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Chester Cathedral

Chester Cathedral is a Church of England cathedral and the mother church of the Diocese of Chester. It is located in the city of Chester, Cheshire, England. The cathedral, formerly the abbey church of a Benedictine monastery dedicated to Saint Werburgh, is dedicated to Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary. Since 1541, it has been the seat of the Bishop of Chester.

Chester Cathedral
Cathedral Church of Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary
East side of the cathedral
Chester Cathedral
Location in Chester
53°11′31″N 2°53′26″W / 53.19189°N 2.89046°W / 53.19189; -2.89046
LocationSt Werburgh Street, Chester, Cheshire
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
Previous denominationRoman Catholic
Websitechestercathedral.com
History
DedicationChrist and the Blessed Virgin Mary
Architecture
Architect(s)Richard Lenginour (1272–1314);[1] Nicholas de Derneford (?)(1316–31);[1]
William Rediche(?) (1461–90s);[1] Seth and George Derwall (1495–1530s);[1]
Thomas Harrison,
George Gilbert Scott
StyleRomanesque, Gothic
Specifications
Length355 feet (108 m)[2]
Nave width75 feet (23 m)
Nave height78 feet (24 m)
Tower height127 feet (39 m)
Administration
ProvinceYork
DioceseChester
Clergy
Bishop(s)Mark Tanner
DeanTim Stratford
Canon(s)Rosie Woodall (Vice Dean and Canon for Spirituality and Worship)
Richard Walker (Canon Diocesan)
Laity
Director of musicPhilip Rushforth
Alex Lanigan-Palotai
The choir stalls inside the cathedral
The garden

The cathedral is a Grade I listed building, and part of a heritage site that also includes the former monastic buildings to the north, which are also listed Grade I. The cathedral's construction dates from between the 10th century[3] and the early 16th century, having been modified a number of times throughout history, a typical characteristic of English cathedrals; however, the site itself may have been used for Christian worship since Roman times. All the major styles of English medieval architecture, from Norman to Perpendicular, are represented in the present building.[1][4]

The cathedral and former monastic buildings were extensively restored during the 19th century (amidst some controversy), and a free standing bell tower was added in the 20th century. In addition to holding services for Christian worship, the buildings are a major tourist attraction in Chester and the cathedral is used as a venue for concerts and exhibitions.

History edit

The city of Chester was an important Roman stronghold. There may have been a Christian basilica on the site of the present cathedral in the late Roman era,[5] while Chester was controlled by Legio XX Valeria Victrix.[6] Legend holds that the basilica was dedicated to Saint Paul and Saint Peter.[7] This is supported by evidence that in Saxon times the dedication of an early chapel on this site was changed from Saint Peter to Saint Werburgh.[8] In 958 King Edgar granted land to the Minster of St Werburgh in Chester.[9]

During the Early Middle Ages Barloc of Norbury, a Catholic Celtic saint and hermit,[10] was venerated at Chester Cathedral with a feast day on 10 September. He is known to history mainly through the hagiography of the Secgan Manuscript;[11] he also occurs in a litany in MS Tanner 169* of the Bodleian Library, Oxford.[12]

In 907 Chester was refortified against the threat from the Vikings, and shortly afterwards the minster was founded or refounded, and Werburgh's remains were transferred there from Hanbury, probably by Æthelflæd, Lady of the Mercians.[13] The collegiate church, as it was then, was restored in 1057 by Leofric, Earl of Mercia, and Lady Godiva. This church was razed to the ground around 1090, with the secular canons evicted, and no known trace of it remains.[14]

In 1093 a Benedictine abbey was established on the site by Hugh Lupus, Earl of Chester, with the assistance of St Anselm and other monks from Bec in Normandy. The earliest surviving parts of the structure date from that time.[15] The abbey church was not at that time the cathedral of Chester; from 1075 to 1082 the cathedral of the diocese was the nearby church of St John the Baptist, after which the see was transferred to Coventry.[16] In 1538, during the dissolution of the monasteries, the monastery was disbanded and the shrine of Saint Werburgh was desecrated.[17] In 1541 St Werburgh's abbey became a cathedral of the Church of England, by order of Henry VIII. At the same time, the dedication was changed to Christ and the Blessed Virgin. The last abbot of St Werburgh's Abbey, Thomas Clarke, became the first dean of the new cathedral, at the head of a secular chapter.[18]

Although little trace of the 10th-century church has been discovered, save possibly some Saxon masonry found during a 1997 excavation of the nave,[19] there is much evidence of the monastery of 1093. This work in the Norman style may be seen in the northwest tower, the north transept and in remaining parts of the monastic buildings.[17] The abbey church, beginning with the Lady Chapel at the eastern end, was extensively rebuilt in Gothic style during the 13th and 14th centuries. At the time of the dissolution of the monasteries, the cloister, the central tower, a new south transept, the large west window and a new entrance porch to the south had just been built in the Perpendicular style, and the southwest tower of the façade had been begun.[1] The west front was given a Tudor entrance, but the tower was never completed.[4]

In 1636 the space beneath the south west tower became a bishop's consistory court. It was furnished as such at that time, and is now a unique survival in England, hearing its last case, that of an attempted suicide of a priest, in the 1930s.[17][20] Until 1881, the south transept, which is unusually large, also took on a separate function as an independent ecclesiastical entity: the parish church of St Oswald.[21] Although the 17th century saw additions to the furnishings and fittings, there was no further building work for several centuries. By the 19th century, the building was badly in need of restoration. The present homogeneous appearance that the cathedral presents from many exterior angles is largely the work of Victorian restorers, particularly George Gilbert Scott.[22]

The 20th century has seen continued maintenance and restoration. In 1922, the Chester War Memorial was installed in the cathedral grounds and dedicated to the fallen soldiers of the First World War and later the Second World War.[23] In 1973–75 a detached belfry, the Addleshaw Tower, designed by George Pace, was erected in the grounds of the cathedral.[4] In 2005 a new Song School was added to the cathedral.[24] During the 2000s, the cathedral library was refurbished and relocated. It was officially reopened in September 2007.[25] The cathedral and the former monastic buildings were designated as Grade I listed buildings on 28 July 1955.[4][26]

In October 2021, the abbey's gateway was one of 142 sites across England to receive part of a £35-million injection into the government's Culture Recovery Fund.[27]

Architecture edit

Cathedral edit

Plan edit

Chester Cathedral has an east–west axis, common to many cathedrals, with the chancel at the eastern end, and the façade to the west. The plan is cruciform, with a central tower (as is usual in English monastic churches), but is asymmetrical, having a small transept on the north side remaining from an earlier building, and an unusually large south transept. As the plan shows, the asymmetry extends to the west front, where the north tower remains from the Norman building, and the south tower is of the early 16th century. At the eastern end, the symmetrical arrangement of the aisles was lost when the end of the south aisle was demolished and rebuilt in an apsidal shape. The nave, choir and south transept have wide aisles on either side, and are lit by clerestory windows and large multi-light windows in each of the three cliff-like ends. To the north of the cathedral are monastic buildings, including the cloister, refectory and a rectangular chapter house. The façade of the building is abutted on the north by later buildings.[4][28]

 

1. West door
2. South tower & Consistory court
3. North tower
4. Nave
5. Crossing
6. Quire
7. Lady Chapel
8. South porch
9. South aisle
10. South transept
11. South door
12. South quire aisle/St. Erasmus chapel
13. North aisle
14. North transept
15. North quire aisle

16. St. Werburgh's Chapel
17. Vestry
18. Vestibule
19. Chapter house
20. Slype
21. Monk's Parlour with Song School above it.
22. Refectory
23. Shop
24. Undercroft
25. Abbot's Passage
26. Cloister
27. Cloister garth
28. Reception
29. Memorial garden

a. Font
b. RAF Memorial chapel
c. Monument to 1st Duke of Westminster
d. Cheshire Regiment Memorial
e. St Mary Magdalen Chapel (Children's Chapel)
f. St. Oswald's Chapel
g. St. George's Chapel (Cheshire Regiment)
h. St. Nicholas' Chapel
i. Choir Stalls
j. Bishop's Throne
k. High Altar
l. St. Werburgh's Shrine
m. East Window

n. organ
o. John Pearson's Tomb
p. Cobweb painting
q. Night Stairs
r. Day Stairs
s. Wall Pulpit
t. Lavatorium
u. Norman entrance to refectory
v. Carells
w. Scriptorium
x. Fountain and Sculpture
y. Education centre
z. WCs

External appearance edit

Like the cathedrals of Carlisle, Lichfield and Worcester, Chester Cathedral is built of New Red Sandstone, in this case Keuper Sandstone from the Cheshire Basin. The stone lends itself to detailed carving, but is also friable, easily eroded by rain and wind, and is badly affected by pollution. With the other red sandstone buildings, Chester is one of the most heavily restored of England's cathedrals. The restoration, which included much refacing and many new details, took place mainly in the 19th century.[29]

 
The sandstone exterior (from the south west) has much decorative architectural detail but is heavily restored.
 
The west front with recessed Perpendicular window and portal

Because the south transept is similar in dimension to the nave and choir, views of the building from the south-east and south-west give the impression of a building balanced around a central axis, with its tower as the hub. The tower is of the late 15th century Perpendicular style, but its four large battlemented turrets are the work of the restoration architect George Gilbert Scott.[4] With its rhythmic arrangement of large, traceried windows, pinnacles, battlements and buttresses, the exterior of Chester Cathedral from the south presents a fairly homogeneous character, which is an unusual feature as England's cathedrals are in general noted for their stylistic diversity.[30] Close examination reveals window tracery of several building stages from the 13th to the early 16th century. The richness of the 13th-century tracery is accentuated by the presence of ornate, crocketted drip-mouldings around the windows; those around the perpendicular windows are of simpler form.

The façade of the cathedral is dominated by a large deeply recessed eight-light window in the Perpendicular style,[15] above a recessed doorway set in a screen-like porch designed, probably by Seth and George Derwall, in the early 1500s.[1][15] This porch formed part of the same late 15th-century building programme as the south transept, central and southwest towers, and cloister.[1] Neither of the west towers was completed.[31] To the north is the lower stage of a Norman tower, while to the south is the lower stage of a tower designed and begun, probably by Seth and George Derwall, in 1508,[1] but left incomplete following the dissolution of the monastery in 1538. The cathedral's façade is abutted on the north by a Victorian building housing the education centre and largely obscured from view by the building previously used as the King's School, which is now a branch of Barclays Bank.[32] The door of the west front is not used as the normal entrance to the cathedral, which is through the southwest porch which is in an ornate Tudor style.

