Tuesday, 12 June 2012

Saint Margaret of Antioch - Suffield

© Godric Godricson
 There is something sad about this notice board with nothing in it. So much for the life of the parish.

North Side burials



Ecclesiastical Curiosities - (1898)
Editor: William Andrews
Project Gutemburg


"Yet there are prevalent ideas or notions, about the churchyard and its sleepers, as deep-rooted as any wild superstition, and perhaps as difficult to solve, or to trace to any rational source. I would here mention one of the most strange, and probably one of the most prejudiced notions to be met with relating to burial in the churchyard. I refer to the East Anglian prejudice of being buried on the north side of the church. That this prejudice is a strong one, among the country people in certain parts of England, is proved by the scarcity of graves, nay, in many instances the total absence of graves, on the north side of our churches".

Eric Wilfrid Green Died 14 April 1945


Saint Mary - Antingham, Norfolk


© Godric Godricson

 


Ann Harwood Died 1800

Saint Margaret of Antioch - Suffield


© Godric Godricson

 

Holsworthy Parish Church - 1885

Ecclesiastical Curiosities - (1898)
Editor: William Andrews
Project Gutemburg

"With the spread of Christianity the belief in human sacrifice died out. In 1885, Holsworthy Parish Church was restored; during the work of restoration it was necessary to take down the south-west angle of the wall, and in this wall was found, embedded in the mortar and stone, a skeleton. The wall of this part of the church had settled, and from the account given by the masons it would seem there was no trace of a tomb, but on the contrary every indication that the victim had actually been buried alive—a mass of mortar covered the mouth, and the stones around the body seemed to have been hastily built. Some few years ago the Bridge Gate of the Bremen city walls was taken down, and the skeleton of a child was found embedded in the foundations".