The Network RSCM Events in Your Local Area June – October 2016

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Network RSCM Events in Your Local Area June – October 2016 the network RSCM events in your local area June – October 2016 The Network June 2016.indd 1 16/05/2016 11:17:47 Welcome THE ROYAL SCHOOL OF You can travel the length and CHURCH MUSIC breadth of the British Isles this Registered Charity No. 312828 Company Registration No. summer, participate in and 00250031 learn about church music in 19 The Close, Salisbury SP1 2EB so many forms with the RSCM. T 01722 424848 I don’t think I’ve ever seen quite F 01722 424849 E [email protected] so varied and action-packed an W www.rscm.com edition of The Network. I am Front cover photograph: most grateful to the volunteers on the RSCM’s local Area RSCM Ireland award winners committees, and I hope you will feel able to take up this recording for an RTÉ broadcast, oering. November 2015 How to condense it? Awards, BBC broadcast, The Network editor: Contemporary worship music, Diocesan music day, Cathy Markall Evensongs, Food-based events, Gospel singing, Harvest Printed in Wales by Stephens & George Ltd anthems, Instrumental music, John Rutter, Knighton pilgrimage, Lift up your Voice, Music Sunday, National Please note that the deadline for submissions to the next courses, explore the Organ, converting Pianists, edition of The Network is celebrating the Queen’s birthday, Resources for small and 1 July 2016. rural churches, Singing breaks, Training organists, Using the voice well, Vespers, Workshops, events for Young ABOUT THE RSCM people. Excellence and zeal, I hope. The RSCM is a charity Don’t forget that there is also the triennial committed particularly to International Summer School in Liverpool in August promoting the study, practice and improvement of music at which you can experience many of these things in in Christian worship. It is a single week. As I write it is still possible to book onto an open, life-long learning that, and onto some of our summer courses. If this organization, oering doesn’t provide variety enough there are the RSCM’s face-to-face and distance further ongoing training programmes such as Voices and education and training through its programmes, Millennium Youth Choirs, Church Music Skills, work with published resources, courses lay and ordained ministers, and Voice for Life: do contact and activities. The RSCM us for more information. Please recommend RSCM events is sustained by thousands to others in your church, choir, music group or family. of members, volunteers Whatever your interest, I hope you nd something and donors worldwide. For information about suitable from the RSCM this summer. And if not, please membership benets, email tell us what’s missing that you’d like us to provide in [email protected]. future. To make a charitable or legacy contribution, contact [email protected], phone 01722 424848, or visit www.rscm.com/donate. Andrew Reid, RSCM Director The Network June 2016.indd 2 16/05/2016 11:17:48 Contents NORTH OF ENGLAND 4 How to apply for events Please telephone or email the SOUTH OF ENGLAND 13 contact name given under the event you wish to attend. If leaving a message, remember WALES 23 to give your contact details and postal address. It is important SCOTLAND 24 to book your place so that you can be notied in the event of IRELAND 25 any changes. It is also helpful to say how many people you RSCM CHOIRS 26 wish to book. Please be aware that events listed may CONTACT DETAILS 29 be subject to change. Additional events Please note that the regions in England have changed to Additional events may be correspond to the Areas served by the RSCM’s new arranged after the press date Regional Coordinators (see page 29 for full details). for this edition of The Network. Please contact your Area for further information, or visit www.rscm.com for the latest Map of regions information about events in the UK and around the world. Regional Coordinators Regional Coordinators oversee the activities of the Areas within their regions. Contact details are provided on page 29 and at www.rscm.com/contact Scotland Area Awards RSCM