Interior edit

 
Norman architecture in the north transept
 
The font stands under the Norman north-west tower

The interior of Chester Cathedral gives a warm and mellow appearance because of the pinkish colour of the sandstone. The proportions appear spacious because the view from the west end of the nave to the east end is unimpeded by a pulpitum and the nave, although not long, is both wide and high compared with many of England's cathedrals. The piers of the nave and choir are widely spaced, those of the nave carrying only the clerestory of large windows with no triforium gallery. The proportions are made possible partly because the ornate stellar vault, like that at York Minster, is of wood, not stone.[17][28]

Norman remnants edit

The present building, dating from around 1283 to 1537, mostly replaced the earlier monastic church founded in 1093 which was built in the Norman style. It is believed that the newer church was built around the older one.[24] That the few remaining parts of the Norman church are of small proportions, while the height and width of the Gothic church are generous would seem to confirm this belief. Aspects of the design of the Norman interior are still visible in the north transept, which retains wall arcading and a broadly moulded arch leading to the sacristy, which was formerly a chapel.[4] The transept has retained an early 16th-century coffered ceiling with decorated bosses, two of which are carved with the arms of Henry VIII and Cardinal Wolsey.[21]

The north west tower is also of Norman construction. It serves as the baptistry and houses a black marble font, consisting of a bowl on a large baluster dating from 1697.[4] The lower part of the north wall of the nave is also from the Norman building, but can only be viewed from the cloister because the interior has been decorated with mosaic.[24]

 
The Lady Chapel, Early English Gothic, (1265–90)
 
The Choir, Decorated Gothic, (1283–1315)

Early English edit

The Early English Gothic chapter house, built between 1230 and 1265, is rectangular and opens off a "charming" vestibule leading from the north transept.[28] The chapter house has grouped windows of simple untraceried form. Alec Clifton-Taylor describes the exterior of this building as a "modest but rather elegant example of composition in lancets"[28] while Nikolaus Pevsner says of the interior "It is a wonderfully noble room" which is the "aesthetic climax of the cathedral". To the north of the chapter house is the slype, also Early English in style, and the warming room, which contains two large former fireplaces.[33] The monastic refectory to the north of the cloister is of about the same date as the chapter house.[1]

The Lady Chapel to the eastern end of the choir dates from between 1265 and 1290.[1] It is of three bays, and contains the Shrine of St Werburgh, dating from the 14th century. The vault of the Lady Chapel is the only one in the cathedral that is of stone.[28] It is decorated with carved roof bosses representing the Trinity, the Madonna and Child, and the murder of Thomas Becket. The chapel also has a sedilia and a piscina.[4]

Decorated Gothic edit

 
The building of the nave, begun in 1323, was halted by plague and completed 150 years later.

The choir, of five bays, was built between 1283 and 1315 to the design of Richard Lenginour,[1] and is an early example of Decorated Gothic architecture. The piers have strongly modelled attached shafts, supporting deeply moulded arches. There is a triforium gallery with four cusped arches to each bay. The sexpartite vault, which is a 19th-century restoration, is supported by clusters of three shafts which spring from energetic figurative corbels. The overall effect is robust, and contrasts with the delicacy of the pinnacled choir stalls, the tracery of the windows and the rich decoration of the vault which was carried out by the ecclesiastical designers, Clayton and Bell.[34] The choir stalls, dating from about 1380, are one of the glories of the cathedral.[28]

The aisles of the choir previously both extended on either side of the Lady Chapel. The south aisle was shortened in about 1870 by George Gilbert Scott, and given an apsidal east end, becoming the chapel of St Erasmus. The eastern end of the north aisle contains the chapel of St Werburgh.[4]

The nave of six bays, and the large, aisled south transept were begun in about 1323, probably to the design of Nicholas de Derneford.[1] There are a number of windows containing fine Flowing Decorated tracery of this period. The work ceased in 1375, in which year there was a severe outbreak of plague in England. The building of the nave was recommenced in 1485, more than 150 years after it was begun. The architect was probably William Rediche.[1] Remarkably, for an English medieval architect, he maintained the original form, changing only the details. The nave was roofed with a stellar vault rather like that of the Lady Chapel at Ely and the choir at York Minster, both of which date from the 1370s. Like that at York, the vault is of wood, imitating stone.[28]

Perpendicular Gothic edit

From about 1493 until 1525 the architect appears to have been Seth Derwall, succeeded by George Derwall until 1537.[1] Seth Derwall completed the south transept to a Perpendicular Gothic design, as seen in the transomed windows of the clerestory. He also built the central tower, southwest porch and cloisters. Work commenced on the south west tower in 1508, but it had not risen above the roofline at the time of the dissolution of the monasteries, and has never been completed. The central tower, rising to 127 feet (39 m),[1] is a "lantern tower" with large windows letting light into the crossing. Its external appearance has been altered by the addition of four battlemented turrets by George Gilbert Scott in the 19th century.[4]

 
The Cloister Garth and Refectory

Former monastic buildings edit

The Perpendicular Gothic cloister is entered from the cathedral through a Norman doorway in the north aisle. The cloister is part of the building programme that commenced in the 1490s and is probably the work of Seth Derwall.[1] The south wall of the cloister, dating from the later part of the Norman period, forms the north wall of the nave of the cathedral, and includes blind arcading.[35] Among the earliest remaining structures on the site is an undercroft off the west range of the cloisters, which dates from the early 12th century, and which was originally used by the monks for storing food.[36] It consists of two naves with groin vaults and short round piers with round scalloped capitals.[4]

Leading from the south of the undercroft is the abbot's passage which dates from around 1150 and consists of two bays with rib-vaulting.[37] Above the abbot's passage, approached by a stairway from the west cloister, is St Anselm's Chapel which also dates from the 12th century. It is in three bays and has a 19th century Gothic-style plaster vault. The chancel is in one bay and was remodelled in the early 17th century. The screen, altar rails, holy table and plaster ceiling of the chancel date from the 17th century.[36][37] The north range of the cloister gives access to a refectory, built by Simon de Whitchurch in the 13th century. It contains an Early English pulpit, approached by a staircase with an ascending arcade. The only other similar pulpit in England is in Beaulieu Abbey.[36]

Restoration edit

 
The wooden quadripartite vault of the choir was rebuilt by George Gilbert Scott
 
Much of the exterior stonework has been refaced in the 19th and 20th centuries.

By the 19th century the fabric of the building had become badly weathered, with Charles Hiatt writing that "the surface rot of the very perishable red sandstone, of which the cathedral was built, was positively unsightly" and that the "whole place previous to restoration struck one as woebegone and neglected; it perpetually seemed to hover on the verge of collapse, and yet was without a trace of the romance of the average ruin".[31] Between 1818 and 1820 the architect Thomas Harrison restored the south transept, adding corner turrets.[32] This part of the building served until 1881 as the parish church of St Oswald, and it was ecclesiastically separate.[21] From 1844 R. C. Hussey carried out a limited restoration including work on the south side of the nave.[4]

The most extensive restoration was carried out by the Gothic Revival architect, George Gilbert Scott, who between 1868 and 1876 "almost entirely re-cased" the cathedral.[15][17] The current building is acknowledged to be mainly the product of this Victorian restoration commissioned by the Dean, John Saul Howson.[38] In addition to extensive additions and alterations to the body of the church, Scott remodelled the tower, adding turrets and crenellations.[4] Scott chose sandstone from the quarries at Runcorn for his restoration work.[39] In addition to the restoration of the fabric of the building, Scott designed internal fittings such as the choir screen to replace those destroyed during the Civil War; the roof had also been melted down to make musket balls.[20] He built the fan vault of the south porch, renewed the wooden vault of the choir and added a great many decorative features to the interior.

Scott's restorations were not without their critics and caused much debate in architectural circles. Scott claimed to have archaeological evidence for his work, but the Liverpool architect, Samuel Huggins argued in an 1868 address to the Liverpool Architectural Society, that the alterations were less like restoration and more like rebuilding. One of the larger changes was to shorten the south aisle and restyle it as an apse. The changes also proposed the addition of a spire above the existing tower, but this proposal was later rejected.[38] Samuel's further paper of 1871 entitled On so-called restorations of our cathedral and abbey churches compelled the Dean to attempt to answer the criticism. The debate contributed to the establishment of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.[40]

Later in the century, from 1882, Arthur Blomfield and his son Charles made further additions and modifications, including restoring and reinstating the Shrine of St Werburgh. More work was carried out in the 20th century by Giles Gilbert Scott between 1891 and 1913, and by F. H. Crossley in 1939.[4]

 
The Addleshaw Tower, (1975), houses the bells
 
The Cheshire Regiment Memorial Garden

Bell tower edit

Towards the end of 1963 the cathedral bells, which were housed in the central tower, were in need of an overhaul and ringing was suspended. In 1965 the Dean asked George Pace, architect to York Minster, to prepare specifications for a new bell frame and for electrification of the clock and tolling mechanism. Due to structural difficulties and the cost of replacing the bells in the central tower it was advised that consideration should be given to building a detached bell and clock tower in the southeast corner of the churchyard. It was decided to proceed with that plan, and in 1969 an announcement was made that the first detached cathedral bell tower was to be erected since the building of the campanile at Chichester Cathedral in the 15th century. In February 1969, nine of the ten bells in the central tower were removed to be recast by John Taylor & Co as a ring of twelve bells with a flat sixth.[41] The new bells were cast in 1973.[42] Work on the new bell-tower began in February 1973. Two old bells dating from 1606 and 1626 were left in the tower. On 26 February 1975 the bells were rung for the first time to celebrate the wedding of a member of the Grosvenor family. The official opening on 25 June 1975 was performed by the Duke of Gloucester. The belfry is known as the Dean Addleshaw Tower, after the dean of the cathedral responsible for its construction.[41] The tower is built in concrete, faced with sandstone at its base. It is the first detached bell tower to be built for a cathedral in this country since the Reformation.[43] Between the bell tower and the south transept is a garden in remembrance of the Cheshire Regiment (originally the 22nd Regiment of Foot).[19]

Fittings and glass edit

 
The Consistory Court of 1632
 
Choir Stalls (about 1380) and Rood Screen (late 19th century)

The treasures of Chester Cathedral are its rare fittings, specifically its choir stalls and the 17th-century furnishing of the bishop's Consistory Court in the south tower, which is a unique survival.[17]

Choir stalls edit

The choir stalls date from about 1380. They have high, spiky, closely set canopies, with crocketed arches and spirelets. The stall ends have poppyheads and are rich with figurative carving.[44] The stalls include 48 misericords, all but five of which are original,[21] depicting a variety of subjects, some humorous and some grotesque. Pevsner states that they are "one of the finest sets in the country",[44] while Alec Clifton-Taylor calls them "exquisite" and says of the misericords that "for delicacy and grace they surpass even those at Lincoln and Beverley".[28]

 
The organ of Chester Cathedral

Organ edit

In 1844, an organ by Gray & Davison of London was installed in the cathedral, replacing an instrument with parts dating back to 1626. The organ was rebuilt and enlarged by Whiteley Bros of Chester in 1876, to include harmonic flutes and reeds by Cavaillé-Coll. It was later moved to its present position at the front of the north transept. In 1910 William Hill and Son of London extensively rebuilt and revoiced the organ, replacing the Cavaillé-Coll reeds with new pipes of their own. The choir division of the organ was enlarged and moved behind the choirstalls on the south side. The instrument was again overhauled by Rushworth and Dreaper of Liverpool in 1969, when a new mechanism and some new pipework made to a design by the organist, Roger Fisher, was installed. Since 1991 the organ has been in the care of David Wells of Liverpool.[45]

Stained glass edit

See Gallery below

Chester suffered badly at the hands of the Parliamentary troops.[28] As a consequence, its stained glass dates mainly from the 19th and 20th centuries and has representative examples the significant trends in stained glass design from the 1850s onwards. Of the earlier Victorian firms, William Wailes is the best represented, in the south aisle (1862), as well as Hardman & Co. and Michael O'Connor. Glass from the High Victorian period is well represented by two leading London firms, Clayton and Bell and Heaton, Butler and Bayne. The Aesthetic style is represented by Charles Eamer Kempe. Early 20th century windows include several commemorating those who died in World War I.

