All Saints - Kettlestone [Link] © Godric Godricson |
"Both the rich man and the poor man die, and both are salted for the pit" [Maltese saying]
Showing posts with label All Saints. Show all posts
Showing posts with label All Saints. Show all posts
Friday 12 October 2012
Burial in Church
Labels:
All Saints,
Burial in Church,
Kettlestone,
memorial,
monument
Location:
Kettlestone, Norfolk NR21, UK
James Baldwin 1833 - 1904
James Baldwin Died 4th December 1904 All Saints, Stibbard [Link] © Godric Godricson |
Labels:
All Saints,
Baldwin,
cross,
Stibbard
Location:
Stibbard, Norfolk NR21, UK
Friday 21 September 2012
The South Side
All Saints - Billockby [Link]
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Labels:
All Saints,
Billockby,
coffin,
Graveyard
Location:
Billockby, Norfolk NR29, UK
Thursday 20 September 2012
Dark and stormy
All Saints - Billockby [Link]
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Labels:
All Saints,
Billockby,
Church,
Tower
Location:
Billockby, Norfolk NR29, UK
Wednesday 19 September 2012
The South Side
All Saints - Billockby [Link]
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Labels:
18th Century,
All Saints,
Billockby,
Skinner
Location:
Billockby, Norfolk NR29, UK
Moving to dereliction
Labels:
All Saints,
Billockby,
Church,
Derelict,
Vernacular
Location:
Billockby, Norfolk NR29, UK
Tuesday 18 September 2012
William Heath Died 14th July 1747
William Heath Died 14th July 1747 Hemblington - All Saints [Link]
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Labels:
All Saints,
Heath,
Hemblington
Location:
Hemblington, Norfolk NR13, UK
Skinner - Billockby
All Saints - Billockby [Link]
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Labels:
All Saints,
Billockby,
Norfolk,
Skinner,
Stele
Location:
Billockby, Norfolk NR29, UK
Mary Jary Died 29th September 1839
Hemblington - All Saints [Link]
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Labels:
All Saints,
Hemblington,
Jary,
Norfolk
Location:
Hemblington, Norfolk NR13, UK
Dealings with the Dead - Cremation
Dealings with the Dead, Volume I (of 2) Project Gutenburg |
The board of sextons have met, and we have concluded not to recommend a revival of the ancient custom of burning the dead. It would be very troublesome to do it, out of town, and inconvenient in the city. I have always thought it wrong to bury in the city; and it would be much worse to burn there. The first law of the tenth table of the Romans is in these words—“Let no dead body be interred or burnt within the city.” Something may be got to help pay for a church, by selling tombs below. When a church was built here, some years ago, an eminent physician, one of the proprietors, was consulted and gave his sanction. Yet more than one of our board is very sure, that, on a warm, close Sunday, in the spring, he has snuffed up something that wasn’t particularly orthodox, in that church. The old Romans were very careful of the rights of their fellows, in this respect: the twelfth law of the tenth table runs thus—“Let no sepulchre be built, or funeral pile raised within sixty feet of any house, without the consent of the owner of that house.” They certainly conducted matters with great propriety, avoiding extravagance and intemperance, as appears by the seventh law of the same table—“Let no slaves be embalmed; let there be no drinking round a dead body; nor any perfumed liquors be poured upon it.” So also the second law—“Let all costliness and excessive waitings be banished from funerals.” The women were so very troublesome upon these occasions, that a special law, the fifth, was made for their government—“Let not the women tear their faces, or disfigure themselves, or make hideous outcries.”
Burial in the nave Hemblington - All Saints [Link]
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It was not unusual for one person to have several funerals: to prevent this, however agreeable to the Roman undertakers, the tenth law of the tenth table was made—“Let no man have more than one funeral, or more than one bed put under him.” There was also a very strange practice during the first Decemvirate; the friends often abstracted a finger of the deceased, or some part of the body, and performed fresh obsequies, in some other place; erecting there a cenotaph or empty sepulchre, in which they fancied the ghost of the departed took occasional refuge, when wandering about—in case of a sudden shower, perhaps; or being caught out too near daylight.
