OraLabora. we’re peculiar Anglicans here in Cornwall.

Cornwall is known as the Land of Saints as we have a proliferation of Celtic Saints who were busily traveling between Ireland, Wales, Cornwall and Brittany spreading the Gospel in the 5th and 6th centuries. The Patron Saints of Cornwall are St Petroc, St Pyran and St Michael the Archangel. As Anglicans in Cornwall we honour the Celtic Saints and use a Celtic Sanctorale in our Diocese.
The Celtic Church in Cornwall did not conform to the outcome of the Synod of Whitby of 664 but carried on with its Celtic traditions rather than adopting Roman custom. Apart from a brief period in the 9th century when the Cornish Bishop Kenstec acknowledged the authority of Ceolnoth, Archbishop of Canterbury, 833-870, it wasn’t until 930 that the English King Athelstan conquered the Cornish and brought the remnants of the Kingdom of Dumnonia under English control. The Celtic Church in Cornwall then became remodeled on Saxon/English lines. Foreshadowing the later dissolution of monasteries under Henry VIII, many celtic monastic houses were dissolved although some were reconstituted as collegiate churches as at St Michael’s Mount and St Buryan in west Cornwall. In the heyday of Cornish Celtic monasticism there were somewhere in the region of 100 monastic foundations and we still see evidence of this in Cornish place names beginning with Lan, signifying a monastic enclosure.
Anyway, as Anglicans in Cornwall we have:
reliquaries - reliquary of St Petroc, St Petroc’s Church, Bodmin
altar tombs - altar tomb of St Endelienta, St Endellion
ancient stone altars above holy wells - St Clether’s Holy Well
and crucifixes - St Petroc’s Church, Padstow. This Anglican building is shared with the local Roman Catholic congregation due to issues with the Catholic building. There is a formal church sharing agreement between the Anglican Diocese of Truro and the RC Diocese of Plymouth.