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| Saints and Beati associated with Gloucestershire |
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Episcopal Saints
Before the creation of the See of
Gloucester in 1541 by King Henry VIII and its recognition by the Papacy in 1554
Gloucestershire was divided between the Diocese of Worcester (known for a time
as the Diocese of Worcester with Westbury (-on-Trym)) and the Diocese of
Hereford together with some parishes north of Gloucester known as the
jurisdiction of St Oswald which belonged to the archdiocese of York. All the
medieval parishes in the Forest Deanery (nearly everything west of the River
Severn/River Leadon except Lassington but including Bromsberrow) – today what
is now the Catholic Parishes of Coleford, Cinderford and part of Newent - were
in the Diocese of Hereford.
St Chad of Mercia
Chad was bishop of Mercia from 669 before
the creation of the dioceses of Worcester and Hereford. When he died in 672,
having been Bishop of Mercia for only two and a half years, his body was
enshrined at Lichfield Cathedral where it remained until the Reformation.
Amazingly the relics were largely preserved and were transferred to the
Metropolitan Cathedral of St Chad in Birmingham in 1841. He was a very
influential figure in the development of Christianity in Mercia.
Feast 2nd March and Feast of the
Re-translation is kept on the third Sunday of June (‘The Bones Walk’).
St Egwin of Evesham
Bishop of Worcester 693-711, Founder of
Evesham Abbey. Connections with Malmesbury – conducted Aldhelm’s funeral in
709. Developed cult and shrine of Our Lady at Evesham.
Feast 30th December (translation
feasts on 10th September and 11th January)
St Dunstan of Canterbury
St Dunstan became successively Bishop of
Worcester (957-959), Bishop of London and Archbishop of Canterbury.
Feast 19th May (ordination feast
at Canterbury 21 October)
St Oswald of Worcester
St Oswald was a Benedictine monk and Bishop
of Worcester from 961 and also Archbishop of York from 972. He founded the
monastery of Westbury-on-Trym in 962 together with Deerhurst,Winchcombe,
Pershore, Evesham, Worcester. He died in 992 at Worcester. St Wulfstan
translated his shrine in about 1086.
Feast 28th January (translation
15th April)
St Wulfstan of Worcester (Wulstan)
Born in 1008. Wulfstan became a
Benedictine. Educated at Evesham and Peterborough. 1062 became Bishop of
Worcester. He died in 1095. Cult began at once. Relics translated 1198.
Feast 19th January (translation
7th June)
St Thomas of Hereford – Thomas Cantelupe
Born at Hambleton, Bucks in 1218.
Chancellor of Oxford University, Chancellor of England, Bishop of Hereford in
1275, died at Orvieto on 25th August 1282.
400 claimed miracles, Hereford most
important centre in west of England, canonised 1320, relics translated in 1287
and 1349.
Feast 2nd October (translation
feasts 3rd April, 25th October)
St Alphege
St Alphege became a monk at Deerhurst in
about 970, and eventually Abbot of Bath. He later became Archbishop of
Canterbury and died in 1012.
Feast 19th April (translation 8th
June, ordination 16th November)
Ancient Cults
St Kenelm of Winchcombe
Mercian Prince possibly died – martyred –
in 812 or 821. Buried at Winchcombe. When Oswald revived Winchcombe in the
second half of 10th century Kenelm was regarded as a martyr and
figured in liturgical books, sacramentary, Legend developed.
Major medieval shrine at Winchcombe and
seven medieval churches dedicated to him.
Feast Day 17th July
St Kyneburgh of Gloucester or Cyniburg
Descended from Saxon Royal Family lived at
Morton, Thornbury. Parents arranged marriage to a neighbouring Prince. She
wanted to remain a virgin and fled to Gloucester. Became maid to a baker. The
baker was inspired by her and adopted her as his daughter. Wife jealous, killed
girl and threw her down a well near South Gate of City. Miracles wrought there
and an investigation revealed body. Amongst Canterbury reliquaries – A bone of
St Kyneburga, virgin
1174 Robert, Bishop of Hereford built a
chapel on site of well. Almshouses named after St Kyneburgh for six poor
people. Now Kimbrose Way.
Feast 25th June
St Arild of Thornbury
Virgin. Place of her death at
Kington-by-Thornbury. ‘one Muncius a tiraunt, who cut off hir heade becawse she
would not consent to lye with hym’. Relics translated to Gloucester Cathedral.
Evidence for a statue in the reredos of Gloucester Cathedral Lady Chapel,
medieval stained glass etc. Churches at Oldbury-on-Severn and
Oldbury-on-the-Hill dedicated to her. Hymn to St Arilde on fly-leaf of a book
which belonged to a former Abbot of Gloucester, 1224-28, now in Hereford
Library. Keen local ecumenical devotion today in Thornbury area. Annual
piligrimage to well etc.