There are also several notable modern windows, the most recent being the refectory window of 2001 by Ros Grimshaw which depicts the Creation.[46] The eight-light Perpendicular window of the west end contains mid-20th century glass representing the Holy Family and Saints, by W. T. Carter Shapland. Three modern windows in the south aisle, designed and made by Alan Younger to replace windows damaged in the Second World War. They were donated by the 6th Duke of Westminster to celebrate the 900th anniversary of the cathedral and contain the dates 1092 and 1992 to reflect the theme of "continuity and change".[47]

Features edit

 
The font at the end of the north aisle
 
The nave lectern and tiled floor

Nave edit

The west end of the nave is dominated by an eight-light window in the Perpendicular Gothic style which almost fills the upper part of the west wall. It contains stained glass designed by W. T. Carter Shapland dating from 1961 and depicts the Holy Family in the middle two lights, flanked by the northern saints Werburgh, Oswald, Aidan, Chad and Wilfrid, and Queen Ethelfleda.[48]

The stone nave pulpit was designed by the restorer R. C. Hussey and the lectern, dated 1876, is by Skidmore.[49] The mosaic floor of the tower bay was designed by John Howson (Dean, 1867–1885) and executed by Burke and Co. The same firm installed the mosaics which decorate the wall of the north aisle, depicting the patriarchs and prophets Abraham, Moses, David and Elijah.[4] They were designed by J. R. Clayton of Clayton and Bell, and date from 1883 to 86.[49]

Monuments in the nave include those to Roger Barnston, dated 1838, by John Blayney, to Nicholas Stratford (Bishop, 1689–1707), dated 1708, to George Hall (Bishop, 1662–1668 (d.)), to Edmund Entwistle, dated 1712, to John and Thomas Wainwright who died respectively in 1686 and 1720, to Robert Bickerstaff who died in 1841 by Blayney, to William Smith (Dean, 1758–1787 (d.)) by Thomas Banks, and to William Mainwaring, dated 1671.[49]

 
A beer-swilling man with the rear end of a pig
 
A misericord showing Alexander the Great being carried Heavenwards by griffons

Quire edit

The most famous feature of the quire is the set of choir stalls, dating from about 1380, and described above. The lectern, in the form of a wooden eagle, symbol of John the Evangelist, dates from the first half of the 17th century.[50] The candlesticks also date from the 17th century and are by Censore of Bologna who died in 1662.[44]

With these exceptions, most of the decoration and the fittings of the quire date from the 19th century and are in keeping with the Gothic Revival promoted by the Oxford Movement and Augustus Welby Pugin. The restored vault of the quire is typical of the period, having been designed by Scott and decorated and gilded by Clayton and Bell.[34]

The quire is entered through a screen designed by George Gilbert Scott, with gates made by Skidmore. The rood was designed by Scott, and was made by F. Stuflesser.[4] The bishop's throne or "cathedra" was designed by Scott to complement the choir stalls. It was constructed by Farmer and Brindley in 1876. The reredos and the floor mosaic date from 1876, and were designed by J. R. Clayton. The east window has tracery of an elegant Decorated Gothic design which is filled with stained glass of 1884 by Heaton, Butler and Bayne.[44]

 
The Chancel – the High Altar has a reredos by J.R. Clayton of Clayton and Bell, and a seasonal altar frontal in the Art Nouveau style.
 
Sedilia and one of a pair of candlesticks in the quire

Lady Chapel edit

The 13th-century Lady Chapel contains the stone shrine of Saint Werburgh which dates from the 14th century and which used to contain her relics. The shrine, of similar red sandstone as the cathedral, has a base pierced with deep niches. The upper part takes the form of a miniature chapel containing statuettes. During the Dissolution of the Monasteries it was dismantled. Some of the parts were found during the 1873 restoration of the cathedral and the shrine was reassembled in 1888 by Blomfield. A carving of St Werburgh by Joseph Pyrz was added in 1993.[51] Also in the chapel are a sedilia and a piscina. The stained glass of 1859, is by William Wailes. The chapel contains a monument to Archdeacon Francis Wrangham, made by Hardman & Co. and dating from 1846.[52] In 1555, George Marsh, Martyr stood trial here accused of heresy.[53]

North quire aisle edit

The north quire aisle has a stone screen by R. C. Hussey and an iron gate dated 1558 that came from Guadalajara. At the east end of the aisle is the chapel of St Werburgh which has a vault of two bays,[54] and an east window depicting the Nativity by Michael O'Connor, dated 1857. Other stained glass windows in the north aisle are by William Wailes, by Heaton, Butler and Bayne, and by Clayton and Bell. The chapel contains a piscina dating from the 14th century,[4] and monuments to John Graham (Bishop, 1848–1865) dated 1867, and to William Bispham who died in 1685,[52] Other monuments in the north aisle include a tablet to William Jacobson (Bishop, 1865–1884), dated 1887, by Boehm to a design by Blomfield.[44]

 
The Nativity Window in the Chapel of St Werburgh, by Michael O'Connor (1853)
 
The chancel window by Heaton, Butler and Bayne (1884)

North transept, sacristy and chapter house edit

The small Norman transept has clerestory windows containing stained glass by William Wailes, installed in 1853.[55] The sacristy, of 1200, has an east window depicting St Anselm, and designed by A. K. Nicholson. In the north transept is a freestanding tomb chest monument to John Pearson who died in 1686, designed by Arthur Blomfield and carved by Nicholas Earp, with a recumbent effigy by Matthew Noble. Other monuments in the transept include one to Samuel Peploe, dating from about 1784, by Joseph Nollekens. The wall monuments include cenotaphs to members of the Cheshire (Earl of Chester's) Yeomanry killed in the Boer War and in the First and Second World Wars.[4] At the corner of the transept with the north aisle is a 17th-century Tree of Jesse carved in whale ivory. A niche contains a rare example of a "cobweb picture", painted on the web of a caterpillar. Originating in the Austrian Tyrol, it depicts Mary and the Christ-Child, and is based on a painting by Lucas Cranach the Elder.[56]

The chapter house has stained glass in its east window by Heaton, Butler and Bayne and grisaille windows in the north and south walls, dated 1882–83, by Blomfield.[57] It contains an oak cope cupboard from the late 13th century.[58] The front of the chapter house was rebuilt to a design by Hussey.[33]

South choir aisle edit

The south aisle was shortened in about 1870 by Scott, and given an apsidal east end, becoming the chapel of St Erasmus.[4] The stained glass in the apse window is dated 1872 and is by Clayton and Bell. Below this is a mosaic designed by J. R. Clayton and made by Salviati, and a fresco painting by Clayton and Bell, dated 1874. Elsewhere the stained glass in the aisle is by Wailes, and by Hardman & Co. to a design by Pugin.[55] The aisle contains the tomb of Ranulf Higdon,[36] a monk at St Werburgh's Abbey in the 12th century who wrote a major work of history entitled Polychronicon,[59] a monument to Thomas Brassey (a civil engineering contractor who died in 1870), designed by Blomfield and made by Wagmuller, a monument to Samuel Peploe (Bishop, 1726–1752) who died in 1752, and three painted monuments by a member of the Randle Holme family.[55]

 
The south transept has window tracery in the Flowing Decorated style
 
Altar in the south transept with a reredos depicting scenes of Mary of Bethany

South transept edit

The south transept, formerly the parish church of St Oswald contains a piscina and sedilia in the south wall.[21] On the east wall are four chapels, each with a reredos, two of which were designed by Giles Gilbert Scott, one by Kempe and the other by his successor, W. E. Tower.[4] The south window is dated 1887 and was made by Heaton, Butler and Bayne to a design by R. C. Hussey.[32] Other stained glass in the transept is by Clayton and Bell, by C. E. Kempe and by Powell.

The monuments include those to George Ogden who died in 1781, by Hayward, to Anne Matthews who died in 1793, by Thomas Banks, to John Philips Buchanan who died at Waterloo in 1815, to the first Duke of Westminster, designed by C. J. Blomfield,[49] and two memorial plaques to members of the Egerton family. On the wall of the southwest crossing pier are monuments which include a cenotaph to the casualties in HMS Chester in the Battle of Jutland in 1916 who included the 16-year-old John Cornwell VC. The west wall of the south transept has many memorials, including cenotaphs to the Cheshire Regiment, the Royal Air Force and the Free Czech Forces.[4]

 
The Cloisters
 
The Water of Life by Stephen Broadbent

Cloisters and refectory edit

The cloisters were restored in the 20th century, and the stained glass windows contain the images of some 130 saints.[36] The cloister garth contains a modern sculpture entitled The water of life by Stephen Broadbent.[60] The refectory roof is dated 1939 and was designed by F. H. Crossley.[61] The east window with reticulated tracery was designed by Giles Gilbert Scott and is dated 1913.[62] The stained glass in the west window, depicting the Creation, was designed by Ros Grimshaw and installed in 2001 to celebrate the Millennium.[63] On the refectory's west wall there is a tapestry depicting Elymas being struck with blindness[36] which was woven at the Mortlake Tapestry Works in the 17th century from one of the Raphael Cartoons. The heraldic paintings on the north wall represent the arms of the Earls of Chester.[63]

Library edit

A library has been present since the time of St Werburgh's Abbey, and following the dissolution of the monasteries it became the cathedral library.[64] It continued to grow over the centuries, but by the 19th century it had become neglected.[65] Between 1867 and 1885 it was enlarged and in the 1890s new bookcases were added.[66] A further reorganisation took place in the 1920s but by the 1980s the contents were contained in five separate sites around the cathedral.[67] A programme of repair and re-cataloguing of the contents was instituted. During the 2000s more work was carried out and the refurbished library, housed in three rooms, opened in 2007.[68] The library is available for research and for organised visits by groups.[25]

Ministry edit

 
A defaced misericord showing the Virgin and Child framed by pelicans, symbols of Christ's love for the Church.
 
Carving from the Dean's Chair

Dean and chapter edit

As of 3 January 2024:[69]

  • DeanTim Stratford (since 8 September 2018)
  • Canon Missioner & Vice Dean — Jane Brooke (since 11 September 2010 installation;[70] Acting Dean, 2017–2018)
  • Canon for Worship and Spirituality – Rosie Woodall (since 20 May 2023 licensing)

Services edit

The cathedral is a place of Christian worship, with two services held daily, and four or five each Sunday. There is Holy Communion each day, and Choral Evensong each day except Wednesday. There is a sung service of cathedral Eucharist every Sunday.[71]

Music edit

The Organist and Master of the Choristers is Philip Rushforth, Head of Music Outreach and Assistant Organist, Dan Mathieson and Sub-Organist, Alexander Palotai. There are lunchtime organ recitals weekly on Thursday at 1:10pm, immediately following Holy Communion.[72] The monthly program of music is available on the cathedral's website.[73]

The hymn-writer William Cooke (1821–1894) was a canon of Chester.[74]

Organists edit

The earliest recorded appointment of an organist is of John Brycheley in 1541.[75] Notable organists include the composers Robert White and John Sanders, conductor George Guest and the recording artist Roger Fisher.[75][76]

Choirs edit

The choral tradition at Chester is 900 years old, dating from the foundation of the Benedictine monastery. In 1741 Handel heard the first recital of his Messiah at Chester.[20] There are usually eight choral services in the cathedral each week. Chester has a cathedral choir of male lay clerks, choral scholars, boy and girl choristers and a Nave Choir which is of mixed voice. They rehearse in the Song School, built on the site of the former Monks' Dormitory. In addition to singing at services, the choir perform in concerts, tour abroad, and make recording on CDs. There is no choir school at Chester, so the choristers come from local schools.[77] The Nave Choir, which sings Compline on Sunday evenings and in other services, also takes part in concerts, and undertakes tours. Having been founded during the 1860s, it is the longest-running voluntary cathedral choir in Britain.[78]

Activities edit

Apart from services, a variety of events such as concerts, recitals, exhibitions and tours are held at the cathedral.[79] There are weekly lunchtime organ recitals each Thursday, and concerts by the Chester Cathedral Nave Choir.[80]

The cathedral and precinct are open to visits both by individuals and by groups.[81] The former Refectory of the abbey is used as a café.[63] The Refectory, the Cloister Room, the Chapter House, and the Vestibule can be hired for meetings, receptions and other purposes.[82]

Burials edit

 
Memorial plaques of the Egerton family in the south transept: a tablet to family members killed during the First World War (top) and a tablet to Vice-Admiral Wion Egerton (below), killed in the Second.

