Sunday, 12 February 2012

Day 9 - 25 August - Nothing to report

No news about Saint Morwenna today. However, I did learn that badgers like plums.

Day - lost track - News - Yes

I'm not going to make any excuses - no time for that! so will launch straight into what's been happening to date. I went down to Morwenstow a couple of weeks back, and met a man about a donkey at Covelly...So here we go..


After speaking to my Dad, he told me that there was a village 'somewhere in North Cornwall' that still use donkeys to transport people and goods up and down to the village due to its steep location. So after a bit of googling - I found it! Covelly. 


http://www.clovelly.co.uk/donkey_stables.php


I emailed these lovely people the night before we set off for Morwenstow - but hadn't heard back from them in the morning so wasn't sure whether to 'just turn up'. As we got closer to Morwenstow we saw the signs for Clovelly and at the last minute said - 'lets go and see some donkeys!' We arrived at the village and I asked in the shop where the stables were. The lady was very helpful and pointed us in the right direction. She then asked if we were going to go to the village (which you have to pay to visit) and I said 'not this time - just the donkeys'....so she let us in with out having to pay. Now then, I know what you're thinking - did we take a sneaky trip down to the village anyway???....Nope (I prob would have in my younger years!) We walked down a rather steep section and found them..



We're heading in the right direction!


There they are! look rather small - I thought donkeys were bigger than this?


Me and 'Donk' who at 34 is nearly as old as I am....Oops giving away my age! I'm actually 28...;-)


Mr Bart Kelly, Me and Donk, who loves nothing better than trying to push you over with his nose.

Bart, who along with his wife, Sue, care for the donkeys, kindly let us in to meet them and have a chat about my idea of travelling some way to Morwenstow by donkey. Clovelly is about 12 miles from Morwenstow and is right on the coastal path! However....I wasn't expecting to be told I was a bit too 'big' for these fellows and they only carry packs or small children...(que disappointed face) BUT Bart has offered to lend me a couple of donkeys to carry my packs on part of the journey! How cool is that! He told me that they get lonely and need to travel in pairs and I'll also need some 'donkey leading training' as they have a mind of their own... There is also a wedding taking place at Clovelly on the 5th July and all the donkeys are being dressed up and will be taking part in the day. So that just means we need to coordinate when I'll be leading the donkeys and where from and where to! Super! Will keep you posted on updates.

Tuesday, 17 January 2012

Day errr - It's been a while - but now I'm back on track!

OK. So I abandoned this project for a while. Reason - moved and went back to work so didn't have as much time. BUT, as of last week I've decided to re-start this and to actually do the trip from Brecon to Morwenstow this summer....


and I emailed those lovely fellows a the traditional sailing company about thier ship called Morwenna, and unfortunately they are elsewhere when i want to cross the channel - but have said that they would do 'something' so will be giving them a call!! ACE that they even replied. ;-). Question now is how do I cross the Bristol Channel??


Am going to Morwenstow this weekend as well so really looking forward to that. 

Wednesday, 24 August 2011

Day 8 - 24 August 2011 - Hawker - what a cheeky fellow!

Hello chaps! not a long post this evening as been very busy today! so just to post the email that I got back from Alan this morning with some more information about St.Morwenna's church and Hawker. The more I learn about him - the more I like him. If he wasn't up to some high jinks he was causing some kind of a stir!


Info obtained today:

in 1296, the "ancient" church of St John was passed to the monks of Bridgewater.  When Hawker became incumbent in 1834 he decided that Morwenstow was derived from St Morwenna - Morwenna's station, rather than place on the moor. He then constructed and elaborate fiction which you can read about in his book "Footprints of men in far Cornwall"  There are more details about him and his life in "The Life and Letters of RS Hawker" written by his son-in-law Byles.

Hawker was a poet and romantic. It was he than adopted and added to all the imagery in the church, the books mentioned detail some of this.

On page 24 of the guide is some information about the window.  There is a bench end in Sheepstor church which depicts (a Victorian ideal) of St Morwenna where the picture itself came from, I have no idea, but it must be conjectural.