Area committees arrange examinations at set times each year for individual singers of all ages leading to RSCM Awards at Bronze (Dean’s) and Silver North of (Bishop’s) levels. Please ask England your Area contact for further Ireland details. Wales Area contacts can be found on page 29. South of England The Network June 2016.indd 3 16/05/2016 11:17:48 NORTH OF ENGLAND SEA, SONG AND FISH O TASTE AND SING AND CHIPS The Revd Andrew Towner Andrew Robinson Thursday 9 June 2016 Wednesday 8 June 2016 19:30 to 21:30 19:30 to 21:00 St Andrew, Penrith St Paul, Park View, Whitley Cost: £6 Road, Tyne and Wear Contact: Joan Gordon NE26 2TH T 01768 352980 Cost: £6 including sh and chips E [email protected] Contact: e Revd Ann McGivern Following the successful event held last year, T 0191 266 5442 Andrew Towner will present an evening E [email protected] workshop to explore how contemporary A chance to enjoy an evening by the coast, worship music can enhance liturgy and discover a range of new resources for choirs middle-of-the-road services. A useful including music by the Northumbrian-based workshop for clergy, organists, choir trainers composer Paul Ritchie, Malcolm Archer and singers alike. and much, much more! en enjoy the end Cumbria Area Event of our time together with a sh and chip supper. Northumbria Area Event YOUNG VOICES FESTIVAL AS PART OF INSTRUMENTAL WORKSHOP AS PART OUR MUSIC SUNDAY WEEKEND OF OUR MUSIC SUNDAY WEEKEND Robert Webb Ray Gallagher Saturday 11 June 2016 Saturday 11 June 2016 10:30 to 17:00 (16:00 service) 10:30 to 17:00 (16:00 service) St James, Clifton, Rotherham S65 2SX St James, Clifton, Rotherham S65 2SX Cost: £1 (£3 non-members) Cost: £1 (£3 non-members) Contact: Ray Gallagher Contact: Ray Gallagher T 01709 540819 E [email protected] T 01709 540819 E [email protected] Our Young Voices Festival is part of our Our Instrumental Workshop is part of our weekend of celebrations for the Queen’s weekend of celebrations for the Queen’s 90th birthday. Attendees will sing music 90th birthday. Attendees will play music celebrating diversity and simultaneously we celebrating diversity and simultaneously will be holding an instrumental workshop. we will be holding a Young Voices Festival. In the second half of the day, our singers In the second half of the day, our singers and instrumentalists will come together to and instrumentalists will come together to rehearse and worship. rehearse and worship. Sheeld & South Yorkshire Area Event Sheeld & South Yorkshire Area Event 4 The Network The Network June 2016.indd 4 16/05/2016 11:17:48 SING, PRAISE AND PLAY O TASTE AND SING WITH David & Helen Iles THE REVD ANDREW TOWNER The Revd Andrew Towner Saturday 11 June 2016 13:00 to 17:00 Saturday 11 June 2016 St George, Newtown, Birmingham B19 2YX 13:00 to 16:30 St Paul, Tupsley HR1 1RT Cost: £3 adults, £2 children Contact: Amanda Kaye Cost: £5 (£7.50 non-members) T 07985 423120 Contact: Jon Weller T 07850 019489 E [email protected] E [email protected] A fun and interactive aernoon for children, Andrew Towner will present a workshop to also giving adults, choir leaders or junior explore how contemporary worship music leaders some ideas to take back to their can enhance liturgy and middle-of-the- choirs for warm-ups and games, as well as road services. A useful workshop for clergy, learning some pieces for a service to close organists, choir trainers and singers alike. the aernoon. ere will be a chance to have e workshop will be followed by tea and a picnic before the event starts. scones to celebrate HRH e Queen’s 90th Birmingham Area Event birthday. Hereford & South Shropshire Area Event FESTIVAL CELEBRATING THE FEAST MUSIC SUNDAY CHORAL FESTIVAL OF ST BARNABAS Darren Williams Andrew Bryden Saturday 11 June 2016 14:45 for 15:00 rehearsal (17:30 service) Sunday 12 June 2016 Ripon Cathedral 14:00 to 18:15 Cost: £3 plus purchase of music Doncaster Minster, Church Street, Contact: Andrew Robinson Doncaster DN1 1RD T 07739 341213 E [email protected] Cost: £1 (£3 non-members) Contact: Ray Gallager A Festal Mass for St Barnabas featuring a T 01709 540819 E [email protected] new setting by Northumbrian composer Paul