[83]

Gallery edit

Stained glass windows
 
The Lady Chapel has Lancet Gothic windows with mid-19th-century glass by William Wailes (1859) depicting the Passion, Resurrection and Ascension of Christ.
 
The south transept window, Flowing Decorated Gothic, with High Victorian glass by Heaton Butler and Bayne (1887)
 
The west window is Perpendicular Gothic with 20th-century stained glass by W. T. Carter Shapland (1961). The Holy Family with Saints Werburgh, Oswald, Aidan, Chad, Wilfrid, and Ethelfleda
 
The three Westminster windows by Alan Younger (1992) celebrate the 900th anniversary of the cathedral.

See also edit

References and notes edit

Notes

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Harvey 1961, p. 125.
  2. ^ All dimensions taken from Hiatt 1898, p. 115.
  3. ^ Chester Tourist". Chester Tourist.com. Archived from the original on 9 April 2010. Retrieved 18 March 2008
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Historic England. "Cathedral Church of Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary, Chester (1376398)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  5. ^ Richards 1947, p. 93.
  6. ^ White, Kevan W. (17 September 2007). "Deva Victrix-Castra Legionis". Roman-Britain.org. from the original on 9 May 2008. Retrieved 24 May 2008.
  7. ^ Home 1925, p. 14.
  8. ^ Richards 1947, pp. 93–94.
  9. ^ Lewis 2008, p. 104; S 667.
  10. ^ Barloc of Norbury 6 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine in The Oxford Dictionary of Saints
  11. ^ Stowe MS 944, British Library
  12. ^ Barloc 24 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine at Answers.com
  13. ^ Thacker 2014.
  14. ^ Home 1925, pp. 18–23.
  15. ^ a b c d Richards 1947, p. 94.
  16. ^ "St John the Baptist, Chester, Cheshire". The Corpus of Romanesque Sculpture in Britain and Ireland. Archived from the original on 29 July 2012. Retrieved 13 June 2010.
  17. ^ a b c d e f Tatton-Brown & Crook 2002, pp. 94–95.
  18. ^ "Chester Cathedral". University of London & History of Parliament Trust. from the original on 25 May 2011. Retrieved 28 February 2008.
  19. ^ a b "Chester Tourist". Chester Tourist.com. from the original on 9 April 2010. Retrieved 18 March 2008.
  20. ^ a b c Bowerman 1996, p. 1
  21. ^ a b c d e Richards 1947, p. 95.
  22. ^ Hartwell et al. 2011, p. 220.
  23. ^ Morris & Roberts 2012, pp. 87–90.
  24. ^ a b c . Chester Cathedral. Archived from the original on 27 June 2007. Retrieved 15 February 2008.
  25. ^ a b Nuttall 2009, p. 20.
  26. ^ Historic England. "Former monastic buildings to Cathedral Church of Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary, Chester (1376397)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 8 April 2012.
  27. ^ "Heritage and Craft Workers Across England Given a Helping Hand" – Historic England, 22 October 2021
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i Clifton-Taylor 1967, p. 266.
  29. ^ Clifton-Taylor 1967, pp. 110–113.
  30. ^ Pevsner & Hubbard 2003, pp. 136–138.
  31. ^ a b Home 1925, pp. 14–15.
  32. ^ a b c Pevsner & Hubbard 2003, p. 137.
  33. ^ a b Pevsner & Hubbard 2003, p. 146.
  34. ^ a b Pevsner & Hubbard 2003, p. 140.
  35. ^ Pevsner & Hubbard 2003, pp. 145–146.
  36. ^ a b c d e f Richards 1947, p. 96.
  37. ^ a b Pevsner & Hubbard 2003, p. 145.
  38. ^ a b "Chester Cathedral". University of London & History of Parliament Trust. from the original on 25 May 2011. Retrieved 3 June 2010.
  39. ^ Starkey 1990, p. 149
  40. ^ Nicholson, Albert; Scott, Valerie (2004), "Huggins, Samuel (1811–1885)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, retrieved 5 July 2013 ((subscription or UK public library membership required))
  41. ^ a b Lewis, C. Kenneth (1987). . Chester Diocesan Guild of Church Bell Ringers. Archived from the original on 23 August 2006. Retrieved 28 February 2008.
  42. ^ "Chester, Cath Ch of Christ & BVM". Dove's Guide for Church Bell Ringers. Central Council for Church Bell Ringers. 4 May 2007. Retrieved 17 July 2008.
  43. ^ . Chester City Council. Archived from the original on 21 July 2006. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
  44. ^ a b c d e Pevsner & Hubbard 2003, p. 142.
  45. ^ , Chester Cathedral, archived from the original on 16 January 2012, retrieved 28 February 2008
  46. ^ Cowen 2003, pp. 1–112.
  47. ^ Sheehan 2003, p. 45.
  48. ^ Sheehan 2003, p. 14.
  49. ^ a b c d Pevsner & Hubbard 2003, p. 144.
  50. ^ Richards 1947, pp. 95–96.
  51. ^ Sheehan 2003, pp. 32–35.
  52. ^ a b Pevsner & Hubbard 2003, p. 141.
  53. ^ Foxe's Book of Martyrs
  54. ^ Pevsner & Hubbard 2003, p. 139.
  55. ^ a b c Pevsner & Hubbard 2003, p. 143.
  56. ^ Sheehan 2003, p. 38.
  57. ^ Sheehan 2003, p. 41.
  58. ^ Richards 1947, pp. 96–97.
  59. ^ Burton, Edwin (1913). "Ranulf Higden". The Catholic Encyclopedia. The Encyclopedia Press. from the original on 5 June 2008. Retrieved 18 March 2008.
  60. ^ "Chester Cathedral Cloister Garth". visitchester.com. Retrieved 18 October 2009.
  61. ^ Pevsner & Hubbard 2003, p. 147.
  62. ^ Pevsner & Hubbard 2003, pp. 137–138.
  63. ^ a b c Refectory Cafe, Chester Cathedral, from the original on 12 June 2013, retrieved 5 July 2013
  64. ^ Nuttall 2009, p. 6.
  65. ^ Nuttall 2009, pp. 7–10.
  66. ^ Nuttall 2009, p. 11.
  67. ^ Nuttall 2009, pp. 11–13.
  68. ^ Nuttall 2009, pp. 14–20.
  69. ^ "Who's Who – Chester Cathedral". chestercathedral.com. Retrieved 3 January 2024.
  70. ^ Chester Cathedral — Meet the Clergy 7 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine (Accessed 6 January 2013)
  71. ^ Services, Chester Cathedral, from the original on 7 September 2013, retrieved 5 July 2013
  72. ^ Organ Recitals, Chester Cathedral, from the original on 27 June 2013, retrieved 5 July 2013
  73. ^ , Chester Cathedral, archived from the original on 10 June 2013, retrieved 5 July 2013
  74. ^ Samuel Willoughby Duffield, English Hymns: Their Authors and History (1886), p. 358
  75. ^ a b Cathedral Organists. John E West. 1899
  76. ^ The Succession of Organists. Watkins Shaw. 1991
  77. ^ Cathedral Choir, Chester Cathedral, from the original on 4 July 2013, retrieved 5 July 2013
  78. ^ Nave Choir, Chester Cathedral, from the original on 4 July 2013, retrieved 5 July 2013
  79. ^ Events, Chester Cathedral, from the original on 5 August 2013, retrieved 5 July 2013
  80. ^ . Archived from the original on 20 May 2013. Retrieved 13 August 2013.
  81. ^ Groups, Chester Cathedral, from the original on 10 June 2013, retrieved 5 July 2013
  82. ^ Organising an Event at the Cathedral, Chester Cathedral, from the original on 7 September 2013, retrieved 5 July 2013
  83. ^ Richardson, Douglas (2011). Everingham, Kimball G. (ed.). Plantagenet Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Mediecal Families. Vol. III. Salt Lake City, UT, U.S.: Douglas Richardson. p. 427. ISBN 978-1449966355. LCCN 2010902930. 5. ELLEN OF WALES. She married (1st) about 22 Aug. 1222 JOHN OF SCOTLAND, Knt., 8th Earl of Chester, 10th Earl of Huntingdon, Warden of all the Forests of the Honour of Huntingdon, 1233, 3rd but only surviving son and heir of David, 9th Earl of Huntingdon (brother of William the Lion, King of Scotland), by Maud, daughter of Hugh, 6th Earl of Chester, Vicomte of Avranches. He was born about 1207. Ellen's maritagium included the manors of Bidford, Warwickshire and Suckley, Worcestershire (which property formerly formed part of her mother, Princess Joan's maritagium), as well as the manor of Wellington, Shropshire. They had no issue. Sometime before 1215, he, his parents, and his sister, A[da], were admitted into the fraternity of Holy Trinity Priory, London "to share in all the benefits of their church." He was senior co-heir in 1232 to his uncle, Ranulph, Earl of Chester. He presented to the church of Grendon, Northamptonshire in 1232. In 1234 the barons and knights of Earl John were forbidden to hold a tournament at Yardley, Northamptonshire. He carried the sword Curtana at the Coronation of Queen Eleanor of Provence, wife of King Henry III, in 1236. He took the Cross about 8 June 1236. SIR JOHN OF SCOTLAND, Earl of Chester and Huntingdon, died at Darnal Abbey, Cheshire shortly before 6 June 1237, and was buried at St. Werburgh's, Chester.

Sources

  • Bowerman, Anthony (1996), Chester Cathedral, The Secret Past, Chester: Chester Cathedral, ISBN 0-9522434-2-3
  • Clifton-Taylor, Alec (1967), The Cathedrals of England, London: Thames and Hudson, ISBN 0-500-20062-9
  • Cowen, Painton (2003), Six Days: The Story of the making of the Chester Cathedral Creation Window, Bristol: Alastair Sawday Publishing, ISBN 1-901970-33-7
  • Hartwell, Clare; Hyde, Matthew; Hubbard, Edward; Pevsner, Nikolaus (2011) [1971], Cheshire, The Buildings of England, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0-300-17043-6
  • Harvey, John (1961) [1950], English cathedrals (Third ed.), London: Batsford, OCLC 2683041
  • Home, Beatrice (1925), Gordon Home (ed.), Cathedrals, Abbeys and Famous Churches — Chester, Manchester and Liverpool, J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd, OCLC 1681547
  • Hiatt, Charles (1911) [1898], The cathedral church of Chester; a description of the fabric and a brief history of the episcopal see, London: G. Bell, p. 115, OCLC 841718720
  • Lewis, C. P. (2008). "Edgar, Chester and the Kingdom of the Mercians, 957-9". In Scragg, Donald (ed.). Edgar King of the English: New Interpretations. Woodbridge, Suffolk: The Boydell Press. pp. 104–123. ISBN 978-1-84383-399-4.
  • Morris, Edward; Roberts, Emma (2012), Public Sculpture of Cheshire and Merseyside (excluding Liverpool), Public Sculpture of Britain, vol. 15, Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, ISBN 978-1-84631-492-6
  • Nuttall, Derek (2009), "Chester Cathedral Library", Cheshire History, vol. 49, Chester: Cheshire Local History Association, ISSN 0141-8696
  • Pevsner, Nikolaus; Hubbard, Edward (2003) [1971], Cheshire, The Buildings of England, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, ISBN 0-300-09588-0
  • Richards, Raymond (1947), Old Cheshire Churches, London: Batsford, OCLC 719918
  • Sheehan, Bernie (2003). Chester Cathedral. Jarrold Publishing. ISBN 0-7117-3090-3.
  • Starkey, H. F. (1990), Old Runcorn, Halton: Halton Borough Council
  • Tatton-Brown, Tim; Crook, John (2002), The English Cathedral, London: New Holland, ISBN 1-84330-120-2
  • Thacker, Alan (2014). "Chester". In Lapidge, Michael; Blair, John; Keynes, Simon; Scragg, Donald (eds.). The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo-Saxon England (2nd ed.). Chichester, UK: Wiley Blackwell. pp. 104–06. ISBN 978-0-631-22492-1.

