The first of three windows in Saint Editha’s Collegiate Church, Tamworth, telling the story of the marriage of Editha of Mercia and Sigtrygg of Northumbria (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)
Patrick Comerford
We are in Ordinary Time in the Church Calendar, and this week began with the Seventh Sunday after Trinity (23 July 2023). Today, the Church Calendar remembers Anna and Joachim, the parents of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Before this day begins, I am taking some time this morning for prayer, reading and reflection.
In the weeks after Trinity Sunday, I was reflecting each morning with Trinity-themed images from cathedrals, churches and chapels. That series came to a conclusion on Saturday (16 July) with my search for the mediaeval Holy Trinity altar in Saint Editha’s Collegiate Church, Tamworth. This week, my reflections each morning involve:
1, Looking at stained glass windows in Saint Editha’s Church, Tamworth;
2, the Gospel reading of the day in the Church of England lectionary;
3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary.
The second Marmion window in Saint Editha’s Church, Tamworth, shows Saint Editha and her nuns witnessing a vision of the Virgin Mary (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)
The Marmion (Saint Editha) windows, Tamworth:
During this week, I am reflecting in this prayer diary each morning on windows in Saint Editha’s Collegiate Church, Tamworth.
A set of three windows on the south side of the chancel in Saint Editha’s Church, high above the High Altar, tells the story of Saint Editha and how she became the patron saint of Tamworth.
Saint Editha is said to have been the devout Christian daughter of Athelstane, King of Mercia, the expansive Anglo-Saxon kingdom in the Midlands that had its ecclesiastical capital in Lichfield and its civic and political capital in Tamworth.
However, the historical identity of Editha or Edith (Ealdgyth) and the dates of her lifespan are uncertain and questions about her historical identity are fraught with difficulties. Some sources say she was a daughter of King Edward the Elder, others say she was the daughter of Egbert of Wessex, while yet other traditions say she was a sister of King Æthelstan.
Saint Editha was to be given in marriage by her father, or her brother, in the year 925 to Sigtrygg, the Norse ruler of Northumbria in the North of England. It was not exactly a love marriage, and was planned as a symbol of peace between the two kingdoms. Fifty years earlier, the Vikings had invaded Mercia from the north, and had ransacked Tamworth.
The legend says that Editha refused to marry Sigtrygg unless he agreed to convert to Christianity. The marriage took place in the church in Tamworth, but Sigtrygg reneged on his undertaking, returned north without Editha. The marriage was never consummated and was annulled.
Saint Editha, who always wanted to be a nun, joined a convent near Tamworth at Polesworth, which may have been founded by that other Staffordshire saint, Saint Modwen, or Saint Modwenna, a female hermit who lived near Burton-on-Trent.
She later became the Abbess of Tamworth, and was known for her charitable deeds. She died in 960, and the memory of her inspired great devotion to her in Tamworth.
In yet another Danish invasion of the Staffordshire area three years later, Tamworth was destroyed once again. King Edgar of England rebuilt Tamworth, and at the same time Editha was declared a saint. The parish church has been dedicated to her ever since.
After the invasion of England in 1066, William the Conqueror gave the lands around Tamworth to the new lord, Marmion. One day after hunting in Hopwas Wood near Tamworth, Marmion fell into a sleep in which he dreamt that Saint Editha had struck him with her crozier of office, causing a deep wound. When he awoke, he found he had been badly wounded indeed.
When the wound refused to heal, Marmion decided to restore Saint Editha’s former nunnery to the Benedictine nuns, who build a new convent on the site.
In the late 19th century, Ford Madox Brown (1821-1893), one of the great Pre-Raphaelite painters of his day, was commissioned by Francis Willington of Colehill, Tamworth, to design the windows telling the story of Saint Editha. These magnificent windows, high up in the clerestory on the south side of the chancel, were made at the studios of William Morris (1834-1896), a Pre-Raphaelite and a member of the Arts and Crafts Movement.
The Willington family in Tamworth included Waldyve Willington, Parliamentarian Governor of Tamworth in 1645; John Willington, steward of the Townshend estate at Tamworth Castle in the 19th century, who lived at the Moat House, the former Comberford family home on Lichfield Street; and Francis Willington, Town Clerk of Tamworth.
