fbpx
Wikipedia

Collegiate church

In Christianity, a collegiate church is a church where the daily office of worship is maintained by a college of canons, a non-monastic or "secular" community of clergy, organised as a self-governing corporate body, headed by a dignitary bearing a title which may vary, such as dean or provost.

In its governance and religious observance, a collegiate church is similar in some respects to a cathedral, but a collegiate church is not the seat of a bishop and has no diocesan responsibilities.

Collegiate churches have often been supported by endowments, including lands, or by tithe income from appropriated benefices.

The church building commonly provides both distinct spaces for congregational worship and for the choir offices of the canons.

History edit

 
Interior of Collegiate Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Help and Mary Magdalene in Poznań, Poland

In the early medieval period, before the development of the parish system in Western Christianity, many new church foundations were staffed by groups of secular priests, living a communal life and serving an extensive territory. In England these churches were termed minsters, from the Latin monasterium,[1] although only a few were truly houses of monks. In the 9th and 10th centuries many such churches adopted formal rules of governance, commonly derived from those composed by Chrodegang of Metz for Metz cathedral, and thenceforth came to be described as "collegiate"; and there were also new foundations of this type.

Originally, the endowments of these foundations were held in a common treasury from which each canon received a proportion for their subsistence, such canons being termed portioners; but from the 11th century onwards, the richer collegiate churches tended to be provided with new statutes establishing the priests of the college as canons within a formal chapter such that each canon was supported by a separate endowment, or prebend; such canons being termed prebendaries. A few major collegiate bodies remained portionary – such as Beverley Minster and the cathedral chapters of Utrecht and Exeter – but in less affluent foundations, the pooled endowments of the community continued to be apportioned between the canons. Both prebendaries and portioners tended in this period to abandon communal living, each canon establishing his own house within the precinct of the church. In response to which, and generally on account of widespread concern that the religious life of collegiate communities might be insufficiently rigorous, many collegiate foundations in the 12th century adopted the Augustinian rule, and become fully monastic, as for example at Dorchester Abbey and Christchurch Priory.

Because each prebend or portion provided a discrete source of income as a separate benefice, in the later medieval period canons increasingly tended to be non-resident, paying a vicar to undertake divine service in their place. Kings and bishops came to regard prebends as useful sources of income for favoured servants and supporters, and it was not uncommon for a bishop or archbishop also to hold half a dozen or more collegiate prebends or deaneries.

From the 13th century onwards, existing collegiate foundations (like monasteries) also attracted chantry endowments, usually a legacy in a will providing for masses to be sung for the repose of the souls of the testator and their families by the collegiate clergy or their vicars. The same impetus to establish endowed prayer also led to many new collegiate foundations in this later period; under which an existing parish church would be rebuilt to accommodate a new chantry college; commonly with the intention that the rectory of the parish should be appropriated to support the new foundation. A new organisational structure was developed for these bodies, by which endowment income was held collectively, and each canon received a fixed stipend conditional on being personally resident, such canons being termed fellows, or chaplains led by a warden or master. In this arrangement, only the office of warden constituted a separate benefice; appointment to the individual canonries being at the discretion of the chapter. Chantry colleges still maintained the daily divine office with the additional prime function of offering masses in intercession for departed members of the founder's family; but also typically served charitable or educational purposes, such as providing hospitals or schools. For founders, this presented the added advantage that masses for the repose of themselves and their families endowed in a chantry would be supported by a guaranteed congregation of grateful and virtuous recipients of charity, which conferred a perceived advantage in endowing such a chantry in a parish church over doing so in a monastery. Consequently, in the later medieval period, testators consistently tended to favour chantries linked to parochial charitable endowments.

One particular development of the chantry college principle was the establishment in university cities of collegiate foundations in which the fellows were graduate academics and university teachers. Local parish churches were appropriated to these foundations, thereby initially acquiring collegiate status. However, this form of college developed radically in the later Middle Ages after the pattern of New College, Oxford, where for the first time college residence was extended to include undergraduate students. Thereafter, university collegiate bodies developed into a distinct type of religious establishment whose regular worship took place in dedicated college chapels rather than in collegiate churches; and in this form they survived the Reformation in England in the universities of Oxford and Cambridge; as also did the associated collegiate schools and chapels of Eton College and Winchester College.

