The Friends of Southwell Cathedral Would You Help

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Friends of Southwell Cathedral Would You Help THE FRIENDS OF WOULD YOU HELP WITH MEMBERSHIP BANKERS SOUTHWELL CATHEDRAL OUR ONGOING TASK? APPLICATION ORDER were formed in 1947 to provide funds to: You are warmly invited to join us by completing the Please enrol me/us as a Friend/Friends To (name and address of your Bank) • Preserve the Cathedral membership application form on this leaflet. There is of Southwell Cathedral. • Maintain daily worship of God also a Bankers Order, and a Gift Aid declaration for • Conserve and enhance the furnishings use if you are a UK tax payer. Name and adornments Address Membership includes ‘Pepperpots’ our bi-annual A message from the Dean of Southwell journal; visits, outings and events and a welcome Postcode to the Friends’ annual Festival – a day of interesting As the mother church of Nottinghamshire, the Postcode Sort code activities centered on the Minster. Minster is both a lively centre of Christian worship Telephone number Account number for the diocese, and the parish Church of the smallest Cathedral town in England. It has stood here for * I enclose cash/cheque for £ Please pay to ‘The Friends of Southwell nearly a thousand years and is part of our spiritual (Cheques payable to ‘The Friends of Southwell Cathedral’ please) Cathedral’ account number 97113409 and national heritage. * I enclose a completed bankers order at NatWest Bank, 9 Church Street, In addition to regular worshippers, concert audienc- * I enclose a completed Gift Aid declaration Southwell, Notts, NG25 0HW es, school parties and guests at civic occasions, many * Please delete as appropriate Sort Code 60-20-15 thousands of visitors from the four corners of the world come to experience the tranquillity and the The amount of your subscription the sum of £ pounds on receipt of architectural splendour of the Minster. Many wish to The annual subscription is at your discretion but the offer some regular contribution to the ongoing and following is suggested. this order and on every day of ever rising cost of maintenance. The Friends exist for Individual members £15 annually until further notice. just that purpose. Joint members £25 Please cancel any existing order in favour of Members of the Friends live in locations as far apart Unwaged £10 as Africa and the United States, in addition to every Life membership is conferred for one single The Friends of Southwell Cathedral. corner of Great Britain. They are people who wish payment of £500 to maintain a connection with the Minster in some If you are a tax payer please consider completing tangible and helpful way. the Gift Aid declaration Signature john guille Legacies - a simple and tax-efficient process A leaflet is available on request Date Please send your enrolment form to: The Membership Secretary The Friends of Southwell Cathedral, Minster Centre, Church Street, Southwell, Notts, ng25 0hd Telephone 01636 817282 www.southwellminster.org.uk HOW THE FRIENDS THANK YOU FOR YOUR THE FRIENDS OF HAVE HELPED INTEREST IN S outhwell Gift aid declaration THE FRIENDS OF Only one person should complete this form. Cathedral You must pay an amount of income tax and/or capital S outhwell gains tax at least equal to the tax that the Friends of Southwell Cathedral reclaim on your contributions in Cathedral the tax year. Please inform the Friends of Southwell Cathedral if In recent years the Friends have provided: you cease to pay tax at this level or if you change your name or address. • A significant sum towards the restoration of the I want the Friends of Southwell Cathedral to treat quire organ and central tower all the contributions I have made since 6 April 2000, • Kelham Cross and candlesticks and all contributions I make from the date of this declaration, until I notify you otherwise, as gift aid • Nave choir stalls donations. • Speech reinforcement system Title • Information desk Forenames • New chairs Surname • Choir robes Address • Pilgrim Statue • Staging Postcode • Audio Tour • Screen and projection equipment Signature • West door gates Date • Quire heating • Chain and finial for candelabra Do join The Friends and share in our work. The Friends are very grateful to those who donate and bequeath gifts. Registered Charity No. 1039131 WHY YOU SHOULD JOIN US.
