This is the last glimpse of  The Cathedral Church of St Nicholas and also the last glimpse from my Mini Break in Newcastle, apart from a few photos that I took on my journey home.

A Wise Master Builder

Commemoration

10 Comments CherryPie on Apr 24th 2013

Danish War Memorial Window

Danish War Memorial

Info from the Cathedral Church of St Nicholas guide book:

In World War II, after the fall of Denmark and Norway in 1940, Newcastle became the home of the Danish merchant fleet. About 4,000 Danish seamen sailed from here and 1,406 gave their lives. the memorial in natural slate and stainless steel, designed in 1982 by Ronald G. Sims, the cathedral architect, is imaginative and arresting. The Westmorland slate represents the Danish islands and the remembrance book came originally from the Danish Seamen’s Church in Newcastle via the Danish Seamen’s Church in London. In October 2002 the memorial was augmented by the fine window above. Its simple but powerful images include the coats of arms of Newcastle and three Danish ports; crosses for ‘faith’ anchors for ‘hope’, and the heart for ‘charity’, all set in clear but textured glass. The designer was Mike Davis of Durham and the glass is Northumbrian with two clear roundels of Danish glass in the shaped beads of the outer lights.

The plaque underneath the memorial window, seen to the right of the second photo reads:

Dedicated on 26th October 2003 in the presence of Tom Risdahl, his excellency the Danish Ambassador.  The window displays the virtues of faith, hope and charity.  And the arms of some of the ports of the Danish Seamen; Arhus, Marstal and Copenhagen together with those of Newcastle Upon Tyne.

4 Comments CherryPie on Apr 23rd 2013

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8 Comments CherryPie on Apr 22nd 2013

Harmony makes small things grow.  Lack of it makes great things decay.

Sallust (c. 86-34 B.C.)

In the Distance

12 Comments CherryPie on Apr 21st 2013

Communion Wafer & Meniscus

Above the Thornton brass is a sculpture designed by Stephen Cox.  It represents a broken Communion wafer and the meniscus of a cup of Communion wine.

high up on the back of the reredos, is a curious sculpture of two discs.  The top one, in Egyptian alabaster, represents a broken Communion wafer while the second, in Roman imperial porphyry, represents the meniscus (the flat surface) of a cup of Communion wine.  Both types of stone have been quarried for thousands of years in Egypt, first by the Pharaohs and then by the Romans, and so both are directly linked to the actual time and place of Christ’s earthly life.*

*From the Cathedral of St Nicholas guidebook.

6 Comments CherryPie on Apr 20th 2013

The Thornton Brass

This brass once covered the altar tomb of Roger Thompson.

[This] huge Flemish brass that formerly covered the altar tomb of Roger Thornton in the ancient Newcastle parish church of All Saints, Quayside, which closed for Anglican worship in 1959. It is believed to be the largest brass in the country.

It is pre-1429 and commemorates Roger who died in that year, his wife who predeceased him in 1411, and their seven sons and seven daughters. Roger Thornton was the ‘Dick Whittington’ of Newcastle, having arrived from the Cumberland area in a penurious state. He became a successful merchant in the town and was a great benefactor to St Nicholas’s and other churches and institutions. He was three times Mayor of Newcastle and several times Member of parliament.*

*From the Cathedral Church of St Nicholas guidebook.

4 Comments CherryPie on Apr 19th 2013

Reflection

I have really enjoyed my ‘part year’ in the 52 photos project and I am looking forward to starting the next round of challenges from the beginning.  Thank you Bella :-)

The final photo in this round is a self portrait. For several reasons I haven’t been inspired to take a self portrait over the last few months and the last few weeks have been rather hectic…  So I delved into my ‘fairly recent’ archives to find a suitable photograph for the theme.

See the gallery for more ‘self portraits‘.

12 Comments CherryPie on Apr 18th 2013

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