Showing posts with label Dunton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dunton. Show all posts

Thursday 4 October 2012

Sacrifical Foundations

Ecclesiastical  Curiosities
Edited William Andrews (1899) Project Gutenburg
© Godric Godricson

In early ages a sacrifice of some sort or other was offered on the foundation of nearly every building. In heathen times a sacrifice was offered to the god under whose protection the building was placed; in Christian times, while many old pagan customs lingered on, the sacrifice was continued, but was given another meaning. The foundation of a castle, a church, or a house was frequently laid in blood; indeed it was said, and commonly believed, that no edifice would stand firmly for long unless the foundation was laid in blood. It was a practice frequently to place some animal under the corner stone—a dog, a wolf, a goat, sometimes even the body of a malefactor who had been executed.

Saturday 2 June 2012

William Case (1814-1857) - Saint Peter, Dunton


William Case - Saint Peter, Dunton

© Godric Godricson

Birth:
Birthplace:Testerton House, Norfolk
Death:Died in Chinut, India

Friday 18 May 2012

Signs of faith

© Godric Godricson

Saint Peter's Dunton



Dunton, Norfolk, Parish Church
Saint Peter's Dunton
© Godric Godricson





The 'balcony' over the east End is amazing and it is truly surprising that this was restored after the Reformation. From this somewhat rickety position there is a view of the grave covers in the floor. In the Pre-Reformation period this would also have been for the singing of the Easter Liturgy.

Matthew Lancaster of Dunton

Matthew Lancaster

© Godric Godricson

Martha Case Died 2nd September 1805

Martha Case
Died 2nd September 1805

© Godric Godricson

William Henry Beets

Beets, Burial, Norfolk
William Henry Beets

© Godric Godricson

Thursday 17 May 2012

The Parish Clerk By Thomas Gainsborough, R.A.

The Parish Clerk (1907)
Peter Hampson Ditchfield
Courtesy : Project Gutenburg



The Parish Clerk is a position that I hadn't known of until recently and I hadn't known of the significance of this post in the parish. The Parish Clerk was clearly a man (occasionally a woman) who had significance in the life, work and worship of the Anglican Parish in England. The good people at Project Gutenburg have transcribed a book from 1907 and we can see a memorial in Saint Peter's Dunton as the symbol of another long serving Parish Clerk