Friday 29th August 2008

Feature Week
Abbeys

Plus NIKON D90 announced

Some will find this one of the most exciting featured items, others perhaps will be less excited, and some may be put off by the religious connection, or the feel that these were part of our history we could have better done without. Many will have misconceptions, and have got questionable historic facts, with history nothing is ever as simple as presented. Yes, you had some Norman bishops brought in, who had castle grade fortified palaces complete with moats, collected taxes and were a part of the ruling class, profiteering at every opportunity, but you also had monasteries that looked after the homeless and poor, that assisted travellers and looked after sailors when on land, that provided medical care, and a lot more besides.

Reflections in the Bishops Palace Moat, Wells

Image taken with Nikon D300, with 18-200mmVR lens at 18mm, ISO 1600, 1/500th, F22

On this day I was using just high ISO and no flash to photograph inside Wells cathedral. Some outside shots were also used with
high ISO for comparisons.

Many believe that the dissolution of the monasteries was brought about solely by the pope not allowing the King to dump one wife and take another, but the process had started well before this and was happening in other countries ahead of it happening in England.

Perhaps you are aware of the diversity of religious buildings and long history represented or perhaps when you have been looking at places to go you have come across leaflets and entries for this abbey or that abbey, and spotted there are rather a lot of them. Prior to the dissolution of the monasteries in the time of Henry VIII, there were many more, and over 800 were taken over by the Crown at that time. Many knocked down or converted, some used in part for parish churches or cathedrals, and some just abandoned.

As a part of the run up to the Crown taking the Abbey properties and assets, representatives were sent out to every church to tell congregations several things, getting them on their side, one of these was that if the King took over these assets, amounting to over 15% of the land in England, and other  income streams, then this would give the King and Government sufficient income, that the people of England would never need to pay taxes again. Of course it did not quite work out that way in the longer term. If that promise had been honoured there would be no VAT, fuel tax, income tax, NI, council tax, or any of the thousand stealth taxes, and disposable incomes after necessities would be perhaps over 10 times what they are today. Of course it all went wrong when they wanted money for a war, and as today money for wars is always found while at the same time small amounts for drugs that people need or operations cannot be found, unless it or you are a special case.

Most abbeys are built around a common plan, the abbey church the largest and most superb building in the shape of a cross with its top pointing sort of east'ish, pointing, the west end and entry often being rather grand, with a second elaborately carved entry on the south. To the south you have the cloisters, square covered area, and of this most other parts are accessible. The second grandest room being the chapter house. Many of our cathedrals, like Salisbury, Wells, Gloucester, Westminster Abbey... were abbey churches, and many more have survived as parish churches, so we have the opportunity to explore complete examples as well as ruins, although with the ruins its often easier to understand the parts and how they were put together. Exploring several ruins by the same order, often allows you to get a picture in your mind of what a complete abbey would have looked like.

There are also many stories to unravel, from who set up the original abbeys and what their belief was, pre catholic, the many items that attracted pilgrims, legends of people walled up for falling in love, and why some fell down while others are still standing.  If you have driven through Wiltshire, you may have seen Malmesbury Abbey, large and visible for miles around, but what we see toady is only a part of the nave, less than half its length, the transepts also have gone, it had a great west entrance but it fell down, it had a spire taller than Salisbury cathedral, but that fell down as well.

For the photographer, abbey ruins present many opportunities, the ruins themselves both from an artistic and documentary viewpoint, often plants and nature as well as their place within the landscape. Within the last couple of weeks, at abbeys, we have photographed many butterflies, a lot different plants, a heron, as well as many other birds, a re-enactment group, a presentation of a medieval kitchen, a medieval herb garden with herbs for healing as well as cooking, really good reflections in the moat of a bishops palace, in addition we have taken photos of parts of abbeys, of a wide range or remains, restoration work being carried out, stone carvings, shots of landscapes, and of people exploring them. In addition in cathedrals that were at one time abbeys we have also taken other shots of the architecture, fittings, ceilings, tombs and stain glass windows.

Although we have visited more religious houses in the last few weeks, than we normally would as we we were working towards this feature week, looking back through the years, they have featured throughout. In addition to the photography possibilities its the chance to play time detective that attracts me and many others, we can look at abbeys, castles and other heritage remains and add one piece of knowledge to another, spotting  the abnormal or unusual, working out how things worked and knowing the 'normal' layouts deduce where other parts would have been, and perhaps at times disagree with the labelling of the site.

