Stained Glass in Wales | Gwydr Lliw yng Nghymru

Christ Preaching under Solomon's Porch

  Christ Preaching under Solomon's Porch

Photo © Martin Crampin, Imaging the Bible in Wales

larger image

probably 1900s

Four-light window with Christ teaching amid a crowd in the lower half of the two central lights. Angels and symbols in the outer lights and vines in the tracery.


firm/studio: H. J. Salisbury

Trinity Methodist Church, Penarth, Vale of Glamorgan
south wall of the south transept

Signed by the firm.

Text: 'I give unto them eternal life' (John 10:28).

The window was given in memory of John Angel Gibbs. However, according to the dedication in the window, this was not John Angel Gibbs who was killed at Passchendaele in 1917, as stated in John and Sheila Gibbs' history of the church, but of a forebear who died in 1884.



 
Record added by Martin Crampin. Last updated on 17-09-2020

 

For other views of this work click on the image(s) below:

Christ Preaching under Solomon's PorchAngel: Christ Preaching under Solomon's PorchChrist Preaching under Solomon's PorchChrist Preaching under Solomon's Porch

This work is indexed under the following main subject(s):
for other works containing these subjects please click on the links.

Show more subjects

Click here for other works at this site
Click here for other works connected to H. J. Salisbury

References

Martin Crampin, Stained Glass from Welsh Churches (Talybont: Y Lolfa, 2014), p. 211.

John Gibbs and Sheila Gibbs, Trinity Methodist Church, Penarth: A Portrait (Peterborough: Methodist Publishing House, 1994), p. 57.


 

Click to show suggested citation for this record
Martin Crampin (ed.), Stained Glass in Wales Catalogue, University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies, Aberystwyth, 2020.
https://stainedglass.delweddau.cymru/object/2235 (accessed 17 November 2024)



View this object on the Imaging the Bible in Wales database

 

  Christ Preaching under Solomon's Porch

Photo © Martin Crampin, Imaging the Bible in Wales



 
Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies


Database and software developed by Technoleg Taliesin © 2011-2024