Ritchie. e anthem is Come adore Come and sing choral evensong at his wondrous presence also by Paul Ritchie. Doncaster Minster to celebrate RSCM Music e festival will include the presentation of Sunday. All music will be based on the awards. theme of the Queen and royalty, and will be provided on the day. Ripon & Leeds Area Event Sheeld & South Yorkshire Area Event The North of England 5 The Network June 2016.indd 5 16/05/2016 11:17:48 NORTH OF ENGLAND MUSIC SUNDAY CHORAL FESTIVAL MEET, EAT AND SING Ian Roberts Martin Westhorp Monday 13 June 2016 19:30 to 21:45 St Leonard’s Church Sunday 12 June 2016 and Hall, Penwortham 15:00 to 19:45 St John, Ranmoor Park Road, Ranmoor, Cost: £10 Sheeld S10 3GX Contact: Marilyn Prescott T 01524 823031 Cost: £1 (£3 non-members) E [email protected] Contact: Ray Gallagher T 01709 540819 E [email protected] We are delighted to welcome Martin Westhorp for the rst time to lead this An opportunity for local choirs to come and popular annual event for us.
Recommended publications
  • Tavistock Abbey
    TAVISTOCK ABBEY Tavistock Abbey, also known as the Abbey of Saint Mary and Saint Rumon was originally constructed of timber in 974AD but 16 years later the Vikings looted the abbey then burned it to the ground, the later abbey which is depicted here, was then re-built in stone. On the left is a 19th century engraving of the Court Gate as seen at the top of the sketch above and which of course can still be seen today near Tavistock’s museum. In those early days Tavistock would have been just a small hamlet so the abbey situated beside the River Tavy is sure to have dominated the landscape with a few scattered farmsteads and open grassland all around, West Down, Whitchurch Down and even Roborough Down would have had no roads, railways or canals dividing the land, just rough packhorse routes. There would however have been rivers meandering through the countryside of West Devon such as the Tavy and the Walkham but the land belonging to Tavistock’s abbots stretched as far as the River Tamar; packhorse routes would then have carried the black-robed monks across the border into Cornwall. So for centuries, religious life went on in the abbey until the 16th century when Henry VIII decided he wanted a divorce which was against the teachings of the Catholic Church. We all know what happened next of course, the Dissolution of the Monasteries, when along with all the other abbeys throughout the land, Tavistock Abbey was raised to the ground. Just a few ruined bits still remain into the 21st century.
    [Show full text]
  • NEWSLETTER September 2019
    President: Secretary: Treasurer: David Illingworth Nigel Webb Malcolm Thorning 01305 848685 01929 553375 01202 659053 NEWSLETTER September 2019 FROM THE HON. SECRETARY Since the last Newsletter we have held some memorable meetings of which the visit, although it was a long and tiring day, to Buckfast Abbey must rank among the best we have had. Our visit took place on Thursday 16th May 2019 when some sixteen members assembled in the afternoon sunshine outside the Abbey to receive a very warm welcome from David Davies, the Abbey Organist. He gave us an introduction to the acquisition and building of the organ before we entered the Abbey. The new organ in the Abbey was built by the Italian firm of Ruffatti in 2017 and opened in April 2018. It has an elaborate specification of some 81 stops spread over 4 manuals and pedals. It is, in effect, two organs with a large west-end division and a second extensive division in the Choir. There is a full account of this organ in the Organist’s Review for March 2018 and on the Abbey website. After the demonstration we were invited to play. Our numbers were such that it was possible for everyone to take the opportunity. David was on hand to assist with registration on this complex instrument as the console resembled the flight deck of an airliner. Members had been asked to prepare their pieces before-hand and this worked well with David commenting on the excellent choice of pieces members had chosen to suit the organ. We are most grateful to David Davies for making us so welcome and help throughout the afternoon.