I suggest you obtain copies of books about Hawker which will lead you into his thinking and some of his ideas about Morwenna.  If you find out the origin of the picture, I would be intrested.


-end-


So books about Hawker I will read ;-) oh and a visit to Sheepstor church at some point...which is in....(quick look on the old google maps)........Dartmoor!

Tuesday, 23 August 2011

Day 7 - 23 August - Feast date proves a mystery

Well, I've heard back from the lovely Alan at Morwenstow and have discovered that they don't actually celebrate St. Morwenna there at all! (poor thing!) they do celebrate St.John though on the 24th June...(who the church is also dedicated to). 
You know I'm not actually sure why it is dedicated to two saints, but according to Alan, it was Hawker who introduced St. Morwenna to the church. So was it only know as St. John' before Hawker arrived? I find this hard to believe - so have asked the question and will see what comes out of that. He also couldn't help me with what her feast day is and said that they were planning on organising an annual pilgrimage out to the cliffs where her well is on this date, but as they couldn't actually agree on a date no such event has ever taken place......yet..:-)  So I've offered to share what I learn (haven't mentioned that I'm planning on following her journey yet? Should I?) yeah I think I should>


brrr it's just got really cold here....!


I've also fished out some books that I bought way back (love the charity shops!) that I thought might be useful. The books might actually be too late in history - but I expect they will give me some information about life during that time. They are:

  • The Medieval Cookbook by Maggie Black
  • Medieval Lives by Terry Jones
  • Old school history books by Myself!! ;-) 
Have also decided to create a special loaf and call it Saint Morwenna's loaf  (I know I mentioned bread earlier - but just had that idea today) - which will be eaten on her feast day (once I've found out when that is...)  Any ideas about the shape of the bread? ah what about in the shape of her cross? There's one in the churchyard there. Or one that represents learning or teaching?


Ah before I forget I did also read that she was....wait for it....a PRINCESS (this just keeps getting better and better - so before she became a Saint she was Princess Morwenna - which of course makes sense if she was the daughter of a king. Never actually occurred to be before. However, there is a dispute about whether she was actually his daughter or his granddaughter. 


She also studied in Ireland before going to Cornwall - along with a lot (I don't know how many) of her brothers and sisters. She was also a teacher.


I've also asked Alan if he knows who designed the Hawker Memorial window that features St. Morwenna and if the original drawings exist and if I can see them. I also want to know where the image of Saint Morwenna came from. Was it just the artists imagination? or was she based on an actual lady from Morwenstow at that time? ooh that would be exciting if that was the case and I could find out who she was! 


until tomorrow...



Monday, 22 August 2011

Day 6 - 22 August 2011 - The Bude Mermaid


I haven't got that much further with my research today, other than uploading my letter from the Bard of Cornwall and watching an episode of Coast (Series 6, episode 2 - Devon and Cornwall)  that shows Morwenstow (right near the end of the programme) and Hawkers hut. It also mntions Rev Hawker once dressed up as a mermaid and the fact that he had a pet pig! I like this fellow. 



Sadly, I couldn't find any photos of him dressed as a mermaid - but did find this really funny account of the event...so picture this....


Rev. Hawker
The Bude Mermaid
The following text is taken from The Vicar of Morwenstow: A Life of Robert Stephen Hawker, M.A. By Sabine Baring-Gould. Which you can read online by using the link.
"At full moon in the July of 1825 or 1826, he swam or rowed out to a rock at "some little distance from the shore, plaited seaweed into a wig, which he threw over his head, so that it hung in lank streamers halfway down his back, enveloped his legs in an oilskin wrap, and, otherwise naked, sat on the rock, flashing the moonbeams about from a hand-mirror, and sang and screamed till attention was arrested. Some people passing along the cliff heard and saw him, and ran into Bude, saying that a mermaid with a fish's tail was sitting on a rock, combing her hair, and singing.
A number of people ran out on the rocks and along the beach, and listened awe-struck to the singing and disconsolate wailing of the mermaid. Presently she dived off the rock, and disappeared.
Next night crowds of people assembled to look out for the mermaid; and in due time she re-appeared, and sent the moon flashing in their faces from her glass. Telescopes were brought to bear on her; but she sang on unmoved, braiding her tresses, and uttering remarkable sounds, unlike the singing of mortal throats which have been practised in do-re-mi.
This went on for several nights; the crowd growing greater, people arriving from Stratton, Kilkhampton, and all the villages round, till Robert Hawker got very hoarse with his nightly singing, and rather tired of sitting so long in the cold. He therefore wound up the performance one night with an unmistakable "God save the King," then plunged into the waves, and the mermaid never again revisited the "sounding shores of Bude."

