Difference between revisions of "Glastonbury"

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;[[World of Darkness: 1900]]
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;[[World of Darkness: 1900]] -- [[London - Pax Britannica]]
 
== '''Introduction''' ==
 
== '''Introduction''' ==
 
''"In Glastonbury, history, myth and legend combine in such a way that most visitors cannot fail to feel the powerful atmosphere of the town. For not only is Glastonbury the cradle of Christianity in England but is also reputed to be the burial place of King Arthur. Glastonbury is a town steeped in myths and legends. Theories about the founding of the great abbey and connections to the Arthurian legends and the land of Avalon are too numerous to count. The mysterious and sacred aspects of Glastonbury attract visitors and pilgrims from all over the world who seek forgotten lands and wish to drink from sacred springs."''
 
''"In Glastonbury, history, myth and legend combine in such a way that most visitors cannot fail to feel the powerful atmosphere of the town. For not only is Glastonbury the cradle of Christianity in England but is also reputed to be the burial place of King Arthur. Glastonbury is a town steeped in myths and legends. Theories about the founding of the great abbey and connections to the Arthurian legends and the land of Avalon are too numerous to count. The mysterious and sacred aspects of Glastonbury attract visitors and pilgrims from all over the world who seek forgotten lands and wish to drink from sacred springs."''
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== '''Climate''' ==
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== '''[[Climate of Glastonbury]]''' ==
Along with the rest of South West England, Glastonbury has a temperate climate which is generally wetter and milder than the rest of the country. The annual mean temperature is approximately 10 °C (50.0 °F). Seasonal temperature variation is less extreme than most of the United Kingdom because of the adjacent sea temperatures. The summer months of July and August are the warmest with mean daily maxima of approximately 21 °C (69.8 °F). In winter mean minimum temperatures of 1 or 2 °C (33.8 or 35.6 °F) are common. In the summer the Azores high pressure affects the south-west of England, however convective cloud sometimes forms inland, reducing the number of hours of sunshine. Annual sunshine rates are slightly less than the regional average of 1,600 hours. In December 1998 there were 20 days without sun recorded at Yeovilton. Most of the rainfall in the south-west is caused by Atlantic depressions or by convection. Most of the rainfall in autumn and winter is caused by the Atlantic depressions, which is when they are most active. In summer, a large proportion of the rainfall is caused by sun heating the ground leading to convection and to showers and thunderstorms. Average rainfall is around 700 mm (28 in). About 8–15 days of snowfall is typical. November to March have the highest mean wind speeds, and June to August have the lightest winds. The predominant wind direction is from the south-west.
 
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== '''Demonym''' ==
 
== '''Demonym''' ==
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== '''Districts''' ==
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== '''[[Economy of Glastonbury]]''' ==
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== '''Economy''' ==
 
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== '''Geography''' ==
 
== '''Geography''' ==
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* '''[[Glastonbury Map 1930]]'''
<br>
 
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== '''History''' ==
 
=== Myth & Legend ===
 
Glastonbury is notable for myths and legends concerning '''Joseph of Arimathea''', the Holy Grail and King Arthur as recorded by ancient historians William of Malmesbury, Venerable Bede, Gerald of Wales and Geoffrey of Monmouth. The legend that Joseph of Arimathea retrieved certain holy relics was introduced by the French poet Robert de Boron in his 13th-century version of the grail story, thought to have been a trilogy though only fragments of the later books survive today. The work became the inspiration for the later Vulgate Cycle of Arthurian tales.
 
  
De Boron's account relates how Joseph captured Jesus's blood in a cup (the "Holy Grail") which was subsequently brought to Britain. The Vulgate Cycle reworked Boron's original tale. Joseph of Arimathea was no longer the chief character in the Grail origin: Joseph's son, Josephus, took over his role of the Grail keeper. The earliest versions of the grail romance, however, do not call the grail "holy" or mention anything about blood, Joseph or Glastonbury.
+
==== Districts ====
 +
* [[Beckery]] -- ''Little Ireland''
  
In 1191, monks at the abbey claimed to have found the graves of Arthur and Guinevere to the south of the Lady Chapel of the Abbey Church, which was visited by a number of contemporary historians including Giraldus Cambrensis. The remains were later moved and were lost during the Reformation. Many scholars suspect that this discovery was a pious forgery to substantiate the antiquity of Glastonbury's foundation, and increase its renown.
 
 
An early Welsh poem links Arthur to the Tor in an account of a confrontation between Arthur and Melwas, who had kidnapped Queen Guinevere.
 
