St Veep

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St Veep
Cornwall
St Veep Parish Church - geograph.org.uk - 218004.jpg
St Veep Parish Church
Location
Grid reference: SX139550
Location: 50°21’54"N, 4°37’5"W
Data
Population: 305
Post town: Lostwithiel
Postcode: PL22
Local Government
Council: Cornwall
Parliamentary
constituency:
South East Cornwall

St Veep is a hamlet in southern Cornwall and the churchtown of the wider parish of St Veep. It stands above the east bank of the River Fowey about three miles south-east of Lostwithiel, facing Golant across the river.

The parish is bordered by the parishes of St Winnow to the north-west, Boconnoc to the north, Lanreath to the east Lansallos to the south-east and Lanteglos to the south. The River Fowey forms its western boundary. The parish is named after Saint Veep of whom little is known (not even whether the saint was male or female).

Penpol Mill

Part of the village of Lerryn is in St Veep parish. The hamlets of Cliff (50°22’8"N, 4°38’2"W), Higher Penpol (50°21’36"N, 4°36’58"W), Middle Penpol and Lower Penpol (50°21’36"N, 4°36’25"W) are all within the parish.

History

The parish church was originally dedicated to St Veep, but when it was rebuilt in 1336 it was rededicated to St Quiricus and St Julietta.[1]

Following the Prayer Book Rebellion of 1549, a number of well-known Cornishmen, priests among them, were hanged in Cornwall, and these included Richard Bennet, vicar of St Veep, under the direct orders of Anthony Kingston, Provost Marshal serving under King Edward VI.[2]

Valuable church silverware, which had been deposited with Lloyds Bank of St Austell and subsequently lost, was rediscovered in 2015 at a storage facility near Glasgow. Items included a communion cup (dated 1579), silver flagon tankard (1737) and a silver plate (1738).[3]

St Cadix's Priory

A small cell or priory was built by the side of Penpol Creek, today the site is referred to as "St Cadix's Priory" but it has also appeared as St Ciric, St Carroc, St Cadokys, St Carrett and St Karroc. There is some uncertainty as to which saint the priory was dedicated to; either 6th-century Celtic St Cadoc or Cyricus son of St Julietta, who the parish church is dedicated to. Little remains of the priory today and a farmhouse was built on the site in 1710, but there are some remains of a crucifix and ecclesiastical stones dated at 1150 onwards.[4]

In 1100 the priory was granted to the Benedictine Cluniac Montacute Priory in Somerset by William, Count of Mortain. Before that a small cell or holy well had existed. It remained the priory's until the dissolution of the monasteries in 1536. For most of its time just one monk and prior lived there. Three priors are known: Robertus (1339), Wilhelmus Smythe (1385) and Laurence Castleton (1536).[4] The cells' residents included Walter de Exeter who supposedly wrote a biography of Guy of Warwick in 1301.[1][5]

After dissolution the freehold of the site was granted to Laurence and Dorothy Courtenay on 3 September 1545. They leased it to the Cavells who leased it to Burchard Kranich a German silver smelter and adventurer. Kranich borrowed £500 from Mary Tudor, £150 from William Godolphin and more from several others to build a "melting house" in Lerryn which cost about £300 to build. Later he was lent £300 by Queen Elizabeth I, who ordered the repair of the bridge in Lerryn. Between 1556 and 1583 at least 2,000 ounces of silver were smelted with ore coming from mines in Tregardoke, Padstow, St Delion, Portysyke, Peran and St Columb.[4] Kranich was arrested for his debts and held in the Marshalsea in London. He is credited with curing Queen Elizabeth I of smallpox.<ref

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about St Veep)

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Lake's parochial history of Cornwall - St Veep". http://pyran.org/LakesStVeep.pdf. Retrieved 19 June 2011. 
  2. Philip Payton - (1996) "Cornwall", Fowey: Alexander Associates
  3. Barton, Lyn (3 December 2015). "Cornish Church's historic 'lost' silverware found in aircraft hangar". Western Morning News: p. 3. http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Cornish-Church-s-historic-lost-silverware/story-28282868-detail/story.html. Retrieved 4 December 2015. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Foot, Andrew (1986). A History of St. Veep Church & Parish Including Lerryn. 
  5. Dictionary of National Biography - 'Exeter, Walter of' Volume 18