (vii) marriages 1794–1812; (viii)
baptisms and burials 1799–1812.
The churchyard was levelled and inclosed by a new
wall in 1897–98 by the generosity of Sir Henry ClarkeJervoise, and the churchyard enlarged on the southwest side in 1921. The work was mostly carried out
free of cost by the inhabitants of Langham. A
memorial cross to the men of the parish killed in the
war, 1914–19, was erected in the churchyard.
Some idea of the condition of the church in the
17th century can be obtained from the archdeacon's
visitations. (fn. 53) In 1605 the chancel was unpaved and
stones lay in the corner 'very unseemly'; the communion table was in decay and the carpet for it 'is
naught'; the seats were broken and needed repair
and the font wanted a cover. In 1619 the chancel
required whitening all over, 'being very foul and
filthy,' and the roof defective; there was no paten, and
a basin was sometimes used for christening; a school
was kept in the church by Mr. Royd. In 1681 it was
ordered that the chancel should be paved and the seats,
floor and rood-loft be repaired, the windows glazed,
and the Ten Commandments, Creed and Lord's
Prayer and King's Arms be painted and the sanctus
bell repaired and hung.
Advowson
The chapel of St. Peter and St.
Paul (fn. 54) was severed from the church
of Oakham before 1913. It was probably in existence in 1229, when certain immunities
were granted to the tenants of Oakham Church and its
chapels, (fn. 55) and it is mentioned as a chapelry of Oakham
in 1534 and 1584. (fn. 56) The rectory of Langham was
separated from that of Oakham, possibly with the
original object of providing a stipend for a chaplain.
When the abbey of Westminster, to whom the church
of Oakham was granted, first by Edward the Confessor
and then later by one of the Norman kings, (fn. 57) instituted
the vicarage and appropriated the great tithes, the
rectories of Oakham and Langham still seem to have
remained separate. In 1509 Langham rectory was
let at farm for £18 to Thomas Wyllewys, John Ball and
Henry Hychcook at a rent of £18 a year. (fn. 58) The
tithes of Langham were granted in 1542 to the Dean
and Chapter of Westminster (fn. 59) and the custom of
leasing the rectory was continued. In 1646 it was
ordered by the Committee for Plundered Ministers
that £50 from the tithes of Langham, sequestered
from Lord Campden, delinquent, be given to the
minister of Oakham, (fn. 60) and in 1650 it was reported that
the parsonage of Langham was worth £120 a year,
whereof the vicar of Oakham had £50 and the curate
of Langham had the rest. The church, it was said,
was fit to be a parish church. (fn. 61) The vicar of Oakham
appointed the curate to whom in 1658 the impropriate
tithes were leased for £17, when the living was worth
about £50 a year, the vicarial tithes being worth
£40 a year. (fn. 62) The tithes belonging to Langham
rectory were exempted from the provisions of the
Inclosure Act for Oakham. (fn. 63) In the reign of Henry II
Walchelin de Ferrers granted the tithes of the mills of
Langham to the Priory of Brooke. (fn. 64) In 1536 8s. a
year was paid to the prior for tithes from the mills. (fn. 65)
The Bishop of Peterborough is now patron.
Bishop Dalderby of Lincoln (1300–1328) granted
an indulgence for the construction of the Chapel of the
Hermitage of Langham, (fn. 66) the hermitage itself being
probably already in existence. In 1320, and again in
1323, John de Norton, the hermit of Langham, was
granted a royal protection for himself and his men
seeking alms through the country. (fn. 67) In 1326 and
1327 John de Warrewyk appears as the hermit, and he
and his men were still seeking alms, presumably for
building the chapel, (fn. 68) but no later reference to the
hermitage has been found.
The gild of Our Lady is mentioned in the will of
John Bery of Langham, dated 1541, but it may possibly
have been one of the Oakham gilds. (fn. 69)
There is a Baptist chapel in the village, built in 1854.
Charities
The Bainton Poor's Land.—By
indentures of lease and release, 1 May
1682, certain lands were given upon
trust, the rents to be applied towards the relief of
the poor and repair of the church at Langham. The
endowment of the charity consists of a farm-house and
land at Bainton and land at Glinton (co. Northants),
containing about 14 acres and 1 acre 1 rood respectively, producing about £29 per annum. The
charity is administered by the vicar and churchwardens together with Hubbard's Charity (see below),
and the net income is applied in doles and bread
for the poor and gifts of money to poor widows.
The Bilsdon Poor's Land.—By indentures of lease
and release, dated 14 and 15 April 1685, a piece of land
was conveyed in trust for the use of poor decayed
inhabitants of Langham. The endowment now consists of a close of land at Billesdon (Leicester) containing about 6 acres and let at about £10 per annum.
The net income, together with Clarke's Charity (see
below), is distributed by the vicar and churchwardens
in cash to about 20 or 30 poor people.
Frances Clarke's Gift consists of a sum of £10 per
annum paid by the Tallow Chandlers' Company in
London.
Henry Hubbard, by his will dated 15 November 1714,
gave £40, £10 of which was to be applied towards
the repair of the parish church and the income from
the remainder to be given to the ten poorest widows
in the parish. The endowment of the charity now
consists of a rent-charge of £1 5s. per annum arising
out of land at Sewstern. The charity is now administered by the vicar and churchwardens together with
the Bainton Poor's Land.
Thomas Watkins ('In memoriam Thomas and
Mary Watkins'), by his will proved at Birmingham
7 March 1905, bequeathed £10 to the trustees of the
parish church at Langham, the income to be applied
for the benefit of the poor at Christmas. The endowment of the charity consists of £9 16s. 11d. 2½ per cent.
Consolidated Stock with the Official Trustees, producing 4s. 8d. per annum, which is given to two poor
persons.
Thomas Busby of Meyford, co. Staffs, by his will
dated 13 Dec. 1577 (P.C.C. 34 Watson), bequeathed
to Dr. Gabriel Goodman, Dean of Westminster, and
to Mr. Edward Chambers and their heirs one messuage
or cottage in Langham, desiring them to bestow in
deeds of charity to the poor sick and impotent people
of Langham and Barleythorpe the yearly rent thereof.
There is now no trace of this charity.