Feast 20th July
St Aldate of Gloucester
A fifth century
Briton who lived in the West of England. It is alleged that he inspired his
countrymen to defend their land against the warring Anglo-Saxons, but he was
killed at the Battle Deorham (Dyrham), Gloucestershire. He is recorded in
ancient martyrologies - Sarum and other martyrologies, as Bishop of Cluvium,
possibly Gloucester (Glevum) – all rather spurious. Feast occurs in a
Gloucester calendar (14th century addition). A church is dedicated
to him in Gloucester.
Feast 4th
February
St Tecla or St Twrog
On Chapel Rock,
off the southern tip of the Beachley Peninsula, and only accessible at low
tide, are the remains of the medieval chapel of St Twrog – one wall with an
arched opening survives. It is said that when the Welsh Bishops crossed the
Severn to meet Augustine, they called at St Tecla’s Island to consult its
eponymous virgin and hermit. If Tecla was murdered in AD 47 as some suggest,
they would have been 550 years too late! It is also said that there may have
been a holy well on the island.
St Briavel
St Briavel is believed to have been a
Celtic hermit who lived in the Forest of Dean and gave his name to this place.
Feast 17th June
St Dubricius or Dyfrig
Patron of Herefordshire. Born at Madley
Feast Day 14th November
St Tathan or Tateus or Tathai or Athan
of Caerwent
Founded the monastery at Caerwent
Feast Day 26th December
St Cadoc or Docus or Sophias
Patron of Gwent. Connected with Caerwent
Feast Day 25th September
St Machutus or Malo or Mellon or
Maclou of Caerwent
Born at Caerwent and a missionary in
Brittany
Feast Day 15th November
St Oswald of Northumbria
There was a major shrine at Gloucester – St
Oswald’s Priory founded 909– in Gloucester where there was an arm if not more
of this seventh century Northumbrian King and Martyr. Robert of Gloucester
claimed that he died in a battle near Marshfield but this is generally have
thought to have taken place near Oswestry.
His feast was on 5th August (or
8th or 9th). There was a translation feast at Gloucester
and Evesham on 8th October.
St Blaise
St Blaise is the Patron Saint of
Wool-combers and there was a great devotion to him in the Cotswolds during
medieval times. The Chapel of St Blaise at Lechlade bears witness to this cult.
Relics were kept at Canterbury.
His feast is on 3rd February
The Recusant Martyrs
Blessed Thomas Alfield
was born in 1552 in Gloucester, and educated at Eton and King’s
College, Cambridge. In 1581, following a short period of study at the English
Seminary in Douai, he was ordained priest for the English Mission. He witnessed
St Edmund Campion’s execution in 1581, and suffered martyrdom himself at Tyburn
on 6th July 1585. Part of his ministry was spent in his native
county.
Anniversary of Death 6th July
Venerable Thomas Webley
a dyer of Gloucester, was associated with Blessed Thomas Alfield.
They were martyred together on 6th July 1585 at Tyburn.
Anniversary of Death 6th July
Blessed John Pibush
was arrested in Moreton-in-Marsh. He was tried and imprisoned at
Gloucester and later escaped from Gloucester on 19th February 1594.
He was (re) arrested on the next day at Matson. Martyred at Southwark on 18th
February 1601.
Anniversary of Death 18th
February
St Edmund Campion (1540-1581) was a close friend of Richard Cheyney, Bishop of
Gloucester, and he wrote to him -‘so often was I with you at Gloucester so
often in your private chambers, so many hours have I spent in your study and
library’. Campion was also associated with the Alfield and Webley Families of
Gloucestershire. When he was arrested at Lyford Grange, Berkshire, he was in
company with William Webley, a yeoman, probably from Brockworth and Thomas
Alfield reported the martyrdom of Campion at Tyburn on 1st December
1581.
Edmund Campion was beatified on 29th
December 1886 by Pope Leo XIII and canonized as one of the Forty Martyrs of
England in 1970 by Pope Paul VI.
Anniversary of Death 1st
December
The following Martyrs were beatified by
Pope John Paul II on 22nd November 1987:
Blessed William Lampley was probably born in Gloucester and worked in the city as a glover.
He was condemned for ‘persuading to popery’ and hanged at Gloucester in 1588.
Blessed Richard Sargeant was born in Gloucestershire, possibly at Stone, near Berkeley. He
studied at Oxford and Rheims where he was ordained in 1583. That same year he
returned to the English mission. He was condemned for the priesthood and hanged
at Tyburn on 20th April 1586.
Anniversary of Death 20th April
Blessed Henry Webley
was born in Gloucester in about 1558. He was
arrested in Chichester harbour in 1586 and condemned for assisting a priest,
probably William Dean. He was hanged with Dean at Mile End Green, London on 28th
August 1588.
