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Pilgrims still make the journey to Glastonbury Abbey where they are able to take part in church services that are held in St Patrick’s Chapel.

Every week throughout the year, services are held in St Patrick’s Chapel which was founded by Abbot Richard Beere in 1500 and so has been witness to 500 years of Christian worship.

Summer – a Saturday in June – is the high point of the modern-day Glastonbury Pilgrimage. Begun by a few local Somerset churches in 1924, the pilgrimage has become a public expression of personal faith.

Groups of worshippers come from all over Britain and Europe. At noon, the pilgrims gather to process down Glastonbury High Street, with banners flying and then return to the ruined nave of the abbey church, where Eucharist is celebrated.

Several thousand people take part in this service, presided over by bishops and priests and receive the Holy Sacrament.

On the same day, an Orthodox service is held in the ruins of the Lady Chapel to venerate the icon of Our Lady of Glastonbury; Musicians, choirs and actors also entertain the pilgrims as the day progresses. The day culminates with the Christian multitude celebrating Evensong in the nave of the abbey church at 3.30pm.

In early July, on a Sunday, the Roman Catholic pilgrimage comes to the abbey. A procession is made around the abbey grounds, then out into the High Street and back to the abbey via the main entrance, in Magdalene Street. Bishops and visiting dignitaries lead the singing pilgrims in procession. On return to the abbey, Mass is celebrated in the Nave of the Abbey Church at 3.30pm.

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Situated in front of St Patrick’s Church is a statue of Sigeric, a former monk at Glastonbury who became Archbishop of Canterbury in 990:

He travelled to Rome on a pilgrimage and kept a diary of his return journey to Canterbury along the Via Francigena (Via Romea), a route much-used by merchants, pilgrims, scholars, soldiers and ordinary men and women. In 1985, using Sigeric’s chronicle as a guide, the route was mapped out again and pilgrims can once more tread the road used by their medieval predecessors.*

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*From Glastonbury – The Isle of Avalon handbook

10 Comments CherryPie on Dec 28th 2016

10 Responses to “St Patrick’s Chapel – Glastonbury”

  1. ....peter:) says:

    St Patrick’s Chapel is humble church with only the windows to dress it up Cherie… the bronze statue of of Sigeric, and the boy with the apple for is horse is beautiful… i like this series and the history of the chapel….peter:)

  2. Astrid says:

    This is such a wonderful inside of this ‘normal’ looking chapel. What a treasure is inside. Wonderful pictures.

  3. Alan says:

    I especially like the wall paintings.

  4. The Yum List says:

    Is that lavender growing along the wall?

  5. Such an interesting chapel.