Recommended publications
  • MAILING CONTENTS PAGE.Pub
    Clergy Mailing - September 2015 Contents 1. Nifty Notes 2. Big E Day information & workshop choices 3. Big E Day booking form 4. Diocesan Conference booking form 5. Ministry Vacancies Niftynotes news & information from the Diocese www.southwell.anglican.org SEPTEMBER 2015 Compiled by Nicola Mellors email: [email protected] A voice for the voiceless Leverhulme Research Fellow and a Human ARights Activist are the keynote speakers at this year’s Racial Justice Weekend, which aims to help give a voice to the voiceless. The event is held on Saturday 12th September (10am–3.30pm) at St Stephen’s and St Paul’s Church, Hyson Green and Sunday13th September from 6pm Dr Roda Madziva at the Calvary Family Church, publics are imagined, constituted, Nottingham. engaged and mediated in immigration politics. Roda’s topic Sonia Aslam On Saturday, ‘Voice of the will cover Christians from ‘Lack of Rights of Christian Voiceless’ features keynote Muslim majority countries, their Women in Pakistan’ led by Sonia speaker, Dr Roda Madziva, who arrival in the UK as asylum Aslam; ‘Issues Providing the is a Leverhulme Research Fellow seekers and the possible double Burden of Proof – in UK re: in the School of Politics and discrimination re: Islamaphobia Blasphemy Charges’ International Relations. She holds and the burden of proof at the Continued on page 12 an MA (Social Policy and Home Office. Roda’s research Administration, Distinction) and forms part of the Leverhulme In this month’s issue: PhD (Sociology and Social funded and University of Policy) from the University of Nottingham-led programme on 2 News in brief Nottingham.
    [Show full text]
  • REACHING out a Celebration of the Work of the Choir Schools’ Association
    REACHING OUT A celebration of the work of the Choir Schools’ Association The Choir Schools’ Association represents 46 schools attached to cathedrals, churches and college chapels educating some 25,000 children. A further 13 cathedral foundations, who draw their choristers from local schools, hold associate membership. In total CSA members look after nearly 1700 boy and girl choristers. Some schools cater for children up to 13. Others are junior schools attached to senior schools through to 18. Many are Church of England but the Roman Catholic, Scottish and Welsh churches are all represented. Most choir schools are independent but five of the country’s finest maintained schools are CSA members. Being a chorister is a huge commitment for children and parents alike. In exchange for their singing they receive an excellent musical training and first-class academic and all-round education. They acquire self- discipline and a passion for music which stay with them for the rest of their lives. CONTENTS Introduction by Katharine, Duchess of Kent ..................................................................... 1 Opportunity for All ................................................................................................................. 2 The Scholarship Scheme ....................................................................................................... 4 CSA’s Chorister Fund ............................................................................................................. 6 Finding Choristers .................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Dear Friends
    Little St. Mary's, Cambridge NEWSLETTER October 2010, No. 424 Price: 25p Preachers on Sundays during October 3rd: 18th after Trinity: Harvest Thanksgiving 10.30am: The Vicar 6pm Fr Mark Bishop 10th: 19th after Trinity: 10.30am: Canon Frances Ward , Dean Elect of St Edmundsbury Cathedral 6pm: The Vicar 17th: 20th after Trinity: 10.30am: David Edgerton (Ridley Hall) 6pm: The Vicar 24th: 21st after Trinity: 10.30am: Canon Alan Cole 6pm: The Vicar Special Events Saturday 9th: Society of Mary to Ely Cathedral Walsingham Cell Saturday 16th: Outing to Southwell Minster and St Mary©s Nottingham Monday 18th: Feast of St Luke: Low Mass 7.45am Sung Mass 7pm Collections for the Homes of St Barnabas Saturday 23rd: Sponsored Walk to Ely (for the Parish Centre Development Fund) CONTENTS Vicar's Letter 2-4 Harvest and Jimmy©s 9 People for our Prayers 4 Parish Centre Fund Events 10 Calendar & Intentions 5-8 Whom to Contact 11 Services at LSM 12 1 Dear Friends, On August 31st we heard at last the name of the man who is to be the next Bishop of Ely. The Rt Revd Stephen Conway is the Area, or Suffragan, Bishop of Ramsbury, in the Diocese of Salisbury, which he is currently ‘minding’ as there is also an ‘episcopal interregnum’ in that diocese. Bishop Stephen was trained at Westcott House here in Cambridge, and until he became Bishop of Ramsbury in 2006 served all his ministry in the Diocese of Durham, in two curacies, then as a Parish Priest, as Director of Ordinands and Bishop’s Chaplain, and finally as an Archdeacon.
