Clergy and aristocrats in Gozo |
"Both the rich man and the poor man die, and both are salted for the pit" [Maltese saying]
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Wednesday, 18 December 2013
The Theatre of death in Malta
The theatre of death at The Cathedral of The Assumption - Gozo |
I was in Malta again recently and had some time in Gozo which is
the smaller island off the coast of the main island of Malta. The
island of Gozo is green and pleasant and less frantic than the larger
island. The houses are further apart and have a rural atmosphere
compared to the other place. Gozo is interesting if you have the time
to visit the place. More often as not tourists spend a day on Gozo
before hurrying back on the last ferry.
Gozo has a unique atmosphere and the the capital of Victoria or
Rabat (you take your pick as with many other Maltese towns) is a
place of small shops, sometimes bad tea and the Cathedral that sits
on the heights above the market square. The walls of the citadel are
intimidating and as intended. The masonry was always there to ensure
that the locals knew who was in charge and that invaders were aware
of the outcome of any attack. Even now the ascent to the citadel is
difficult on foot and you have to stop and catch your breath in the
last sun of the year when the sun was unseasonably strong.
The citadel (built on the site of a Roman temple) was hot and dry and bathed in sun and yet the
Cathedral frowned down upon anyone who made it into the square and
shelled out the 6 Euros to go inside. I resent paying the Roman
catholic Church anything at all. The congregations are often
complicit in assaults carried out upon children and many of the
clergy (although not all) are aware of child abusers and are aware of
those who have 'got away with it'. The light, air and beauty of this
hilltop covered in stone is damaged by the Cathedral which has a
monumentally dark energy. The larger than life statues of Popes on
the steps ensures that a feeling of power and monumentality is
created. This is Roman Catholicism in large scale and in a sort of
funny farm baroque way. The site is harmed by the building and it
gets worse as you go inside.
Death as an object of fear and veneration |
The interior of the Cathedral embodies the sort of melancholy I
have mentioned on this blog previously. The darkness of the interior
is evident as the tourist is drawn inside towards the tombs in what
is a small and rather insignificant building. The floor is the first
things that grips you as the graves are laid out like Baroque crazy
paving. The clergy and aristocrats find their place under marble
tombs and ornate marble work that fills the imagination. The colours
are bright for this oppressive environment and the brightness of the
materials makes up for the Christian tendency to fill Churches with
the dead. The floor is filled with the dead and the so are the walls
where we find tombs. Here we also find effigies of a Pope in a
cabinet and this is where the Roman Catholics are the cult of the
dead incarnate. Death has become something that it inevitable to
become something that is actual desirable. Death is the thing that
brings the Christian closer to God and the Christian forgets the joys
of life in a rush to death.
The voices of tourists are hushed as they feel their way around in
the darkness and Japanese tourists clearly have no idea what they're
looking at and they seemed confused by the images and the apparently
random placing of the dead and the living. That is nothing new as
many Churches are little more that indoor burial sites where the
great and the good await a place in the next life. They point to the
image of a silver cross with an emaciated and tortured Christ and
this is the centre of this faith.
The Church led by the dead! |
I leave the Cathedral of Victoria / Rabat with relief and I
quickly go round the back to find that the masonry walls enclose a
garden and I touch the clean soil of the garden. This is clean dirt
rather than the filth that fills the cathedral's substructure and
the walls give a good view of the landscape. The wind at this height
blows the cobwebs away and the sun destroys any feelings of
negativity.
The Cathedral at Gozo
Wednesday, 11 December 2013
Monday, 14 October 2013
Sunday, 13 October 2013
Largest burial ground in the last 100 years
From: The Bromley Times |
The capital’s largest burial ground in the last 100 years officially opened in Chislehurst last week.
The site, run by Michael Burke, opened unofficially last year. He says the site will set “new levels of expectations” for London cemeteries.