In a collegiate church or chapel, as in a cathedral, the canons or fellows are typically seated separately from any provision for a lay congregation, in quire stalls parallel with the south and north walls facing inwards, rather than towards the altar at the eastern end. This has influenced the design of other churches in that the singing choir is seen as representing the idea of a college. The Westminster model of parliamentary seating arrangement arose from Parliament's use of the collegiate St Stephen's Chapel Westminster for its sittings, until Westminster Palace burned down in 1834.

Contemporary examples edit

Three traditional collegiate churches have survived in England since the Middle Ages: at Westminster Abbey in London, St George's Chapel of Windsor Castle and Church of St Endelienta, St Endellion, Cornwall.

The idea of a "collegiate church" has continued to develop a contemporary equivalent.

Examples of contemporary collegiate churches in America today are The Collegiate Church of New York City,.[2] These include the Marble Collegiate Church, founded in 1628, and the Middle Collegiate, Fort Washington Collegiate and West End Collegiate churches, affiliated with the Reformed Church in America.

In the Catholic Church, most cathedrals possess a cathedral chapter and are thus collegiate churches. The number of collegiate chapters other than those of cathedrals has been greatly reduced compared to times past. Three of them are in Rome: the two papal basilicas (other than the Lateran as cathedral and St. Paul's as a monastery) of St. Peter and St. Mary Major, together with the Basilica St. Maria ad Martyres. Elsewhere, three can be found in Germany, to wit, St. Martin's Church, Landshut (chapter of Sts. Martin and Kastulus), Sts. Philipp and James in Altötting (chapter of St. Rupert) and St. Remigius in Borken. In Portugal the one example (abolished in 1869, restored in 1891 abolished again in 1910 and restored in 1967 – minus its Royal prerogative, the monarchy itself having been abolished in the intervening period) that survives is that of the ancient Real Colegiada of Nossa Senhora da Oliveira in Guimarães. One collegiate church can be found in the Czech Republic: Sts. Peter and Paul in Prague-Vyšehrad.

Historical examples edit

Belgium edit

Historical Collegiate Churches include:

England edit

In pre-Reformation England there were usually a number of collegiate churches in each diocese, with over a hundred in total. They were mostly abolished during the reign of Edward VI in 1547, as part of the Reformation, by the Act for the Dissolution of Collegiate Churches and Chantries. Almost all continue to serve as parish churches with a resident rector, vicar or curate (although the appointment of a vicar in succession to the priestly services of the Augustinian priory at St Paul's Church, Bedford predates this by nineteen years). Two major collegiate churches, however, Manchester and Southwell, were refounded with a collegiate body after the Reformation; and these were joined by the revived college at Ripon in 1604, all three churches maintaining choral foundations for daily worship. These three churches became cathedrals in the 19th century. Hence, at the beginning the 20th century, the royal peculiars of Westminster and Windsor alone survived with a functioning non-cathedral and non-academic collegiate body.

The colleges of Oxford and Cambridge universities, and the schools of Eton and Winchester, successfully resisted dissolution at the Reformation, arguing that their chantry origins had effectively been subsumed within their continuing academic and religious functions; and pleading that they be permitted simply to cease maintaining their chantries and obituaries. For the most part, they had already ceased to undertake collegiate worship in their appropriated churches, which reverted to normal parish status. The chapel of Merton College, Oxford, however, continued to serve as a collegiate church until 1891; just as the chapel of Christ Church, Oxford doubles as the cathedral of Oxford; while the chapel of Eton College serves as the parish church of Eton to this day. The Church of St Mary Magdalene, Newark-on-Trent, though never collegiate in the medieval period, maintained a choral foundation for collegiate worship after the Reformation in association with the Magnus Bequest, an arrangement that continued till 1901.

Otherwise, twelve colleges survived the Reformation in England and Wales in nominal form. In some cases these were refoundations under Queen Mary (as for instance the college of Wolverhampton); in other cases, they may simply have been overlooked by the suppression commissioners. Unlike at Manchester, Ripon and Southwell, these churches did not continue to maintain regular collegiate worship, but their prebends or portioners persisted as non-resident sinecures, and as such were mostly dissolved by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners Act 1840. However, the Victorian legislators themselves overlooked two churches of portioners in Shropshire – St Mary's, Burford and St George's, Pontesbury; and also the college of Saint Endellion in Cornwall, which uniquely continues collegiate to this day, having in 1929 been provided with new statutes that re-established non-resident unpaid prebends and an annual chapter.