For the correction of this folly, the Decemvirs passed the sixth law of the tenth table—“Let not any part of a dead body be carried away, in order to perform other obsequies for the deceased, unless he died in war, or out of his own country.” It was upon such occasions as these, in which an empty form was observed, and no actual inhumation took place, that the practice of throwing three handsful of earth originated. This usage was practised also by the Jews, and has come down to modern times. Baron Rothschild (Nathan Meyer) who died in Frankfort, July 28, 1836, was buried in the ground of the Synagogue, in Duke’s Place, London. His sons, Lionel, Anthony, Nathaniel, and Meyer, his brother-in-law, Mr. Montefiore, and his ancient friend, Mr. Samuels, at the age of ninety-six, commenced the service of filling up the grave,—by casting in, each one of them, three handsful of earth. Not satisfied with carrying a bottle of sal volatile to funerals, the women, and even the men, were in the habit of carrying pots of essences, which occasioned the enactment of the eighth law—“Let no crowns, festoons, perfuming pots, or any kind of perfume be carried to funerals.”
Here lieth the body of William the son of Will and Mary Heath he died May the 14th 1746 Aged 19 years Hemblington - All Saints [Link]
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Burning or interring was adopted, by the ancients, at the will of the relatives. This is manifest from the eleventh law, which prohibits the use of gold in all obsequies, with a single exception—“Let no gold be used in any obsequies, unless the jaw of the deceased has been tied up with a gold thread. In that case the corpse may be interred or burnt, with the gold thread.” A large quantity of silver is annually buried with the dead. It finds its way up again, however, in the course of time.
Common as burning was, among the ancients, it was looked upon, by some, with great abhorrence. The body to be burned was placed upon a pile—if the body of a person of quality, one or more slaves or captives were burned with it. When not forbidden, all sorts of precious ointments and perfumes were poured upon the corpse. The favorite dogs and horses of the defunct were cast upon the pile. Homer tells us, that four horses, two dogs, and twelve Trojan captives were burnt upon the pile, with the dead body of Patroclus. The corpses, that they might consume the sooner, were covered with the fat of beasts. Some near relative lighted the pile, uttering prayers to Boreas and Zephyrus to increase the flame.
In Memory of Robert the son of Edw Heath who died August 30 1763 In his infancy Hemblington - All Saints [Link]
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Labels:
All Saints,
Cremation,
Heath,
Hemblington
Location:
Hemblington, Norfolk NR13, UK
Hemblington - All Saints
Ancient and full of interest Hemblington - All Saints [Link]
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Labels:
All Saints,
Graveyard,
Hemblington,
Norfolk
Location:
Hemblington, Norfolk NR13, UK
Monday 17 September 2012
All Saints - Billockby
All Saints - Billockby [Link]
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Labels:
All Saints,
Billockby,
Church,
Derelict
Location:
Billockby, Norfolk NR29, UK
Sunday 16 September 2012
Moving to dereliction
Labels:
All Saints,
Billockby,
tomb
Location:
Billockby, Norfolk NR29, UK
Coffin shaped marker
All Saints - Billockby [Link]
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Labels:
All Saints,
Billockby,
coffin,
Graveyard
Location:
Billockby, Norfolk NR29, UK
Saturday 8 September 2012
Funeral tributes
Hemblington - All Saints [Link]
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Labels:
All Saints,
flowers,
funeral,
Hemblington
Location:
Hemblington, Norfolk NR13, UK
Friday 7 September 2012
14th Century wall detail
Hemblington - All Saints [Link]
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Labels:
All Saints,
art,
Hemblington,
wall
Location:
Hemblington, Norfolk NR13, UK
Sunday 1 July 2012
All Saints - Beachamwell
All Saints - Beechamwell |
The ruined Church of All Saints - Beachamwell, is the sort of site that I really like. It is romantic, fragile and away from the crowds. The Church is also ruined and the sort of place that would be included in a 'lost graveyard' report.