    [Show full text]
  • Stage 1-Route-Guide-V3.Cdr
    O MO R T W R A A Y D w w k u w . o .d c ar y. tmoorwa Start SX 6366 5627 Ivy Bridge on Harford Road, Ivybridge Elevation Profile Finish SX 6808 6289 Shipley Bridge car park 300m Distance 10 miles / 16 km 200m 2,037 ft / 621 m Total ascent 100m Refreshments Ivybridge, Bittaford, Wrangaton Golf Course, 0.0km 2.0km 4.0km 6.0km 8.0km 10.0km 12.0km 14.0km 16.0km South Brent (off route), Shipley Bridge (seasonal) 0.0mi 1.25mi 2.5mi 3.75mi 5mi 6.25mi 7.5mi 8.75mi 10mi Public toilets Ivybridge, Bittaford, Shipley Bridge IVYBRIDGE BITTAFORD CHESTON AISH BALL GATE SHIPLEY Tourist information Ivybridge (The Watermark) BRIDGE Ivybridge is easily accessed via the A38, and the only town on the Dartmoor Way to have direct access to the main rail network. The original hamlet developed at a handy crossing point of the River Erme, and later became a staging post on the London to Plymouth road; the railway arrived in 1848. Ivy Bridge Ivybridge - which developed as a mill town during the 19th Please refer also to the Stage 1 map. century, utilising the fast-flowing waters of the Erme - only S The official start of the Dartmoor Way is on Harford Road by the officially became a town in 1977, four years after the medieval Ivy Bridge over the River Erme. opening of the A38 bypass. POOR VISIBILITY OPTION a The Watermark (local information) is down in the town near In times of poor visibility or if anxious about your route-finding New Bridge, built in 1823 just downstream from the older Ivy abilities over moorland head down Harford Road, bearing left near Bridge, originally a 13th-century packhorse bridge, passed the bottom to meet the roundabout.
    [Show full text]
  • Advent 2015 Two Recent Publications: a Book and a Film
    Advent 2015 Two Recent Publications: A Book and a Film Monks have long been known for their diverse tal- on the afternoon of Sunday, September 13, attended ents and interests: teachers, farmers, writers, artists. by a number of Fr Stephen’s former students and Among the last-named was Fr Stephen Reid of our other friends of the abbey. It is available in our gift community, who at the time of his death in 1989 had shop for $20, and can be ordered by mail for an produced a remarkable number of sculptures and additional four dollars to cover shipping costs. paintings. In the past few years, an art critic named We think our readers would also like to know Bruce Nixon has been working on a publication that of a documentary about Benedictine life that has offers a thoughtful, carefully researched interpretive been produced for the Catholic French television text that considers Fr Stephen’s art in the context channel KTO, founded in 1999 by the late cardinal- of his life as a monk. Titled A Communion of Saints, archbishop of Paris, Jean-Marie Lustiger. Titled Le this forty-page illus- Temps et la règle bénédictine, this 52-minute film was trated catalog includes first telecast in December, 2014. The director, Patrice photographs made in Cros, has twice visited St Anselm’s and hopes accordance with the to produce English-language documentaries on archival standards of this and similar Benedictine topics, such as work, museum documenta- community, authority, and poverty. If any of our tion and so serves to readers have suggestions of sponsors who could preserve the legacy finance such a project, please let Abbot James know.
