Showing posts with label St Michaels and All Saints church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St Michaels and All Saints church. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 May 2010

If Walls Could Speak...


Dave Tonge, storyteller, telling medieval tales at the site.

When you enter any medieval church site, you are in a special place. Here are some of my thoughts about this:

  • The church acted as a focal point and meeting place for the community for so many hundreds of years. A parish church has witnessed all of the bitter-sweetness of life. 
  • It has been a marker against which wider events took place.
  • In those still places, we stand in the footprints of others; physically, in that same place where their hearts raced and their tears fell. Pettiness, day-dreams, discomfort, hope... all of these and more have been felt here before we pass through. A ruin has stories to tell (see photo, above). 
  • A sense of this time and connection makes me aware that we are not only time-travellers in the present; we are, simultaneously, and instantly, part of the story too. 
  • In those still places, I am moved, imaginatively, to reach out for those past presences. We should, in my opinion,  all be humble in the face of this.
  • A medieval church is a space where I am open to possibilities. Here, my imagination is challenged and stretched. I begin to feel for the nature of things and our place within it.   
  • The movement of seasons and the natural life which passes through are part of the story too.
  • I am full of wonder and inspired to creativity...
Colin

Tuesday, 16 June 2009

Picturing the past - East Window


What would St Michael's and All Saints church have looked like if it had not become a ruin?
Although we cannot say for sure, we can get some idea by looking at churches of a similar age which have survived. In the photo above, you are looking towards the East end of the church, where an altar and a great window would once have stood.

Here's a photo looking towards the East end of a local church ('Alburgh') which has survived complete into the present day...


© Simon Knott, 2006 - All Saints, Alburgh

Even when we visit old churches today, it is very hard to picture what they would have looked like hundreds of years ago. This is because old buildings often develop and change over time.

In the next post we will think about some of the things that would have been in the original church at Bowthorpe.