St Rumbald's Church, Stoke Doyle
The story of St Rumblad, after who the church at Stoke Doyle is dedicated, is a fascinating one. He was a child of the royal family of the Midland kingdom of Mercia, a grandson of King Penda and son of a Christian mother and pagan father, from Northumbria. He is said to have been born at King's Sutton near Banbury. His legend has it that he died aged just three days, but that in that time he said several times "I am a Christian", expressed his faith in the Holy Trinity, asked for Baptism and Holy Communion, preached on the Holy Trinity and the need for a virtuous life and quoted scripture.
St Rumbald's church stands pretty much on its own at the East end of the village. It was erected in the years 1722 to 1725, on the site of an earlier church, the original structure thought to date from the mid 13th Century. This earlier building was much larger than todays structure, but was in a very poor state of repair. In a petition to the Bishop, it was said that the old building was so dilapidated that any cost of repair would have been too heavy a burden on the parish. The place was in such disrepair that the spire was in danger of falling. It was also pointed out that the existing church was just too big for a village as small as Stoke Doyle.
See Peterborough Churchcrawler for further information. - Ken Ince (photographer)
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The story of St Rumblad, after who the church at Stoke Doyle is dedicated, is a fascinating one. He was a child of the royal family of the Midland kingdom of Mercia, a grandson of King Penda and son of a Christian mother and pagan father, from Northumbria. He is said to have been born at King's Sutton near Banbury. His legend has it that he died aged just three days, but that in that time he said several times "I am a Christian", expressed his faith in the Holy Trinity, asked for Baptism and Holy Communion, preached on the Holy Trinity and the need for a virtuous life and quoted scripture. St Rumbald's church stands pretty much on its own at the East end of the village. It was erected in the years 1722 to 1725, on the site of an earlier church, the original structure thought to date from the mid 13th Century. This earlier building was much larger than todays structure, but was in a very poor state of repair. In a petition to the Bishop, it was said that the old building was so dilapidated that any cost of repair would have been too heavy a burden on the parish. The place was in such disrepair that the spire was in danger of falling. It was also pointed out that the existing church was just too big for a village as small as Stoke Doyle. See Peterborough Churchcrawler for further information.
A picture of: Stoke Doyle
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Stoke Doyle
Camera Make: Panasonic Model: DMC-TZ40
Exposure Program: Landscape, Focal length: 4.3 mm, ISO: 160, Exposure time: 1/400 sec, Metering Mode: Multi-Segment, Exposure Bias: 0 EV
Date/Time Creation: October 16, 2014, 4:34 pm
ImageID:1195651, Image size: 3264 x 1840 pixels
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