Once I was a clever boy learning the arts of Oxford... is a quotation from the verses written by Bishop Richard Fleming (c.1385-1431) for his tomb in Lincoln Cathedral. Fleming, the founder of Lincoln College in Oxford, is the subject of my research for a D. Phil., and, like me, a son of the West Riding. I have remarked in the past that I have a deeply meaningful on-going relationship with a dead fifteenth century bishop... it was Fleming who, in effect, enabled me to come to Oxford and to learn its arts, and for that I am immensely grateful.


Wednesday, 25 February 2026

More Medieval Maps


Earlier this month I posted The earliest surviving maps of Great Britain linking to an online article about early maps of Britain.

I have now found another online article from Rare Historical Photos about maps of the world from late antiquity through to the seventeenth century. A number are schematic like the Hereford Mappa Mundi from the early fourteenth century. Others however are concerned to give as accurate a cartographic representation of the world as the mapmakers could. Looking at the various maps serves as a reminder of how much was known long before we might think, and that for centuries people understood the earth far better than more modern writers have assumed and claimed.


Tuesday, 24 February 2026

Conserving the twelfth century wall paintings at Ickleton church


The BBC News website has a report about the restoration of the impressive remains of a cycle of wall paintings in the church at Ickleton in south Cambridgeshire. They were only rediscovered during cleaning following a fire in 1979, which means they and the church are not necessarily included in many established books on medieval churches and their decoration. 

The Wikipedia entry for the church indeed quotes Pevsner as lamenting that this important church is not better known for its Norman work. That article can be seen at St_Mary_Magdalene_Church,_Ickleton

The illustrated report on the current conservation work can be seen at Ickleton's rare Norman church frescoes secure conservation funds

The fate of Queen Mary I’s episcopate


I have no wish to be vainglorious, but readers may be interested to see an article that I have written, which has been published in the latest edition of the Latin Mass Society magazine Mass of Ages. Entitled ‘Deprived and Imprisoned’ it looks the fate of the surviving Marian bishops after 1559, And seeks to correct the impression that one often sees in history books that the deprived bishops simply faded away in discreet retirement on their family estates. This was not the case, as they were imprisoned and indeed some faced the possibility of execution. Two managed to escape abroad, but one of them died soon afterwards. The long and tedious years of imprisonment gradually took its toll. They are not men who are particularly held in remembrance, and I hope that the article might help rectify that omission.

Mass of Ages can be found in all good Catholic churches, and is free. The magazine can be accessed directly online and can be downloaded as a PDF.
The article is on page 31, following a reprint of the Daily Telegraph obituary of Fr Ray Blake, whom I had the privilege of meeting on several occasions.

Monday, 23 February 2026

Sagrada Familia nears completion


The new rival to Cologne Cathedral and Ulm Minster, and to the former claim of Lincoln Cathedral, to be the tallest churches in the world is, of course, Antonio Gaudi’s astonishing Sagrada Familia in Barcelona. 

In recent days the basilica’s central tower and spire were completed when the cross was placed on top of the Jesus tower. There remains another decade to work to finish the decoration and details of a building whose foundation stone was laid in 1882. At 566 feet the spire is the tallest in the world - but even then just possibly lower than that which once crowned Lincoln Cathedral.

There is a good video about Sagrada Familia, its architect Gaudi, and the travails faced by the builders during the horrors of the Spanish Civil Wat - building so great a statement of faith in anarchist Catalonia was likely to attract hostility and violence.

As a boy I remember having books in which one pasted pictures of other countries, and a recurring image was of the one completed facade of this extraordinary looking building. I am grateful for having lived to see the verge of its completion, and to do so as a Catholic.



Surveying the graffiti of Lincoln Cathedral


Just before Christmas the BBC News website reported on an ongoing project at Lincoln Cathedral to find and record the medieval and later graffiti in the building. These date from the fourteenth century onwards and are both sacred and secular in their intention. More than eight thousand have been identified and the survey is by no means complete.


This online visit to Lincoln leads rather neatly into my next post. When some of these graffiti were made Lincoln Cathedral was, whether people who saw it knew or not, the tallest building hitherto built in the world. From 1311 until a storm blew it down in 1548 the central tower - itself the tallest in the country - supported a timber and lead spire which overtopped all others. Often claimed to have been 584 feet high, but almost certainly somewhat less because of physical limitations, maybe 560 feet, it was not exceeded in height until the completion of the Washington monument in Washington DC in 1884, the same decade in which it was rivalled by the completion of Cologne Cathedral and Ulm Minster. Now it has a new rival …


Thursday, 19 February 2026

Symbolism and preparation for the Westminster installation


Following on from my recent post about the inauguration Mass for Archbishop Moth’s ministry at Westminster Cathedral I have now found an online video about the preparations for the day, and in particular about many of the items used. These include more images and more information about the amethyst cope morse, the crosier and the chalice used for the celebration of the Mass, and the symbolism of the altar and the Archiepiscopal throne, the cathedra which gives the name of cathedral to every episcopal church. 

As I said in my previous post, and as this video stresses much more emphatically, they all stress the inherent unity of the Catholic Church from the Apostolic Age onwards, and its inherent unity, despite so much upheaval and suffering from just after the chalice was made to the calmer times of the restoration of the Hierarchy and the building of Westminster Cathedral, in England.



Wednesday, 18 February 2026

The evolution of Ash Wednesday


The New Liturgical Movement has an excellent article today about the evolution and development of the historic liturgy of Ash Wednesday from the time of St Gregory the Great. It also has a useful note about the development of processions on certain other feast days, although Ash Wednesday lost this particular element in the later medieval period.

The article can be accessed at Liturgical Notes on Ash Wednesday


Ash Wednesday and T.S.Eliot


Today being Ash Wednesday seems a very good occasion on which to share an article from the Daily Telegraph by Christopher Howse. In it he writes about T.S. Eliot’s set of six poems, written in 1927 and published as “Ash Wednesday” in 1930. It is often seen as Eliot’s “conversion” piece, written when he became an Anglo-Catholic. As the article points out many critics in 1930 missed many of the liturgical allusions in the text, let alone how many would miss them today, which is a depressing commentary on the state of our society.

The text of the poem can be found online, and there are a number of online videos about it.