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    • The Glastonbury Abbey Archaeological Archive Project
    • Glastonbury Abbey: archaeology, legend and public engagement
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    • The Saxon Churches (c.700 – c.1100)
      • The Legend of the ‘Old Church’
      • Monastic landscape
      • The early monastery
      • Earliest settlement
      • Anglo-Saxon churches
    • The Cloister (c.1150s)
      • Saxon monastic buildings
      • Henry of Blois
      • Monastic Life
      • Dunstan and Monastic Reform
      • Romanesque Sculpture
      • Literacy and Learning
    • The Abbot’s Complex (c.1150 – c.1725)
      • The Abbots of Glastonbury
      • Hospitality
      • Dissolution
      • Archaeology of the Complex
      • Archaeology of Food and Drink
      • Abbey after the Reformation
    • The Lady Chapel (c.1185 – 1539)
      • Building of the Lady Chapel
      • Joseph of Arimathea
      • Architecture
      • Chapel of Joseph of Arimathea
      • Pilgrimage
    • Arthur’s Tomb (c.1331)
      • King Arthur at Glastonbury
      • Arthurian Myth
      • Royal Connections
      • The exhumation of Arthur
      • Radford’s Excavation
      • Arthur’s Tomb
  • Methods
  • Myths
    • King Arthur
    • Joseph of Arimathea
    • The Old Church
    • The Holy Thorn
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Methods

Glastonbury’s ‘Old Church’: representing ‘the cradle of English Christianity’

Glastonbury was famous in the middle ages as the location of the earliest Christian church in England, a belief that continues to be held by many Christians today. An ancient...Read More >
Glastonbury’s ‘Old Church’: representing ‘the cradle of English Christianity’

The Lady Chapel and Crypt Chapel of Joseph of Arimathea

The Lady Chapel was built after fire had destroyed the ‘Old Church’ in 1184. The exterior walls are still standing, but the exterior has lost much of its contrasting stonework…Read More >

The Lady Chapel and Crypt Chapel of Joseph of Arimathea

Imagining Glastonbury’s lost Romanesque Cloister

Among the treasure-trove of architectural fragments at the abbey is a collection of finely-carved blue-lias fragments which have long been regarded as part of Henry of Blois’ magnificent 12th-century cloister….Read More >

Imagining Glastonbury’s lost Romanesque Cloister

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