    [Show full text]
  • Centenary Celebration Report
    Celebrating 100 years CHOIR SCHOOLS’ ASSOCIATION CONFERENCE 2018 Front cover photograph: Choristers representing CSA’s three founding member schools, with lay clerks and girl choristers from Salisbury Cathedral, join together to celebrate a Centenary Evensong in St Paul’s Cathedral 2018 CONFERENCE REPORT ........................................................................ s the Choir Schools’ Association (CSA) prepares to enter its second century, A it would be difficult to imagine a better location for its annual conference than New Change, London EC4, where most of this year’s sessions took place in the light-filled 21st-century surroundings of the K&L Gates law firm’s new conference rooms, with their stunning views of St Paul’s Cathedral and its Choir School over the road. One hundred years ago, the then headmaster of St Paul’s Cathedral Choir School, Reverend R H Couchman, joined his colleagues from King’s College School, Cambridge and Westminster Abbey Choir School to consider the sustainability of choir schools in the light of rigorous inspections of independent schools and regulations governing the employment of children being introduced under the terms of the Fisher Education Act. Although cathedral choristers were quickly exempted from the new employment legislation, the meeting led to the formation of the CSA, and Couchman was its honorary secretary until his retirement in 1937. He, more than anyone, ensured that it developed strongly, wrote Alan Mould, former headmaster of St John’s College School, Cambridge, in The English
    [Show full text]
  • The-History-Of-The-Minster-School PDF File Download
    The History of the Minster School I. Introduction The present Southwell Minster School came into being in September 1976 as an 11-18, co- educational comprehensive. One of its "ancestors" was a grammar school, established in the Middle Ages. No precise date can be given to the grammar school's foundation. It was always a small school - on a number of occasions in danger of ceasing to exist. It did not develop a reputation for producing pupils who became household names, nor did it set any trends in education. Yet, through descent from the Grammar School, the Minster School is part of a line of development which may go back further than that represented by any other English school now outside the private sector. And, precisely because the Grammar School, and the other ancestors of the modern comprehensive, were not too much out of the ordinary, their story is the more important. II. The Grammar School 1. The Origins of the Grammar School The earliest schools were linked to a monastery, cathedral or other large church, such as the Minster at Southwell. Such "grammar" schools were at first very small - made up of perhaps less than twenty boys. Pupils probably started to attend between the ages of nine and twelve. Southwell's grammar school may have been created at the same time as its Minster - to provide education for Minster choristers. The Minster is thought to have been founded soon after the Saxon King Edwy gave lands in Southwell to Oscetel, Archbishop of York, in a charter dating from between 955 and 959.