    [Show full text]
  • English Monks Suppression of the Monasteries
    ENGLISH MONKS and the SUPPRESSION OF THE MONASTERIES ENGLISH MONKS and the SUPPRESSION OF THE MONASTERIES by GEOFFREY BAS KER VILLE M.A. (I) JONA THAN CAPE THIRTY BEDFORD SQUARE LONDON FIRST PUBLISHED I937 JONATHAN CAPE LTD. JO BEDFORD SQUARE, LONDON AND 91 WELLINGTON STREET WEST, TORONTO PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN IN THE CITY OF OXFORD AT THE ALDEN PRESS PAPER MADE BY JOHN DICKINSON & CO. LTD. BOUND BY A. W. BAIN & CO. LTD. CONTENTS PREFACE 7 INTRODUCTION 9 I MONASTIC DUTIES AND ACTIVITIES I 9 II LAY INTERFERENCE IN MONASTIC AFFAIRS 45 III ECCLESIASTICAL INTERFERENCE IN MONASTIC AFFAIRS 72 IV PRECEDENTS FOR SUPPRESSION I 308- I 534 96 V THE ROYAL VISITATION OF THE MONASTERIES 1535 120 VI SUPPRESSION OF THE SMALLER MONASTERIES AND THE PILGRIMAGE OF GRACE 1536-1537 144 VII FROM THE PILGRIMAGE OF GRACE TO THE FINAL SUPPRESSION 153 7- I 540 169 VIII NUNS 205 IX THE FRIARS 2 2 7 X THE FATE OF THE DISPOSSESSED RELIGIOUS 246 EPILOGUE 273 APPENDIX 293 INDEX 301 5 PREFACE THE four hundredth anniversary of the suppression of the English monasteries would seem a fit occasion on which to attempt a summary of the latest views on a thorny subject. This book cannot be expected to please everybody, and it makes no attempt to conciliate those who prefer sentiment to truth, or who allow their reading of historical events to be distorted by present-day controversies, whether ecclesiastical or political. In that respect it tries to live up to the dictum of Samuel Butler that 'he excels most who hits the golden mean most exactly in the middle'.
    [Show full text]
  • A Nigerian Experiment
    6 A MONASTIC SECOND SPRING The Re-establishment of Benedictine life in Britain HE DISSOLUTION of the English Monasteries and other great Religious Houses by King Henry VIII virtually destroyed monastic life in Britain and Ireland in the five short years T between 1535 and 1540. So dominant had been the monks' con- tribution to the English 'thing' in the sphere of religious practice, so forceful its social, economic and political impact, that the spiritual and topographical shape of the country was entirely changed. Only gaunt and empty buildings remained as witnesses of a noble past that reached back for close on a thousand years. The visible absence of monasteries was to haunt the countryside and townships of these islands for nearly three centuries. If men and women from Great Britain and Ireland, who had remained loyal to the ancient faith of Columba and Aidan, Gregory and Augustine, felt the call to follow Christ along the monastic path, they had to leave home for the continent of Europe. At the outset, its men joined monasteries in Italy and Spain. But later, they became numerous enough to band together. With the approval of Rome, they reshaped an English Congregation of Monasteries in the Netherlands, France and Germany. There they waited patiently, until God's time should come for them to return and to re-found their monasteries in the homeland. The english monks settled at Douai (St Gregory's), at Dieuleward, Lorraine (St Laurence's) and at Paris (St Edmund's); the Scots established monasteries at Ratisbon and Wurzburg. The nuns settled earlier at Brussels, Cambrai and Ghent, at Dunkirk and Paris.
    [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]
  • Vocation Story My First Memory As Regards Religious Vocation Would Be
    Vocation Story My first memory as regards religious vocation would be from about the time I was 6 or 7. Not that far away from our house, just in a suburban street, was a small chapel, maybe a United Reformed Church or something like that. It was just like a little brick hall and didn’t look like a church as we would imagine it. I can’t recall anyone going in or out of it or it ever showing any signs of life inside. Once when we were walking by I asked my Mum ‘who goes there and what do they believe?’ This was in pre- ecumenical days and my Mum was rather dismissive of the question and didn’t really enter into the conversation. Somehow the idea of a place of worship for different people, for people who worshipped God in a different way, intrigued my young mind. It is hard to say what it was that aroused my curiosity but even to this day places of worship – Methodist Chapels, Unitarian Churches, Kingdom Halls, Mosques and Temples – still intrigue me. When I was about 14 or 15 our family went on holiday to Salcombe in Devon, a very nice place on a beautiful estuary. One day I was sitting on the harbour wall doing nothing and there was an old fisherman nearby talking to a young boy. He was telling the boy that there is a place in the Bible describing a visitation from God and if you draw exactly what is described there you come out with a picture of a modern day space rocket in all its details.
