European Churches, Cathedrals and Abbeys
Read MoreLegend has it that the rocky outcrop, known as the Rock of Cashel found its way there when Patrick banished Satan from a cave on a mountain known as the Devil’s Bit, some thirty miles away, and the mountain landed upside down in its present location. It is believed to be the site of the conversion to Christianity of the Kings of Munster by Patrick in the 5th century.
Station Two of the Glencolumcille Turas
Glencolumcille, County Donegal, Ireland
St. Mary's Chapel (The Hermitage)
Bradford-On-Avon, Wiltshire, Great Britain
The Daily Ramble: The River Chew at Pensford The village of Pensford is in Somerset, Great Britain. A great flood of the River Chew in 1968 damaged the railroad viaduct in the background so extensively it never reopened. Also damaged was the St Thomas à Becket Church in the foreground, which was already in use in 1341.