    [Show full text]
  • 660268-69 Bk Strauss EU
    MENDELSSOHN Choral Music Sechs Sprüche • Hear my prayer • Motets, Op. 39 Magnificat and Nunc dimittis • Ave Maria • Psalm 43 Peter Holder, Organ • St Albans Abbey Girls Choir Lay Clerks of St Albans Cathedral Choir • Tom Winpenny Felix Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847) MENDELSSOHN Choral Music (1809-1847) Felix Mendelssohn was born in Hamburg in 1809 into a marred by ill health, the result of over-work: distressed by Choral Music distinguished Jewish family. The grandson of philosopher the death of his sister Fanny a few months earlier, he died Moses Mendelssohn and the son of a banker, he was in November 1847. Sechs Sprüche, Op. 79 10:06 recognised as a prodigious pianist at a young age. The The significant output of smaller sacred choral works 1 I. Frohlocket, ihr Völker auf Erden 1:27 family moved to Berlin in 1811, later adopting the name is set against Mendelssohn’s towering achievements – 2 II. Herr Gott, du bist uns’re Zuflucht für und für 2:29 Mendelssohn-Bartholdy and being baptised into the the oratorios St Paul (1836) and Elijah (1846). The 3 III. Erhaben, o Herr, über alles Lob 1:34 Lutheran Church. influence of Palestrina prevails in the smaller works, 4 IV. Herr, gedenke nicht unser Übeltaten 1:21 Mendelssohn began composing around 1819 under inspired by Mendelssohn’s participation in the Berlin 5 V. Lasset uns frohlocken 1:35 the tutelage of Carl Friedrich Zelter, director of the Berlin Singakademie, and by his experience attending the Holy 6 VI. Um uns’rer Sünden willen 1:38 Singakademie. Zelter was a flagbearer for the Bach Week services in the Sistine Chapel in 1831.
    [Show full text]
  • B R I D L I N G T O N P R I O R Y O R G a N R E C I T a L S 2 0
    April 27th Paul Hale May 25th John Scott Whitely June 29th Peter King July 27th Gordon Stewart Aug. 31st Daniel Cook Sept. 28th Ian Tracey Southwell Minster York Minster Bath Abbey International Concert Organist Durham Cathedral Liverpool Cathedral Paul Hale was Cathedral Organist John Scott Whiteley is Organist Peter King was Director of Music at Gordon Stewart was born in Daniel Cook is Master of the Professor Ian Tracey has had a and Rector Chori at Southwell Minster Emeritus of York Minster and well Bath Abbey from 1986-2016 and where Scotland and studied at the Royal Choristers and Organist of Durham life-long association with Liverpool Manchester College of Music and the for twenty seven years and appointed known for his performances of the he is now Organist Emeritus. In 1997 Cathedral where he began his music Cathedral becoming the youngest Geneva Conservatoire gaining a cathedral organist in the country in Organist Emeritus following his complete organ works of Bach on BBC he established a girls' choir which education before spending a year as retirement. He was previously Assistant television. He studied with Ralph Performer’s Diploma with distinction in Organ Scholar at Worcester Cathedral. 1980. After 27 years in post the Dean quickly became one of the finest in the Manchester and a Premier Prix de Organist of Rochester Cathedral, Downes at the Royal College of Music From there he took up a place at the and Chapter created the post of country. Described as 'a virtuoso of Virtuosité in Geneva. A former Organist Organist Titulaire allowing him the Organist of Tonbridge School and and with Fernando Germani and Flor of Manchester and Blackburn Royal Academy of Music studying world class' he has an extensive and freedom to devote more time to Organ Scholar of New College, Oxford.