External links edit

  Media related to Chester Cathedral at Wikimedia Commons

  • A tour of Chester Cathedral
  • Chester Cathedral in the Corpus of Romanesque Sculpture in Britain and Ireland
  • Details of organ[permanent dead link]
  • British History Online
  • Aerial photograph
  • Photographs from Art and Architecture
  • Plan of the cathedral
  • Medieval stained glass from CVMA
  • The Chester Virtual Stroll Cathedral pages
  • Chester Cathedral Quarter — development project 24 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine

chester, cathedral, church, england, cathedral, mother, church, diocese, chester, located, city, chester, cheshire, england, cathedral, formerly, abbey, church, benedictine, monastery, dedicated, saint, werburgh, dedicated, christ, blessed, virgin, mary, since. Chester Cathedral is a Church of England cathedral and the mother church of the Diocese of Chester It is located in the city of Chester Cheshire England The cathedral formerly the abbey church of a Benedictine monastery dedicated to Saint Werburgh is dedicated to Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary Since 1541 it has been the seat of the Bishop of Chester Chester CathedralCathedral Church of Christ and the Blessed Virgin MaryEast side of the cathedralChester CathedralLocation in Chester53 11 31 N 2 53 26 W 53 19189 N 2 89046 W 53 19189 2 89046LocationSt Werburgh Street Chester CheshireCountryEnglandDenominationChurch of EnglandPrevious denominationRoman CatholicWebsitechestercathedral comHistoryDedicationChrist and the Blessed Virgin MaryArchitectureArchitect s Richard Lenginour 1272 1314 1 Nicholas de Derneford 1316 31 1 William Rediche 1461 90s 1 Seth and George Derwall 1495 1530s 1 Thomas Harrison George Gilbert ScottStyleRomanesque GothicSpecificationsLength355 feet 108 m 2 Nave width75 feet 23 m Nave height78 feet 24 m Tower height127 feet 39 m AdministrationProvinceYorkDioceseChesterClergyBishop s Mark TannerDeanTim StratfordCanon s Rosie Woodall Vice Dean and Canon for Spirituality and Worship Richard Walker Canon Diocesan LaityDirector of musicPhilip RushforthAlex Lanigan Palotai The choir stalls inside the cathedral The garden The cathedral is a Grade I listed building and part of a heritage site that also includes the former monastic buildings to the north which are also listed Grade I The cathedral s construction dates from between the 10th century 3 and the early 16th century having been modified a number of times throughout history a typical characteristic of English cathedrals however the site itself may have been used for Christian worship since Roman times All the major styles of English medieval architecture from Norman to Perpendicular are represented in the present building 1 4 The cathedral and former monastic buildings were extensively restored during the 19th century amidst some controversy and a free standing bell tower was added in the 20th century In addition to holding services for Christian worship the buildings are a major tourist attraction in Chester and the cathedral is used as a venue for concerts and exhibitions Contents 1 History 2 Architecture 2 1 Cathedral 2 1 1 Plan 2 1 2 External appearance 2 1 3 Interior 2 1 4 Norman remnants 2 1 5 Early English 2 1 6 Decorated Gothic 2 1 7 Perpendicular Gothic 2 2 Former monastic buildings 2 3 Restoration 2 4 Bell tower 3 Fittings and glass 3 1 Choir stalls 3 2 Organ 3 3 Stained glass 4 Features 4 1 Nave 4 2 Quire 4 3 Lady Chapel 4 4 North quire aisle 4 5 North transept sacristy and chapter house 4 6 South choir aisle 4 7 South transept 4 8 Cloisters and refectory 4 9 Library 5 Ministry 5 1 Dean and chapter 5 1 1 Services 5 2 Music 5 2 1 Organists 5 2 2 Choirs 5 3 Activities 6 Burials 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 References and notes 10 External linksHistory editThe city of Chester was an important Roman stronghold There may have been a Christian basilica on the site of the present cathedral in the late Roman era 5 while Chester was controlled by Legio XX Valeria Victrix 6 Legend holds that the basilica was dedicated to Saint Paul and Saint Peter 7 This is supported by evidence that in Saxon times the dedication of an early chapel on this site was changed from Saint Peter to Saint Werburgh 8 In 958 King Edgar granted land to the Minster of St Werburgh in Chester 9 During the Early Middle Ages Barloc of Norbury a Catholic Celtic saint and hermit 10 was venerated at Chester Cathedral with a feast day on 10 September He is known to history mainly through the hagiography of the Secgan Manuscript 11 he also occurs in a litany in MS Tanner 169 of the Bodleian Library Oxford 12 In 907 Chester was refortified against the threat from the Vikings and shortly afterwards the minster was founded or refounded and Werburgh s remains were transferred there from Hanbury probably by AEthelflaed Lady of the Mercians 13 The collegiate church as it was then was restored in 1057 by Leofric Earl of Mercia and Lady Godiva This church was razed to the ground around 1090 with the secular canons evicted and no known trace of it remains 14 In 1093 a Benedictine abbey was established on the site by Hugh Lupus Earl of Chester with the assistance of St Anselm and other monks from Bec in Normandy The earliest surviving parts of the structure date from that time 15 The abbey church was not at that time the cathedral of Chester from 1075 to 1082 the cathedral of the diocese was the nearby church of St John the Baptist after which the see was transferred to Coventry 16 In 1538 during the dissolution of the monasteries the monastery was disbanded and the shrine of Saint Werburgh was desecrated 17 In 1541 St Werburgh s abbey became a cathedral of the Church of England by order of Henry VIII At the same time the dedication was changed to Christ and the Blessed Virgin The last abbot of St Werburgh s Abbey Thomas Clarke became the first dean of the new cathedral at the head of a secular chapter 18 Although little trace of the 10th century church has been discovered save possibly some Saxon masonry found during a 1997 excavation of the nave 19 there is much evidence of the monastery of 1093 This work in the Norman style may be seen in the northwest tower the north transept and in remaining parts of the monastic buildings 17 The abbey church beginning with the Lady Chapel at the eastern end was extensively rebuilt in Gothic style during the 13th and 14th centuries At the time of the dissolution of the monasteries the cloister the central tower a new south transept the large west window and a new entrance porch to the south had just been built in the Perpendicular style and the southwest tower of the facade had been begun 1 The west front was given a Tudor entrance but the tower was never completed 4 In 1636 the space beneath the south west tower became a bishop s consistory court It was furnished as such at that time and is now a unique survival in England hearing its last case that of an attempted suicide of a priest in the 1930s 17 20 Until 1881 the south transept which is unusually large also took on a separate function as an independent ecclesiastical entity the parish church of St Oswald 21 Although the 17th century saw additions to the furnishings and fittings there was no further building work for several centuries By the 19th century the building was badly in need of restoration The present homogeneous appearance that the cathedral presents from many exterior angles is largely the work of Victorian restorers particularly George Gilbert Scott 22 The 20th century has seen continued maintenance and restoration In 1922 the Chester War Memorial was installed in the cathedral grounds and dedicated to the fallen soldiers of the First World War and later the Second World War 23 In 1973 75 a detached belfry the Addleshaw Tower designed by George Pace was erected in the grounds of the cathedral 4 In 2005 a new Song School was added to the cathedral 24 During the 2000s the cathedral library was refurbished and relocated It was officially reopened in September 2007 25 The cathedral and the former monastic buildings were designated as Grade I listed buildings on 28 July 1955 4 26 In October 2021 the abbey s gateway was one of 142 sites across England to receive part of a 35 million injection into the government s Culture Recovery Fund 27 Architecture editCathedral edit Plan edit Chester Cathedral has an east west axis common to many cathedrals with the chancel at the eastern end and the facade to the west The plan is cruciform with a central tower as is usual in English monastic churches but is asymmetrical having a small transept on the north side remaining from an earlier building and an unusually large south transept As the plan shows the asymmetry extends to the west front where the north tower remains from the Norman building and the south tower is of the early 16th century At the eastern end the symmetrical arrangement of the aisles was lost when the end of the south aisle was demolished and rebuilt in an apsidal shape The nave choir and south transept have wide aisles on either side and are lit by clerestory windows and large multi light windows in each of the three cliff like ends To the north of the cathedral are monastic buildings including the cloister refectory and a rectangular chapter house The facade of the building is abutted on the north by later buildings 4 28 nbsp 1 West door 2 South tower amp Consistory court 3 North tower 4 Nave 5 Crossing 6 Quire 7 Lady Chapel 8 South porch 9 South aisle 10 South transept 11 South door 12 South quire aisle St Erasmus chapel 13 North aisle 14 North transept 15 North quire aisle 16 St Werburgh s Chapel 17 Vestry 18 Vestibule 19 Chapter house 20 Slype 21 Monk s Parlour with Song School above it 22 Refectory 23 Shop 24 Undercroft 25 Abbot s Passage 26 Cloister 27 Cloister garth 28 Reception 29 Memorial garden a Font b RAF Memorial chapel c Monument to 1st Duke of Westminster d Cheshire Regiment Memorial e St Mary Magdalen Chapel Children s Chapel f St Oswald s Chapel g St George s Chapel Cheshire Regiment h St Nicholas Chapel i Choir Stalls j Bishop s Throne k High Altar l St Werburgh s Shrine m East Window n organ o John Pearson s Tomb p Cobweb painting q Night Stairs r Day Stairs s Wall Pulpit t Lavatorium u Norman entrance to refectory v Carells w Scriptorium x Fountain and Sculpture y Education centre z WCs External appearance edit Like the cathedrals of Carlisle Lichfield and Worcester Chester Cathedral is built of New Red Sandstone in this case Keuper Sandstone from the Cheshire Basin The stone lends itself to detailed carving but is also friable easily eroded by rain and wind and is badly affected by pollution With the other red sandstone buildings Chester is one of the most heavily restored of England s cathedrals The restoration which included much refacing and many new details took place mainly in the 19th century 29 nbsp The sandstone exterior from the south west has much decorative architectural detail but is heavily restored nbsp The west front with recessed Perpendicular window and portal Because the south transept is similar in dimension to the nave and choir views of the building from the south east and south west give the impression of a building balanced around a central axis with its tower as the hub The tower is of the late 15th century Perpendicular style but its four large battlemented turrets are the work of the restoration architect George Gilbert Scott 4 With its rhythmic arrangement of large traceried windows pinnacles battlements and buttresses the exterior of Chester Cathedral from the south presents a fairly homogeneous character which is an unusual feature as England s cathedrals are in general noted for their stylistic diversity 30 Close examination reveals window tracery of several building stages from the 13th to the early 16th century The richness of the 13th century tracery is accentuated by the presence of ornate crocketted drip mouldings around the windows those around the perpendicular windows are of simpler form The facade of the cathedral is dominated by a large deeply recessed eight light window in the Perpendicular style 15 above a recessed doorway set in a screen like porch designed probably by Seth and George Derwall in the early 1500s 1 15 This porch formed part of the same late 15th century building programme as the south transept central and southwest towers and cloister 1 Neither of the west towers was completed 31 To the north is the lower stage of a Norman tower while to the south is the lower stage of a tower designed and begun probably by Seth and George Derwall in 1508 1 but left incomplete following the dissolution of the monastery in 1538 The cathedral s facade is abutted on the north by a Victorian building housing the education centre and largely obscured from view by the building previously used as the King s School which is now a branch of Barclays Bank 32 The door of the west front is not used as the normal entrance to the cathedral which is through the southwest porch which is in