Babingley

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Babingley
Babingley (Norfolk)
Babingley

Babingley shown within Norfolk
OS grid reference TF607253
Shire county Norfolk
Region East
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Police Norfolk
Fire Norfolk
Ambulance East of England
European Parliament East of England
List of places: UKEnglandNorfolk

Coordinates: 52°48′N 0°23′E / 52.8, 0.38

The ruin of St Felix Church
The ruin of St Felix Church

Babingley is one of Norfolk's lost villages. This small parish was located on the western side of the A149, 1 mile north-west of Castle Rising, and 5½ miles north-north-east of King's Lynn. It is claimed that Babingley was the landfall of St Felix the Burgundian, who converted the East Angles. Felix was invited by the Wuffings, the East Anglian royal family, to evangelise their kingdom - although Babingley is about as far as it is possible to be in East Anglia from the former royal capital at Rendlesham. St Felix is said to have arrived in Babingley around AD 615 via the River Babingley after taking shelter from a violent storm, and made his way to Canterbury where he was ordained as a bishop around 630[1] by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Honorius, at the request of King Sigebert of East Anglia.[2] St Felix made his cathedral on the other side of the kingdom at Dummoc, the modern Walton.

Contents

[edit] The Village Today

Today, the village of Babingley is mere fields and marshes, the noise of traffic on the busy King's Lynn to Hunstanton road fading to nothing as the ruins of the church of St Felix are approached.

[edit] Saint Felix Church

The mission church built in 1880
The mission church built in 1880
Babingley Bridge
Babingley Bridge

The ruins of Babingley’s church stand in the meadows close to the river. It is said to be the first Christian Church erected in the county. This remote ruin, now part of the nearby Sandringham estate, was still a working church in the early 19th century. Indeed, there are records of an attempt to repair it as recently as 1849, according to Nikolaus Pevsner. However, the introduction of the mission church on the main road in 1880 led to its final demise, and it was abandoned. Derelicted by having its roof removed, it declined very quickly, and what remains today apart from the sturdy 14th-century tower is just an empty shell, but there is one fascinating detail. Curiously, the chancel arch was blocked and has a window set in it. This is a reminder that, before the 19th-century sacramental revival, many chancels were blocked off and used for other purposes, but it is a rare survival today. There were two aisles; the north one was demolished and the arcade blocked long before ruination. The arcade to the south aisle survives. There is a substantial Tudor brick porch, which must have been a fine one. Ivy has mastered this ruin now.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Powicke Handbook of British Chronology p. 222
  2. ^ Walsh A New Dictionary of Saints p. 201
  • F. Maurice Powicke and E.B. Fryde Handbook of British Chronology 2nd. ed. London: Royal Historical Society, 1961
  • Walsh, Michael A New Dictionary of Saints: East and West London: Burns & Oates, 2007, ISBN 0-86012-438-X

[edit] Saint Felix

Felix
Denomination Catholic
Senior posting
See Bishop of Dunwich
Period in office c630–647
Predecessor new foundation
Successor Thomas
Personal
Date of death 647
Felix of Dunwich
Died 647
Major shrine Ramsey Abbey
Feast previously March 8
now May 13
Attributes bishop with three rings on his right hand
Patronage Diocese of East Anglia
Saints Portal

[edit] See also

The list of lost settlements in the county of Norfolk