The site is dramatic and out of the way down a footpath and on a slight rise in the land. All Saints is ruined, vulnerable and momentarily dramatic as it finally falls into the same ground from which it arose. The flints that forms the remaining walls are seperating from each other and on a hot day in June 2012 it was hard to see where the walls began and ended. The wind blew through the site and the wild grasses rustled in an evocative sort of way.
The outline of the Church was evident from walking the site and the lumps and bumps of the field were noticed underfoot. There were no burials evident amongst the grasses and I'm sure that even if there were stone memorials they have long gone as the locals robbed the site of building materials for the world of the living. The remaining walls have plants colonising the mortar and the the wild flowers help the final stages of dissolution.
All Saints - Beachamwell Crumbling walls in a sea of grass © Godric Godricson |
All Saints - Beachamwell "Big sky country" © Godric Godricson |
All Saints - Beachamwell © Godric Godricson |
Labels:
All Saints,
Beechamwell,
Derelict,
Ruin
Location:
Beachamwell, Norfolk PE37, UK
Saturday 16 June 2012
Charles Calaby 30th April 1817
Labels:
All Saints,
Calaby,
Castle Acre,
Stele
Location:
Castle Acre, Norfolk PE32, UK
Wednesday 13 June 2012
Kingborrow Martin
All Saints - Newton by Castle Acre © Godric Godricson |
This picture isn’t the best in the world and I have no real excuse for showing it other than the marvellous name of “Kingborrow” which I have never heard of before. It sounds like a man’s name although in this context it is the name of a woman in Newton by Castle Acre in Norfolk . This is an ‘in Church burial’ and the headstone is in the East End of the Church near to the altar. I’m guessing from the geographical location that the Martin clan were quite well off financially and probably had links to the local landowners if they weren’t the landowners themselves. Snug and cosy in the small East End , Kingborrow Martin rests along with other Martin relatives. This parish, with its Saxon roots, means that the East End is confined and cosy a sort of private area for the clergy and I’m sure that’s how the Saxon ancestors liked it. What they would have made of the Martin’s muscling in is any ones guess.
The memorial set into the floor is an intrusion and Kingborrow should really have been buried outside. The memorials here form the contemporary floor although the 19th Century memorials get in the way of the calm and cool interior which would be better left in the Saxon past. I know that people will say that Kingborrow is part of the heritage of the Church and is now part of the story although I would argue that the Martin’s crept into the Church and placed themselves into the history of the building without any request. Perhaps they should now be cleared away as part of a formal and planned archaeological examination of the building?
For now Kingborrow rests in her grave safe and sound although they are a sign of burials in Churches that turned the house of God into a charnel house.
Labels:
18th Century,
All Saints,
Burial in Church,
Castle Acre,
Martin
Location:
Newton by castleacre PE32, UK
Wednesday 3 August 2011
King's Lynn - All Saint's
This is a magnificent church in King's Lynn set amongst the ' car crash' that is the "Hillingdon Square" housing development.
Whilst this housing development may have been a major development in 1960s architecture, it has rather distorted and confused the surrounding geographical area. The church seems to be hemmed in on all sides by modern development to the point where it is held down and squashed. Moreover, the railings that probably surrounded the cemetery on three to four sides have all been removed and the cemetery has become little more than an open space for the housing development. Unincorporated into its surroundings, the church is isolated and alone and is the subject of vandalism and community disinterest. However, it seems to be the way of things that there is little involvement of the local community with this ancient monument and place of worship. The Anglo-Catholic tradition, once the powerhouse of 19th century Episcopalian worship in the United Kingdom has not continued into the 21st century with its former vigour. People living nearby have no interest in the building or the cemetery and seen her involvement with building or the tradition that it represents. The cemetery itself is now largely municipal in nature and contains very little of interest although one can see a brick lined grave atmospherically situated. The large ledger stone on the surface is swept with rain. Surprisingly, this interesting church and cemetery is only 100 yards or so away from the Jewish cemetery
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