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Binsey: Oxford's Holy Place Lydia Carr

Binsey: Oxford's Holy Place By Lydia Carr

Binsey: Oxford's Holy Place by Lydia Carr


$26,99
Condition - Very Good
Out of stock

Summary

This collection of essays is not a guidebook so much as an evocation of Binsey, dwelling on specific aspects from the busy river to the tranquil and silent churchyard; from the poplars and Hopkins' great poem on them, to the personalities who served the village community; from the Binsey of St Frideswide's time to the community of the present day.

Binsey: Oxford's Holy Place Summary

Binsey: Oxford's Holy Place: Its saint, village, and people by Lydia Carr

Binsey is a village to the west of Oxford, on the south bank of the main channel of the River Thames, opposite Port Meadow, which has been an open space belonging to the burgesses of Oxford since late Saxon times. Although now within the ring-road, the village is essentially rural and unspoilt. The hub of Binsey is a row of cottages and the Perch Inn on one side of the village green. At one time when the river was wider there was a ferry here taking travelers across to Oxford. The church, its present building no earlier than the 12th century though on an older site, lies a third of a mile distant. Its association with Oxford's patron saint St Frideswide alone makes this an evocative place for anyone with an interest in the origins of this great University city. Its holy well, dedicated to St Margaret like the church itself, was a place of resort for those with eye problems or desirous of a child: Katharine of Aragon's lack of success in conceiving a male heir after resort to the well in a sense precipitated the English Reformation! Later associations, which include Charles Dodgson and Alice Liddell as well as Gerard Manley Hopkins and C. S. Lewis, render Binsey a place for the literary as well as the religious pilgrim. This book is a collection of essays on aspects of Binsey and its environs. It is not a guidebook so much as an evocation of the place, dwelling on specific aspects from the busy river to the tranquil and silent churchyard; from the poplars, great-grandparents of the present trees along the river and Hopkins' great poem on them, to the personalities who served the village community; from the Binsey of St Frideswide's time to the community of the present day.

About Lydia Carr

Martin Henig lectured on Roman Art in the University of Oxford for many years, where he was latterly a Supernumerary Fellow of Wolfson College. He is the author of many books and articles on Roman gems and on the art and culture of Roman Britain. Martin serves as an Anglican priest in the Diocese of Oxford.

Table of Contents

Forewords (Christopher Lewis and Clare Sykes) ;
Introduction and Acknowledgements ;
A Poet's View: St Margaret's Church at Binsey (Nigel Speight) ;
The Legends of Saint Frideswide (John Blair) ;
St. Frideswide's Binsey as Sacred Space (Martin Henig) ;
Pilgrimage to Binsey: Medieval and Modern (Lydia Carr) ;
The Clergy of Binsey (Russell Dewhurst) ;
Life in Binsey as Recorded in the Church Registers (Carl Boardman) ;
Binsey: A Church in its Landscape (Julian Munby) ;
Binsey and Lewis Carroll (Edward Wakeling) ;
Gerard Manley Hopkins and 'Binsey Poplars' (Beatrice and Peter Groves) ;
The Perch and its Predecessors (Mark Davies) ;
Meeting God at Binsey: Holy Ground, then and now (Martin Henig)

Additional information

GOR009897472
9781905739844
1905739842
Binsey: Oxford's Holy Place: Its saint, village, and people by Lydia Carr
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Archaeopress
20140913
157
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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