
Cornwall has often been referred to as the ‘Land of the Saints’. The late artist John Miller’s great painting displayed in Truro Cathedral is indeed entitled ‘Cornubia – Land of the Saints’ and shows the Duchy bathed beneath a heavenly light.
One such Saint who arrived on our northern shores around 490AD was Piran, the patron of tinners and now of all Cornwall. The legend is that he floated across from Ireland upon a millstone.
His emblem, the white cross on a black background has become recognised as the Cornish flag and he is widely celebrated on 5th March annually, his feast day.
Although his main connections appear to be in the west of Cornwall, he is also remembered in the village of Trethevy close to Tintagel where there is a well and chapel dedicated to him.
Here can be found a medieval chapel possibly standing upon a 6th Century monastic settlement, which has also served as a barn. History reports that a Vicar of Tintagel called Gregory held mass in the building in 1457. During the subsequent bloodthirsty reformation, the building became a shelter for cattle.