These two shrines are an addition to the original itinerary, and also a further deviation from what was planned for this year. However, to my good fortune, I came across the website of avereginamaria.info This had material which I had seen before but had forgotten.
The niche in which stood the famous statue of Our Lady of Gillingham may still be seen over the west door of the ancient parish church which likewise contained a cross which was held to be miraculous.
Gillingham Church
The niche for the statue can still be seen on the west face of the tower
Image: Geograph - David Martin
Even more celebrated was the neighbouring sanctuary of Chatham, an ancient Norman church, now destroyed, in which existed many singular and beautiful remains of ancient architecture. Under the entrance arch to the north porch appeared an empty niche and bracket with figures of angels at the sides extending their wings as if over the head of the figure of Our Lady that formerly occupied it, and other angels bending prostrate towards Her. In this niche the famous image is believed to have stood, ….. [W]hen the old church was pulled down in 1788…. fragments of sculpture richly painted and gilt were discovered among the materials with
which the east window had been built up. Among these fragments were headless figures of the Blessed Virgin and Her Divine Child. The figure of Our Lady was dressed in a mantle fastened across the breast by a fibula in which still remained some pieces of coloured glass in imitation of precious stones. This was in all probability the ancient and much-honoured statue of Our Lady of Chatham, desecrated at the time of the reformation, and broken up with other building rubbish for the purpose of yet further defacing the church in which it had been honoured for centuries, by blocking its window.
Mention of both these last-named sanctuaries occurs in a legend preserved by William Lambarde in his pioneering county history A Perambulation of Kent, published in 1576.
1 comment:
Our Lady of Chatham, pray for us. Our Lady of Gillingham, pray for us.
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