Morvah

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Morvah
Cornwall

Morvah chapel and church
Location
Grid reference: SW402353
Location: 50°9’40"N, 5°38’20"W
Data
Population: 49  (2011)
Post town: Penzance
Postcode: TR20
Dialling code: 01736
Local Government
Council: Cornwall
Parliamentary
constituency:
St Ives

Morvah is a village on the Penwith peninsula in the far west of Cornwall. The village stands some eight miles west of St Ives and five and a half miles north-west of Penzance.

Morvah parish is wider, encompassing the hamlets of Chypraze and Rosemergy, and is bounded by the parishes of St Just to the west, Zennor to the north-east, Madron to the south and by the sea in the north. Within this, Morvah itself is the small churchtown which lies along the B3306 road which connects St Ives to the A30 road and consists of housing, an art gallery, a dairy farm and the parish church, St Bridget's.[1] The chancel and nave were rebuilt in 1828, leaving the two-staged, unbuttressed west tower from the 14th-century.[2]

Plain in Morvah with the Atlantic beyond

Morvah is within the 'Cornwall Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty', as is almost a third of the county. The South West Coast Path, which follows the coast of the West Country from Somerset to Dorset, passes by on the cliffs to the north of Morvah churchtown.

History

Antiquities

Evidence of a settlement at Morvah in the early Middle Ages is in the form of an inscribed stone known as the Mên Scryfa; it is a memorial to one 'Rialobranus son of Cunovalus', located in a field on a moor about three kilometres from the village. It was first described in a letter written by the antiquary Edward Lhwyd. The inscription has been dated from the fifth to the eighth century.,[3] but more firmly and authoritatively dated to the middle third of the 6th century by Professor Charles Thomas (And Shall these Mute Stones Speak, University of Wales Press 1994). In fact, this inscribed stone stands in the parish of Madron, a good mile east of Morvah parish. The finest antiquities of Morvah parish are the Neolithic dolmen of Chûn Quoit (c. 3500 BC) and the nearby Iron Age hillfort (c. 300 BC) of Chûn Castle (half of which is also in Madron parish), as well as the Late Iron Age settlement of four distinctively local courtyard houses at Croftoe. These include a rare "semi-detached" dwelling.

Morvah Gold Hoard

In 1884 during quarrying for building materials at Morvah, on the coast at Carne Farm, (which lies about half a mile north of Chûn Castle and quoit), a hoard of gold ornaments was found dating from the late Bronze Age. The hoard of gold bracelets discovered here consisted of six large bracelets, three with distinctive trumpet-like ends. One also has engraved geometric designs on it. These bracelets were almost certainly either made in Ireland or made from Irish gold, and made their way, probably through trade in exchange for tin, to Cornwall. They now reside in the British Museum but are a vivid reminder of how relatively well-off Cornwall was in prehistoric times.[4]

Mining

A copper mine, Morvah Consols opened on Morvah Cliff, in 1851, with funding by Levant adventurers.[5]

Morvah Fair

Until the 20th century, the Morvah Fair was held on 1 August every year, which has been described as the biggest Lammas Day celebrations outside Ireland. The fair was attended by a large number from across West Cornwall. The fair was also associated with the legend of "Jack the Tinkard".

In the late 19th century the then priest of Morvah lead a successful campaign to ban the celebrations due to the excess of drunken and promiscuous behaviour. In a proclamation he stated:

"The Church-Town of Morvah has for many years past been much resorted to on the First Sunday in August by disorderly persons of every description, much to the annoyance of the parishioners, he hereby cautions all such persons from assembling on that day for idle and profane amusement, so revolting to that great command of the Law of God –

"Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy"

Strict orders have been given to the Constable and Officers of the Parish to take into custody any person who shall be found desecrating the Lord's Day."[6]

Morvah now celebrates 'pasty day' instead, on the first Tuesday of every August.

Shipwrecks

On 3 August 2011, the 9,000 ton MV Karin Schepers, with a cargo which included petroleum, ran onto a sandy beach under Trevean Cliff at 17 knots. The crew managed to refloat the ship and continue on its journey from Cork to Rotterdam. Falmouth Coastguard contacted the ship two hours before she went aground and made repeated calls as the ship appeared to ignore shipping lanes. The Sennen Lifeboat was first on the scene followed by a helicopter from RNAS Culdrose, both reported no sign of any crew on deck. Representatives of the Marine Accident Investigation Branch (MAIR) met with the crew after docking at Rotterdam. The ship also ran aground two years previously in the Baltic off Denmark.[7]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Morvah)

References

  1. Morvah.com
  2. Beacham, Peter; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2014). Cornwall. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp. 358–59. ISBN 978 0 300 12668 6. 
  3. See the discussion and bibliography in Elisabeth Okasha, Corpus of Early Christian Inscribed Stones of South-west Britain (Leicester: University Press, 1993), pp. 174–177
  4. The Morvah Hoard at the British Museum
  5. "Mining Intelligence". The Cornish Telegraph (1): p. 3. 3 January 1851. 
  6. [1] Morvah.com website; History; retrieved April 2010
  7. Toby Meyjes. Crew warned before big ship ran aground. The Cornishman 11 August 2011.