Ireland edit

 
The roofs of St. Mary's Collegiate Church in Youghal, Ireland

In Ireland, there are a number of ancient churches still in regular use that are collegiate churches. Most notably the church known as St Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin, is a collegiate church. St Mary's Collegiate Church (in Youghal founded 1220,[3] County Cork, a building of very remote antiquity, home to a fine choir, The Clerks Choral. St Nicholas' Collegiate Church in Galway, founded in 1320 and granted collegiate status in 1484, is another fine example of a pre-reformation Collegiate Church. The Collegiate Church of St Peter and St Paul is located in Kilmallock; founded by 1241, it was dedicated as a collegiate church in 1410.

Scotland edit

 
St Mary's Collegiate Church, Haddington, East Lothian, Scotland, consecrated 1410, now a place of worship for the Church of Scotland

The church now referred to as 'St Giles Cathedral', in Edinburgh, became a collegiate church in 1466, less than a century before the Scottish Reformation.

Wales edit

St Peter's Collegiate Church, Ruthin, was built by John de Grey in 1310, following the erection of Ruthin Castle by his father, Reginald de Grey in 1277. For some time before this, Ruthin had been the home of a nunnery and a prior. From 1310 to 1536 St Peter's was a Collegiate Church served by a Warden and seven priests. Following the dissolution of the college its work was restored on a new pattern by Gabriel Goodman (1528–1601), a Ruthin man who became Dean of Westminster in 1561. Goodman re-established Ruthin school in 1574 and refounded the Almshouses of Christ's Hospital, together with the Wardenship of Ruthin in 1590. Since then, St Peter's has continued as a Parochial and Collegiate Church with its Warden, Churchwardens and Parochial Church Council. A close relationship is maintained between the Church, Ruthin School and the Almshouses of Christ's Hospital.

St Padarn's Church, Llanbadarn Fawr was a collegiate church, having originally been founded as a clas church by Saint Padarn, after whom it was named, in the early sixth century.[4] The church had been the seat of a bishop during the years immediately following St Padarn, who was its first bishop. The church was re-founded as a cell of St Peter's, Gloucester (a Benedictine abbey), by Gilbert fitzRichard. Monastic life at Llanbadarn Fawr was short-lived for the Welsh drove the English monks away when they re-conquered Cardigan. The priory later became a college of priests. Thomas Bradwardine, later briefly Archbishop of Canterbury, was Rector of Llanbadarn Fawr 1347–1349, and thereafter the Abbot of the Cistercian Vale Royal Abbey, Chester, was ex officio Rector 1360–1538.

The old Bishop's Palace at Abergwili, home to the Bishop of St David's since 1542, when Bishop William Barlow transferred his palace from St David's to Abergwili, re-using the premises of an older college of priests. The building is believed to have been built between 1283 and 1291, when Thomas Bek was made bishop of St Davids. It was known as a college until it was amalgamated with the Dominican friary now known as Christ College Brecon, refounded as a public school in 1541. It was almost completely rebuilt in 1903 following a disastrous fire. It contains the chapel originally added by Archbishop Laud in 1625, when he was Bishop of St David's. In 1974 the old episcopal palace was purchased by Carmarthenshire County Council for use as a museum, whilst a new residence for the bishops, "Llys Esgob", was built in part of the grounds, together with Diocesan Offices – thereby continuing a connection with Abergwili which has now lasted for well over 400 years.[5]

St. Cybi's Collegiate and Parish Church, Holyhead, was another collegiate church, as is the Collegiate and Parish Church of St Mary, St Mary's Square, Swansea, along with St Beuno's Church, Clynnog Fawr.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "minster – Origin and meaning of minster by Online Etymology Dictionary". etymonline.com.
  2. ^ "Home – The Collegiate Churches of New York". www.collegiatechurch.org.
  3. ^ "Youghal Union of Parishes – Youghal Cloyne Anglican". www.youghal.cork.anglican.org.
  4. ^ St Padarn's Church, Llanbadarn Fawr, Aberystwyth
  5. ^ . www.carmarthenmuseum.org.uk. Archived from the original on 2013-08-14. Retrieved 2014-08-10.