    [Show full text]
  • John Hendrix Keywords Architecture As Cosmology
    John Hendrix Keywords Architecture as Cosmology: Lincoln Cathedral and English Gothic Architecture architecture, cosmology, Lincoln Cathedral, Lincoln Academy, English Gothic Architecture, Robert Grosseteste (Commentary on the Physics, Commentary on the Posterior Analytics, Computus Correctorius, Computus Minor, De Artibus Liberalibus, De Calore Solis, De Colore, De Generatione Sonorum, De Generatione Stellarum, De Impressionibus Elementorum, De Iride, De Libero Arbitrio, De Lineis, De Luce, De Motu Corporali at Luce, De Motu Supercaelestium, De Natura Locorum, De Sphaera, Ecclesia Sancta, Epistolae, Hexaemeron), medieval, University of Lincoln, Early English, Decorated, Curvilinear, Perpendicular, Catholic, Durham Cathedral, Canterbury Cathedral, Anselm of Canterbury, Gervase of Canterbury, Thomas Becket, Becket’s Crown, Trinity Chapel, Scholasticism, William of Sens, William the Englishman, Geoffrey de Noyers, Saint Hugh of Avalon, Saint Hugh’s Choir, Bishop’s Eye, Dean’s Eye, Nikolaus Pevsner (Buildings of England, Cathedrals of England, Leaves of Southwell, An Outline of European Architecture), Paul Frankl (Gothic Architecture), Oxford University, Franciscan School, Plato (Republic, Timaeus), Aristotle (De anima, De Caelo, Metaphysics, Physics, Posterior Analytics), Plotinus (Enneads), Wells Cathedral, Ely Cathedral, Hereford Cathedral, Lichfield Cathedral, Winchester Cathedral, Beverley Minster, Chester Cathedral, York Minster, Worcester Cathedral, Salisbury Cathedral, Southwell Minster, Gloucester Cathedral, Westminster Abbey, Elias
    [Show full text]
  • The Taste of Legends Baltic Outlook Journalists Natali Lekka and Chris Yeomans Visit Nottinghamshire in Search of History, Legend and Culinary Delights
    OUTLOOK / TRAVEL The taste of legends Baltic Outlook journalists Natali Lekka and Chris Yeomans visit Nottinghamshire in search of history, legend and culinary delights. TEXT BY NATALI LEKKA AND CHRIS YEOMANS PHOTOS COURTESY OF EXPERIENCE NOTTINGHAMSHIRE AND VISITENGLAND Fly to Europe with airBaltic ONE from €29 WAY Newark Market he English county of Nottinghamshire is reminder of the country’s sometimes violent past. steeped in history and legend. From the In 2015, Newark plans to open a National Civil War famous Robin Hood to numerous kings and Museum devoted to this key event in English history. lords, many have traversed and left their mark. One of the most striking things about Newark-on- TToday’s visitors can get there much faster than the Trent is the large number of independent retailers and horses and carriages of medieval times, and our easterly restaurants, giving the high street a more bespoke starting point of Newark-on-Trent is only one hour and nature than in other market towns of a similar size. 15 minutes by train from London’s King’s Cross station. Known as a foodie’s paradise, Newark has restaurants The bustling market town of Newark brims with tales that cater to all appetites and budgets. Our first from yesteryear, and it has played a notable part in two culinary stop was at Gannet’s Day Café, a family-owned of the most significant wars in English history. During bistro housed in an elegant Georgian building near the the Wars of the Roses (1455-1487), King Edward IV of castle.
    [Show full text]
  • MAILING CONTENTS PAGE.Pub
    Clergy Mailing - November 2015 Contents 1. Nifty Notes 2. Ministry Vacancies 3. Finding Direction through Prayer Niftynotes news & information from the Diocese www.southwell.anglican.org NOVEMBER 2015 Compiled by Nicola Mellors email: [email protected] Christmas video Bishop Paul Williams reflects competition now launched on his first 100 days Christmas The Rt Revd Paul Williams has video reflected on his first 100 days as the Bishop of Southwell & competition Nottingham in a video made during the Listen Hear event for Make a two-minute children and young people at video telling the Jubilee House, Southwell. Christmas story and win the cash for your Bishop Paul spoke of his joy at church youth group coming to the diocese and said he was having a wonderful time travelling across the area, meeting new people and prize of £100 is being offered in a Christmas video discovering how God is at work. competition launched for young people in the Diocese of ASouthwell and Nottingham. He said it was a particular encouragement to be at Listen They are being asked to make a two-minute video about the Continued on page 3 Christmas Story that shows originality and imagination rather than Oscar-winning sound and production quality. In this month’s issue: The films can be made with models, live actors, Lego, or drawings – whatever comes to mind. 2 News in brief 4 Events & information How to enter and tips on filming 5 Prayer Diary The closing date for entries is Monday 9th November 2015 and the ` 9 Training Courses winning entry will be announced on Sunday 29th November.