an ornate Tudor style Interior edit nbsp Norman architecture in the north transept nbsp The font stands under the Norman north west tower The interior of Chester Cathedral gives a warm and mellow appearance because of the pinkish colour of the sandstone The proportions appear spacious because the view from the west end of the nave to the east end is unimpeded by a pulpitum and the nave although not long is both wide and high compared with many of England s cathedrals The piers of the nave and choir are widely spaced those of the nave carrying only the clerestory of large windows with no triforium gallery The proportions are made possible partly because the ornate stellar vault like that at York Minster is of wood not stone 17 28 Norman remnants edit The present building dating from around 1283 to 1537 mostly replaced the earlier monastic church founded in 1093 which was built in the Norman style It is believed that the newer church was built around the older one 24 That the few remaining parts of the Norman church are of small proportions while the height and width of the Gothic church are generous would seem to confirm this belief Aspects of the design of the Norman interior are still visible in the north transept which retains wall arcading and a broadly moulded arch leading to the sacristy which was formerly a chapel 4 The transept has retained an early 16th century coffered ceiling with decorated bosses two of which are carved with the arms of Henry VIII and Cardinal Wolsey 21 The north west tower is also of Norman construction It serves as the baptistry and houses a black marble font consisting of a bowl on a large baluster dating from 1697 4 The lower part of the north wall of the nave is also from the Norman building but can only be viewed from the cloister because the interior has been decorated with mosaic 24 nbsp The Lady Chapel Early English Gothic 1265 90 nbsp The Choir Decorated Gothic 1283 1315 Early English edit The Early English Gothic chapter house built between 1230 and 1265 is rectangular and opens off a charming vestibule leading from the north transept 28 The chapter house has grouped windows of simple untraceried form Alec Clifton Taylor describes the exterior of this building as a modest but rather elegant example of composition in lancets 28 while Nikolaus Pevsner says of the interior It is a wonderfully noble room which is the aesthetic climax of the cathedral To the north of the chapter house is the slype also Early English in style and the warming room which contains two large former fireplaces 33 The monastic refectory to the north of the cloister is of about the same date as the chapter house 1 The Lady Chapel to the eastern end of the choir dates from between 1265 and 1290 1 It is of three bays and contains the Shrine of St Werburgh dating from the 14th century The vault of the Lady Chapel is the only one in the cathedral that is of stone 28 It is decorated with carved roof bosses representing the Trinity the Madonna and Child and the murder of Thomas Becket The chapel also has a sedilia and a piscina 4 Decorated Gothic edit nbsp The building of the nave begun in 1323 was halted by plague and completed 150 years later The choir of five bays was built between 1283 and 1315 to the design of Richard Lenginour 1 and is an early example of Decorated Gothic architecture The piers have strongly modelled attached shafts supporting deeply moulded arches There is a triforium gallery with four cusped arches to each bay The sexpartite vault which is a 19th century restoration is supported by clusters of three shafts which spring from energetic figurative corbels The overall effect is robust and contrasts with the delicacy of the pinnacled choir stalls the tracery of the windows and the rich decoration of the vault which was carried out by the ecclesiastical designers Clayton and Bell 34 The choir stalls dating from about 1380 are one of the glories of the cathedral 28 The aisles of the choir previously both extended on either side of the Lady Chapel The south aisle was shortened in about 1870 by George Gilbert Scott and given an apsidal east end becoming the chapel of St Erasmus The eastern end of the north aisle contains the chapel of St Werburgh 4 The nave of six bays and the large aisled south transept were begun in about 1323 probably to the design of Nicholas de Derneford 1 There are a number of windows containing fine Flowing Decorated tracery of this period The work ceased in 1375 in which year there was a severe outbreak of plague in England The building of the nave was recommenced in 1485 more than 150 years after it was begun The architect was probably William Rediche 1 Remarkably for an English medieval architect he maintained the original form changing only the details The nave was roofed with a stellar vault rather like that of the Lady Chapel at Ely and the choir at York Minster both of which date from the 1370s Like that at York the vault is of wood imitating stone 28 Perpendicular Gothic edit From about 1493 until 1525 the architect appears to have been Seth Derwall succeeded by George Derwall until 1537 1 Seth Derwall completed the south transept to a Perpendicular Gothic design as seen in the transomed windows of the clerestory He also built the central tower southwest porch and cloisters Work commenced on the south west tower in 1508 but it had not risen above the roofline at the time of the dissolution of the monasteries and has never been completed The central tower rising to 127 feet 39 m 1 is a lantern tower with large windows letting light into the crossing Its external appearance has been altered by the addition of four battlemented turrets by George Gilbert Scott in the 19th century 4 nbsp The Cloister Garth and Refectory Former monastic buildings edit The Perpendicular Gothic cloister is entered from the cathedral through a Norman doorway in the north aisle The cloister is part of the building programme that commenced in the 1490s and is probably the work of Seth Derwall 1 The south wall of the cloister dating from the later part of the Norman period forms the north wall of the nave of the cathedral and includes blind arcading 35 Among the earliest remaining structures on the site is an undercroft off the west range of the cloisters which dates from the early 12th century and which was originally used by the monks for storing food 36 It consists of two naves with groin vaults and short round piers with round scalloped capitals 4 Leading from the south of the undercroft is the abbot s passage which dates from around 1150 and consists of two bays with rib vaulting 37 Above the abbot s passage approached by a stairway from the west cloister is St Anselm s Chapel which also dates from the 12th century It is in three bays and has a 19th century Gothic style plaster vault The chancel is in one bay and was remodelled in the early 17th century The screen altar rails holy table and plaster ceiling of the chancel date from the 17th century 36 37 The north range of the cloister gives access to a refectory built by Simon de Whitchurch in the 13th century It contains an Early English pulpit approached by a staircase with an ascending arcade The only other similar pulpit in England is in Beaulieu Abbey 36 Restoration edit nbsp The wooden quadripartite vault of the choir was rebuilt by George Gilbert Scott nbsp Much of the exterior stonework has been refaced in the 19th and 20th centuries By the 19th century the fabric of the building had become badly weathered with Charles Hiatt writing that the surface rot of the very perishable red sandstone of which the cathedral was built was positively unsightly and that the whole place previous to restoration struck one as woebegone and neglected it perpetually seemed to hover on the verge of collapse and yet was without a trace of the romance of the average ruin 31 Between 1818 and 1820 the architect Thomas Harrison restored the south transept adding corner turrets 32 This part of the building served until 1881 as the parish church of St Oswald and it was ecclesiastically separate 21 From 1844 R C Hussey carried out a limited restoration including work on the south side of the nave 4 The most extensive restoration was carried out by the Gothic Revival architect George Gilbert Scott who between 1868 and 1876 almost entirely re cased the cathedral 15 17 The current building is acknowledged to be mainly the product of this Victorian restoration commissioned by the Dean John Saul Howson 38 In addition to extensive additions and alterations to the body of the church Scott remodelled the tower adding turrets and crenellations 4 Scott chose sandstone from the quarries at Runcorn for his restoration work 39 In addition to the restoration of the fabric of the building Scott designed internal fittings such as the choir screen to replace those destroyed during the Civil War the roof had also been melted down to make musket balls 20 He built the fan vault of the south porch renewed the wooden vault of the choir and added a great many decorative features to the interior Scott s restorations were not without their critics and caused much debate in architectural circles Scott claimed to have archaeological evidence for his work but the Liverpool architect Samuel Huggins argued in an 1868 address to the Liverpool Architectural Society that the alterations were less like restoration and more like rebuilding One of the larger changes was to shorten the south aisle and restyle it as an apse The changes also proposed the addition of a spire above the existing tower but this proposal was later rejected 38 Samuel s further paper of 1871 entitled On so called restorations of our cathedral and abbey churches compelled the Dean to attempt to answer the criticism The debate contributed to the establishment of the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings 40 Later in the century from 1882 Arthur Blomfield and his son Charles made further additions and modifications including restoring and reinstating the Shrine of St Werburgh More work was carried out in the 20th century by Giles Gilbert Scott between 1891 and 1913 and by F H Crossley in 1939 4 nbsp The Addleshaw Tower 1975 houses the bells nbsp The Cheshire Regiment Memorial Garden Bell tower edit Main article Addleshaw TowerTowards the end of 1963 the cathedral bells which were housed in the central tower were in need of an overhaul and ringing was suspended In 1965 the Dean asked George Pace architect to York Minster to prepare specifications for a new bell frame and for electrification of the clock and tolling mechanism Due to structural difficulties and the cost of replacing the bells in the central tower it was advised that consideration should be given to building a detached bell and clock tower in the southeast corner of the churchyard It was decided to proceed with that plan and in 1969 an announcement was made that the first detached cathedral bell tower was to be erected since the building of the campanile at Chichester Cathedral in the 15th century In February 1969 nine of the ten bells in the central tower were removed to be recast by John Taylor amp Co as a ring of twelve bells with a flat sixth 41 The new bells were cast in 1973 42 Work on the new bell tower began in February 1973 Two old bells dating from 1606 and 1626 were left in the tower On 26 February 1975 the bells were rung for the first time to celebrate the wedding of a member of the Grosvenor family The official opening on 25 June 1975 was performed by the Duke of Gloucester The belfry is known as the Dean Addleshaw Tower after the dean of the cathedral responsible for its construction 41 The tower is built in concrete faced with sandstone at its base It is the first detached bell tower to be built for a cathedral in this country since the Reformation 43 Between the bell tower and the south transept is a garden in remembrance of the Cheshire Regiment originally the 22nd Regiment of Foot 19 Fittings and glass edit nbsp The Consistory Court of 1632 nbsp Choir Stalls about 1380 and Rood Screen late 19th century The treasures of Chester Cathedral are its rare fittings specifically its choir stalls and the 17th century furnishing of the bishop s Consistory Court in the south tower which is a unique survival 17 Choir stalls edit The choir stalls date from about 1380 They have high spiky closely set canopies with crocketed arches and spirelets The stall ends have poppyheads and are rich with figurative carving 44 The stalls include 48 misericords all but five of which are original 21 depicting a variety of subjects some humorous and some grotesque Pevsner states that they are one of the finest sets in the country 44 while Alec Clifton Taylor calls them exquisite and says of the misericords that for delicacy and grace they surpass even those at Lincoln and Beverley 28 nbsp The organ of Chester Cathedral nbsp The Rood Screen Organ edit Main article Organ and organists of Chester Cathedral In 1844 an organ by Gray amp Davison of London was installed in the cathedral replacing an instrument