    [Show full text]
  • Offices at Buckfast Abbey Buckfastleigh Devon TQ11 0EE
    TO LET - PRESTIGOUS OUT OF TOWN OFFICES Buckfastleigh Offices at Buckfast Abbey Buckfastleigh Devon TQ11 0EE 11,050 sq ft (1026.54 sq m) approx. Net Internal Area Converted office premises formed from existing Buckfast Abbey Estate buildings within the Abbey AVAILABLE AS A WHOLE OR IN PART Offices at Buckfast Abbey, Buckfastleigh, Devon, TQ11 0EE Location There are a number of good quality pubs and restaurants Accommodation in the vicinity. There is a bus stop at Dartbridge, on bus Buckfast Abbey forms part of an active Benedictine routes providing regular bus services to the surrounding monastery at Buckfast, near Buckfastleigh, Devon. Area Sq ft Sq m region, as well as Exeter and Plymouth. Buckfastleigh is an historic mill town situated on the Level 1 Upper Ground Floor 5,013 465.68 southern edge of Dartmoor National Park with a population of approximately 3,600. It benefits from a reasonable level Description Level 2 First Floor 4,510 419.02 of retail facilities and other amenities. The premises form part of a converted period property with Level 3 Second Floor 1,527 141.84 Buckfastleigh is well placed for quick and easy access a gym and café on lower ground floor. Suites are available TOTAL 11,050 1026.54 onto the A38 Devon Express Way which provides from 1,137 sq ft (105.66 sq m) to 11,050 sq ft (1026.54 sq excellent communications to Exeter approximately 24 m). miles (38 km) distant and Plymouth approximately 22 miles All measurements are approximate Net Internal Areas. The building is capable of occupation by a single occupant (35 km) distant.
    [Show full text]
  • Services Today
    The Parish of Our Lady of the Assumption Tavistock. with Our Lady of Victories Callington Tavistock Parish is part of the Plymouth R.C.Diocese: Charity No. 21322 Priest in Charge: Fr. John Greatbatch B.A. (Of the Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham) 01822 612645 07799078164 : [email protected] Website: ourladytavistock.org.uk The 18th Sunday of Ordinary Time – 5th August 2012 We would like to welcome any visitors to the Parish - We hope that you enjoy your visit to our churches and find them a place of warm welcome and spiritual renewal. This Week: Monday: Callington: 5.00pm Mass (Transfiguration of the Lord - Feast) Proceeded by Holy Rosary, Exposition and Benediction at 4.300pm. Tuesday: Tavistock: 10.00am Mass (Ferial) followed by Exposition & Benediction. Wednesday: St Austell: Ordinariate Mass (St Dominic) Thursday: Tavistock: 10.00am Mass St. Teresa Benedicta of the Cross – Patron of Europe (Feast) Saturday: Tavistock: Prison Mass – Fr. John is saying Mass at Dartmoor Prison on Saturday morning, so there will be no Mass at Tavistock. Fr. John’s Diary: Monday pm Presbytery cleaning; Tuesday: 2.00pm meeting with Spiritual Director, Wednesday – St. Austell all day, Saturday 9.00am till noon – H.M.P. Dartmoor (Masses) To Visitors/Holiday Makers: if you would like to 'Gift Aid' your giving there are some yellow 'Gift Aid' envelopes on the table at the back of the Church. Please ensure that you complete all details in pen. Help with cleaning the Presbytery: Fr. John would be very grateful to anyone who could help him out with cleaning at the Presbytery.
