Zumthor’s chapel for Swiss hermit

The German-Swiss architect Peter Zumthor has created the “Field Chapel” dedicated to Brother Klaus or Nicholaus of Flue, the early modern Swiss hermit and visionary. An article from the Guardian entitled “Solitary Refinement” by Jonathan Glancey describes the chapel:

The apparently simple form of Zumthor’s building proves to be far richer than it first appears. The concrete has been poured by Herr Scheidtweiler, family and friends, over a wigwam-like timber frame. Once the concrete had set, this frame was set on fire, creating walls inside the chapel that are strangely blackened and haunted with the ghosts of the timbers that once supported them. The floor is a frozen pool of molten lead, while the roof is open to the sky and, by night, the field of stars above. Rain and sunlight tumble and fall through this oculus to create atmospheric patterns of shade and glistening weather.

Zumthor’s chapel is numinously dark inside, but when you look up, the oculus itself resembles the flare of a star – a reference, presumably, to Brother Klaus’s vision in the womb. Being here alone is close to feeling, if not understanding, the faith that sustained the Swiss hermit.

So, here is a building containing just one room, with a roof that fails to keep out the rain, made of rough concrete, burned timber and lead. It has no electricity. No running water. No plumbing. No lavatories. No wind turbine. No solar panels. No air-con. No pictures hang on its walls. It offers no obvious, or accepted, sense of comfort. And yet it is compelling and very beautiful, offering solace.

URL: http://arts.guardian.co.uk/art/architecture/story/0,,2100148,00.html

Frank Bottomley: Yorkshire hermits

Frank Bottomley is a medieval and local historian concentrating on Yorkshire, England. His monograph “Yorkshire’s Spiritual Athletes: Hermits & Other Solitaries” is a wonderful resource which he makes available free at his website. (The text appears complete in the main link, but the appendices only include one of several projected items in the table of contents.) The work extends the detail of venerable predecessors like Rotha Mary Clay’s Hermits and Anchorites of England.

URL: http://dryfish.org.uk/~medieval/
and main text directly at http://www.zurgy.org/medieval/hermits.pdf

Rauch on introversion

Thanks to a member of the Hermitary forum for pointing out a series of articles on introversion by writer Jonathan Rausch in the Atlantic Monthly. The title of the original March 2003 article is “Caring for Your Introvert: The Habits and Needs of a Little-understood Group” and drew more hits to the Atlantic website than any previous article. The article is short and addresses the basics, arguing that extroverts simply don’t understand what it is like to be an introvert. URL: http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200303/rauch

Rauch was interviewed in the February 2006 issue of the magazine, under the title “Introverts of the World, Unite!” URL: http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200602u/introverts. And in an April 2006 column titled “The Introversy Continues,” Rauch responded to reader feedback. URL: http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200604u/introversy

Planting of the Penny Hedge

The “Planting of the Penny Hedge” is an outdoor ritual in Whitby, North Yorkshire, England, held on Ascension Day. The Planting is based on a medieval legend about a hermit. A recent news item tells us:

The story goes that three men were hunting a wild boar which was believed to have sought refuge with a hermit at Eskdaleside but the three hunters attacked the hermit and killed him.

As punishment for the crime the trio were ordered to build a hedge cut with a penny knife at low tide and if they refused or the hedge failed to withstand three tides and fell down, they would be forced to forfeit their land.

The article does not elaborate on the nature or efficacy of this ritual, probably as unknown to its participants as to those who read this item. URL: http://www.whitbytoday.co.uk/news?articleid=2885245.

The story is nicely summarized on a page of the Whitby-UK Resources website: http://www.whitby-uk.com/cgi-bin/site.nav/whitby.pl?page=pennyhedge.

John Christopher Atkinson, author of an obscure 1894 book entitled “Memorials of Old Whitby: Historical Gleanings from Ancient Whitby Record,” also explains the probable origins of the ritual, adding, however, that on the face of it the ritual is “nonsensical” and a “farcical, objectless ceremony.”

Colombian hermit in Lebanon

This news item from Reuters and variously broadcast in web media is entitled “Colombian hermit finds paradise on Lebanon trail.” The article describes a Colombian monk and hermit, Dario Escobar, now residing in a cave in the Qadisha Valley in Lebanon. The article is chiefly about the fledgling effort to create the Lebanon Mountain Trail and both preserve environmental features and promote tourism and a better image of the country. URL:
http://www.reuters.com/article/environmentNews/idUSL3046042120070507?
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