This week we are starting this section, but we did not have sufficient time to complete all that we had hoped to. We have been working on a master index of all sites in the country, identifying where churches and other buildings have come from abbeys, a large indexing task organised both nationally and by county, but its not quite complete, and rather than put it up as it is we decided to complete it first. We hope to have this done by next week. We have also decided to expand the section to include a full listing on all cathedrals and other major cathedral scale churches, but due to the larger list taking far longer than expected this one has also been delayed.

What we do have for you this week is the main articles for this new section, looking at the history, the orders involved in building abbeys, the normal layout, what happened in the abbey day, and a range of feature and other locations guides that introduce some of the sites that you might like to visit. We also have an article on how to go about photographing abbey ruins.

Next week we have the month changeover and new photographers diary, and some other items as well as completing this stage of the Abbey section, with an article on photographing in cathedrals and abbeys currently in use, and we hope to have the listings available as well. These parts are in part connected into some of this weeks articles but with there links greyed out this week.

Summary of Articles Included this week

New Section - Abbeys and Monasteries

Introduction to abbeys section looks at what you can find, how as a time detective you can deduce far more and introduces the other information within this section.

Christianity in Britain, looks at how Christianity arrived in Britain and the early history, including the development of Celtic and Roman branches of the Christian faith and their amalgamation.

The development of Monasteries and Abbeys in Britain  looks at how monasteries came about, the development of the brands, numbers involved and why each developed and eventually fell out of favour.

Dissolution of the Monasteries looks at the background to, and what was going on in Europe, what led to and the results of the dissolution of the monasteries, which had little to do with who Henry VIII wished to marry.

The layout of a Monastery or Abbey,  looks at an early complete design of a Benedictine Monastery, and also looks at some later differences.

A Day at the Abbey, looks at the life of the monks who lived there and how they used much of the space we discover in buildings now.

How to photograph a derelict abbey.

Lists relating to Abbey Photography

Featured Abbeys & other religious buildings

In the News This Week
Nikon Announce the D90:-
  • 12.3 megapixel
  • DX format sensor (like the D70, D80, D200, D300)
  • SD cards (like D80 and D60)
  • ISO 200-3200 sensitivity
  • Live View mode
  • Many of the features from the D300
  • easy Focusing - Scene Recognition with integrated Face Detection
  • 11-point AF system like D200 and D80, (D300 has more)
  •  NEW   D-Movie function lets you shoot HD 720p (1280 x 720 pixels), 640 x 424 pixels or 320 x 216 pixels movies at the professional smoothness of 24 frames-per-second in motion JPEG format.
  • In-camera image enhancement including Active D-Lighting
  • High-resolution 3-inch LCD monitor
  • Image Sensor Cleaning,
  • Controls are very similar to the D80
  • RRP £699.00, or £849.99 with a new 18-105VR lens. Available conceptually in September.

Watch this website for more information shortly

Click on image to see a large version

Locations Guides Added This Week

Battle Abbey and Battlefield, Battle, East Sussex

Bishop's Waltham Palace, Bishops Waltham, Hampshire

Dundrennan Abbey, Dundrennan, Dumfriesshire, Scotland 

Egglestone Abbey, Barnard Castle, Durham

Glastonbury Abbey, Glastonbury, Somerset

Hailes Abbey, nr Winchcombe, Gloucestershire

Holmcultrum Abbey, nr Abbey Town, Cumbria

Hulne Priory, Hulne Park, Alnwick, Northumberland

Lenses Abbey, Abbey Wood, Belvedere, London

Lilleshall Abbey, nr Telford, Shropshire

Jervaulx Abbey, Middleham, Yorkshire

Michelham Priory & Gardens, Upper Dicker, nr Hailsham, East Sussex

Muchelney Abbey, nr Ilchester, Somerset

Netley Abbey nr Fareham, Hampshire

Newark Priory, Pyrford, Surrey

Roche Abbey, Maltby, Rotherham, Yorkshire

Southwick Priory, Nr Porchester, Hampshire

Whitby Abbey, Whitby, Yorkshire

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