 
Joseph is said to have arrived in Glastonbury by boat over the flooded Somerset Levels. On disembarking he stuck his staff into the ground and it flowered miraculously into the Glastonbury Thorn (also called Holy Thorn). This is said to explain a hybrid Crataegus monogyna (hawthorn) tree that only grows within a few miles of Glastonbury, and which flowers twice annually, once in spring and again around Christmas time (depending on the weather). Each year a sprig of thorn is cut, by the local Anglican vicar and the eldest child from St John's School, and sent to the Queen.
 
 
The original Holy Thorn was a centre of pilgrimage in the Middle Ages but was chopped down during the English Civil War.[62] A replacement thorn was planted in the 20th century on Wearyall hill (originally in 1951 to mark the Festival of Britain, but the thorn had to be replanted the following year as the first attempt did not take). The Wearyall Hill Holy Thorn was vandalised in 2010 and all its branches were chopped off. It initially showed signs of recovery but now (2014) appears to be dead. A new sapling has been planted nearby. Many other examples of the thorn grow throughout Glastonbury including those in the grounds of Glastonbury Abbey, St Johns Church and Chalice Well.
 
 
Today, Glastonbury Abbey presents itself as "traditionally the oldest above-ground Christian church in the world," which according to the legend was built at Joseph's behest to house the Holy Grail, 65 or so years after the death of Jesus. The legend also says that as a child, Jesus had visited Glastonbury along with Joseph. The legend probably was encouraged during the medieval period when religious relics and pilgrimages were profitable business for abbeys. William Blake mentioned the legend in a poem that became a popular hymn, "Jerusalem".
 
 
==== Temple of the Stars ====
 
The Temple of the Stars is an alleged ancient temple claimed to be situated around Glastonbury in Somerset, England.
 
 
===== Origin =====
 
The temple is claimed by some to depict a colossal landscape zodiac, a map of the stars on a gigantic scale, formed by features in the landscape (roads, streams, field boundaries, etc.). The theory was first put forward in 1934 by Katherine Maltwood, an artist who "discovered" the zodiac in a vision, and held that the "temple" was created by Sumerians in about 2700 BC. The idea was revived in 1969 by Mary Caine in an article in the magazine Gandalf's Garden (number 4). Compared to Maltwood's version, she turned Scorpio upside down, added a monk to Gemini, and altered the outlines of Capricorn, Libra, and Leo.
 
 
The temple plays an important role in many occult theories. It has been associated with the Grail legend, Uther Pendragon, Diarmuid Emrys (Daegal Kian) and King Arthur (according to some legends buried in Glastonbury).
 
 
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== '''[[History of Glastonbury]]''' ==
  
 
== '''Population''' ==
 
== '''Population''' ==
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== '''Arenas''' ==
 
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== '''Attractions''' ==
 
== '''Attractions''' ==
=== Glastonbury Tor ===
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:* [[Glastonbury Abbey]]
[[File:Glastonbury Tor.jpg]]
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:* [[Glastonbury Lake Village]]
<br>
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:* [[Glastonbury Tor]]
<br>
+
 
 +
== '''Cemeteries''' ==
 +
* '''[[Glastonbury Cemetery]]''' -- Established: 1854–55
 
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== '''Cemeteries''' ==
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== '''City Government''' ==
 +
 
 +
=== Glastonbury Town Council ===
 +
''Glastonbury's town council is composed of fifteen men including the mayor. The councilors for the town art drawn from the more elderly, err successful, business men of Glastonbury town. The mayors office and the council's meeting chambers are located inside Glastonbury Town Hall in the heart of old Glastonbury.''
 +
 
 +
* Glastonbury Town Hall
 +
 
 +
==== Mayor ====
 +
* '''[[Warwick Anselm Scriven]]'''
 +
 
 +
===== Town Council =====
 +
* Douglas Blythe
 +
* Greyson Dickens
 +
* Jameson Sutton
 +
* Benedict Burton
 +
* Silver Norris
 +
* Lew Edison
 +
* Harding Hedley
 +
* Gregg Roderick
 +
* Henderson Fenwick
 +
* Crew Lewis
 +
* Elliott Marston
 +
* Joe Nicholls
 +
* Harland Addison
 +
* Cary Ware
 
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<br>
 
<br>
 
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== '''City Government''' ==
+
 
