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Northern Christianity

 

With the Romans came Christianity.  The first British Christian martyr is said to be Saint Alban in the third century (executed in a crack down on this troublesome religion. Christianity was legalised in the Roman Empire by Constantine I in 313 (see also York above). Theodosius I made Christianity the state religion of the empire in 391, and by the time the Romans withdrew from Britain in 410 many had adopted the new religion, including communities in areas never under Roman control in Scotland and Ireland. 

In 410 the Roman legions withdrew from Britain to defend Rome itself now under increasing attack from the pagan Visigoths and Ostrogoths; so that for a period Rome itself was no longer Christian.  But in Britain, and elsewhere in northern Europe pockets of Christianity remained.   So we are told of Saint Patrick, a British Christian bishop, bringing Christianity to Ireland in 432; only to discover an already well established Christian monastic presence in the Irish Kingdom of Ossory.  Historians describe the remnants of insular Christianity remaining as 'Celtic Christianity', distinguished by its monastic style.  In 563 a monastery was founded on the island of Iona by the Irish monk Columba (Colm Cille). From this base the Christians set about converting the Picts in Scotland and the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Northumbria.  

In 634 the Irish monk Saint Aidan left Iona to establish Lindisfarne Priory on Holy Island in Northumberland on the coast between Sunderland and Berwick-on-Tweed.

Just 40 years later the newly converted Queen Etheldreda of Northumbria granted lands for the construction of Hexham Abbey; the oldest continuous Christian Church in England.

 

Hexham Abbey Interior
Hexham Abbey Interior

 

 

Ongoing Viking raids on Lindisfarne Priory forced its relocation in 995 to the wonderfully strategic location almost surrounded by cliffs above the River Wear in Durham; with a narrow access neck easily defended; latterly by Durham Castle.  Today this site is home to both the beautiful cathedral and to the University of Durham.

In due course in Europe the Goths converted to Christianity and Constantinople fell to Islam.  After a brief period in which France was its centre Rome was re-established as the spiritual centre of the Christian church.   Meantime there was an accommodation between Celtic Christianity and the Roman Church, reinforced later by the Norman invasion of England, and a schism between Eastern and Western Christianity. 

 

 

From the Tower of Durham Cathedral
From the Tower of Durham Cathedral

 

The present cathedral was founded in 1093, after the Norman invasion, and is UNESCO World Heritage Site; regarded as one of the finest examples of Norman architecture still existing.

 

 

Durham Cathedral
Durham Cathedral

 

 

The first seeds of rebellion against the Vatican were financial.  A number of countries, including England, objected to the taxes and revenues from church lands being repatriated to extravagances in Rome. The Church was also widely considered to be corrupt. 

For example as a result of the Papal Schism of the 15th century the Scottish monarch gained the authority to appoint bishops.  In 1504 James IV's illegitimate son Alexander was nominated as Archbishop of St. Andrews at the age of eleven; illustrating to Christian intellectuals the depths depravity to which the Church had sunk.  

The Renaissance had brought a wide range of technological improvements.  Amongst other things these significantly changed military capability with developments in explosives; ship design; navigation and fortifications. The balance of power was changing; together with increasing literacy in regional languages; in addition to Latin.  Religious scholarship placed greater reliance on original sources; and scepticism mounted. 

Into this new world came Martin Luther, a German Catholic monk and professor of theology, who was engaged in translating the Bible into German; to be published using the new process of printing using removable type.  Luther found ninety five points of serious inconsistency between the then teachings of the Church and the Bible.  In particular he objected to the sale of indulgences which purported that 'freedom from God's punishment for sin could be purchased with money'. 

 

 

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Travel

South Korea & China

March 2016

 

 

South Korea

 

 

I hadn't written up our trip to South Korea (in March 2016) but Google Pictures gratuitously put an album together from my Cloud library so I was motivated to add a few words and put it up on my Website.  Normally I would use selected images to illustrate observations about a place visited.  This is the other way about, with a lot of images that I may not have otherwise chosen.  It requires you to go to the link below if you want to see pictures. You may find some of the images interesting and want to by-pass others quickly. Your choice. In addition to the album, Google generated a short movie in an 8mm style - complete with dust flecks. You can see this by clicking the last frame, at the bottom of the album.

A few days in Seoul were followed by travels around the country, helpfully illustrated in the album by Google generated maps: a picture is worth a thousand words; ending back in Seoul before spending a few days in China on the way home to OZ. 

Read more: South Korea & China

Fiction, Recollections & News

His life in a can

A Short Story

 

 

"She’s put out a beer for me!   That’s so thoughtful!" 

He feels shamed, just when he was thinking she takes him for granted.

He’s been slaving away out here all morning in the sweltering heat, cutting-back this enormous bloody bougainvillea that she keeps nagging him about.  It’s the Council's green waste pick-up tomorrow and he’s taken the day off, from the monotony of his daily commute, to a job that he has long since mastered, to get this done.  

He’s bleeding where the thorns have torn at his shirtless torso.  His sweat makes pink runnels in the grey dust that is thick on his office-pale skin.  The scratches sting, as the salty rivulets reach them, and he’s not sure that he hasn’t had too much sun.  He knows he’ll be sore in the office tomorrow.

Read more: His life in a can

Opinions and Philosophy

The Transit of Venus

 

 

On Wednesday 6th June, 2012 in Eastern Australia and New Zealand (as well Pacific islands across to Alaska) Venus was seen to pass between the Earth and the Sun; appearing as a small circular spot crossing the sun’s disc; for around six and a half hours.

This is a very rare astronomical event that has been the cause of great change to our world.

This is not because, as the astrologers would have it, that human events are governed or predicted by the disposition of the stars or planets.  It is because the event has served to significantly advance scientific knowledge and our understanding of the Universe.

Read more: The Transit of Venus

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