Anniversary of Death 28th
August
Blessed John Sandys worked in Gloucestershire as tutor to the children of Admiral Sir
William Winter at Lydney. He became a Catholic and returned to the Lydney area
as a priest where he worked for two years. He was arrested there, tried at
Gloucester and barbarically martyred at Gloucester on 11th August
1586
Anniversary of Death 11th August
Blessed Stephen Rowsham was an Anglican Priest in Oxford. He became a Catholic and later
worked as a priest on the English mission. Having been arrested and banished he
returned and worked in east Glos. He was arrested after a year, in 1587, at the
home of Mrs Strange of Chesterton in Cirencester. He had links with Mr Thomson
of Burford. He was sentenced, imprisoned and martyred at Gloucester in March
1587.
The Franciscan Martyrs
The Community of Poor Clares at Woodchester
has significant relics of the Franciscan martyrs, many of whom visited their
community when the sisters were living as Third Order Franciscans in Brussels.
Five of these relics were in 1994 enshrined in an integral bronze casket
beneath a modern beech wood Altar, designed by David John of Stroud. These
relics include those of Saint John Wall, Blessed Thomas Bullaker, Blessed Henry
Heath, Blessed Arthur Bel and Blessed John Woodcock. These relics came to
England at the time of the French Revolution and to Woodchester from their
motherhouse at Taunton.
Nineteenth Century
Blessed Dominic Barberi was influential in the early days of the missions at
Northfields, Woodchester, Nympsfield and Fairford. (1846-1849)
Blessed Charles of Mount Argos was at Broadway for some time. (1866-1867)
Venerable John Henry Newman made many visits to friends in Gloucestershire before and after his
conversion.
Missionaries
St Birinus of Dorchester
Possibly a Lombard by birth he was sent by
Pope Honorius I to continue to convert the English. After a wandering mission
he failed to penetrate into the Midlands but settled at Dorchester. He was the
first Bishop of Dorchester, which lay in the West Saxon Kingdom, and he
baptised King Cynegils. He converted the upper reaches of the River Thames and
built various chapels. He dedicated a church at Winchester where the see later
moved after Dorchester was merged into Mercia in the 9th century. He
died in 650. There is a modern devotion to him in Lechlade.
Feast 3rd December and
Translation on 4th September
St Dubricius or Dyfrig or Devereux Dyfrig died in about 550. He was a monk and
bishop who worked mainly in the Gwent-Hereford area and places associated with
him include Hentland, Whitchurch, Madley, and Moccas, in the Wye Valley. He is
justifiably regarded as the principal saint and prime missionary of Archenfield
which was formed out of the small British Kingdom of Ergyng, which passed to
the Anglo-Saxons in about 750, and may have included the Forest of Dean.
His relics were translated to Llandaff in
1120.
Feast 14th November
Tewkesbury Feasts
Feast of the Holy Relics of
Tewkesbury
‘In 1235 through the efforts of Abbot
Robert, the abbey was given a curious assortment of relics by Isabel of
Gloucester. These included a stone from Calvary, a bone of St Wulstan, the
blood and hair of St Thomas the Martyr, and most remarkable of all, the stake
or base into which the Cross of Christ had been fixed (…de stipite in quo crux
Christi fixa fuit). Thereafter a Feast of the Holy Relics was celebrated each
year on 2 July. The Feast grew rapidly in popularity and in the revenue it
generated. Several miracles were reported to have taken place as a result of
pilgrimages made to the relics in 1232 and 1250.’ (‘Tewkesbury Abbey – History,
Art, Architecture’ Page 45 and VCH II Page 62)
Feast day 2nd July
Feast of
Dedication of Tewkesbury Abbey
‘At the second dedication of the church, 18th
June 1239, Walter Cantilupe, bishop of Worcester, granted an indulgence to
those who visited it during the feast of dedication and its octave and on the
feast of the Relics’
Feast day 18th June
The Abbey Seal
‘A seal of the fifteenth century represents
three heavily canopied niches; in the centre the Assumption of the Virgin,
standing with hands uplifted in prayer, within an oval vesica of clouds, upheld
by an angel above it; on the left St Peter with nimbus, book and keys; on the
right St Paul with nimbus, sword and book, each saint slightly turned to the
Virgin; over the central canopy a smaller niche containing the shield of arms,
a cross engrailed supported by two lions couchant guardant addorsed. The legend
is – ‘Sigillvm . Commvne . ec … ie … ncte . Marie . de . Tevkesbvry’
St Joseph
(Declared
Patron of the Universal Church in 1870) 19th March
St Joseph the Worker
1st May
St Benet
Kemerton (Opened 19th July 1843)
Medieval Dedications within the
Parish
St Mary,
Tewkesbury, Deerhurst, Forthampton
St Michael and All Angels, Tirley
St John the Baptist, Tredington, Chaceley
St Catherine of Alexandria, The Leigh
St Mary Magdalene, Twyning
St Nicholas, Ashchurch
Local Saint
St Alphege lived at Deerhurst
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