 +
===Law Enforcement===
 +
''The Glastonbury police force is ten officers strong, they look after four-thousand civilians and usually do so without great difficulty. Padan Grenville is the town's chief constable and a veteran of London's '''Metropolitan Police'''. The Chief Constable is supported by Art Owston a local copper with decades of experience policing the more rural locales of Somerset and an expert tracker. There art eight uniformed street constables broken into teams of two who work rotating eight hour shifts. This arrangement means there are three pairs of constables active in a day with one pair off for the day. Patrols that cover the old part of town do so on foot while those covering the outer edges of the town use horses to get about. The Glastonbury constabulary has been stable since Padan Genville took over in 1899 and his men are as solid and even-headed a group of officers as any in the county of Somerset.''
 +
 
 +
====Leadership====
 +
* '''[[Paden Grenville]]''' -- Chief Constable
 +
** '''Art Owston''' -- Sargent of Constables
 +
 
 +
=====Street Constables=====
 +
***  Ned Dean & Rickey Lloyd
 +
***  Wade Pemberton & Winton Barrett
 +
***  Monte Hathaway & Sterling Jinks
 +
***  Mortimer Crisp & Spencer Bonney
 +
 
 +
==== The Judiciary ====
 +
* '''Matthew Hoyt Maynard''' -- Parish Judge
 
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 +
 
== '''Communications''' ==
 
== '''Communications''' ==
 
=== Post ===
 
=== Post ===
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== '''Crime''' ==
 
== '''Crime''' ==
 +
''Crime in Glastonbury is largely petty in its nature: public intoxication, lewd behavior, assault and battery and petty theft make up thr majority of illegal activities likely encountered in Glastonbury and half of all those cases are perpetrated by outsiders visiting the town.''
 +
 +
* '''[[Fitzroy Place Gang]]''' --
 +
 +
=== Prostitution ===
 +
* '''[[Lilac House]]''' -- A Den of Iniquity
 
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 +
 
== '''Citizens''' ==
 
== '''Citizens''' ==
 +
: - [[Tobias Cokes]] -- Presbyterian Minister of Glastonbury First United Church
 +
 +
=== Clubs & Fraternities ===
 +
* [[Fellowship of Arimathea]] --
 +
* [[Glastonbury Antiquarian Society]] --
 +
* [[Royal Society for the Protection of Birds]] --
 +
* [[Sisterhood of Saint Brigid]] --
 +
* [[The Younglings]] --
 +
 +
==== Missing Persons ====
 +
: - Father  Bayley Winslow
 +
: - Harold Cory (7yrs old)
 +
 
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 +
 
== '''Current Events''' ==
 
== '''Current Events''' ==
 
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== '''Holy Ground''' ==
 
== '''Holy Ground''' ==
 +
* [[Church of St John the Baptist (Glastonbury)]]
 
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 +
 
== '''Hospitals''' ==
 
== '''Hospitals''' ==
 
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== '''Hotels & Hostels''' ==
 
== '''Hotels & Hostels''' ==
 +
* [[George Hotel and Pilgrims' Inn]]
 +
 +
* [[Raven's Rookery]]
 +
 +
* [[St. Brigid's Hotel]]
 +
 +
* [[Three Sisters Respite]]
 +
 +
* [[Wanderer's Rest]]
 
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 +
== '''Items of Mystery''' ==
 +
* [[Eye of Arawn]]
 +
* [[Glastonbury Fragment]]
 +
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 +
<br>
 +
<br>
 +
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 +
 
== '''Landmarks''' ==
 
== '''Landmarks''' ==
 +
* Glastonbury Canal
 +
* Glastonbury Market Cross
 +
* Glastonbury Thorn
 +
* River Brue
 +
* Millard Farm *
 +
 
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<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
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 +
 
== '''Law Enforcement''' ==
 
== '''Law Enforcement''' ==
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+
 
 +
* [[Arthur Grady]] - street bobby
 +
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<br>
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== '''Monuments''' ==
 
== '''Monuments''' ==
 
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== '''Museums''' ==
 
== '''Museums''' ==
 +
* [[The Tribunal]] -- Museum of Iron Age Artifacts
 
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 +
 
== '''Newspapers''' ==
 
== '''Newspapers''' ==
 +
* Somerset County Gazette (1836)
 +
* Mid Somerset Series (1851)
 +
* [[Western Daily Press]] (1858)
 +
*
 +
*
 
