Paul (Cornwall)

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Coordinates: 50 ° 5 ′  N , 5 ° 32 ′  W

Paul
Paul (United Kingdom)
Paul
Paul
Location of Paul
Location in District Penwith Location in the former District of Penwith
Basic data
status Civil Parish
region South West England
Ceremony county Cornwall
Trad. county Cornwall
Administrative headquarters Paul
Residents 239 (2001)
Post Code TR19 6xx
Telephone code 01736
Sub-locations Mousehole , Kerris
Website -

Paul ( Cornish : Breweni ) is a civil parish and a place in the former District of Penwith in the county of Cornwall in England . The place itself is within the current city limits of Penzance . However, there is a separate parish council in Paul that is responsible for the affairs of the area.

history

Much of Paul's story has to do with the Church of England , the national Church of England . The church in Paul is said to have been founded by the Celtic saint Paulinus Aurelianus in the year 490 (or a little later). Paul, along with Mousehole , Newlyn and Penzance, was one of the places destroyed in a 1595 raid by the Spaniards.

A monument in the village commemorates Dolly Pentreath , the last known native speaker of Cornish. Louis Lucien Bonaparte , a linguist and nephew of Napoléon Bonaparte , had the monument erected. The Cornish writers Nicholas Boson , Thomas Boson and John Boson are all buried in Paul's churchyard. In the church itself there is an epitaph by John Boson in the Cornish language.

Web links

Commons : Paul, Cornwall  - Collection of images, videos and audio files
Paul Church