    [Show full text]
  • Southwell Minster 1
    20 OCTOBER 2014 SOUTHWELL MINSTER 1 Release date Version notes Who Current version: H1-Southwell-2014-1 20/10/14 Original version RS Previous versions: ———— This text is made available through the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial-NoDerivs License; additional terms may apply Authors for attribution statement: Charters of William II and Henry I Project Richard Sharpe, Faculty of History, University of Oxford SOUTHWELL MINSTER Collegiate church of St Mary County of Nottinghamshire : Diocese of York The manor of Southwell was given to Archbishop Oscytel by King Eadwig in 956, according to a diploma (S 659), copied in York Minster Archives, D&C, MS L2/1, Magnum Registrum Album (s. xiv), pt 1, fols. 58r–59r; Farrer, Early Yorkshire Charters, i. 5–10 (no. 2), now re-edited with commentary by Woodman, Northern Houses, 97–110 (no. 2). An Anglo-Saxon saint Eadburh is said to have been venerated here, giving rise to debate about the antiquity of the minster itself. By the eleventh century Southwell minster along with the ancient minsters of Beverley and Ripon were three major collegiate churches held by the archbishop of York. This may explain why, when Nottinghamshire became a shire, it was included in the diocese of York. The archbishops acquired other lands in the county over time, and these were in some cases used to build up prebends for the canons of Southwell, as we see from the documents printed here. Southwell minster came to represent the cathedral to the men of Nottinghamshire, and in the time of Archbishop Thomas II they were allowed by the archbishop to make their processions (a custom at Whitsuntide) to the church of Southwell instead of to York (Burton, EEA 5 York, 1070–1154, 22–3, no.
    [Show full text]
  • Eternal Light: a Requiem
    Eternal Light: A Requiem 2008 Theatre Royal, Bath Sadlers Wells, London Forum Theatre, Malvern Theatre Royal, Plymouth St John’s Smiths Square, London The Lowry, Salford Wycombe Swan, High Wycombe Theatre Royal, Norwich Festival Theatre, Edinburgh 2009 Cymru, Llandudno Hall for Cornwall, Truro Snape Maltings Theatre Royal, Brighton Eden Court, Inverness Clwyd Theatre, Cymru, Mold Theatre Royal, Newcastle Birmingham Hippodrome, Birmingham Tewkesbury Abbey, Tewkesbury Guildhall, Plymouth Wells Cathedral, Wells Newcastle University, Australia Grand Theatre, Leeds Leisure Centre, Thame Hertogenbosch, The Netherlands St Peter’s Church, Plymouth St John the Baptist Church, Barnstaple All Saints Church, Swansea Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford All Saints Church, Douglas, Isle of Man Parish Church, Stockton State Hall, Heathfield, East Sussex Methodist Church, Belfast Methodist Central Hall, Coventry St Lukes United Methodist Church, Houston TX, USA St James the Great Church, Littlehampton St John’s Church, Old Coulsdon St Bede’s Roman Catholic Church, Basingstoke Tewskesbury Abbey St Mary’s Church, Bury St Edmunds St James, Exeter 2010 Leisure Centre, Billingshurst St Michael’s & All Angels Church, Turnham Green, London St Peters Church, Ealing, London Lady Eleanor Hollis School, Hampton All Saints Church, Putney, London Easterbrook Hall, Dumfries Waterfront Hall, Belfast First United Church, Mooretown NJ, USA Symphony Hall, Birmingham St James Piccadilly, London The Sage, Gateshead Cadogan Hall, London St Saviour’s Church, Brockenhurst St Albans
    [Show full text]