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 +
 
== '''Parks''' ==
 
== '''Parks''' ==
 +
:* Wirrall Field
 
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 +
 +
== '''Pubs and Alehouses''' ==
 +
 +
Three innkeepers, including the tenant of the George, were licensed to sell wine in the town in 1555, and the Hart and the Pelican were named in the 1580s.  Seven victuallers were in business in 1620,  and in 1630 there were eight alehouses, the limit set by the magistrates in 1636.  Among the inns which contributed to the guest beds for 91 and stabling for 45 in 1686  were the Ship, the Bell, the Oak or Royal Oak, the Pelican, and the White Hart in addition to the George and the Crown. In 1695 there were eleven inns,  and those named at the beginning of the 18th century included in addition the Holly Bush and the Tavern. The parish vestry thought so many alehouses were 'so many nurseries of indolence and vice' and requested the magistrates to license eleven. Ten alehouses were approved in 1764, seventeen in 1768, and fourteen victuallers in 1786. There were again seventeen licensed houses in the parish in 1866, of which six were unnamed beer houses, and there were twenty-two in 1889 and 1891. In 1905 there were fourteen fully licensed houses, eight beer houses, and a licensed grocer, a license for every 174 people in the parish. As a consequence four licenses were refused, and among those houses closed was the Red Loin, which had occupied the former gatehouse to the abbey precinct.
 +
 +
=== Taverns ===
 +
* [[Blackwoods Tavern]]
 +
* [[Market House]]
 +
* [[Garlands on High Street]]
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* [[White Hart]]
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* [[The Pelican]]
 +
* [[The Royal Oak Tavern]]
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* [[The George]]
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* [[The Crown]]
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* [[Three Innkeepers]]
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* [[The Holy Bush]]
 +
* [[The Ship]]
 +
* [[The Bell]]
 +
* [[The Tavern]]
 +
* [[Tor House]]
 +
* [[Anchor Inn]]
 +
* [[Chalice Well House]]
 +
* [[Red Loin]] (closed 1904)
 +
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<br>
 +
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== '''Residences''' ==
 
== '''Residences''' ==
 
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== '''Schools''' ==
 
== '''Schools''' ==
 +
In 1839 the two National schools between them had 128 pupils on weekdays and 84 on Sundays and there was an infants' school for 70 supported by a Mrs. Roach and school pence. There were two Independent Sunday schools for 179 children between them and a Wesleyan Sunday school for 50 children. There were also six private schools, three of them described as commercial. In 1847 the National school, named St. John's and St. Benedict's, had 80 boys attending on weekdays and Sundays, 47 girls on both and 70 on Sundays only, and 147 infants. There were then dame schools for 10 boys and 12 girls affiliated to the National Society. The Wesleyans and the Independents had Sunday schools in 1861.
 +
 +
The National school was largely rebuilt in 1864–5; the designs by (Sir) George Gilbert Scott in harmony with those of St. John's church were treated very freely by Frederick Merrick, the builder. A private infants' school was opened at Hill Head, from 1864 until 1877 receiving a grant from Levington's charity. In 1875–6 a new National school was built in Benedict Street. From c. 1884 it shared the charity endowments with St. John's school.
 +
 +
In 1901 there were five elementary schools in the town, including the Wesleyan day school; two years later the two public elementary schools, St. John's and St. Benedict's, came under a joint board of management which itself was under the control of a newly-formed borough sub-committee of the county education committee. In 1903 there were 412 children on the books at St. John's school with an average attendance of 328 children. At St. Benedict's there were 300 on the books and average attendance was 231. St. John's school had 178 boys and 72 infants in 1925.
 
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 +
 
== '''Shopping''' ==
 
== '''Shopping''' ==
 +
* [[Langdon's Market]] -- An Essential Grocer
 +
* [[Meyer & Meyer Antiquities]] -- A shop
 
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== '''Taverns''' ==
+
 
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<br>
 
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== '''Theaters''' ==
 
== '''Theaters''' ==
 +
* '''[[Abbey Threatre]]''' -- current entertainers:  ''[[Prospero's Players]]''
 
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<br>
 
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 +
 
== '''Transportation''' ==
 
== '''Transportation''' ==
 +
 +
=== Automobiles ===
 +
 +
=== Coach Service ===
 +
 +
=== Flat Boats ===
 +
 +
=== Train Service ===
 +
* [[Glastonbury and Street railway station]]
 
