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| Home | The Fells | Walking log | Directory | Calendar | Galleries |
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Go to the Directory home page |
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Mungrisdale Church |
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The following text is taken from the booklet which can be bought in the church. |
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Map and Gallery: |
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Area Map |
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The Good Shepherd Team Ministry embraces the parishes of Greystoke, Matterdale, Mungrisdale, Patterdale and Watermillock |
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Early Days. |
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From the beginning of the fifth century came the Celtic saints who brought a religion that had originated in the middle east and then spread through Europe to Ireland and northumbria. such men were Martin, Ninian, Columba, Patrick, Cuthbert and our own dedicatee, Kentigern. For the first time, sites of churches were founded and the Celtic church took root. this persisted long after the Synod of Whitby in 664 and certainly until the coming of the Vikings in the Tenth Century. |
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These Vikings were not the plunderers who had ravished from the east in the previous century but those who had already settled in Ireland and the Western Isles. they came therefore with convenient adaptation of Christianity suited to old gods. Only after the Norman conquest did the church really become established and then later than most places because of geographical isolation and border strife. |
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St Kentigern |
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Kentigern, or Mungo as he is more generally known north of the border, is Glasgow's patron saint and the city's coat of arms bears the symbols traditionally associated with him: a robin, a ring, a fish and a tree. these refer to stories of "miracles" popular in the Middle Ages with local variations - the dead bird brought back to life, the lost ring found in a fish and fresh fruit found in a tree in midwinter. |
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Mungrisdale |
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The Church |
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It is a typical barn-like Dale church built of thick rubble stone walls and covered with a slated roof carried on king-post trusses. The round-headed Georgian windows give the only external indication of its period and the three-light east window may seen unusually sophisticated for the type of building. it represents part of the great interest in Georgian church building throughout Cumberland in the eighteenth century and was probably directly influenced by the fine local exemplar, St Andrew's in Penrith, which was completed in 1722. it is interesting to compare the Venetian-type east windows of Penrith and Mungrisdale with that at St Mary's Threlkeld, which came in 1777. |
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The pews and choir stalls must have been re-used, coming from either the earlier building or from another church, as the disposition of their elegant numerals defies arrangement. The three-decker pulpit, another surprising element of sophistication in such a simple interior, is seen to be another instance of re-use of earlier furnishings, mostly from the late seventeenth century. |
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There are three brass wall plaques. One, on the north wall, is in memory of Raisley Calvert, Steward to Duke of Norfolk at Greystoke and father of Raisley Calvert who was a friend of Wordsworth during their student days. Out of gratitude to the poet for looking after him during a long and eventually fatal illness, the younger Calvert bequeathed the sum of £900 to the impecunious Wordsworth, thus ensuring a comfortable start to his literary career. Adjacent is a plaque in memory of Lt col the Reverend AH MacGuffie MBE. vicar from 1956 to 1973 and the last occupant of the vicarage opposite before it was sold as a private house. the third plaque, on the south wall, commemorates restoration work done to the church "in pious memory" of three local ladies. |
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In a copy of the Bible which was printed in 1617, there are several hand written entries by William Forrest, curate and Schoolmaster, confirming that it was "Grisdall Tennants bible booke" purchased in 1630 for forty-four shillings, a third of which cost was borne by the tenants of Murray and Mouskell (Murrahand Bowscale). Among other inscriptions is one by john Story. curate in 1633, confirming this. the book was repaired and rebound in 1924 as noted by the Reverend WH Cormack. there is also a Prayer book of 1788 that contains services for the commemoration of the Gunpowder Plot, the beheading of Charles I and the restoration of Charles II. |
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Also to be noted are the carpenter's marks at the joints of each four roof trusses and the simple font. the banner, stools and chair cushion which all incorporate St Kentigern's tree, robin, fish and ring were designed and made by Eller Kidd. new-kneelers, hand-worked by ladies of the parish, replaced old ones around 1900. |
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The bellcote contains a single bell, dated 1481, supposed to have come from Greystoke, at one time the mother church. The churchyard, recently leveled and tidied, is surrounded by a typical local stone field wall. the gates and notice board were made in 1980 and were the gift of Mungrisdale Parish Council to commemorate the Queen's Silver jubilee. |
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The former butching house on the other side of the road, in past times also a clog maker's shop and an agricultural store, has been refurbished as a meeting place for parish activities and was dedicated to this purpose in 1988 as "St Mungo's House". WJK 1984 (revised 1999) |
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Find a walk which includes this place: |
| Date: ( I did the walk ) | Walk: | Distance: | Ascent: |
| 1st April 2007 | The fells above Mungrisdale | 8.6 mile | 2579 ft |
| Route: Mungrisdale - Souther Fell - White Horse Bent - Bannerdale Crags - Bowscale Fell - Tarn Crags - Bowscale Tarn - Bowscale - Road to Mungrisdale | |||
| 16th November 2003 | Bowscale Tarn to Bannerdale Crags. | 9.2 mile | 2178 ft |
| Route: Mungrisdale - Bowscale hamlet - Bowscale Tarn - Tarn Crags - Bowscale Fell - Bannerdale Crags - River Glendermakin - Bannerdale - Mungrisdale | |||
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