From the east, the first window represents the marriage of Editha of Mercia and Sigtrygg of Northumbria. The left panel shows Athelstane taking Editha by the right hand to give her away in marriage. In the two centre panels, Sigtrygg is seen placing a wedding ring on Editha’s left hand. The pane on the right shows Ella, Bishop of Lichfield, blessing the marriage.
At the top of the window is a Norse galley as an emblem of Sigtrygg. At the foot of the window is the heraldic arms of Athelstane, the Willington family, Sigtrygg and the Bishop of Lichfield. The Willington arms are used here as Saint Editha had no heraldic arms.
The second window represents Saint Editha, whose nunnery was in Tamworth, as an Abbess with a crozier in her right hand in the first panel, and her nuns with her in the two centre panels, beholding a vision portrayed in the fourth panel of the Virgin Mary, patron of the Benedictine Order to which the nunnery belonged, with the Christ Child.
At the top of this window is a panel with the tower of Saint Editha’s nunnery. The nuns had no heraldic arms, so the four panels at the bottom of the window depict the arms of the Willington family, Guy de Beauchamp (1272-1315), 10th Earl of Warwick, and the Bracebridge and Waldyve families, who all claimed descent from King Athelstane of Mercia.
The third window deals with two subjects. The two panels to the left show William the Conqueror resting on a mighty sword, presenting Tamworth Castle to Marmion. The two panels to the right depict Saint Editha striking Marmion with her crozier for banishing the nuns. When he awoke and his wound failed to heal, he allowed the nuns to return.
The panel at the top of this third window shows Tamworth Castle. The four heraldic panels at the foot of the window depict the arms of William the Conqueror, the Marmion family and their successors at Tamworth Castle, and the Willington family.
Other churches dedicated to Saint Edith include Church Eaton in Staffordshire, Amington Parish Church near Tamworth, Saint Edith’s Church in Monks Kirby, Warwickshire, and a number of churches in Louth, Lincolnshire. Her feast day is 15 July.
Although Saint Editha’s Day was 11 days ago [15 July 2023], Tamworth Civic Society, which is celebrating its fiftieth anniversary, is celebrating Saint Editha’s Day and Cherry Fair today (26 July 2023), honouring the town’s patron saint and reviving a great historic tradition begun by a 16th century royal charter.
The day begins at the bandstand at 10.45, and a procession to Saint Editha’s Church, followed by a special Saint Editha’s Day service. People are invited to wear red for the Cherry Fair procession.
The third window tells the story of the Marmion family of Tamworth Castle and a vision of Saint Editha (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)
Matthew 13: 16-17 (NRSVA):
[Jesus said:] 16 ‘But blessed are your eyes, for they see, and your ears, for they hear. 17 Truly I tell you, many prophets and righteous people longed to see what you see, but did not see it, and to hear what you hear, but did not hear it.’
Saint Editha represented in a statue in the south-east corner of the chancel in Saint Editha’s Church, Tamworth (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2023)
Today’s Prayer:
The theme this week in ‘Pray With the World Church,’ the Prayer Diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel), is ‘Reflections from the International Consultation.’ This theme was introduced on Sunday by Michael Clarke of the West Indies.
The Prayer in the USPG Prayer Diary today (26 July 2023) invites us to pray in these words:
Help us Lord, that by understanding our past, we can help tackle modern-day slavery and human trafficking.
Collect:
Lord God of Israel,
who bestowed such grace on Anne and Joachim
that their daughter Mary grew up obedient to your word
and made ready to be the mother of your Son:
help us to commit ourselves in all things to your keeping
and grant us the salvation you promised to your people;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.
Post Communion:
Father,
from whom every family in heaven and on earth takes its name,
your servants Anne and Joachim revealed your goodness
in a life of tranquillity and service:
grant that we who have gathered in faith around this table
may like them know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge
and be filled with all your fullness;
through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Yesterday’s reflection
Continued tomorrow
Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible: Anglicised Edition copyright © 1989, 1995, National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide. http://nrsvbibles.org
26 July 2023
Five months to go,
and my Christmas list
has a good new book
‘Christmas and the Irish’ … the latest collection edited by Professor Salvador Ryan makes an ideal Christmas present
Patrick Comerford
There are still five more months to go to Christmas. Please don’t ask me how many shopping days that amounts to. But already retailers and publishers are preparing for the Christmas market.
