Saint Neot

St Neot was born in Saxon times, living as a monk in Cornwall, England most of his life. He died around 870 CE.
  Neot seems to have begun his adult life as a soldier, later renouncing this for life in a monastery. He served as sacristan at Glastonbury Abbey but later lived in Cornwall, at first alone, then with a growing group of other monks near Bodmin Moor. He was remembered (and given the status of a saint) because of his good work in caring for the poor. The Cornish village of St Neot is named after him. 
His bones were preserved as a holy relic but were later taken by monks to the medieval priory at St Neots on the River Great Ouse near Bedford. They returned with their prize, pursued (according to some versions) by angry Cornishmen. The bones were housed in the priory for many years but were finally lost during the reign of Henry VIII during the dissolution of the monasteries. The image above shows the commemorative mosaic of the saint in the Market Square in St Neots. The mosaic is based on a Saxon ornament, the Alfred Jewel.

Reference

Young, Rosa (1996). St Neots Past, pp. 15-18. Phillimore and Co Ltd. ISBN 1-86-077025-8 Neot

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
gerhard johann vossius
nisqually (tribe)
johann jakob herzog
machinist
widnes
washoe (chimpanzee)
chessbase
jgerkorpset
daniel heinsius
philips van marnix, lord of sint aldegonde
paul lacroix
martin opitz von boberfeld
roger morrice
operation blue star
burnley
kenneth richard norris
q programming language
love's labour's won
adam beck
smokejumper
wong
shin bet
huang (surname)
echizen province
lawrence university
batman: mask of the phantasm
ann fagan ginger
coyoacn
mirabel international airport
paul krassner
new york city transit authority
there is nothing left to lose
touch (album)
peet coombes
volusius
newark city subway
nanaimo, british columbia
freedom from religion foundation
cracked rear view
tennessee state university
chad channing
jehovist
rocco baldelli
rar (file format)