    [Show full text]
  • DSM Dateline
    The view from Down St Mary 780 to 2014 DSM timeline © Roger Steer 780 The Saxons reach the Tamar. During the period of the Saxons, the natural forests of Devon are gradually cleared and most of the villages and settlements we take for granted in the countryside are established. 905 Bishop Putta is murdered – some say at the spot where Copplestone cross stands. 909 Diocese of Crediton created. 934-53 Bishop Ethelgar collects funds for the building of St Mary’s Minster at Crediton. 974 Copplestone Cross, at the junction of Down St Mary with two other parishes until 1992, is mentioned in a charter, but is much older than that. It is early Celtic interlaced work such as is not found elsewhere in England except in Northumbria. The cross gives a name to a once noted Devon family which comes in the local rhyme: Crocker, Cruwys, and Coplestone, When the Conqueror came were found at home. Eleventh Century 1018 Buckfast Abbey is founded under the patronage of King Canute. 1040 The Manor of Down(e) named after the Saxon settlement DUN meaning Hill, first recorded as being the gift of King Harthacnut. (Harthacnut was king of Denmark from 1028 to 1042 and of England from 1040 to 1042. Some of the glebe land in the manor originally formed part of the Devon estates of Harthacnut’s father, Canute, king of England 1016-35.) Tenure is granted to Aelfwein, Abbot of Buckfast in support of the ministry of the Abbey Church. Down St Mary is one of six Devon churches held by the Abbot of Buckfast prior to the Norman conquest, the others being Churchstow, Petrockstow, South Brent, Trusham and Zeal Monachorum.
    [Show full text]
  • Curriculum Vitae 2015
    Petroc Willey BD, S.T.L., Ph.D (Liverpool), Ph.D (Lateran) Curriculum Vitae 2015 Qualifications B.D.Hons (1st class), King's College, London (1978-1981) Ph.D. (Moral Philosophy), University of Liverpool: thesis subject: Christian Doctrine and Environmental Ethics (1981-1985) STL, Pontifical University, Maynooth (2005-2007) (summa cum laude) PhD, Lateran Pontifical University, Rome (2006-2010) (thesis subject: philosophy of education and the pedagogy of God) Main Positions Plater College, Oxford (1985-1992) 1985, Lecturer in Christian Ethics 1990, Lecturer in Epistemology, Moral Philosophy, Philosophy of Religion, and New Testament Studies 1991, Dean of Studies Maryvale Institute, Birmingham (1992-2013) 1992, Director, Masters Programme in Religious Education and Catechetics 1995, Dean of Higher Education 1998, Deputy Director for Academic Affairs 2008, Dean of Graduate Research 2012, Acting Director Archdiocese of Birmingham (2001-2004) Director of Adult Education, Archdiocese of Birmingham The School of the Annunciation, Buckfast Abbey, UK (2013-) Reader in the New Evangelisation Franciscan University, Steubenville (2014-) Professor of Theology (Catechetics) Publications Academic ‘The Earth as a Gift’ (with Eldred Willey), New Blackfriars February 1993 1 ‘Will animals be redeemed?’ (with Eldred Willey), in A.Linzey (ed): Animals on the Agenda, SCM 1998 ‘Parents as Primary Educators’, in J.Redford (ed), Theology and Catechesis for the New Millennium, Veritas 2003 Entries on ‘St.Augustine’, ‘St.Thomas Aquinas’, ‘Catechism of the Catholic Church’, ‘Sex Education’, in Thomas Hunt, Ellis Joseph and Ronald Nuzzi (eds), Catholic Schools in the U.S.: An Encyclopedia, Greenwood Press 2004 The Catechism of the Catholic Church and the Craft of Catechesis, with C.Schonborn, B.Morgan, and P.de Cointet, Ignatius Press 2008 ‘An Original Pedagogy for Catechesis’, ‘The Teacher and the Pedagogue’ and ‘The Pedagogy of God: Aim and Process’, in Caroline Farey, Waltraud Linning, Sr M.
    [Show full text]