My friend and colleague Professor Salvador Ryan of Maynooth has edited Christmas and the Irish, a new volume that is at the final stages of production and that promises to be in the bookshops in October, and in time for Christmas gift planning this year, and with a launch in the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin in November.
This new volume, published by Wordwell in Dublin, follows the success of his three previous volumes in an educating and entertaining series published between 2016 and 2021, looking at Birth, Marriage and Death and the Irish.
This latest collection looks at the celebration of Christmas among the Irish, from the seventh century to the present day. In 75 chapters, ranging from the serious to the light-hearted, writers from a range of academic disciplines and professions – anthropology, Celtic studies, education, folklore, healthcare, history, journalism, literature, media, broadcasting, pastoral ministry, philosophy and theology – reflect on what Christmas has meant to Irish people through the ages, at home or abroad.
The topics covered in this latest Christmas volume include: the theme of light in early Irish texts; festive feasting and fighting in the Middle Ages; the Kilmore carols of Co Wexford; the history of Irish Christmas food through the centuries; crimes of Christmas past; Christmas on the Blasket Islands; the claim that ‘Santa’s Grave’ is in Co Kilkenny; why Irish missionaries in Zimbabwe regularly missed out on their Christmas dinner; the origins and early life of the Late Late Toy Show; a Christmas surprise among Irish peacekeepers in the Lebanon; Christmas customs among the Travelling Community; Christmas and the Irish Jewish community; the Wren Boys; ‘Women’s Christmas’; Irish links to popular Christmas carols; Christmas and James Joyce; the curious custom of reciting 4,000 Hail Marys in the lead up to Christmas; and why it became an established tradition for the Viceroy to send a woodcock to the British monarch every Christmas.
This anthology is bound to be a fascinating read for all who are interested in the social, cultural, and religious history of Ireland. But, more importantly, it will delight all who love Christmas itself.
Many of the contributors are my friends and colleague. In her essay, another Wexford historian Dr Ida Milne of Carlow College, recalls her mother being the organist at the Christmas carol services in Ferns Cathedral.
Other contributors include Ian d’Alton of TCD, Seamus Dooley of the NUJ, the Limerick historian Seán Gannon, Crawford Gribben and Laurence Kirkpatrick, both of QUB, the singer-songwriter Max McCoubrey, Miriam Moffitt, John-Paul Sheridan of Maynooth, Clodagh Tait of Limerick.
Salvador Ryan is Professor of Ecclesiastical History at Saint Patrick’s College, Maynooth. This is the eigth book edited by him that includes contributions from me. Other volumes he has edited and to which he has invited me to contribute include: Birth and the Irish: a miscellany (Dublin: Wordwell Books, 2021); We Remember Maynooth: A College across Four Centuries, edited with John-Paul Sheridan (Dublin: Messenger Publishing, 2020); Marriage and the Irish: a miscellany (Dublin: Wordwell, 2019); The Cultural Reception of the Bible: explorations in theology, literature and the arts, edited with Liam Tracey (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2018); Death and the Irish: a miscellany, ed Salvador Ryan (Dublin: Wordwell, 2016); Treasures of Ireland, Vol III, To the Ends of the Earth (Dublin: Veritas, 2015); and Treasures of Irish Christianity, Vol II, A People of the Word, edited with Brendan Leahy (Dublin: Veritas, 2013).
Now, in his latest venture, he has invited me to contribute three papers to this new Christmas volume:
• The ‘Wexford Carol’ and the mystery surrounding some old and popular Christmas carols;
• ‘We Three Kings of Orient are’: an Epiphany carol with Irish links;
• Molly Bloom’s Christmas card: where Joycean fiction meets a real-life family.
Because of my three contributions, I have had a sneak preview of Christmas and the Irish last week. Do I think it’s worth adding to your Christmas present list? Of course I’d say yes, wouldn’t I?