Literature edit

  • G.H. Cook English Collegiate Churches of the Middle Ages (Phoenix House, 1959)
  • P.N. Jeffery The Collegiate Churches of England and Wales (Robert Hale, 2004)

collegiate, church, christianity, collegiate, church, church, where, daily, office, worship, maintained, college, canons, monastic, secular, community, clergy, organised, self, governing, corporate, body, headed, dignitary, bearing, title, which, vary, such, d. In Christianity a collegiate church is a church where the daily office of worship is maintained by a college of canons a non monastic or secular community of clergy organised as a self governing corporate body headed by a dignitary bearing a title which may vary such as dean or provost In its governance and religious observance a collegiate church is similar in some respects to a cathedral but a collegiate church is not the seat of a bishop and has no diocesan responsibilities Collegiate churches have often been supported by endowments including lands or by tithe income from appropriated benefices The church building commonly provides both distinct spaces for congregational worship and for the choir offices of the canons Contents 1 History 2 Contemporary examples 3 Historical examples 3 1 Belgium 3 2 England 3 3 Ireland 3 4 Scotland 3 5 Wales 4 See also 5 References 6 LiteratureHistory editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Collegiate church news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Interior of Collegiate Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Help and Mary Magdalene in Poznan Poland In the early medieval period before the development of the parish system in Western Christianity many new church foundations were staffed by groups of secular priests living a communal life and serving an extensive territory In England these churches were termed minsters from the Latin monasterium 1 although only a few were truly houses of monks In the 9th and 10th centuries many such churches adopted formal rules of governance commonly derived from those composed by Chrodegang of Metz for Metz cathedral and thenceforth came to be described as collegiate and there were also new foundations of this type Originally the endowments of these foundations were held in a common treasury from which each canon received a proportion for their subsistence such canons being termed portioners but from the 11th century onwards the richer collegiate churches tended to be provided with new statutes establishing the priests of the college as canons within a formal chapter such that each canon was supported by a separate endowment or prebend such canons being termed prebendaries A few major collegiate bodies remained portionary such as Beverley Minster and the cathedral chapters of Utrecht and Exeter but in less affluent foundations the pooled endowments of the community continued to be apportioned between the canons Both prebendaries and portioners tended in this period to abandon communal living each canon establishing his own house within the precinct of the church In response to which and generally on account of widespread concern that the religious life of collegiate communities might be insufficiently rigorous many collegiate foundations in the 12th century adopted the Augustinian rule and become fully monastic as for example at Dorchester Abbey and Christchurch Priory Because each prebend or portion provided a discrete source of income as a separate benefice in the later medieval period canons increasingly tended to be non resident paying a vicar to undertake divine service in their place Kings and bishops came to regard prebends as useful sources of income for favoured servants and supporters and it was not uncommon for a bishop or archbishop also to hold half a dozen or more collegiate prebends or deaneries From the 13th century onwards existing collegiate foundations like monasteries also attracted chantry endowments usually a legacy in a will providing for masses to be sung for the repose of the souls of the testator and their families by the collegiate clergy or their vicars The same impetus to establish endowed prayer also led to many new collegiate foundations in this later period under which an existing parish church would be rebuilt to accommodate a new chantry college commonly with the intention that the rectory of the parish should be appropriated to support the new foundation A new organisational structure was developed for these bodies by which endowment income was held collectively and each canon received a fixed stipend conditional on being personally resident such canons being termed fellows or chaplains led by a warden or master In this arrangement only the office of warden constituted a separate benefice appointment to the individual canonries being at the discretion of the chapter Chantry colleges still maintained the daily divine office with the additional prime function of offering masses in intercession for departed members of the founder s family but also typically served charitable or educational purposes such as providing hospitals or schools For founders this presented the added advantage that masses for the repose of themselves and their families endowed in a chantry would be supported by a guaranteed congregation of grateful and virtuous recipients of charity which conferred a perceived advantage in endowing such a chantry in a parish church over doing so in a monastery Consequently in the later medieval period testators consistently tended to favour chantries linked to parochial charitable endowments One particular development