Germoe

      Coordinates: 50°06′54″N 5°22′44″W / 50.115°N 5.379°W / 50.115; -5.379

      Germoe
      Cornish: Germogh
      Germoe is located in Cornwall
      Germoe

       Germoe shown within Cornwall
      Population 508 (Civil Parish, 2001)
      OS grid reference SW585294
      Civil parish Germoe
      Unitary authority Cornwall
      Ceremonial county Cornwall
      Region South West
      Country England
      Sovereign state United Kingdom
      Post town PENZANCE
      Postcode district TR20
      Dialling code 01736
      Police Devon and Cornwall
      Fire Cornwall
      Ambulance South Western
      EU Parliament South West England
      UK Parliament St Ives
      List of places
      UK
      England
      Cornwall
      St Germoe's Throne

      Germoe (Cornish: Germogh)[1] is a village and civil parish in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. Germoe village, the parish's main settlement and church town, is about five miles (8 km) west of Helston and seven miles (11.3 km) east of Penzance. The A394 Penzance to Helston road runs along the southern border of the parish.[2] Other settlements in the parish include Balwest, Boscreege and Tresowes Green.

      The parish is named after Saint Germoe, one of the companions of Saint Breage. According to legend Germoe was a king in Ireland whose feast day is 6 May.

      Historically, the largest landowners in the parish were the Godolphin family (the Dukes of Leeds).[3]

      Germoe parish is bounded to the north, east and south by Breage parish and to the west by St Hilary parish.[4] The population was 508 in the 2001 census.[3] The parish is now rural in character but was once associated with mining; to the north it borders the geological formation known as the Tregonning-Godolphin Granite (one of five granite batholiths in Cornwall) and the area was formerly an important source of tin and copper ore (see Geology of Cornwall).[3]Tregonning Hill is the site of the Germoe war memorial.

      Churches

      The parish church in Germoe is mostly of the 14th century and is built on the site of an earlier Norman church. The church has a chancel, nave, north aisle, south transept, and a three-stage battlemented tower of granite ashlar. There is a Godolphin family pew in the north aisle.[3] A small medieval building in the churchyard wall is known as St Germoe's Throne. The Anglican ecclesiastical parish of Germoe is now grouped with Breage. A Wesleyan Methodist chapel was built at Balwest in 1829 for miners in the north of the parish.

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      Pengersick Castle

      Pengersick Castle is of late medieval date and features one of the few towers of its type preserved in Britain.[5] John Milliton of Pengersick Castle became High Sheriff of Cornwall and Pengersick Castle was also improved around 1530 as a fortified manor house after the wreck of a valuable Portuguese ship.[6] Rumors of ghosts and devil-worship[7] surround the castle.[8] Historical research has proven these stories to be false: no monks were murdered there (although one was assaulted by Henry Pengersick), the supposed plague pits featured in the television programme Most Haunted were located in another part of the castle,[9] and the Black Dog is reported to be a myth created by 19th century smugglers to frighten people away.[9] Pengersick Castle is near Praa Sands

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      Gallery

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      References

      The gardens of Pengersick Farm
      1. ^ Place-names in the Standard Written Form (SWF) : List of place-names agreed by the MAGA Signage Panel. Cornish Language Partnership.
      2. ^ Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 203 Land's End ISBN 978-0-319-23148-7
      3. ^ a b c d [1] GENUKI website: Germoe. Retrieved May 2010
      4. ^ [2] Cornwall Council mapping. Retrieved May 2010
      5. ^ Pevsner, N. (1970) Cornwall, 2nd ed. Penguin Books; pp. 72, 134
      6. ^ Pengersick Castle
      7. ^ BBC Cornwall: A night at Pengersick
      8. ^ Legend of Pengersick Castle
      9. ^ a b Double Exposure: Pengersick Castle
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      Last modified on 1 April 2013, at 22:32