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Saturday, 12 October 2013
Tuesday, 17 September 2013
Wednesday, 11 September 2013
Swaffham Parish Church - Styles
Isaac Stroulger Died 26 October 1828 Martha Stroulger Died 6 June 1871 Frances Died 18 July 1883 |
Celtic Cross and dereliction |
Monday, 9 September 2013
Monday, 19 August 2013
Thursday, 15 August 2013
Swaffham Parish Church - Styles
Swaffham Parish Church © Godric Godricson |
Elegant Scroll Cross Swaffham Parish Church © Godric Godricson |
Decay and weathering Swaffham Parish Church © Godric Godricson |
Wednesday, 14 August 2013
Friday, 19 July 2013
Wednesday, 17 July 2013
Monday, 8 July 2013
Monday, 1 July 2013
Tuesday, 18 June 2013
Death in Venice
"For many centuries funeral services in Venice have been conducted by the Scuole del Sacramento, instituted for that purpose. To one of
these societies the friends of the defunct pay a certain sum, and the
association engages to inter the dead, and bear all the expenses of the
ceremony, the dignity of which is regulated by the priest of the parish in which
the deceased lived. The rite is now most generally undertaken by the Scuola di
San Rocco. The funeral train is of ten or twenty facchini, wearing tunics of
white, with caps and capes of red, and bearing the society's long, gilded
candlesticks of wood with lighted tapers. Priests follow them chanting prayers,
and then comes the bier,—with a gilt crown lying on the coffin, if the dead be
a babe, to indicate the triumph of innocence. Formerly, hired mourners
attended, and a candle, weighing a pound, was given to any one who chose to
carry it in the procession."
From: VENETIAN
LIFE By
William Dean Howells. 1st January 1867 Project Gutenburg
Running out of burial plots.
"RESIDENTS in Market Weighton, which is fast running out of
burial plots, will face the choice of being cremated to stay local – or buried
miles away from the town when they die.
The town’s cemetery, on Holme Road ,
has less than 10 plots left in addition to the spaces that have already been
bought by residents who are still alive."
Monday, 17 June 2013
Friday, 7 June 2013
Kalkara
Miss Lily A, Jackson Died 21 October 1918 © Godric Godricson |
Raymond Henery Goddard Died 7 February 1924 © Godric Godricson |
Monday, 27 May 2013
Monday, 6 May 2013
Alex Anderson - 193 Brand Street, Govan - SS Elysia
Alex Anderson Died 24 May 1916 SS Elysia (1908-1942) |
For Alex on Glasgow's role of honour see this link
For Alex in the Kalkara site see this link
Friday, 3 May 2013
Wednesday, 17 April 2013
Saturday, 13 April 2013
Thursday, 11 April 2013
Wednesday, 10 April 2013
Peter's Orchard
"It may be assumed that “Peter’s Orchard” was originally an apple orchard or an
Avalon similar to the “Heaven’s Walls,” which were discovered some years ago
near Royston: these “walls,” immediately contiguous to the Icknield or Acnal
Way, were merely some strips of unenclosed but cultivated land which in ancient
deeds from time immemorial had been called “Heaven’s Walls”. Traditional awe
attached to this spot, and village children were afraid to traverse it after
dark, when it was said to be frequented by supernatural beings: in 1821 some
labourers digging for gravel on this haunted spot inadvertently discovered a
wall enclosing a rectangular space containing numerous deposits of sepulchral
urns, and it then became clear that here was one of those plots of ground
environed by walls to which the Romans gave the name of ustrinum."
Title: Archaic England
An Essay in Deciphering Prehistory from Megalithic
Monuments, Earthworks, Customs, Coins, Place-names, and
Faerie Superstitions
Author: Harold Bayley
Tuesday, 19 March 2013
Wednesday, 13 March 2013
Pagan shrine to Church
Section of the Dolmen Chapel of the Seven Sleepers near Plouaret |
Later came stone circles and megalithic monuments in various forms, whence the connection is direct to cathedrals such as Chartres, which is said to be built largely from the remains of the prehistoric megaliths which originally stood there. There are chapels in Brittany and elsewhere built over pagan monoliths; indeed no new faith can ever do more than superimpose itself upon an older one, and statements about the wise and tender treatment of the old nature worship by the Church are euphemisms for the bald fact that Christianity, finding it impracticable to wean the heathen from their obdurate beliefs, made the best of the situation by decreeing its feasts to coincide with pre-existing festivals."
Title: Archaic England
An Essay in Deciphering Prehistory from Megalithic
Monuments, Earthworks, Customs, Coins, Place-names, and
Faerie Superstitions
Author: Harold Bayley
Wednesday, 13 February 2013
James Whitcomb Riley
I cannot say and I will not say
That she is dead, she is just
away.
With a cheery smile and a wave of hand
She has wandered
into an unknown land;
And left us dreaming how very fair
Its
needs must be, since she lingers there.
And you-oh you, who the wildest yearn
From the old-time step and
the glad return-
Think of her faring on, as dear
In the love of
there, as the love of here
Think of her still the same way, I
say;
She is not dead, she is just away.