Very unusual image with foliage emerging from nose rather than usual mouth. St Kyneburgha, Castor. Thanks to Fiona Chartres. A rare coloured one from Peter Tavy, via @DevonChurchLand Very original design. Cornucopia instead of leaves, and flower face. At Old House, Hereford High Town with consent Posy HillI hesitated to include this dragon emerging from man’s mouth but then I realised it’s eating berries sprouting from another man’s ear so this is epic greenmanery . From Woodbury, Devon via @DABuildings This and above image from St Giles, Longstone, Derbyshire with consent @pacoulmagSt Barthlomew, Sproxton From St Leonard’s Eynsham with consent @liber-ray.bsky.social from underside of font probably from the abbey From Oxford University. Magdalene College, cloisterAnother from chapel porch. Seems deathlikeThis is the first I’ve seen with foliage from its ears. From Mark Purcell. Winchester college Chapel.From misericord in Mere, Wiltshire, broken on left Unusual as a pair of supporters on misericord, Winchester Cathedral. Supporters are usually smaller than main image.St Michael, Stratton-en-le-FrithSheffield Cathedral A boss from Pershore Abbey courtesy of @PosyHill1From the same source though borderline example
My first post on this subject has become so long it is hard to upload so here’s another page to allow it to continue. If you haven’t read the original, it seems to me these heads are the result of dead humans & other animals dying and left unburied. Seeds land and thrive in nutrients from the corpse.
From StMichaels church, Brent Knoll wonderful benched with consent Lois StockThis looks very modern. From Great Brington with consent from Michael Stewart on Facebook From Spaxton, Somerset. my image A very odd version from a region rich in curiosities, rural Scotland thanks to @TheHatton Misericords, Westminster Abbey. My own images St Mary’s Hendon, London via @heritagepilgrim.bsky.social From the wonderful church at Kilpeck. From porch of St Eval, Cornwall with consent @benjaminstevens.bsky.social Underside of misericord, Beverley Minster, with consent @fotofacade Another from @SimoninSuffolk, 14th Century font at Tostock, Suffolk A very curious example that barely qualifies as GreenMan. Bench end from Clay-next-the-Sea courtesy @SimoninSuffolkAnother from @SimoninSuffolk, from Thurston, 14th century From possibly 15th century, Bulmer in Essex, courtesy of @SimoninSussexThis is from Frithelstock, courtesy of @DevonChurchLandA surprising discovery this is on Malvern Council HouseThis is an oddity from the crypt of St John in the Wall, Bristol now in care of the CCT. It is a lions head holding a shield with its teeth and vegetation sprouting from its eyes. Unusual site below font bowl at St Winifred, Branscombe, Devon thanks to @RAGriggsauthorPair of Green Men flanking a white hart, symbol of Richard 11 on Ludlow misericord. Own image.From the 19th century pulpit at Fring, Norfolk from @SimoninSuffolkFrom Medfield, Suffolk. A gift from St Sanna’s Sewing Guild. “One of the old gods banished from inside the church.” Courtesy of @GeoffreyMunn1Unusual example as it seems to include berries. Do the eyes look like yew berries too? Adding to imagery of fertility? From St Peter, Wintringham, North Yorkshire in care of the CCT. With consent from @pacoulmag.From Hereford Cathedral courtesy of @PortaspeciosaThis is from St Collen, Llangollen, Denbighshire courtesy of @pacoulmagThis is the top of a letterbox in Avebury from @danherb10.bsky.socialFrom Llandaff Cathedral apologies for lack of clarity. Images my own An unusual design from is_glasgowThis spectacularly green Green Man is from Leckhampstead, St Mary, with permission from Fiona Chartres All 3 from Banwell, Somerset. Unusual as surrounding rather than sprouting from the heads. Images my own.This wonderful example is a boss in Norwich Cathedral, with permission @MatEdwards7With permission from @chartres_FionaSurprise discovery from my visit to Christchurch Oxford, benchend This is a boss at Crowland Abbey, with permission from Rob Summers on FacebookOn misericord at Tong courtesy of Mark Purcell, FacebookFoliate head on screen door, Tong as above Two fine images from Milton Damerel pulpit with consent from @DevonChurchLand From St Giles Cathedral thanks to Sean Breadin on Facebook An impressive selection from Llanbedr Ystrad. As can be seen they vary widely in their amounts of foliage. Other pieces there were more so.
Ludlow image would appear to be a chained whit hart symbol used by Richard 11 not a dog
jonathanamyas@yahoo.co.uk
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Thanks. Have updated it on your advice
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