Source:
http://alisongraham.hubpages.com/hub/Undiscovered-Cornwall-Reverend-Hawker-Morwenstow-Tidna-Valley




I've also just read that apparently:


St Morwenna's holy well was not located on the cliffs of Morwenstow as a source of water but as a means of tapping into the energy of Mother Earth. 


I like the thought of that - although I'd read elsewhere that it was where Saint Morwenna rested that a 'spring sprung forth'. I guess it really means the same thing. So was she very connected to nature. Did she know the secrets of the healing plants?


http://www.camelot-hotel.co.uk/heritage-breaks-in-cornwall/hidden-cornwall.html

Sunday, 21 August 2011

Day 5 - 21 August 2011 - My lack of history shows!

Well, now I know why St. Morwenna couldn't have possibly been 120 when she died. I didn't know how centuries worked....(This did make me laugh!) So as she was born in AD.480 this was the 5th Century and the 6th Century would have started in AD.500 (apologies to those who know this!!) So this would mean that if she died in the early 6th Century is more than likely that she was in her twenties and possibly early thirties when she died - I don't have an exact year at the moment, so I'm just making assumptions here. I also don't know what she died of - but it appears one of the most common ways to go back then was Plague. Or maybe it was natural causes as I think it might have mentioned somewhere if she had died of The Bubonic Plague. Nasty.


I also had a random thought this morning about the Canterbury tales and envisaged a merry troupe of us  (Momins?) on donkey's travelling St. Morwenna's path with at least one person playing a musical instrument as we traveled - like having our own 'theme tune' as we traveled along!!


After talking to Richard about this, it appears this would be 'Very Monty Python' and rather like their film The Holy Grail (which I must admit to never watching all the way through...so I feel a need to watch it for research purposes!!


Thoughts also today about the type of bread they would have eaten - so am off to find an authentic recipe to recreate. Will let you know how I get on....


You might notice that there is no particular order to my thoughts  - I will try and group things together but I often find things just pop into my head.


Also heard back from Morwenna the physic on the Isle of Wight - next step is to arrange a skype call with her to have my reading. How exciting. She has a different understanding of the translation again and said our name means 'white maiden.'


Another random thought - What language would St. Morwenna have spoken?
A quick google reveals she would properly have spoken a Celtic language. So something like Welsh and Cornish. (http://www.englishclub.com/english-language-history.htm) as English as we know it today didn't start to eveolve until the 5th Century when the Germanic invasions took place - The Saxons, Anglos and Jutes. 


Back to the route details - assuming at the moment that I would walk from Minehead after being dropped of there by my sailing boat...(!)  with or without my donkey, to Morwenstow is approx 115 miles.  So at the moment it's looking like the journey could be about 170 miles (this is just approx at the moment). I'm going to need good shoes ;-)

  • And where would St. Morwenna have stayed on her journey? 
  • Were there 'rest houses' at this time? 

This was during the Middle Ages and the time of the Saxons. The Romans had left Britain by this point. 



  • Would she have camped? (don't think it would have been Glamping..). If so what kind of tent would she have had and what would she have slept on? 
  • Did she travel on her own or with a group? (like my idea of a troupe of us plus music to journey by..;-).  Oh and of course - 
  • When did she travel?
  • Is the feast day actually the date she arrived in Morwenstow? Or her birthday? 

More investigating is required.


OK feeling peckish now. Time for a spot of lunch.