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The church of St Martin in Wareham is about 1000 years old. It is recorded as having been founded earlier than
this by St Aldhelm although this may have been a reference to another building destroyed by the Danes in the raids
of the 9th and 10th centuries.
The building, as it now stands, represents the most complete example of a Saxon church in Dorset. Aspects showing
its Saxon origin include:
- A tall, narrow nave and chancel
- Late Saxon wall-arcading in the North West Isle
- Traces of a Saxon door.
The association with St Martin is made apparent by the 12th century frescoes on the North wall of the
chancel which depict St Martin on horseback, escorted by attendants, dividing his cloak and giving one half to
a beggar. It is said that later the saint had a dream in which he saw Christ wearing the same portion of the cloak.
It is in the North aisle that the visitor will find the effigy of T. E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia). The effigy
was sculpted by Eric Kennington and given to the church by Lawrence's brother in 1939. Lawrence is depicted in
Arabic dress with a curved dagger in his hand and a whip to his side. His feet rest against a block of Hittite
scupture of two fighting bulls representing his archaeological research and his own struggles in the First World
War.
During the Great Fire of Wareham in 1762 the church was used as a temporary refuge for those
who lost their homes. Later the church fell into disuse but was rededicated by the then Bishop of Salisbury on
St Aldhelm's day 1936.
Today the church is regularly used for worship including a weekly communion on Wednesdays. The work pf preserving
the work and researching its history continues and donations towards this on-going work are gratefully received
at all times. Further information is available from The Rectory, Pound Lane, Wareham, Dorset. BH20 4LQ.
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