Well water running through the chapel at St Clether, Cornwall, supercharged by the relics of St Cledarus was used for healing and baptisms.


Well water running through the chapel at St Clether, supercharged by the relics of St Cledarus was used for healing and baptisms. Offerings were placed in the hatch above the chapel outflow to be collected by a priest in return for holy water. Tradition says St Clether himself founded a hermitage on this site in the C6th, beside a never-failing spring in the Inny Valley.


Size: 4961px × 3767px
Location: St Cledarus' Well Chapel, St Clether, Launceston, Cornwall, England, UK
Photo credit: © Mick Sharp / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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