St David |
Gildas requested she left the church. After Nonnita had left he called the people back in to deliver his sermon. At the end the Angel of the Lord explained to Gildas that “Nonnita, a saintly woman, remains in the church, who is now with child, and is destined, with great grace, to give birth to a boy whom thou couldst not preach, the divine power withholding thy speech. The boy this is to come will be of greater grace: no one in your parts will equal him.”
The child in Nonnita’s (St Non) womb was Dewi (David); so moved by the experience Gildas bequeathed Wales to St David’s administrations.
According to the Life of St David written by Rhygyfarch c.1090, Glastonbury was the first of twelve monasteries founded by the Saint in the late 6th Century.
This of course conflicts with the Glastonbury legend that claims the church at Glastonbury had been in existence several hundred years before St David’s arrival. When William of Malmesbury produced his history of the Abbey he suggested that St David must have come to Glastonbury to rededicate the Old Church there.
According to William, the night before the rededication of the Old Church St David experienced a vision in which The Lord confirmed that he himself had dedicated the Old Church long ago. St David decided to build a smaller chapel on to the eastern end of the church. According to later tradition, the line of connection of the two chapels was marked by an external pyramid on the northside and a raised step inside. Extending a line on the southern side is where, it is claimed, Joseph of Arimathea lies.
St David is said to have received a wonderful altar stone, “the sapphire”, from the Patriarch of Jerusalem which he took to Wales. However, as with many contradictory claims, a Glastonbury tradition claimed that St David presented this marvellous jewel to the community at Glastonbury. It was apparently hidden during the turbulent Saxon times but rediscovered by Henry of Blois in the 12th Century. The sapphire was richly decorated and then hung in the church where it remained until the Dissolution, when the commissioners of Henry VIII noted “ a super altar… decorated with the great Saphire of Glastonbury.”
St David's Cathedral |
Source:
James P Carley, Glastonbury Abbey: The Holy House at the Head of the Moors Adventurous, Gothic Image, 1996.
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