6 PAPERS, ETC. 
rets; but there is another large cross church, St. James, 
with a central oetagon, now half destroyed, half desecrated,* 
which must surely have been monastic also. Snettisham 
is, I believe, eruciform, and East Dereham has the striking 
combination of a central lantern and a detached campanile. 
This church, owing to its original central tower having 
been taken down, and rebuilt immediately to the west of 
its old position, presents the singular phenomenon of a 
double transept.f Terrington may have been meant to 
exhibit the same type as Dereham;; at present it has only 
a detached tower ; but of this church more anon. Small 
transepts, or rather transeptal chapels, sometimes occur, 
as in St. Peter Mancroft, Norwich, where they are mere 
projections from a single bay of the aisle, with the clere- 
story carried uninterruptedliy over them. Swaffham has 
transepts nearly the full height, but the tower is western. 
The central tower without transepts occasionally oceurs, 
as in the Norman church at Castle Rising, and in two 
much more remarkable instances in Lynn and Norwich. 
The building called St. Andrew’s Hall, in the latter city, 
is in fact the nave of a large church of Friars, the choir 
of which nominally forms a Dutch church, but it is regularly 
used as the workhouse chapel. Between the nave and the 
choir is a single bay belonging to neither, which is said to 
have supported a hexagonal tower, which fell early in the 
last century. Now at Lynn there remains a very remark- 
able fragment, which, together with what we have just seen 
at Norwich, enables us to re-construct an entire church of 
this type. At Norwich we have the church without the 
steeple ; at Lynn we have the steeple without the church. 
* Since then, I see by the newspapers that the whole building has 
fallen down. 
rT See Archxological Proceedings at Norwich, p. 182. 
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