• Christmas and the Irish: a miscellany, ed Salvador Ryan (Dublin: Wordwell Books, 2023), ISBN: 978-1-913934-93-4, €25
Patrick Comerford
There are still five more months to go to Christmas. Please don’t ask me how many shopping days that amounts to. But already retailers and publishers are preparing for the Christmas market.
My friend and colleague Professor Salvador Ryan of Maynooth has edited Christmas and the Irish, a new volume that is at the final stages of production and that promises to be in the bookshops in October, and in time for Christmas gift planning this year, and with a launch in the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin in November.
This new volume, published by Wordwell in Dublin, follows the success of his three previous volumes in an educating and entertaining series published between 2016 and 2021, looking at Birth, Marriage and Death and the Irish.
This latest collection looks at the celebration of Christmas among the Irish, from the seventh century to the present day. In 75 chapters, ranging from the serious to the light-hearted, writers from a range of academic disciplines and professions – anthropology, Celtic studies, education, folklore, healthcare, history, journalism, literature, media, broadcasting, pastoral ministry, philosophy and theology – reflect on what Christmas has meant to Irish people through the ages, at home or abroad.
The topics covered in this latest Christmas volume include: the theme of light in early Irish texts; festive feasting and fighting in the Middle Ages; the Kilmore carols of Co Wexford; the history of Irish Christmas food through the centuries; crimes of Christmas past; Christmas on the Blasket Islands; the claim that ‘Santa’s Grave’ is in Co Kilkenny; why Irish missionaries in Zimbabwe regularly missed out on their Christmas dinner; the origins and early life of the Late Late Toy Show; a Christmas surprise among Irish peacekeepers in the Lebanon; Christmas customs among the Travelling Community; Christmas and the Irish Jewish community; the Wren Boys; ‘Women’s Christmas’; Irish links to popular Christmas carols; Christmas and James Joyce; the curious custom of reciting 4,000 Hail Marys in the lead up to Christmas; and why it became an established tradition for the Viceroy to send a woodcock to the British monarch every Christmas.
This anthology is bound to be a fascinating read for all who are interested in the social, cultural, and religious history of Ireland. But, more importantly, it will delight all who love Christmas itself.
Many of the contributors are my friends and colleague. In her essay, another Wexford historian Dr Ida Milne of Carlow College, recalls her mother being the organist at the Christmas carol services in Ferns Cathedral.
Other contributors include Ian d’Alton of TCD, Seamus Dooley of the NUJ, the Limerick historian Seán Gannon, Crawford Gribben and Laurence Kirkpatrick, both of QUB, the singer-songwriter Max McCoubrey, Miriam Moffitt, John-Paul Sheridan of Maynooth, Clodagh Tait of Limerick.
Salvador Ryan is Professor of Ecclesiastical History at Saint Patrick’s College, Maynooth. This is the eigth book edited by him that includes contributions from me. Other volumes he has edited and to which he has invited me to contribute include: Birth and the Irish: a miscellany (Dublin: Wordwell Books, 2021); We Remember Maynooth: A College across Four Centuries, edited with John-Paul Sheridan (Dublin: Messenger Publishing, 2020); Marriage and the Irish: a miscellany (Dublin: Wordwell, 2019); The Cultural Reception of the Bible: explorations in theology, literature and the arts, edited with Liam Tracey (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2018); Death and the Irish: a miscellany, ed Salvador Ryan (Dublin: Wordwell, 2016); Treasures of Ireland, Vol III, To the Ends of the Earth (Dublin: Veritas, 2015); and Treasures of Irish Christianity, Vol II, A People of the Word, edited with Brendan Leahy (Dublin: Veritas, 2013).
Now, in his latest venture, he has invited me to contribute three papers to this new Christmas volume:
• The ‘Wexford Carol’ and the mystery surrounding some old and popular Christmas carols;
• ‘We Three Kings of Orient are’: an Epiphany carol with Irish links;
• Molly Bloom’s Christmas card: where Joycean fiction meets a real-life family.
Because of my three contributions, I have had a sneak preview of Christmas and the Irish last week. Do I think it’s worth adding to your Christmas present list? Of course I’d say yes, wouldn’t I?
• Christmas and the Irish: a miscellany, ed Salvador Ryan (Dublin: Wordwell Books, 2023), ISBN: 978-1-913934-93-4, €25
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