Showing posts with label Brookwood Cemetery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brookwood Cemetery. Show all posts

Saturday, 9 March 2024

Dates to remember in March 2024 – 2

 

Dates to remember in March 2024 – 2

English Civil War reenactment

Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons

Some of the more esoteric memorable March days are intriguing and not as widely known as St Patrick’s Day, on 17th March, when the whole world seems to claim Irish ancestry, or the Gemini Boat Race, (usually just called the Boat Race), on 30th March.


11th March: Penny Loaf Day

The English Civil War, which was actually a series of wars, took place between 1642 and 1651. Newark-on Trent, in Nottinghamshire, was strategically positioned at the junction of the Great North Road, from London to the North, and the Fosse Way, from Exeter to Leicester by way of the Cotswolds. The roads linked Chester and York to Oxford, where King Charles I had his headquarters. Newark-on-Trent was a Royalist stronghold.

In March 1644, Henry Clay had a recurring dream for three nights that his house was on fire. Becoming convinced that his dream foretold disaster, he evacuated his family from the house. A short while later, a bomb fired by the Parliamentary forces destroyed the house on 11th March.

In gratitude, believing he had been saved by a miracle, Henry Clay left £100 in trust, the interest on half the sum to be paid to a vicar to preach a sermon annually commemorating the event and the interest on the other half to be used to buy bread for the poor of the parish every year.

This year, 2024, Penny Loaf Day will be celebrated on Sunday 10th March. A procession proceeds from the Town Hall to St Mary Magdalene. The loaves of bread are distributed to local charities.

A strange, rather macabre legend holds that the body of a drowned man could be located by putting quicksilver (mercury) in a penny loaf and throwing it in the river.


 18th March: St Edward the Martyr’s Day

Edward was the Anglo-Saxon king of England from 975 to 978. When he was 15, he was murdered on the orders of his step-mother on 18th March, 978, in Dorset. His body was buried at Wareham, but after miracles occurred at his tomb, he was venerated as a Saint and Martyr and his body relocated to Shaftesbury Abbey.

Brookwood Cemetery, Surrey.

Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons

In 1982, the Saint Edward Brotherhood was founded at Brookwood Cemetery in Surrey. Brookwood, the London Necropolis, is set in 220 acres and is the largest cemetery in the UK and one of the largest in Europe.  The Saint Edward Brotherhood is a monastic community who created a new church in the cemetery grounds, eventually to house the mortal remains of St Edward the Martyr. This was accomplished in 1988. Daily services are chanted at the shrine every day.

Tuesday, 12 January 2010

ABC Wednesday Z


Z is for Zoo. Do you remember Julie Felix singing this song?

Z is also for Zeus and Zion and Zoroaster.

The Prophet Zoroaster (also known as Zarathustra and in Persian as Zarathusti and Gujarati as Zaratosht) founded Zoroastrianism about 3500 years ago in ancient Iran, commonly called Persia. He was born into a Bronze Age polytheistic community which ritually used intoxicants and animal sacrifices in their religious practices. He rejected this religion in which the princes and priests controlled the ordinary people through a thorough-going and oppressive class structure.

When he was thirty years old Zoroaster had a vision of God which affected him deeply and led him to teach that there was only one God, the Creator, who was to be worshipped. He believed that mankind had Free Will and was engaged in a mental struggle between truth and untruth.

Today in Mumbai (Bombay) there is a large community of Parsis (Parsees) descended from a group of Iranian Zoroastrians who fled persecution by Muslims more than 1000 years ago. They are largely involved in business. The Tata Group, now in its fifth generation of family management is one of the largest private employers in India and recently acquired Corus Steel (2007) and Jaguar and Landrover (2008) Genetically Parsis are believed to have more in common with modern Iranians than with Indians.

Some of their traditional practices are under threat, particularly in the disposal of their dead. Parsees believe that earth, fire and water are sacred elements and should not be defiled by the dead. Thus burial and cremation have always been prohibited. Bodies were taken to the Towers of Silence to be consumed by vultures but the number of these birds has reduced dramatically through urbanisation. It is also thought that they have been poisoned by the presence of diclofenac in the corpses. Diclofenac is an anti-inflammatory and analgesic drug commonly prescribed for a number of ailments. Thus the bodies are taking longer to decompose which has led to complaints from nearby residents. Now Parsis in Mumbai are given the option of burial or decomposition for their dead. Naturally, Parsis living in other countries are buried. The cemetery at Brookwood in Surrey is the largest cemetery in Britain and probably Western Europe. It is a Grade I Historic Park and Garden and has a Zoroastrian burial ground.

In a declining population the tradition of passing the faith through the male line is being discussed. Thus the children of a Parsi father married to a non-Parsi mother are considered Parsi. The children of a Parsi mother in a similar marriage are not considered so and there is an expectation that this situation will be adjusted in order to enhance numbers.

Prominent Parsis include rock star Freddie Mercury, conductor Zubin Mehta and cricketer Farokh Engineer.

Thanks go to the ABC Wednesday team for their hard work in organising and hosting this meme.

To see more Zs (goodness, that makes me feel tired . . . zzzzzz) please click here.