Church of the Holy Cross, Crediton

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Church of the Holy Cross, Crediton
Collegiate Church of the Holy Cross and the Mother of Him Who Hung Thereon
Church of The Holy Cross, Crediton.jpg
Crediton Parish Church
Church of the Holy Cross, Crediton
50°47′22.70″N3°39′8.21″W / 50.7896389°N 3.6522806°W / 50.7896389; -3.6522806
Location Crediton, Flag of Devon.svg  Devon
CountryFlag of England.svg  England
Denomination Church of England
Churchmanship Broad Church
Website creditonparishchurch.org.uk
History
Former name(s)Minster Church of St Mary
Status Parish church
Dedication Holy Cross
Blessed Virgin Mary
Architecture
Functional statusactive
Architectural type Basilica
Style Perpendicular Gothic
Administration
Diocese Diocese of Exeter
Archdeaconry Exeter archdeaconry
Deanery Cadbury deanery
Parish Crediton and Shobrooke with Sandford and Upton Hellions
Clergy
Rector Preb Matthew Tregenza
Honorary priest(s) Canon Michael Hall

Rev David Francis
Rev Jenny Francis
Preb Peter Rapsey
Canon Peter Gilks

Rev Brian Shillingford

Contents

Curate(s) Rev Lewis Eden
Deacon(s) Rev Sandra Collier
Laity
Reader(s) Carol Price
Antonia Tregenza
Director of music Jon Rawles
Listed Building – Grade I
Official nameParish Church of the Holy Cross
Designated19 March 1951
Reference no.1209720 [1]

Church of the Holy Cross, Crediton, formally the Collegiate Church of the Holy Cross and the Mother of Him Who Hung Thereon, is the parish church of the town of Crediton in Devon, England. The church is built on the site of what was the cathedral of the Bishop of Crediton in the former diocese until 1050 when the see was transferred to Exeter. A college of canons remained at Crediton, administering the buildings and life of the "collegiate" church.

The nave and chancel of the current building date from the 15th century. At the English Reformation the church was surrendered to Henry VIII in 1545, and the college dispersed. The church buildings were bought by the Crediton Town Corporation who still administer the fabric today.

Now a parish church, the life of the church is administered by the parochial church council (PCC), although many still refer to the church as the Collegiate Church of the Holy Cross. The church is held in trust by the Governors of Crediton for the people of the parish, but its life and worship are planned by the clergy and parochial church council. The church is a Grade I listed building. [1]

History

Nave, looking East Church of the Holy CrossCreditoninterior.jpg
Nave, looking East
Chancel, looking East Holy Cross church, Crediton (interior) - geograph.org.uk - 3514035.jpg
Chancel, looking East

Crediton Church has a history which is as long as that of any church in Devon, including Exeter Cathedral. In the early 10th century Crediton was chosen as the site for the cathedral for Devon and Cornwall and a cathedral was built there c.910 AD by Eadwulf of Crediton. In 1046 Leofric was appointed to both the sees and moved the Devon see to Exeter. The cathedra, the bishop's throne, was moved to Exeter in 1050, where it was placed in a Saxon minster until a purpose-built cathedral could be constructed which did not happen for many years.

Crediton had lost the see, but the Bishop of Exeter retained his palace there (a little to the north-east of Holy Cross) and his lands around the town. The church survived, though not in its original building. The construction of a Norman church on the present site was started—building work was in progress in the 1130s—and a collegiate church (based on the old cathedral and initially staffed by eighteen canons with eighteen vicars) was established, although lack of funds meant that the number of canons was soon reduced to twelve.

The collegiate church was always completely secular: none of the canons or vicars lived the communal life of monks, their work being funded by income from tithes on the extensive lands of the parish (which were shared with the bishop).

The early dedication of the church was to St Mary, but the present dedication—the Church of the Holy Cross and the Mother of Him Who Hung Thereon—came into use only after the 1230s. The church was extended in the late 13th century by the addition of the Lady Chapel and the Chapter House.

John de Grandisson, Bishop of Exeter (1327–1369), attempted to ensure that at least the chief officers of the college, the precentor and the treasurer, were resident in the immediate area of the church. Grandisson had enormous influence on the church in Crediton in another way. This was by introducing—or reviving—the cult of St Boniface (the cult of the saints was in full swing at this time) and firmly established Crediton as his birthplace. A new statue of St Boniface was created in the 1970s by the sculptor Witold Gracjan Kawalec.

In a medieval will it was stated that the Norman nave of the church was being "now nearly levelled to the ground." The bequest of that testator, and others of around the same time, brought enough money for a complete rebuilding of the nave and chancel areas, which started in the early years of the fifteenth century. [2] Great church building depended on generous funding being available. The Perpendicular Gothic rebuilding of Crediton Collegiate Church created a church which though impressive in scale is architecturally fairly modest.

The collegiate churches were dissolved between 1545 and 1549 and Crediton's was "surrendered" to Henry VIII in May 1545. Shortly afterwards the parishioners of Crediton entered into successful negotiations with the Crown for the purchase of the collegiate church which was then threatened with demolition. These were completed in the spring of 1547, when the town paid the sum of £200 to the king. In April 1547, Edward VI signed a charter which created a new organisation for the governance of the church. This was a corporation of 12 governors to administer the parish church and its endowments. A vicar of Crediton was appointed together with two chaplains, one of which ministered to Sandford (the adjoining parish).

The twelve governors of the Crediton Church Corporation, a registered charity, [3] still own and administer the church buildings. Only two other parish churches in England, the church of Ottery St Mary in Devon and Wimborne Minster in Dorset, have a similar form of governance.

Popular sayings

"That’s Exter (Exeter), as the old woman said when she saw Kerton (Crediton)." According to Brewer, this is "a Devonshire saying, meaning, I thought my work was done, but I find much still remains before it is completed. The tradition is that the woman in question was going for the first time to Exeter, and seeing the grand old church of Kerton (Crediton), supposed it to be Exeter Cathedral. 'That's Exter,' she said, 'and my journey is over'; but alas! she had still eight miles to walk." [4]

Monuments

The principal monuments within the church include:

Organ

The War Memorial Organ was designed based on plans drawn by the church's organist Harold Organ in 1915. Harold Organ was killed in action in 1917 but the plans were continued by Cyril Church. The organ was built by Harrison and Harrison of Durham, and first used in 1921. The organ was restored and put in a new case in 2001. [6]

Services

Holycrosscrediton.jpg

Sunday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

See also

Churches and chapels of the United Benefice:

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References

  1. 1 2 Historic England. "Parish Church of the Holy Cross, Crediton (Grade I) (1209720)". National Heritage List for England . Retrieved 30 December 2022.
  2. N. Pevsner, South Devon, says that the church was "called almost in ruins in 1413"
  3. "CHURCH CORPORATION TRUST, registered charity no. 1051555". Charity Commission for England and Wales.
  4. Brewer, E. Cobham. "Exter". Dictionary of Phrase and Fable (1898). p. 344. Retrieved 7 August 2023.
  5. See:"File:JohnDeRaleighDeed1362.JPG": Archives of the Chichester family of Arlington Court, North Devon Record Office: PILTON, ARLINGTON, LOXHORE, CHALLACOMBE, SANDFORD?, WEST DOWN, all in Devon BAGGEARN HUISH, DUNWEAR, in Somerset 50/11/1/1 31 January 1362 36 Edward III
  6. Details of the organ from the National Pipe Organ Register Archived 23 December 2012 at archive.today

Further reading