of the chantry college principle was the establishment in university cities of collegiate foundations in which the fellows were graduate academics and university teachers Local parish churches were appropriated to these foundations thereby initially acquiring collegiate status However this form of college developed radically in the later Middle Ages after the pattern of New College Oxford where for the first time college residence was extended to include undergraduate students Thereafter university collegiate bodies developed into a distinct type of religious establishment whose regular worship took place in dedicated college chapels rather than in collegiate churches and in this form they survived the Reformation in England in the universities of Oxford and Cambridge as also did the associated collegiate schools and chapels of Eton College and Winchester College In a collegiate church or chapel as in a cathedral the canons or fellows are typically seated separately from any provision for a lay congregation in quire stalls parallel with the south and north walls facing inwards rather than towards the altar at the eastern end This has influenced the design of other churches in that the singing choir is seen as representing the idea of a college The Westminster model of parliamentary seating arrangement arose from Parliament s use of the collegiate St Stephen s Chapel Westminster for its sittings until Westminster Palace burned down in 1834 Contemporary examples editThree traditional collegiate churches have survived in England since the Middle Ages at Westminster Abbey in London St George s Chapel of Windsor Castle and Church of St Endelienta St Endellion Cornwall The idea of a collegiate church has continued to develop a contemporary equivalent Examples of contemporary collegiate churches in America today are The Collegiate Church of New York City 2 These include the Marble Collegiate Church founded in 1628 and the Middle Collegiate Fort Washington Collegiate and West End Collegiate churches affiliated with the Reformed Church in America In the Catholic Church most cathedrals possess a cathedral chapter and are thus collegiate churches The number of collegiate chapters other than those of cathedrals has been greatly reduced compared to times past Three of them are in Rome the two papal basilicas other than the Lateran as cathedral and St Paul s as a monastery of St Peter and St Mary Major together with the Basilica St Maria ad Martyres Elsewhere three can be found in Germany to wit St Martin s Church Landshut chapter of Sts Martin and Kastulus Sts Philipp and James in Altotting chapter of St Rupert and St Remigius in Borken In Portugal the one example abolished in 1869 restored in 1891 abolished again in 1910 and restored in 1967 minus its Royal prerogative the monarchy itself having been abolished in the intervening period that survives is that of the ancientReal Colegiada of Nossa Senhora da Oliveira in Guimaraes One collegiate church can be found in the Czech Republic Sts Peter and Paul in Prague Vysehrad Historical examples editBelgium edit Historical Collegiate Churches include Antwerp Saint James Church Bruges Church of Our Lady Kortrijk Church of Our Lady Liege see Seven collegiate churches of Liege Church of St John the Evangelist Church of St Denis Collegiate Church of St Bartholomew Mons Saint Waltrude Collegiate Church Chapter of Noble Canonesses Nivelles Collegiate Church of Saint Gertrude Chapter of Noble Canonesses England edit In pre Reformation England there were usually a number of collegiate churches in each diocese with over a hundred in total They were mostly abolished during the reign of Edward VI in 1547 as part of the Reformation by the Act for the Dissolution of Collegiate Churches and Chantries Almost all continue to serve as parish churches with a resident rector vicar or curate although the appointment of a vicar in succession to the priestly services of the Augustinian priory at St Paul s Church Bedford predates this by nineteen years Two major collegiate churches however Manchester and Southwell were refounded with a collegiate body after the Reformation and these were joined by the revived college at Ripon in 1604 all three churches maintaining choral foundations for daily worship These three churches became cathedrals in the 19th century Hence at the beginning the 20th century the royal peculiars of Westminster and Windsor alone survived with a functioning non cathedral and non academic collegiate body The colleges of Oxford and Cambridge universities and the schools of Eton and Winchester successfully resisted dissolution at the Reformation arguing that their chantry origins had effectively been subsumed within their continuing academic and religious functions and pleading that they be permitted simply to cease maintaining their chantries and obituaries For the most part they had already ceased to undertake collegiate worship in their appropriated churches which reverted to normal parish status The chapel of Merton College Oxford however continued to serve as a collegiate church until 1891 just as the chapel of Christ Church Oxford doubles as the cathedral of Oxford while the chapel of Eton College serves as the parish church of Eton to this day The Church of St Mary Magdalene Newark on Trent though never collegiate in the medieval period maintained a choral foundation for collegiate worship after the Reformation in association with the Magnus Bequest an arrangement that continued till 1901 Otherwise twelve colleges survived the Reformation in England and Wales in nominal