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Church History information for St Buryan and places above it in the hierarchy

St Buryan

  • Anglican.
    • St Buryan Was a parish church is located in OS Grid Square SW4025 and was dedicated to St Berian the Virgin in 1238.
      According to tradition the Saxon King Athelstan rested for the night in the cell attached to the small Oratory of St.Buryan, (of which nothing now remains) the night before he sailed to conquer the Isles of Scilly. The next morning he made his communion and vowed that if he were successful he would found and endow a church. In 931, on the site of the Oratory was built the church of King Athelstan, and experts express the opinion that the building on the north side of the Chancel is the only remaining piece of this work. It seems quite a small building, the west wall being just east of the present screen. In 1238, the church was rebuilt much larger; this was consecrated by Bishop Briwire on August 26th. By 1473, the church building was found to be in a deplorable state, owing to the non-residence of the Dean and the Prebends. King Edward IV appointed a commission of Clergy to report on the state of the Deanery in general. The Church was found to be so ruinous that the only thing was to pull it down and re-build it.
      The new Tower was erected before the old church was pulled down and that is of 14th century work; the present church was built up to the Tower in the late 15th and 16th century and it is easy to notice that the tower and nave are not in a straight line. The tower is 92 feet high and is constructed of wrought granite with a simple bold arch. In the middle of the 18th century the whole of the north wall of the church had to be pulled down and re-built again, and at the same time the small lean-to chapel on the north wall of the chancel was pulled down and the arch built up. In 1814, the church was restored yet again. In 1956 the present Lady Chapel was erected and is a gift of John Franklin Tonkin, in memory of his uncle, Robert Edmund Tonkin, of Treverven. The oak panelling was formally in the manor at Boshan near Helford, and was erected in the church by local craftsmen.
    • A further description and history of Buryan Church, extracted from Blight's Churches of West Cornwall - 1864, is also available.
    • Another description of St Buryan church is lifted directly from The Cornish Magazine - 1898 (part 1) [Quiller-Couch 1898] from an article written by Thurston C. Peter entitled "The Collegiate Church of St. Buryan." It must be read in the context of that date. The contemporary photographs are by J. C. Burrow, F. G. S. and were printed with the original article.
  • Non-Conformist. There are Wesleyan chapels at Borah and Crows-an-Wrah. There are also Wesleyan and Bible Christian chapels in the Churchtown.

Cornwall

UK and Ireland