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<br>
 
<br>
 
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<br>
 
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 +
 
== '''Visitors''' ==
 
== '''Visitors''' ==
: [[Ghislaine Bellefontaine]] -- Professor of Folklore & Linguistics
+
: [[File:Ghislaine Bellefontaine.jpg|250px]] -- [[Ghislaine Bellefontaine]] -- A Widowed Matron
 +
: Eldread Caruthers -- Photography Student
 +
: [[File:Violet Mary Firth.jpg|250px]] -- [[Violet Mary Firth]] -- A sensitive young girl on holiday
 +
: [[File:Ignaz Koch.jpg|250px]] -- [[Ignaz Koch]] -- Attache of the German Consulate to Britain ('''N''' Nachrichten-Abteilung: German Naval Intelligence)
 +
: [[File:Mauricette Bourreau.jpg|250px]] -- [[Mauricette Bourreau]] -- (''Deuxième Bureau'': French Second Desk - French Counter Intelligence)
 +
: [[File:Earl Parish.jpg|250px]] -- [[Earl Parish]] --
 +
: [[File:Konstantin Germogen Novikov.jpg|250px]] -- [[Konstantin Germogen Novikov]] (Russian ''Okhrana'')
 
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== <span style="color:#800000;">'''Vampires''' ==
+
== Supernaturals ==
: '''[[Friedhold Prufrock]]''' -- Tremere Archaeologist
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=== Demons ===
 +
: '''[[Bazlith Keturah]]''' --
 +
 
 +
=== <span style="color:#800000;">'''Vampires''' ===
 +
: '''[[Friedhold Prufrock]]''' -- Tremere Archaeologist ('''''Resident''''')
 +
 
 +
==== Visiting Undead ====
 +
: '''[[Collissa Montpellier]]''' -- French Daughter of Cacophony ('''London''')
 +
: '''[[Moira Rose]]''' -- Scotish Kiasyd Scholar ('''London''')
 +
: '''[[Remington Stark]]''' -- American Brujah Gunslinger ('''London''')
 +
: '''[[Warin Versessen]]''' -- ''Malkavian Agent Provocateur'' ('''London''')
 +
:: '''[[Braden Beech]]''' -- Warin's new neonate
 +
 
 +
=== Wraiths ===
 +
:[[File:La Mort Rouge.jpg|250px]] -- [[Dotetor Red]]
 +
 
 +
=== Widows Three ===
 +
:[[File:Black Triunity.jpg|250px]] -- [[3lack Widows]]
 +
 
 +
=== Fey ===
 +
;[[]]
 +
:[[File:Faceless Lord of the Fae.jpg|250px]]
  
 
=== Character Creation ===
 
=== Character Creation ===
:[[Victorian Prototype]]
+
:[[Victorian Mortal Prototype]]
 +
:[[Edwardian Mortal Prototype]]
 +
:[[Great War Mortal Prototype]]
 +
:[[Victorian Age Vampire Prototype]]
 +
:[[Edwardian Age Vampire Prototype]]
 +
:[[Great War Vampire Prototype]]
 +
----
 +
<br>
 +
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 +
 
 +
== Stories ==
 +
:'''[[A Case of Stolen Goods]]''' -- Current Story (October 1904)
 
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== '''Websites''' ==
 
== '''Websites''' ==
 +
https://naomh-na-tursan.livejournal.com/3782.html
 +
 +
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glastonbury
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glastonbury
  
 
https://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryMagazine/DestinationsUK/Glastonbury/
 
https://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryMagazine/DestinationsUK/Glastonbury/
  
https://www.worldhistory.org/article/1558/visiting-glastonbury---the-town-of-myths--legends/
+
https://www.worldhistory.org/article/1558/visiting-glastonbury---the-town-of-myths--legends/ ****
  
https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/som/vol9/pp6-10
+
https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/som/vol9/pp6-10 *****
  
 
https://www.google.com/search?q=high+street+glastonbury+town+night&sca_esv=3b6dba99caad62d0&biw=1536&bih=710&udm=2&sxsrf=ADLYWIJglGo4C9xYQmIZYg8bfq3SDouh8g%3A1718873281410&ei=wexzZvjhGPPIwN4P8MeJkAQ&ved=0ahUKEwi4xuj65emGAxVzJNAFHfBjAkIQ4dUDCBE&uact=5&oq=high+street+glastonbury+town+night&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiImhpZ2ggc3RyZWV0IGdsYXN0b25idXJ5IHRvd24gbmlnaHRItxxQsgtY0RlwAXgAkAEAmAGJAaAB4ASqAQM1LjG4AQPIAQD4AQGYAgKgAmfCAgQQIxgnwgIFEAAYgATCAgQQABgemAMAiAYBkgcBMqAHgQM&sclient=gws-wiz-serp
 
