Country Life

‘And did those feet...’

TO make a pilgrimage was the fun part of religion in medieval England, as Chaucer reveals in the Rabelaisian adventures stacked up with his Canterbury Tales. Yet it was also a physical journey to the site of a shrine or miraculous event—an apparition of the Virgin Mary or the discovery of a holy cross—with the aspiration of attaining some sort of encounter with the divine.

The famous pilgrimage abbeys encased beneath their Gothic vaults the relics of a saint or a sacred object—in Waltham Abbey, for example, a jet-black cross of flint that had been found 150 miles away at sacred Glastonbury. The abbeys underwent continuous embellishment driven by centuries of devotional gift giving, for everyone understood that a saint who had answered a prayer had to be rewarded with a respectful visit of thanks and a votive gift—anything from a beeswax candle to an entire estate signed and sealed with a charter.

A pilgrimage also offered the chance for an intercession—perhaps for a wished-for child, a cure or a successful war. It served, too, as an act of contrition for a public crime or a private sin.

The holiday atmosphere of the journey would gradually subside as the company approached the shrine and the carnival transformed into a three-day

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Country Life

Country Life9 min read
Empires Of The Sun
SOLAR power is a growth industry, critical to the Government’s pursuit of net-zero emissions and mired in controversy. Britain’s largest solar farm, the 220-acre Shotwick Park in Flintshire, is about to be dwarfed by super schemes already in the pipe
Country Life7 min read
An Air Of Homely Distinction
Russell House, Broadway, Worcestershire The home of Andrew Dakin and Malcolm Rogers AS do many Cotswold villages, composed of picturesque stone houses, cottages and inns erected between the 15th and 18th centuries, Broadway owed its wealth to the med
Country Life5 min read
The Magnificent Seven
SHEILA WILLCOX was not the first female winner—that was Margaret Hough in 1954—but she was ahead of her time in her rigid methodology (which still holds good today) and professional attitude to what was then an amateur sport; she certainly gave no qu

Related Books & Audiobooks