Perranzabuloe
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Perranzabuloe parish church | |
Location within Cornwall | |
Population | 5,406 (Civil Parish, 2011 including Barkla Shop , Callestick and Goonhavern) |
OS grid reference | SW 770,520 |
Civil parish |
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Unitary authority | |
Ceremonial county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | TRURO |
Postcode district | TR4 |
Dialling code | 01872 |
Police | Devon and Cornwall |
Fire | Cornwall |
Ambulance | South Western |
UK Parliament | |
Perranzabuloe (/ˌpɛrənˈzæbjəloʊ/; Cornish Standard Written Form: Pyran yn Treth[2]) is a coastal civil parish and a hamlet in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. Perranzabuloe parish is bordered to the west by the Atlantic coast and St Agnes parish, to the north by Cubert parish, to the east by St Newlyn East and St Allen parishes and to the south by Kenwyn parish.[3] The hamlet (containing the parish church) is situated just over a mile (2 km) south of the principal settlement of the parish, Perranporth; the hamlet is also seven miles (11 km) south-southwest of Newquay.[4][5] Other settlements in the parish include Perrancoombe, Goonhavern, Mount and Callestick.[6] The parish population was 5,382 in the 2001 census,[7] increasing to 5,486 at the 2011 census.[8]
The name of the parish derives from the medieval Latin Perranus in Sabulo meaning Piran in the sand. It refers to Saint Piran (the patron saint of Cornwall) who founded an oratory church in the seventh century near the coast north of Perranporth. In medieval times the parish of Perranzabuloe was a peculiar of Exeter Cathedral. Perranzabuloe at that time exercised ecclesiastic control of St Agnes: the latter's church was a chapelry of Perranzabuloe. In 1846 St Agnes became a separate ecclesiastical parish.[7]