https://www.google.com/search?q=high+street+glastonbury+town+night&sca_esv=3b6dba99caad62d0&biw=1536&bih=710&udm=2&sxsrf=ADLYWIJglGo4C9xYQmIZYg8bfq3SDouh8g%3A1718873281410&ei=wexzZvjhGPPIwN4P8MeJkAQ&ved=0ahUKEwi4xuj65emGAxVzJNAFHfBjAkIQ4dUDCBE&uact=5&oq=high+street+glastonbury+town+night&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiImhpZ2ggc3RyZWV0IGdsYXN0b25idXJ5IHRvd24gbmlnaHRItxxQsgtY0RlwAXgAkAEAmAGJAaAB4ASqAQM1LjG4AQPIAQD4AQGYAgKgAmfCAgQQIxgnwgIFEAAYgATCAgQQABgemAMAiAYBkgcBMqAHgQM&sclient=gws-wiz-serp

Latest revision as of 16:12, 15 October 2024

World of Darkness: 1900 -- London - Pax Britannica

Introduction

"In Glastonbury, history, myth and legend combine in such a way that most visitors cannot fail to feel the powerful atmosphere of the town. For not only is Glastonbury the cradle of Christianity in England but is also reputed to be the burial place of King Arthur. Glastonbury is a town steeped in myths and legends. Theories about the founding of the great abbey and connections to the Arthurian legends and the land of Avalon are too numerous to count. The mysterious and sacred aspects of Glastonbury attract visitors and pilgrims from all over the world who seek forgotten lands and wish to drink from sacred springs."

Glastonbury is a town and civil parish in Somerset, England, situated at a dry point on the low-lying Somerset Levels, 23 miles (37 km) south of Bristol. The town had a population of 4,213 in the 1900 census. Glastonbury is less than 1 mile (2 km) across the River Brue from Street, which is far smaller than Glastonbury. It is 139 miles from Glastonbury to London.

Evidence from timber trackways such as the Sweet Track show that the town has been inhabited since Neolithic times. Glastonbury Lake Village was an Iron Age village, close to the old course of the River Brue and Sharpham Park approximately 2 miles (3 km) west of Glastonbury, that dates back to the Bronze Age. Centwine was the first Saxon patron of Glastonbury Abbey, which dominated the town for the next 700 years. One of the most important abbeys in England, it was the site of Edmund Ironside's coronation as King of England in 1016. Many of the oldest surviving buildings in the town, including the Tribunal, George Hotel and Pilgrims' Inn and the Somerset Rural Life Museum, which is based at the site of a 14th-century abbey manor barn, often referred to as a tithe barn, are associated with the abbey. The Church of St John the Baptist dates from the 15th century.

The town became a center for commerce, which led to the construction of the market cross, Glastonbury Canal and the Glastonbury and Street railway station, the largest station on the original Somerset and Dorset Railway. The Brue Valley Living Landscape is a conservation project managed by the Somerset Wildlife Trust and nearby is the Ham Wall National Nature Reserve.

Glastonbury has been described as having a New Age community, and possibly being where New Age beliefs originated at the turn of the twentieth century. It is notable for myths and legends often related to Glastonbury Tor, concerning Joseph of Arimathea, the Holy Grail and King Arthur. Joseph is said to have arrived in Glastonbury and stuck his staff into the ground, when it flowered miraculously into the Glastonbury Thorn. The presence of a landscape zodiac around the town has been suggested but no evidence has been discovered. The Glastonbury Festival, held in the nearby village of Pilton, takes its name from the town.





Appearance

Daytime

Glastonbury 1900 Idyllic.jpg

Nighttime

Glastonbury 1900 night.jpg





City Device

Glastonbury Coat of Arms.jpg





Climate of Glastonbury

Demonym





Economy of Glastonbury

Geography

Districts





History of Glastonbury

Population

  • -- Glastonbury Town (4,213) - 1900 census
  • -- Neighboring Village of Street (3,535) - 1900 census




Attractions

Cemeteries





City Government

Glastonbury Town Council

Glastonbury's town council is composed of fifteen men including the mayor. The councilors for the town art drawn from the more elderly, err successful, business men of Glastonbury town. The mayors office and the council's meeting chambers are located inside Glastonbury Town Hall in the heart of old Glastonbury.

