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Tuesday, 1 November 2011
Stained Glass for All Saints' Day
Because it's All Saints Day, and because I heard a sermon this morning about how saints are stained glass windows to God, here's an assortment of stained-glass depictions of saints.
(There's a pun somewhere in the fact that stain/saint share the same letters - I did consider 'sainted glass' as a title for this post - but I can't get to it. Assume I made one, and we'll move on).
The picture above, from Ringwood in Hampshire, is at the top of this post because I don't know who the saints are (except St George in the middle) but I love the colours anyway. So they're standing in for all the saints.
Let's start with one of my favourites, St Joseph:
From the church at Freshwater, Isle of Wight. Also from Freshwater (which, because of its connections with Tennyson, also contains this stunning window of Sir Galahad - not a saint but as close as a fictional character can get!), this is St Dorcas:
Her wikipedia article claims that depictions of Dorcas in art are "very rare", but maybe they're just looking in the wrong places; I see her all over the place. This is from the church at West Stourmouth, near Canterbury:
But this gentleman is a rarer sight, I would think:
Gideon, from Norwich Cathedral.
More popular is St Cecilia, of course (this is from Littlebourne in Kent):
And St Michael (from the chapel at Carisbrooke Castle, Isle of Wight):
Another beautiful St Michael here, along with St Chad (on the left) and St Hugh of Lincoln:
The most famous depiction of Thomas Becket, from Canterbury Cathedral:
St Thomas (Becket? I'm not sure) and assorted unnamed bishops (Goodnestone, Kent):
Sunlight St Anne, teaching the Virgin Mary to read, from Selworthy in Somerset:
And two other saintly women, both from St Winnow in Cornwall:
From the same church, some Cornish saints - not a good picture, alas, but when else will I ever get the opportunity to mention St Winnow and St Nectan?
St Catherine, from the chapel of Edward the Confessor in Canterbury Cathedral:
St Catherine is one of my name-saints, so I had to include her.
And now for some real genuine medieval stained glass, which if I were a proper medievalist I would have put front and centre, and about which I would have something intelligent to say; I don't though, except that they're all, for some reason, really cute. Here's two medieval depictions of St John the Baptist, one dramatic (and not so cute), one rather more peaceful:
(This is from the church at Wickhambreaux in Kent, which has an incredible stained-glass east window...).
From Elham, Kent (I love that little lamb!).
The rest are from St Winnow again, and are dated c.1460s. St George is easy to identify:
Isn't that adorable? He looks like a little cartoon character! I think it's the squat body and spindly legs... And this St Michael too is similarly cuddly:
There's a close-up of St Michael's face in process of restoration here, which is pretty cool. All the glass seems to have been cleaned since I visited in 2008, and it looks very different now.
This may be St Winnow (probably this Winwaloe):
And this is apparently St Leonard:
And this is Mary Magdalene:
That blue is gorgeous.
That exhausts my supply of stained-glass saints. Medieval saints as depicted in stained glass have featured in the following posts:
Ramsgate
Canterbury
Suffolk
Norwich
St Edmund of East Anglia
Minster
Northumberland
Somerset
Plus some Gothic medievalish apostles at Kingsdown
This is getting to be an obsession. Perhaps I should write a book.
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