Venerable (Monastic) Unknown

Saint Just of Penwith

Also known as Justus of Cornwall

A saint of Cornwall in the early British church; few details of his life are preserved.

Feast Day
July 13
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.

Life

Saint Just of Penwith is an early saint of the old British church in Cornwall, commemorated on 13 July and honored as the patron of the parish and town of St Just in Penwith, in the far west of the county. Almost nothing of his life is preserved, and his identity is not securely known.

Several theories have been proposed for who Saint Just was, none of them established. He has been identified by some with Archbishop Justus of Canterbury, though this is regarded as unlikely given Cornwall's long resistance to the authority of Canterbury and Rome. Another suggestion connects him with the sixth- or seventh-century Saint Iestyn (whose name corresponds to the Latin Justinus), said to have been a son of Geraint ab Erbin, a ruler of Dumnonia. A third tradition, recorded when William of Worcester visited in 1478, held that the parish church contained the bones of Justus of Trieste.

Contributions & Legacy

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Parish and Dedication

The parish church of St Just in Penwith was rebuilt and dedicated on 13 July 1336 by John Grandisson, Bishop of Exeter. The present building retains a fifteenth-century nave and aisles, while the original fourteenth-century chancel survives. Eight Cornish crosses stand within the parish.

The dedication is marked each year by St Just Feast, traditionally held on 13 July. In 1536, following an Act of Henry VIII, the celebration was moved to the Sunday nearest All Saints' Day, and it now falls at the end of October or the beginning of November.

Notes

Pre-schism Western saint; OCA gives no detail. Honest stub.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints