Tintagel
Appearance

Tintagel, vel Sancta Symphorina,[1][2] est oppidum in comitatu Cornubiae ad extremam Angliae partem occidentalem iacens et unum ex septendecim ducatus Cornubiae maneriis antiquis. Ibi nundinae et mercatus ab anno 1243 habebantur.[3] Anglicanum Sanctae Materianae aevi Normannorum templum parochiale adest, quod autem in oppido non est, sed prope castellum patet; Anglicana Sancti Pirani cappella ad Tretheviam est. Templum Catholicum Sancti Pauli Trevenae est, anno 1968 consecratum. Duo lapides inscriptiones Romanas ferentes exstant, quorum unus nomen Licinii imperatoris, unus nomen Galli et Volusiani imperatorum fert.
Notae
[recensere | fontem recensere]- ↑ "Tintagel (St. Symphorina) in Samuel Lewis, ed., A Topographical Dictionary of England (7a ed. 1848. ~).
- ↑ Lewis has derived "Symphorina" from John Leland's account; evidently Leland has attributed "Symphorian" or "Simiferian" (the saint honoured at Forrabury) to Tintegel (confusing it with "Materian"): Canner, A. C. (1982) The Parish of Tintagel: some historical notes. Camelford: A. C. Canner; pp. 37-33
- ↑ Samantha Letters, "Gazetteer of Markets and Fairs in England and Wales to 1516: Cornwall."
Bibliographia
[recensere | fontem recensere]- "Tintagel (St. Symphorina) in Samuel Lewis, ed., A Topographical Dictionary of England (7a ed. 1848. ~).
- "Tintagell" in Daniel Lysons, Samuel Lysons, Cornwall: a general and parochial history of the county (Magna Britannia. 1814. ~).
- Steven Morris, "Tintagel excavations reveal refined tastes of medieval settlers" in The Guardian, 13 Iulii 2017.
- Anne Preston-Jones, Peter Rose, "Medieval Cornwall[nexus deficit]" in Cornish Archaeology no. 26 (1986) pp. 135-185..
- Charles Thomas, English Heritage book of Tintagel: Arthur and archaeology. Londinii: Batsford, 1993
Nexus interni
Nexus externi
[recensere | fontem recensere]| Vicimedia Communia plura habent quae ad Tintagel spectant. |
- "Tintagel" apud A Vision of Britain Through Time