with parts dating back to 1626 The organ was rebuilt and enlarged by Whiteley Bros of Chester in 1876 to include harmonic flutes and reeds by Cavaille Coll It was later moved to its present position at the front of the north transept In 1910 William Hill and Son of London extensively rebuilt and revoiced the organ replacing the Cavaille Coll reeds with new pipes of their own The choir division of the organ was enlarged and moved behind the choirstalls on the south side The instrument was again overhauled by Rushworth and Dreaper of Liverpool in 1969 when a new mechanism and some new pipework made to a design by the organist Roger Fisher was installed Since 1991 the organ has been in the care of David Wells of Liverpool 45 Stained glass edit See Gallery below Chester suffered badly at the hands of the Parliamentary troops 28 As a consequence its stained glass dates mainly from the 19th and 20th centuries and has representative examples the significant trends in stained glass design from the 1850s onwards Of the earlier Victorian firms William Wailes is the best represented in the south aisle 1862 as well as Hardman amp Co and Michael O Connor Glass from the High Victorian period is well represented by two leading London firms Clayton and Bell and Heaton Butler and Bayne The Aesthetic style is represented by Charles Eamer Kempe Early 20th century windows include several commemorating those who died in World War I There are also several notable modern windows the most recent being the refectory window of 2001 by Ros Grimshaw which depicts the Creation 46 The eight light Perpendicular window of the west end contains mid 20th century glass representing the Holy Family and Saints by W T Carter Shapland Three modern windows in the south aisle designed and made by Alan Younger to replace windows damaged in the Second World War They were donated by the 6th Duke of Westminster to celebrate the 900th anniversary of the cathedral and contain the dates 1092 and 1992 to reflect the theme of continuity and change 47 Features edit nbsp The font at the end of the north aisle nbsp The nave lectern and tiled floor Nave edit The west end of the nave is dominated by an eight light window in the Perpendicular Gothic style which almost fills the upper part of the west wall It contains stained glass designed by W T Carter Shapland dating from 1961 and depicts the Holy Family in the middle two lights flanked by the northern saints Werburgh Oswald Aidan Chad and Wilfrid and Queen Ethelfleda 48 The stone nave pulpit was designed by the restorer R C Hussey and the lectern dated 1876 is by Skidmore 49 The mosaic floor of the tower bay was designed by John Howson Dean 1867 1885 and executed by Burke and Co The same firm installed the mosaics which decorate the wall of the north aisle depicting the patriarchs and prophets Abraham Moses David and Elijah 4 They were designed by J R Clayton of Clayton and Bell and date from 1883 to 86 49 Monuments in the nave include those to Roger Barnston dated 1838 by John Blayney to Nicholas Stratford Bishop 1689 1707 dated 1708 to George Hall Bishop 1662 1668 d to Edmund Entwistle dated 1712 to John and Thomas Wainwright who died respectively in 1686 and 1720 to Robert Bickerstaff who died in 1841 by Blayney to William Smith Dean 1758 1787 d by Thomas Banks and to William Mainwaring dated 1671 49 nbsp A beer swilling man with the rear end of a pig nbsp A misericord showing Alexander the Great being carried Heavenwards by griffons Quire edit The most famous feature of the quire is the set of choir stalls dating from about 1380 and described above The lectern in the form of a wooden eagle symbol of John the Evangelist dates from the first half of the 17th century 50 The candlesticks also date from the 17th century and are by Censore of Bologna who died in 1662 44 With these exceptions most of the decoration and the fittings of the quire date from the 19th century and are in keeping with the Gothic Revival promoted by the Oxford Movement and Augustus Welby Pugin The restored vault of the quire is typical of the period having been designed by Scott and decorated and gilded by Clayton and Bell 34 The quire is entered through a screen designed by George Gilbert Scott with gates made by Skidmore The rood was designed by Scott and was made by F Stuflesser 4 The bishop s throne or cathedra was designed by Scott to complement the choir stalls It was constructed by Farmer and Brindley in 1876 The reredos and the floor mosaic date from 1876 and were designed by J R Clayton The east window has tracery of an elegant Decorated Gothic design which is filled with stained glass of 1884 by Heaton Butler and Bayne 44 nbsp The Chancel the High Altar has a reredos by J R Clayton of Clayton and Bell and a seasonal altar frontal in the Art Nouveau style nbsp Sedilia and one of a pair of candlesticks in the quire Lady Chapel edit The 13th century Lady Chapel contains the stone shrine of Saint Werburgh which dates from the 14th century and which used to contain her relics The shrine of similar red sandstone as the cathedral has a base pierced with deep niches The upper part takes the form of a miniature chapel containing statuettes During the Dissolution of the Monasteries it was dismantled Some of the parts were found during the 1873 restoration of the cathedral and the shrine was reassembled in 1888 by Blomfield A carving of St Werburgh by Joseph Pyrz was added in 1993 51 Also in the chapel are a sedilia and a piscina The stained glass of 1859 is by William Wailes The chapel contains a monument to Archdeacon Francis Wrangham made by Hardman amp Co and dating from 1846 52 In 1555 George Marsh Martyr stood trial here accused of heresy 53 North quire aisle edit The north quire aisle has a stone screen by R C Hussey and an iron gate dated 1558 that came from Guadalajara At the east end of the aisle is the chapel of St Werburgh which has a vault of two bays 54 and an east window depicting the Nativity by Michael O Connor dated 1857 Other stained glass windows in the north aisle are by William Wailes by Heaton Butler and Bayne and by Clayton and Bell The chapel contains a piscina dating from the 14th century 4 and monuments to John Graham Bishop 1848 1865 dated 1867 and to William Bispham who died in 1685 52 Other monuments in the north aisle include a tablet to William Jacobson Bishop 1865 1884 dated 1887 by Boehm to a design by Blomfield 44 nbsp The Nativity Window in the Chapel of St Werburgh by Michael O Connor 1853 nbsp The chancel window by Heaton Butler and Bayne 1884 North transept sacristy and chapter house edit The small Norman transept has clerestory windows containing stained glass by William Wailes installed in 1853 55 The sacristy of 1200 has an east window depicting St Anselm and designed by A K Nicholson In the north transept is a freestanding tomb chest monument to John Pearson who died in 1686 designed by Arthur Blomfield and carved by Nicholas Earp with a recumbent effigy by Matthew Noble Other monuments in the transept include one to Samuel Peploe dating from about 1784 by Joseph Nollekens The wall monuments include cenotaphs to members of the Cheshire Earl of Chester s Yeomanry killed in the Boer War and in the First and Second World Wars 4 At the corner of the transept with the north aisle is a 17th century Tree of Jesse carved in whale ivory A niche contains a rare example of a cobweb picture painted on the web of a caterpillar Originating in the Austrian Tyrol it depicts Mary and the Christ Child and is based on a painting by Lucas Cranach the Elder 56 The chapter house has stained glass in its east window by Heaton Butler and Bayne and grisaille windows in the north and south walls dated 1882 83 by Blomfield 57 It contains an oak cope cupboard from the late 13th century 58 The front of the chapter house was rebuilt to a design by Hussey 33 South choir aisle edit The south aisle was shortened in about 1870 by Scott and given an apsidal east end becoming the chapel of St Erasmus 4 The stained glass in the apse window is dated 1872 and is by Clayton and Bell Below this is a mosaic designed by J R Clayton and made by Salviati and a fresco painting by Clayton and Bell dated 1874 Elsewhere the stained glass in the aisle is by Wailes and by Hardman amp Co to a design by Pugin 55 The aisle contains the tomb of Ranulf Higdon 36 a monk at St Werburgh s Abbey in the 12th century who wrote a major work of history entitled Polychronicon 59 a monument to Thomas Brassey a civil engineering contractor who died in 1870 designed by Blomfield and made by Wagmuller a monument to Samuel Peploe Bishop 1726 1752 who died in 1752 and three painted monuments by a member of the Randle Holme family 55 nbsp The south transept has window tracery in the Flowing Decorated style nbsp Altar in the south transept with a reredos depicting scenes of Mary of Bethany South transept edit The south transept formerly the parish church of St Oswald contains a piscina and sedilia in the south wall 21 On the east wall are four chapels each with a reredos two of which were designed by Giles Gilbert Scott one by Kempe and the other by his successor W E Tower 4 The south window is dated 1887 and was made by Heaton Butler and Bayne to a design by R C Hussey 32 Other stained glass in the transept is by Clayton and Bell by C E Kempe and by Powell The monuments include those to George Ogden who died in 1781 by Hayward to Anne Matthews who died in 1793 by Thomas Banks to John Philips Buchanan who died at Waterloo in 1815 to the first Duke of Westminster designed by C J Blomfield 49 and two memorial plaques to members of the Egerton family On the wall of the southwest crossing pier are monuments which include a cenotaph to the casualties in HMS Chester in the Battle of Jutland in 1916 who included the 16 year old John Cornwell VC The west wall of the south transept has many memorials including cenotaphs to the Cheshire Regiment the Royal Air Force and the Free Czech Forces 4 nbsp The Cloisters nbsp The Water of Life by Stephen Broadbent Cloisters and refectory edit The cloisters were restored in the 20th century and the stained glass windows contain the images of some 130 saints 36 The cloister garth contains a modern sculpture entitled The water of life by Stephen Broadbent 60 The refectory roof is dated 1939 and was designed by F H Crossley 61 The east window with reticulated tracery was designed by Giles Gilbert Scott and is dated 1913 62 The stained glass in the west window depicting the Creation was designed by Ros Grimshaw and installed in 2001 to celebrate the Millennium 63 On the refectory s west wall there is a tapestry depicting Elymas being struck with blindness 36 which was woven at the Mortlake Tapestry Works in the 17th century from one of the Raphael Cartoons The heraldic paintings on the north wall represent the arms of the Earls of Chester 63 Library edit Main article Chester Cathedral Library A library has been present since the time of St Werburgh s Abbey and following the dissolution of the monasteries it became the cathedral library 64 It continued to grow over the centuries but by the 19th century it had become neglected 65 Between 1867 and 1885 it was enlarged and in the 1890s new bookcases were added 66 A further reorganisation took place in the 1920s but by the 1980s the contents were contained in five separate sites around the cathedral 67 A programme of repair and re cataloguing of the contents was instituted During the 2000s more work was carried out and the refurbished library housed in three rooms opened in 2007 68 The library is available for research and for organised visits by groups 25 Ministry edit nbsp A defaced misericord showing the Virgin and Child framed by pelicans symbols of Christ s love for the Church nbsp Carving from the Dean s Chair Dean and chapter edit As of 3 January 2024 69 Dean Tim Stratford since 8 September 2018 Canon Missioner amp Vice Dean Jane Brooke since 11 September 2010 installation 70 Acting Dean 2017 2018 Canon for Worship and Spirituality Rosie Woodall since 20 May 2023 licensing Services edit The cathedral is a place of Christian worship with two services held daily and four or five each Sunday There is Holy Communion each day and Choral Evensong each day except Wednesday There is a sung service of cathedral Eucharist every Sunday 71 Music edit The Organist and Master of the Choristers is Philip Rushforth Head of Music Outreach and Assistant Organist Dan Mathieson and Sub Organist Alexander Palotai There are lunchtime organ recitals weekly on Thursday at 1 10pm immediately following Holy Communion 72 The monthly program of music is available on the cathedral s website 73 The hymn writer William Cooke 1821 1894 was a canon of Chester 74 Organists edit See also List of musicians at English cathedrals The earliest recorded appointment of an organist is of John Brycheley in 1541 75 Notable organists include the composers Robert White and John Sanders conductor George Guest and the recording artist Roger Fisher 75 76 Choirs edit The choral tradition