form In some cases these were refoundations under Queen Mary as for instance the college of Wolverhampton in other cases they may simply have been overlooked by the suppression commissioners Unlike at Manchester Ripon and Southwell these churches did not continue to maintain regular collegiate worship but their prebends or portioners persisted as non resident sinecures and as such were mostly dissolved by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners Act 1840 However the Victorian legislators themselves overlooked two churches of portioners in Shropshire St Mary s Burford and St George s Pontesbury and also the college of Saint Endellion in Cornwall which uniquely continues collegiate to this day having in 1929 been provided with new statutes that re established non resident unpaid prebends and an annual chapter Ireland edit nbsp The roofs of St Mary s Collegiate Church in Youghal Ireland In Ireland there are a number of ancient churches still in regular use that are collegiate churches Most notably the church known as St Patrick s Cathedral in Dublin is a collegiate church St Mary s Collegiate Church in Youghal founded 1220 3 County Cork a building of very remote antiquity home to a fine choir The Clerks Choral St Nicholas Collegiate Church in Galway founded in 1320 and granted collegiate status in 1484 is another fine example of a pre reformation Collegiate Church The Collegiate Church of St Peter and St Paul is located in Kilmallock founded by 1241 it was dedicated as a collegiate church in 1410 Scotland edit Main article List of collegiate churches in Scotland nbsp St Mary s Collegiate Church Haddington East Lothian Scotland consecrated 1410 now a place of worship for the Church of Scotland The church now referred to as St Giles Cathedral in Edinburgh became a collegiate church in 1466 less than a century before the Scottish Reformation Wales edit St Peter s Collegiate Church Ruthin was built by John de Grey in 1310 following the erection of Ruthin Castle by his father Reginald de Grey in 1277 For some time before this Ruthin had been the home of a nunnery and a prior From 1310 to 1536 St Peter s was a Collegiate Church served by a Warden and seven priests Following the dissolution of the college its work was restored on a new pattern by Gabriel Goodman 1528 1601 a Ruthin man who became Dean of Westminster in 1561 Goodman re established Ruthin school in 1574 and refounded the Almshouses of Christ s Hospital together with the Wardenship of Ruthin in 1590 Since then St Peter s has continued as a Parochial and Collegiate Church with its Warden Churchwardens and Parochial Church Council A close relationship is maintained between the Church Ruthin School and the Almshouses of Christ s Hospital St Padarn s Church Llanbadarn Fawr was a collegiate church having originally been founded as a clas church by Saint Padarn after whom it was named in the early sixth century 4 The church had been the seat of a bishop during the years immediately following St Padarn who was its first bishop The church was re founded as a cell of St Peter s Gloucester a Benedictine abbey by Gilbert fitzRichard Monastic life at Llanbadarn Fawr was short lived for the Welsh drove the English monks away when they re conquered Cardigan The priory later became a college of priests Thomas Bradwardine later briefly Archbishop of Canterbury was Rector of Llanbadarn Fawr 1347 1349 and thereafter the Abbot of the Cistercian Vale Royal Abbey Chester was ex officio Rector 1360 1538 The old Bishop s Palace at Abergwili home to the Bishop of St David s since 1542 when Bishop William Barlow transferred his palace from St David s to Abergwili re using the premises of an older college of priests The building is believed to have been built between 1283 and 1291 when Thomas Bek was made bishop of St Davids It was known as a college until it was amalgamated with the Dominican friary now known as Christ College Brecon refounded as a public school in 1541 It was almost completely rebuilt in 1903 following a disastrous fire It contains the chapel originally added by Archbishop Laud in 1625 when he was Bishop of St David s In 1974 the old episcopal palace was purchased by Carmarthenshire County Council for use as a museum whilst a new residence for the bishops Llys Esgob was built in part of the grounds together with Diocesan Offices thereby continuing a connection with Abergwili which has now lasted for well over 400 years 5 St Cybi s Collegiate and Parish Church Holyhead was another collegiate church as is the Collegiate and Parish Church of St Mary St Mary s Square Swansea along with St Beuno s Church Clynnog Fawr See also editList of collegiate churches in England List of collegiate churches in Scotland Chapter Collegiate Church of Notre Dame de Mantes France nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Collegiate churches References edit minster Origin and meaning of minster by Online Etymology Dictionary etymonline com Home The Collegiate Churches of New York www collegiatechurch org Youghal Union of Parishes Youghal Cloyne Anglican www youghal cork anglican org St Padarn s Church Llanbadarn Fawr Aberystwyth Friends of Carmarthen Museum www carmarthenmuseum org uk Archived from the original on 2013 08 14 Retrieved 2014 08 10 Literature editG H Cook English Collegiate Churches of the Middle Ages Phoenix House 1959 P N Jeffery The Collegiate Churches of England and Wales Robert Hale 2004 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Collegiate church amp oldid 1223538488, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.