  • Glastonbury Town Hall

Mayor

Town Council
  • Douglas Blythe
  • Greyson Dickens
  • Jameson Sutton
  • Benedict Burton
  • Silver Norris
  • Lew Edison
  • Harding Hedley
  • Gregg Roderick
  • Henderson Fenwick
  • Crew Lewis
  • Elliott Marston
  • Joe Nicholls
  • Harland Addison
  • Cary Ware



Law Enforcement

The Glastonbury police force is ten officers strong, they look after four-thousand civilians and usually do so without great difficulty. Padan Grenville is the town's chief constable and a veteran of London's Metropolitan Police. The Chief Constable is supported by Art Owston a local copper with decades of experience policing the more rural locales of Somerset and an expert tracker. There art eight uniformed street constables broken into teams of two who work rotating eight hour shifts. This arrangement means there are three pairs of constables active in a day with one pair off for the day. Patrols that cover the old part of town do so on foot while those covering the outer edges of the town use horses to get about. The Glastonbury constabulary has been stable since Padan Genville took over in 1899 and his men are as solid and even-headed a group of officers as any in the county of Somerset.

Leadership

Street Constables
      • Ned Dean & Rickey Lloyd
      • Wade Pemberton & Winton Barrett
      • Monte Hathaway & Sterling Jinks
      • Mortimer Crisp & Spencer Bonney

The Judiciary

  • Matthew Hoyt Maynard -- Parish Judge




Communications

Post

Telegraph





Crime

Crime in Glastonbury is largely petty in its nature: public intoxication, lewd behavior, assault and battery and petty theft make up thr majority of illegal activities likely encountered in Glastonbury and half of all those cases are perpetrated by outsiders visiting the town.

Prostitution





Citizens

- Tobias Cokes -- Presbyterian Minister of Glastonbury First United Church

Clubs & Fraternities

Missing Persons

- Father Bayley Winslow
- Harold Cory (7yrs old)




Current Events





Fortifications





Galleries





Holy Ground





Hospitals





Hotels & Hostels





Items of Mystery





Landmarks

  • Glastonbury Canal
  • Glastonbury Market Cross
  • Glastonbury Thorn
  • River Brue
  • Millard Farm *




Law Enforcement





Monuments





Museums





Newspapers





Parks

  • Wirrall Field




Pubs and Alehouses

Three innkeepers, including the tenant of the George, were licensed to sell wine in the town in 1555, and the Hart and the Pelican were named in the 1580s. Seven victuallers were in business in 1620, and in 1630 there were eight alehouses, the limit set by the magistrates in 1636. Among the inns which contributed to the guest beds for 91 and stabling for 45 in 1686 were the Ship, the Bell, the Oak or Royal Oak, the Pelican, and the White Hart in addition to the George and the Crown. In 1695 there were eleven inns, and those named at the beginning of the 18th century included in addition the Holly Bush and the Tavern. The parish vestry thought so many alehouses were 'so many nurseries of indolence and vice' and requested the magistrates to license eleven. Ten alehouses were approved in 1764, seventeen in 1768, and fourteen victuallers in 1786. There were again seventeen licensed houses in the parish in 1866, of which six were unnamed beer houses, and there were twenty-two in 1889 and 1891. In 1905 there were fourteen fully licensed houses, eight beer houses, and a licensed grocer, a license for every 174 people in the parish. As a consequence four licenses were refused, and among those houses closed was the Red Loin, which had occupied the former gatehouse to the abbey precinct.

Taverns





Residences





Restaurants





Ruins





Schools

In 1839 the two National schools between them had 128 pupils on weekdays and 84 on Sundays and there was an infants' school for 70 supported by a Mrs. Roach and school pence. There were two Independent Sunday schools for 179 children between them and a Wesleyan Sunday school for 50 children. There were also six private schools, three of them described as commercial. In 1847 the National school, named St. John's and St. Benedict's, had 80 boys attending on weekdays and Sundays, 47 girls on both and 70 on Sundays only, and 147 infants. There were then dame schools for 10 boys and 12 girls affiliated to the National Society. The Wesleyans and the Independents had Sunday schools in 1861.

The National school was largely rebuilt in 1864–5; the designs by (Sir) George Gilbert Scott in harmony with those of St. John's church were treated very freely by Frederick Merrick, the builder. A private infants' school was opened at Hill Head, from 1864 until 1877 receiving a grant from Levington's charity. In 1875–6 a new National school was built in Benedict Street. From c. 1884 it shared the charity endowments with St. John's school.

In 1901 there were five elementary schools in the town, including the Wesleyan day school; two years later the two public elementary schools, St. John's and St. Benedict's, came under a joint board of management which itself was under the control of a newly-formed borough sub-committee of the county education committee. In 1903 there were 412 children on the books at St. John's school with an average attendance of 328 children. At St. Benedict's there were 300 on the books and average attendance was 231. St. John's school had 178 boys and 72 infants in 1925.





