Cornwall and the Cross

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A01=Nicholas Orme
Author_Nicholas Orme
Category=QRM
catholic
celtic
chapel
christian faith
Christianity
Christianity 500 - 1560
church
churches
clergy
cornish saint
Cornwall
cornwall & the cross
England's Past for Everyone
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
friar
friaries
guild
identity
lay people
local history
middle ages
monasteries
monk
norman conquest
parish church
parish churches
past for everyone
people
Phillimore
pilgrimage
place names
reformation
religion
roman empire
saint
st austell
st ives
st just
traditions
victoria county history
|religious history

Product details

  • ISBN 9781860774683
  • Weight: 530g
  • Dimensions: 172 x 248mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Sep 2007
  • Publisher: The History Press Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Cornwall's place-names and churches are unique. They commemorate an enormous number of local and little-known saints, such as St Austell, St Ives, and St Just. This book explains how this came about, how Cornwall came to be Christian after the end of the Roman Empire, and how its religious history developed through the Middle Ages and into the Reformation. Every aspect of Christian life is covered: the early Church, the effects of the English and Norman Conquests, the foundation of monasteries and friaries, and the history of the parish churches. There is a full account of the Reformation in Cornwall, showing what was swept away and what survived.

The book is about people. It probes the identity of the early Cornish saints and explains the daily life of monks, friars, and parish clergy, also highlighting their substantial contribution to the Church outside Cornwall. The author emphasises the positive role played by lay people. Far from being passive onlookers in pews, they were involved in appointing clergy, building and running parish churches, founding chapels, forming guilds, going on pilgrimages, and staging religious plays. Celtic or Catholic? This book explores Cornwall's religious history as a whole, and shows how the Cornish developed distinctive traditions while fully sharing in the Christianity of western Europe.

Nicholas Orme is Emeritus Professor of History at Exeter University and an Honorary Canon of Truro Cathedral. He has written nearly twenty books on the hisotry of the Church and society in England, and in Cornwall in particular.

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