'Henry Yevele' (c.
1320-
1400) was the most prolific and successful master mason active in late medieval England. The first document relating to him is dated
3 December 1353, when he purchased the
freedom of London. In February 1356 he was sufficiently well known as a mason that he was chosen as one of a commission of six cutting masons who were to inform the mayor and aldermen about the acts and articles of the craft.
His first connection with royal building works was probably when he was contracted from March 1357 to September 1359 to remodel the
Black Prince's manor at
Kennington, at the cost of £221 4s. 7d. On
23 June 1360, he was appointed "disposer" of the royal works at the
Palace of Westminster and the
Tower of London. For this he was paid 1s. per day, although he continued undertaking other, non-royal, commissions.
At the
Palace of Westminster, Yevele was responsible for two essentially utilitarian buildings, the
Jewel Tower in the
Privy Palace (1365–6) and the clock tower (now destroyed), which stood opposite the north door of
Westminster Hall and regulated the sittings of the royal courts of justice there (1366–7).
At the
Tower of London several minor works, including the vaulting of the thirteenth-century watergate, were performed by Henry's brother, Robert. The real focus of activity in the king's works at this time, however, was
Windsor Castle. The master mason there,
John Sponlee (d. 1382?), walked in the funeral procession of
Queen Philippa in 1369 as an esquire of greater estate, whereas Yevele ranked only as a lesser esquire. During
Edward III's reign Yevele's strictly architectural work for the crown was, with one minor exception, confined to London, but he supplied materials to numerous royal building sites in Kent and Surrey as well as in London.
Yevele advised on repairs and new works at the castles of
Southampton (1378–9),
Carisbrooke (1380–85),
Winchester (1390–1400), and
Portchester (1384–5), and on the town walls of
Canterbury (1385–6), but it is uncertain to what extent this involved him in major design work. In 1381, 1389, and 1393 Yevele's advice was sought by
William of Wykeham,
bishop of Winchester, who had been clerk of works at Windsor Castle from 1356 to 1361. On
29 August 1390 Yevele was made exempt from jury and other forms of service on account of his official duties and ‘great age’.
Yevele's work for other lay patrons belonged to the 1370s and 1380s. For
John of Gaunt he carried out in 1375 unspecified works at the
Savoy Palace in London and, together with another mason, he contracted for the duke's large and very sumptuous canopied tomb in
St Paul's Cathedral. For
John, third Lord Cobham, he furnished the design (‘devyse’) for a new south aisle at the London parish church of St Dunstan-in-the-East, although he did not take charge of its building. From 1368 he served as one of the two wardens of
London Bridge. Although the wardenships were purely administrative, it is highly likely that he was the designer of the two-storeyed apsidal chapel of St Thomas, which projected eastwards from the middle of the bridge and which was under construction between 1384 and 1397. The chapel possessed a ‘table’ or handboard containing a summary history of the bridge, which was the source of the statement by the sixteenth-century antiquary
John Leland that ‘a mason beinge master of the bridge howse’, built the chapel at his own expense (Itinerary, 5.6). This notice can refer only to Yevele, whose name presumably meant nothing to Leland.
Works that can be attributed to him with a reasonable level of certainty include:
★ the high altar screen of
Durham Cathedral (1372–80), shipped in boxes from London to Newcastle
★ the east and south walks of the cloister of
St Alban's Abbey (probably begun c.1380)
★ the south transept façade of
St Paul's (1381–8)
★ the nave and south cloister walk of
Canterbury Cathedral (c.1382–1400).
★ the tombs of
★
★ Cardinal
Simon Langham (d. 1376) in Westminster Abbey
★
★ the Black Prince in
Canterbury Cathedral (begun late 1370s?)
★
★ Archbishop
Simon Sudbury in Canterbury (begun mid-1380s?)
★
★ Edward III in Westminster Abbey (after 1386).
★
★
John of Gaunt and
Blanche of Lancaster in the nave of Old St Paul's
References
★ ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography''