Abbot Of: Burton
Next time you hold a glass of Burton ale, remember the Abbot: the man who provided for everyone else’s thirst while staying forever, deeply, dry. Burton-on-Trent. | The Oxford Companion to Beer
Navigating a world where the line between the living and the dead was as thin as the mist over the River Trent.
There is a quiet, heavy irony in the stones of Burton Abbey. Abbot of Burton
Managing the market charters and the famous bridge that built the town.
But the history of the Abbot runs deeper than brewing. In the 12th century, Abbot Geoffrey recorded the . He told of villagers who died in dispute with the Abbey, only to rise from their graves at night, carrying their wooden coffins on their backs and banging on the doors of the living. Next time you hold a glass of Burton
It makes you wonder about the weight of leadership in such a place. To be the Abbot was to stand at the intersection of: Overseeing the relics of St. Modwenna.
To create a "deep" post for the , it is best to look beyond just the historical facts and tap into the atmosphere of medieval mysticism, the irony of monastic life, and the legendary supernatural events associated with Burton Abbey. There is a quiet, heavy irony in the stones of Burton Abbey
We remember the through an old ditty: he brewed the finest ale in the land on Fridays—the days of fasting—yet he never tasted a drop of his own craft. It’s a haunting image of a man surrounded by the "spirit" of his labor while being spiritually forbidden from consuming it.
