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Six - Sacred Myths: Archaeology and Authenticity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 December 2019

Roberta Gilchrist
Affiliation:
University of Reading

Summary

The final chapter examines the role of archaeology in authenticating or challenging modern myths connected with medieval sacred sites. It considers how medieval sacred heritage is used to construct myths connected with nationalist and religious identities and it reflects on medieval sacred landscapes as contested heritage sites which hold multiple meanings to contemporary social groups. Three British case studies are considered: Glastonbury, Walsingham and Iona.

Information

Figure 0

6.1 Plan of Whithorn Priory (Dumfries and Galloway).

© Headland Archaeology (UK) Ltd
Figure 1

6.2 Photograph of burials during excavation of Whithorn Priory (Dumfries and Galloway).

© Crown Copyright: Historic Environment Scotland
Figure 2

6.3 Courtenay Arthur Ralegh Radford (left) at Glastonbury Abbey (Somerset) in 1962.

Reproduced by kind permission of Peter Poyntz Wright
Figure 3

6.4 Plan showing archaeological evidence relating to Radford’s Saxon ‘cloister’ at Glastonbury Abbey (Somerset)

© Liz Gardner
Figure 4

6.5 Slipper Chapel, Walsingham (Norfolk).

Reproduced by kind permission of Graham Howard
Figure 5

6.6 Anglican Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham (Norfolk).

Reproduced by kind permission of Graham Howard
Figure 6

6.7 Pilgrimage at Walsingham (Norfolk).

Reproduced by kind permission of Graham Howard
Figure 7

6.8 George Fielden MacLeod (1895–1991).

© The Scotsman Publications Ltd
Figure 8

6.9 Craftsmen at Iona Abbey reconstructing the refectory in 1939 (Scottish Inner Hebrides).

© Newsquest (Herald & Times)
Figure 9

6.10 Iona Abbey (Scottish Inner Hebrides) before restoration (c.1874).

© Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland
Figure 10

6.11 Iona Abbey (Scottish Inner Hebrides).

© Mick Sharp
Figure 11

6.12 Glastonbury Abbey’s Lady Chapel (Somerset) c.1900, before restoration. United States Library of Congress, Public Domain

Figure 12

6.13 Glastonbury Tor (Somerset).

© Mick Sharp
Figure 13

6.14 Sacred sites in Glastonbury (Somerset).

© Liz Gardner
Figure 14

6.15 Pilgrimage at Glastonbury Abbey (Somerset) in 2015.

Reproduced by kind permission of Glastonbury Abbey
Figure 15

6.16 Goddess Festival at Glastonbury (Somerset) in 2015.

Reproduced by kind permission of Geoff Corris
Figure 16

6.17 Holy Thorns at Glastonbury (Somerset): Wearyall Hill and St John’s Church (left).

Reproduced by kind permission of Geoff Corris
Figure 17

6.18 3D visualisation of the ‘old church’ at Glastonbury Abbey (Somerset).

© The Centre for the Study of Christianity & Culture, University of York
Figure 18

6.19 Reconstructions of Glastonbury’s ‘old church’: by Spelman (1639) (above) and Bligh Bond (1939).

Reproduced by kind permission of Glastonbury Abbey
Figure 19

6.20 Artist reconstruction of Glastonbury Lake Village by Forestier (1911). Public Domain

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