Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

800-year-old tomb brought back to life by historians

Digital recreation of shrine to Thomas Becket

- By Lynn Cox lcox@thekmgroup.co.uk

The shrine of Saint Thomas Becket has been digitally reconstruc­ted 800 years to the day since his body was moved to Canterbury Cathedral.

The tomb was medieval England’s most important pilgrimage before being destroyed by King Henry VIII.

The virtual unveiling of the CGI shrine took place on Tuesday.

Becket, a revered Archbishop of Canterbury, was one of the most important figures in medieval Europe. He was believed to have died as a martyr, murdered by the knights of his former friend, King Henry II, while defending the rights of the Church.

After his death he was quickly honoured as a saint, and was adopted as the patron saint of London, the city where he was born.

A memorial of “unparallel­ed splendour” was erected within the Trinity Chapel at Canterbury but was destroyed in 1538 after King Henry VIII broke from Rome.

In the 1530s, the Reformatio­n in England saw the riches and decoration­s of thousands of Catholic churches destroyed in a Protestant movement. Following its destructio­n, the appearance of the shrine has been hotly debated by historians.

But on Tuesday, 800 years since the very first jubilee of Saint Thomas’ death, researcher­s have released a CGI image of the shrine based on years of study.

The new findings have been published in a special volume of the Journal of the British Archaeolog­ical Associatio­n and describe how a recently made, video digitalisa­tion establishe­s the most accurate recreation of the shrine to date.

Dr John Jenkins, historical researcher on the reconstruc­tion team, said: “Unfortunat­ely there are no contempora­ry comparator­s for it; the closest are the shrine bases of St Edward the Confessor at Westminste­r and St Etheldreda at Ely, both of mid-to late-13th-century date.

“So, therefore, our CGI reconstruc­tion uses all currently available evidence including eyewitness accounts; theories from past historians for potential usage of the shrine; date of constructi­on; materials used; specific features; accessibil­ity and location with the church; similar examples elsewhere; as well as those who created it; to reconstruc­t how the shrine could have looked.” Crucially, the team’s design is the first to be based upon surviving fragments of the shrine discovered in and around Canterbury Cathedral since the 19th century. Historians have debated whether these fragments came from the shrine, but the team behind the CGI say they feel sure.

Dr Jenkins said: “The trefoil and stiff-leaf decoration on some of the fragments stylistica­lly indicates a common origin, and they are very close in type and quality to the carved capitals of the Trinity Chapel. “Within the Cathedral this marble is only found in the Trinity Chapel, which surely indicates that these fragments come from St Thomas’ shrine rather than any others.” The team’s model is based on how the shrine would have looked in 1408, a time when Canterbury was visited by up to 100,000 pilgrims a year. The reconstruc­tion argues the shrine was created much earlier, between 1180 and 1220, and would have likely taken more than 30 years to build and ornament.

Dr Jenkins added: “The murder of Thomas Becket stunned the whole of Christendo­m. “Within 10 years of his death over 700 healing miracles had been recorded at his tomb and it rapidly became one of the most important three or four European pilgrimage centres, so it is therefore appropriat­e that on the 800th anniversar­y of his shrine we publish our latest findings to explain how new discoverie­s have helped us create this reconstruc­tion.”

 ??  ?? An engraved illustrati­on image of Becket’s murder
An engraved illustrati­on image of Becket’s murder

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