at Chester is 900 years old dating from the foundation of the Benedictine monastery In 1741 Handel heard the first recital of his Messiah at Chester 20 There are usually eight choral services in the cathedral each week Chester has a cathedral choir of male lay clerks choral scholars boy and girl choristers and a Nave Choir which is of mixed voice They rehearse in the Song School built on the site of the former Monks Dormitory In addition to singing at services the choir perform in concerts tour abroad and make recording on CDs There is no choir school at Chester so the choristers come from local schools 77 The Nave Choir which sings Compline on Sunday evenings and in other services also takes part in concerts and undertakes tours Having been founded during the 1860s it is the longest running voluntary cathedral choir in Britain 78 Activities edit Apart from services a variety of events such as concerts recitals exhibitions and tours are held at the cathedral 79 There are weekly lunchtime organ recitals each Thursday and concerts by the Chester Cathedral Nave Choir 80 The cathedral and precinct are open to visits both by individuals and by groups 81 The former Refectory of the abbey is used as a cafe 63 The Refectory the Cloister Room the Chapter House and the Vestibule can be hired for meetings receptions and other purposes 82 Burials edit nbsp Memorial plaques of the Egerton family in the south transept a tablet to family members killed during the First World War top and a tablet to Vice Admiral Wion Egerton below killed in the Second Hugh d Avranches 1st Earl of Chester c 1047 27 July 1101 first in the cemetery of Saint Werberg reburied in the Chapter House Ranulf le Meschin 3rd Earl of Chester 1070 1129 Ranulf de Gernon 4th Earl of Chester and his wife Maud of Gloucester Countess of Chester Hugh de Kevelioc 5th Earl of Chester Ranulf de Blondeville 6th Earl of Chester 1170 1232 Ranulf Higden c 1280 1364 chronicler John Pearson Bishop of Chester 1673 1686 Samuel Peploe Bishop of Chester 1725 1752 John Graham Bishop of Chester 1845 1865 in the cemetery George Clarke of Hyde former Colonial Governor of New York America between 1736 and 1743 Frederick Philipse III a wealthy landowner from New York America who was loyal to the British Colonial Government and forced to quit his estates This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items April 2018 83 Gallery editStained glass windows nbsp The Lady Chapel has Lancet Gothic windows with mid 19th century glass by William Wailes 1859 depicting the Passion Resurrection and Ascension of Christ nbsp The south transept window Flowing Decorated Gothic with High Victorian glass by Heaton Butler and Bayne 1887 nbsp The west window is Perpendicular Gothic with 20th century stained glass by W T Carter Shapland 1961 The Holy Family with Saints Werburgh Oswald Aidan Chad Wilfrid and Ethelfleda nbsp The three Westminster windows by Alan Younger 1992 celebrate the 900th anniversary of the cathedral See also edit nbsp Christianity portal nbsp Cheshire portal Architecture of the medieval cathedrals of England English Gothic architecture Grade I listed buildings in Cheshire West and Chester Grade I listed churches in Cheshire Norman architecture in Cheshire List of works by Thomas Harrison List of works by George Pace Three haresReferences and notes editNotes Citations a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Harvey 1961 p 125 All dimensions taken from Hiatt 1898 p 115 Chester Tourist Chester Tourist com Archived from the original on 9 April 2010 Retrieved 18 March 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Historic England Cathedral Church of Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary Chester 1376398 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 8 April 2012 Richards 1947 p 93 White Kevan W 17 September 2007 Deva Victrix Castra Legionis Roman Britain org Archived from the original on 9 May 2008 Retrieved 24 May 2008 Home 1925 p 14 Richards 1947 pp 93 94 Lewis 2008 p 104 S 667 Barloc of Norbury Archived 6 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine in The Oxford Dictionary of Saints Stowe MS 944 British Library Barloc Archived 24 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine at Answers com Thacker 2014 Home 1925 pp 18 23 a b c d Richards 1947 p 94 St John the Baptist Chester Cheshire The Corpus of Romanesque Sculpture in Britain and Ireland Archived from the original on 29 July 2012 Retrieved 13 June 2010 a b c d e f Tatton Brown amp Crook 2002 pp 94 95 Chester Cathedral University of London amp History of Parliament Trust Archived from the original on 25 May 2011 Retrieved 28 February 2008 a b Chester Tourist Chester Tourist com Archived from the original on 9 April 2010 Retrieved 18 March 2008 a b c Bowerman 1996 p 1 a b c d e Richards 1947 p 95 Hartwell et al 2011 p 220 Morris amp Roberts 2012 pp 87 90 a b c History Chester Cathedral Archived from the original on 27 June 2007 Retrieved 15 February 2008 a b Nuttall 2009 p 20 Historic England Former monastic buildings to Cathedral Church of Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary Chester 1376397 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 8 April 2012 Heritage and Craft Workers Across England Given a Helping Hand Historic England 22 October 2021 a b c d e f g h i Clifton Taylor 1967 p 266 Clifton Taylor 1967 pp 110 113 Pevsner amp Hubbard 2003 pp 136 138 a b Home 1925 pp 14 15 a b c Pevsner amp Hubbard 2003 p 137 a b Pevsner amp Hubbard 2003 p 146 a b Pevsner amp Hubbard 2003 p 140 Pevsner amp Hubbard 2003 pp 145 146 a b c d e f Richards 1947 p 96 a b Pevsner amp Hubbard 2003 p 145 a b Chester Cathedral University of London amp History of Parliament Trust Archived from the original on 25 May 2011 Retrieved 3 June 2010 Starkey 1990 p 149 Nicholson Albert Scott Valerie 2004 Huggins Samuel 1811 1885 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press retrieved 5 July 2013 subscription or UK public library membership required a b Lewis C Kenneth 1987 Dean Addleshaw Tower Chester Diocesan Guild of Church Bell Ringers Archived from the original on 23 August 2006 Retrieved 28 February 2008 Chester Cath Ch of Christ amp BVM Dove s Guide for Church Bell Ringers Central Council for Church Bell Ringers 4 May 2007 Retrieved 17 July 2008 Bell Tower Chester City Council Archived from the original on 21 July 2006 Retrieved 28 July 2009 a b c d e Pevsner amp Hubbard 2003 p 142 The Organ Chester Cathedral archived from the original on 16 January 2012 retrieved 28 February 2008 Cowen 2003 pp 1 112 Sheehan 2003 p 45 Sheehan 2003 p 14 a b c d Pevsner amp Hubbard 2003 p 144 Richards 1947 pp 95 96 Sheehan 2003 pp 32 35 a b Pevsner amp Hubbard 2003 p 141 Foxe s Book of Martyrs Pevsner amp Hubbard 2003 p 139 a b c Pevsner amp Hubbard 2003 p 143 Sheehan 2003 p 38 Sheehan 2003 p 41 Richards 1947 pp 96 97 Burton Edwin 1913 Ranulf Higden The Catholic Encyclopedia The Encyclopedia Press Archived from the original on 5 June 2008 Retrieved 18 March 2008 Chester Cathedral Cloister Garth visitchester com Retrieved 18 October 2009 Pevsner amp Hubbard 2003 p 147 Pevsner amp Hubbard 2003 pp 137 138 a b c Refectory Cafe Chester Cathedral archived from the original on 12 June 2013 retrieved 5 July 2013 Nuttall 2009 p 6 Nuttall 2009 pp 7 10 Nuttall 2009 p 11 Nuttall 2009 pp 11 13 Nuttall 2009 pp 14 20 Who s Who Chester Cathedral chestercathedral com Retrieved 3 January 2024 Chester Cathedral Meet the Clergy Archived 7 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 6 January 2013 Services Chester Cathedral archived from the original on 7 September 2013 retrieved 5 July 2013 Organ Recitals Chester Cathedral archived from the original on 27 June 2013 retrieved 5 July 2013 Music Schemes Chester Cathedral archived from the original on 10 June 2013 retrieved 5 July 2013 Samuel Willoughby Duffield English Hymns Their Authors and History 1886 p 358 a b Cathedral Organists John E West 1899 The Succession of Organists Watkins Shaw 1991 Cathedral Choir Chester Cathedral archived from the original on 4 July 2013 retrieved 5 July 2013 Nave Choir Chester Cathedral archived from the original on 4 July 2013 retrieved 5 July 2013 Events Chester Cathedral archived from the original on 5 August 2013 retrieved 5 July 2013 Chester Cathedral Nave Choir Archived from the original on 20 May 2013 Retrieved 13 August 2013 Groups Chester Cathedral archived from the original on 10 June 2013 retrieved 5 July 2013 Organising an Event at the Cathedral Chester Cathedral archived from the original on 7 September 2013 retrieved 5 July 2013 Richardson Douglas 2011 Everingham Kimball G ed Plantagenet Ancestry A Study in Colonial and Mediecal Families Vol III Salt Lake City UT U S Douglas Richardson p 427 ISBN 978 1449966355 LCCN 2010902930 5 ELLEN OF WALES She married 1st about 22 Aug 1222 JOHN OF SCOTLAND Knt 8th Earl of Chester 10th Earl of Huntingdon Warden of all the Forests of the Honour of Huntingdon 1233 3rd but only surviving son and heir of David 9th Earl of Huntingdon brother of William the Lion King of Scotland by Maud daughter of Hugh 6th Earl of Chester Vicomte of Avranches He was born about 1207 Ellen s maritagium included the manors of Bidford Warwickshire and Suckley Worcestershire which property formerly formed part of her mother Princess Joan s maritagium as well as the manor of Wellington Shropshire They had no issue Sometime before 1215 he his parents and his sister A da were admitted into the fraternity of Holy Trinity Priory London to share in all the benefits of their church He was senior co heir in 1232 to his uncle Ranulph Earl of Chester He presented to the church of Grendon Northamptonshire in 1232 In 1234 the barons and knights of Earl John were forbidden to hold a tournament at Yardley Northamptonshire He carried the sword Curtana at the Coronation of Queen Eleanor of Provence wife of King Henry III in 1236 He took the Cross about 8 June 1236 SIR JOHN OF SCOTLAND Earl of Chester and Huntingdon died at Darnal Abbey Cheshire shortly before 6 June 1237 and was buried at St Werburgh s Chester Sources Bowerman Anthony 1996 Chester Cathedral The Secret Past Chester Chester Cathedral ISBN 0 9522434 2 3 Clifton Taylor Alec 1967 The Cathedrals of England London Thames and Hudson ISBN 0 500 20062 9 Cowen Painton 2003 Six Days The Story of the making of the Chester Cathedral Creation Window Bristol Alastair Sawday Publishing ISBN 1 901970 33 7 Hartwell Clare Hyde Matthew Hubbard Edward Pevsner Nikolaus 2011 1971 Cheshire The Buildings of England New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 17043 6 Harvey John 1961 1950 English cathedrals Third ed London Batsford OCLC 2683041 Home Beatrice 1925 Gordon Home ed Cathedrals Abbeys and Famous Churches Chester Manchester and Liverpool J M Dent amp Sons Ltd OCLC 1681547 Hiatt Charles 1911 1898 The cathedral church of Chester a description of the fabric and a brief history of the episcopal see London G Bell p 115 OCLC 841718720 Lewis C P 2008 Edgar Chester and the Kingdom of the Mercians 957 9 In Scragg Donald ed Edgar King of the English New Interpretations Woodbridge Suffolk The Boydell Press pp 104 123 ISBN 978 1 84383 399 4 Morris Edward Roberts Emma 2012 Public Sculpture of Cheshire and Merseyside excluding Liverpool Public Sculpture of Britain vol 15 Liverpool Liverpool University Press ISBN 978 1 84631 492 6 Nuttall Derek 2009 Chester Cathedral Library Cheshire History vol 49 Chester Cheshire Local History Association ISSN 0141 8696 Pevsner Nikolaus Hubbard Edward 2003 1971 Cheshire The Buildings of England New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 09588 0 Richards Raymond 1947 Old Cheshire Churches London Batsford OCLC 719918 Sheehan Bernie 2003 Chester Cathedral Jarrold Publishing ISBN 0 7117 3090 3 Starkey H F 1990 Old Runcorn Halton Halton Borough Council Tatton Brown Tim Crook John 2002 The English Cathedral London New Holland ISBN 1 84330 120 2 Thacker Alan 2014 Chester In Lapidge Michael Blair John Keynes Simon Scragg Donald eds The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo Saxon England 2nd ed Chichester UK Wiley Blackwell pp 104 06 ISBN 978 0 631 22492 1 External links edit nbsp Media related to Chester Cathedral at Wikimedia Commons Chester Cathedral amp its Historic Links with New York A tour of Chester Cathedral Chester Cathedral in the Corpus of Romanesque Sculpture in Britain and Ireland Details of organ permanent dead link British History Online Aerial photograph Photographs from Art and Architecture Plan of the cathedral Medieval stained glass from CVMA Photographs and panorama The Chester Virtual Stroll Cathedral pages The Chester Cathedral Old Choristers Association pages Chester Cathedral Quarter development project Archived 24 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine Chester Cathedral Nave Choir Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chester Cathedral amp oldid 1223387489 History, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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