Shopping





Theaters





Transportation

Automobiles

Coach Service

Flat Boats

Train Service





Visitors

Ghislaine Bellefontaine.jpg -- Ghislaine Bellefontaine -- A Widowed Matron
Eldread Caruthers -- Photography Student
Violet Mary Firth.jpg -- Violet Mary Firth -- A sensitive young girl on holiday
Ignaz Koch.jpg -- Ignaz Koch -- Attache of the German Consulate to Britain (N Nachrichten-Abteilung: German Naval Intelligence)
Mauricette Bourreau.jpg -- Mauricette Bourreau -- (Deuxième Bureau: French Second Desk - French Counter Intelligence)
Earl Parish.jpg -- Earl Parish --
Konstantin Germogen Novikov.jpg -- Konstantin Germogen Novikov (Russian Okhrana)




Supernaturals

Demons

Bazlith Keturah --

Vampires

Friedhold Prufrock -- Tremere Archaeologist (Resident)

Visiting Undead

Collissa Montpellier -- French Daughter of Cacophony (London)
Moira Rose -- Scotish Kiasyd Scholar (London)
Remington Stark -- American Brujah Gunslinger (London)
Warin Versessen -- Malkavian Agent Provocateur (London)
Braden Beech -- Warin's new neonate

Wraiths

La Mort Rouge.jpg -- Dotetor Red

Widows Three

Black Triunity.jpg -- 3lack Widows

Fey

[[]]
Faceless Lord of the Fae.jpg

Character Creation

Victorian Mortal Prototype
Edwardian Mortal Prototype
Great War Mortal Prototype
Victorian Age Vampire Prototype
Edwardian Age Vampire Prototype
Great War Vampire Prototype



Stories

A Case of Stolen Goods -- Current Story (October 1904)




Websites

https://naomh-na-tursan.livejournal.com/3782.html


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glastonbury

https://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryMagazine/DestinationsUK/Glastonbury/

https://www.worldhistory.org/article/1558/visiting-glastonbury---the-town-of-myths--legends/ ****

https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/som/vol9/pp6-10 *****

https://www.google.com/search?q=high+street+glastonbury+town+night&sca_esv=3b6dba99caad62d0&biw=1536&bih=710&udm=2&sxsrf=ADLYWIJglGo4C9xYQmIZYg8bfq3SDouh8g%3A1718873281410&ei=wexzZvjhGPPIwN4P8MeJkAQ&ved=0ahUKEwi4xuj65emGAxVzJNAFHfBjAkIQ4dUDCBE&uact=5&oq=high+street+glastonbury+town+night&gs_lp=Egxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAiImhpZ2ggc3RyZWV0IGdsYXN0b25idXJ5IHRvd24gbmlnaHRItxxQsgtY0RlwAXgAkAEAmAGJAaAB4ASqAQM1LjG4AQPIAQD4AQGYAgKgAmfCAgQQIxgnwgIFEAAYgATCAgQQABgemAMAiAYBkgcBMqAHgQM&sclient=gws-wiz-serp

https://www.craiyon.com/image/wxKWw7UWT5mDWoU3VqtZ1g

https://localhistories.org/a-history-of-glastonbury/

https://research.reading.ac.uk/glastonburyabbeyarchaeology/digital/the-abbots-complex-c-1150-c-1725/abbey-after-the-reformation/

https://www.google.com/search?q=glastonbury+1900&sca_esv=cbb07cb897603c0c&sxsrf=ADLYWIKUXyag1L2BYBXir__pSrUCb66Sbg:1718820562221&source=hp&biw=1536&bih=710&ei=0h5zZq-sC96z0PEP5uqnuAY&iflsig=AL9hbdgAAAAAZnMs4ofRvdbzgpgHoYc-b0O-ti9BxxXR&ved=0ahUKEwiv3arIoeiGAxXeGTQIHWb1CWcQ4dUDCA8&oq=glastonbury+1900&gs_lp=EgNpbWciEGdsYXN0b25idXJ5IDE5MDBItUpQAFixN3AAeACQAQCYAeYCoAH5D6oBCDUuMTAuMC4xuAEMyAEA-AEBigILZ3dzLXdpei1pbWeYAg6gAvsOwgIEECMYJ8ICBRAAGIAEwgIIEAAYgAQYsQPCAgsQABiABBixAxiDAcICDhAAGIAEGLEDGIMBGIoFwgIEEAAYA5gDAJIHCDEuMTIuMC4xoAfCSw&sclient=img&udm=2#vhid=Gj5rXa66XWGDuM&vssid=mosaic