Horrible Histories

It's one of the most gruesome collections you'll ever cast your eye over, so why has a Lancashire school's set of religious relics been hidden for years? Nick Clark discovers its bloody secrets

Thursday 26 July 2012 05:07 EDT
Comments
The severed right eye of Edward Oldcorne
The severed right eye of Edward Oldcorne

Your support helps us to tell the story

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.

At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.

The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.

Your support makes all the difference.

It is the biggest collection of relics in Britain, but few will have heard of it. Now the curator of the historic Catholic school that houses the archives of eyes, skin, skulls and even a part of the supposed Crown of Thorns hopes the funds can be raised to put it on full public display for the first time. Items from Stonyhurst College's collection are increasingly loaned for exhibitions, with one of the grisly jewels in the crown currently on display at the British Museum's "Shakespeare: Staging the World" exhibition.

The show, which opened this month, brings together a series of objects from Tudor England to help conjure up the turbulent times for a 21st-century audience. Undoubtedly one of the star attractions will be the eyeball held by Stonyhurst from a Catholic martyr who was executed in 1606.

The eye's owner, Edward Oldcorne, was unlucky to have been caught. He had long survived as a Catholic priest at a time when it was considered treason, yet was picked up when other priests, fleeing arrest after the Gunpowder Plot, sought refuge in his house. He was publicly hanged, drawn and quartered. The eye was fished out of the pot used to boil his body, the process to prepare it for public display, and put in a silver reliquary to preserve it.

The religious relic speaks to the persecution of the Catholics in Britain in the 17th century and is just one of the items held in an extraordinary collection at the independent Jesuit school. Jan Graffius, the curator of the school's collections, said: "Some things have a powerful ability to speak. We all know how sensitive the eye is and how precious our eyesight is. To see a human eyeball in that state, you can't fail but be moved. I've never shown it to someone and not got a reaction."

Stonyhurst traces its roots back to 1593, when the English Jesuit College was founded in Saint-Omer to offer a Catholic education to English boys abroad. The persecution of Catholics made it impossible in Britain.

As well as offering Catholic pupils a sanctuary, it preserved manuscripts, vestments, prayer books and relics rescued during the English Reformation. Many relics were handed down by Jesuit families and often given to the school for safe keeping. "We were founded out of persecution and based abroad; these objects were shipped over to keep them safe," Graffius said. Examples include the shoulder blade of one of four Catholic priests executed in Durham in 1590. The bones bear the clear mark of knife slashes where the victim was quartered and some skin still remains attached.

Relics are believed to have a power and there are many instances of miraculous cures with those that have been laid on the sick, she said. "Although many have miraculous traditions attached to them, they are simply there to help the faithful deepen their faithful contact with someone who was a servant of God."

Believers have looked to relics from the earliest time of worship. "The early church was persecuted and the martyrs were put to death in particularly gruesome ways," Graffius said. "People want to meet at those places to commemorate them. That became a tradition. The early Christian churches were built over the graves of these martyrs."

The practice was recorded in the UK by the Venerable Bede writing in 731 in reference to St Chad of Lichfield – a part of whose skull is at Stonyhurst, incidentally – where people would mix dust from his coffin with water to cure illness.

Different relics were used for different ailments and conditions "but the Holy Cross pretty much did everything". Stonyhurst has a piece, hardly bigger than a splinter, of the supposed True Cross upon which Jesus Christ was crucified. Yet its most prized possession is a thorn believed to have been part of the Crown of Thorns. The relic, which has a pearl necklace that was owned by Mary Queen of Scots wrapped around it, can be definitively tracked to the eighth century, but has not been removed from its centuries-old reliquary for further dating tests. The thorns were supposedly found by St Helena and taken, with parts of the cross, to Constantinople.

The capital of the Byzantine Empire was looted by the Crusaders in 1204 during the Fourth Crusade and many of the relics from the crucifixion ended up in Venice before being bought by the French King Louis IX. The French kings would break off thorns from the crown and give them to those who married into the family. A pair was given to Mary Queen of Scots, who wore it in a locket.

The collection has a series of objects from the Stuarts, as the school was sympathetic to their cause. It includes the prayer book Mary took to the executioner's block. She is believed to have swapped it out at the last minute for a less valuable volume, as she knew whatever she was holding would be burnt. The book has been with the Jesuits since the 1640s and went back to Scotland last year for the first time as part of an exhibition. Sections of the Scottish media demanded the volume be returned to Scotland.

The last English Roman Catholic monarch was James II, who died 13 years after being deposed during the Glorious Revolution. In Stonyhurst's collection is a reliquary that has some of the monarch's flesh, hair and blood. "We have a lot of body parts," Graffius said.

There are three canonised saints among the school's alumni and a further 10 beatified martyrs. "I'm very strict on how we treat relics particularly when we're showing them to children," Graffius said. "We don't put them on display as some sort of freak show."

Continental Europeans are more used to the idea of relics and occasionally whole bodies of saints are on display in places of worship. "In Britain during the Reformation this was very much stamped out," Graffius said. "The Anglican tradition doesn't have the same dependence on relics, so British people became unfamiliar with them. It's not really part of the British faith."

Beyond the religious collection are a series of Tudor treasures including prayer books and manuscripts from those who helped shape Britain in the 16th century. One book bears the signature of Elizabeth Plantagenet, sister of the Princes in the Tower and mother of Henry VIII. Watching over the collection is the skull of John Morton, who tutored the Princes and Elizabeth before his arrest by Richard III.

Morton is believed to have written the account of Richard III, later rewritten by Sir Thomas More, who had been in his household, which formed the basis of Shakespeare's play. Morton's skull ended up in Stonyhurst after Oliver Cromwell's troops smashed open his tomb in Canterbury Cathedral.

The collection of the college, which moved to England in 1794, is believed to be the oldest and most comprehensive of its time in Britain. It finishes in the recent past, with a piece of bloodied vestment from a bishop murdered in El Salvador in 1980, Oscar Romero.

The Christian Heritage Centre is seeking funding to make the collection publicly accessible for the first time, estimated to cost over £10.4m. Objects have been loaned to institutions in Britain and abroad. But transporting body parts has not been smooth sailing. She was stopped a US airport when customs officials discovered a human leg.

"The leg of St Thomas of Hereford caused consternation. You're travelling with human remains and people get taken aback," Graffius said. "To me this is perfectly normal; it's not regarded as perfectly normal in the rest of the world."

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in