Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The church is dedicated to St Just; in 1478 William of Worcester reported that the church enshrined the relics of Saint Justus the Martyr. Just, Justin or Yestin was a son of St Geraint. [1] [2] The church of St Just is medieval.
St Just Methodist Free Church The cross at Leswidden. The parish church of St Just is a fine 15th-century building. In 1336 the church was rebuilt and dedicated by John Grandisson, Bishop of Exeter; however only the chancel of this church survives and the nave and aisles are 15th-century in date. [7]
Fore Street Methodist Church, St Ives St Ives [32] Methodist: Uniquely not part of a circuit [33] Zion Community Church, St Ives St Ives: Zion: EFCC / CHC: St Ives Salvation Army St Ives [34] Salvation Army: The Vine Christian Fellowship, St Ives St Ives [35] 1998 Elim: St Anta & All Saints, Carbis Bay St Ives 1913 Church of England: Carbis Bay ...
The church is considered to have been founded around 550 AD in honour of St Just the Martyr. For the first 400 years, it was served by the Celtic clergy from the adjacent cell of Lanzeague. For the first 400 years, it was served by the Celtic clergy from the adjacent cell of Lanzeague.
St Just parish church. St Just in Roseland (Cornish: Lannsiek) is a village and civil parish in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The village is 6 miles (10 km) south of Truro and 2 miles (3 km) north of St Mawes, a small village within the parish of St Just in Roseland. [1] The 2011 Census recorded the parish population as 1,158. [2]
St. Mary's gained a listing on the National Register of Historic Places forty-nine years ago in 1976. [1] The historic church property belongs to Saint Mary of Sorrows Catholic Church in the Diocese of Arlington. [4] The historic church is still in use, although a new primary parish center was built several miles northeast and opened in 1980.
Minster Church was built in Norman times (some late medieval additions and restoration work carried out in the 19th century): it is listed Grade I. [2] The Celtic name of Minster was Talkarn but it was renamed Minster in Anglo-Saxon times because of a monastery on the site. Until the Reformation St Materiana's tomb was preserved in the church.
St Just's plain-an-gwarry is a large circular space, encircled by a 2-metre-high (6.6 ft) wall of stone. There are two entries into the space. [3] In November 1878 the ″Plane-an-Guare″ was restored under the guidance of several gentlemen including William Copeland Borlase.