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Chichester Cathedral

Chichester Cathedral, formally known as the Cathedral Church of the Holy Trinity, is the seat of the Anglican Bishop of Chichester. It is located in Chichester, in West Sussex, England. It was founded as a cathedral in 1075, when the seat of the bishop was moved from Selsey.[2]

Chichester Cathedral
Cathedral Church of the Holy Trinity
Chichester Cathedral
GB-WSX 50°50′11″N 0°46′51″W / 50.8363°N 0.7808°W / 50.8363; -0.7808Coordinates: GB-WSX 50°50′11″N 0°46′51″W / 50.8363°N 0.7808°W / 50.8363; -0.7808
LocationChichester, West Sussex
CountryUnited Kingdom
DenominationChurch of England
Previous denominationRoman Catholic
Websitechichestercathedral.org.uk
History
Consecrated1108
Architecture
StyleNorman, Gothic
Specifications
Length408 ft (124 m)[1]
Width157 ft (48 m)[1]
Height61 ft (19 m)[1]
Spire height277 ft (84 m)[1]
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseChichester
Clergy
ArchbishopJustin Welby
Bishop(s)Martin Warner
Deanvacant
PrecentorJack Dunn
ChancellorDaniel Inman
TreasurerVanessa Baron
Laity
Director of musicCharles Harrison
Organist(s)Timothy Ravalde

Chichester Cathedral has fine architecture in both the Norman and the Gothic styles, and has been described by the architectural critic Ian Nairn as "the most typical English Cathedral".[3] Despite this, Chichester has two architectural features that are unique among England's medieval cathedrals—a free-standing medieval bell tower (or campanile) and double aisles.[4] The cathedral contains two rare medieval sculptures, and many modern art works including tapestries, stained glass and sculpture, many of these commissioned by Walter Hussey (Dean, 1955–77).[2]

The city of Chichester, though it retains two main cross streets laid out by the Romans, has always been small enough for the city's entire population to fit inside the cathedral at once, causing Daniel Defoe to comment:

I cannot say much of Chichester, in which, if six or seven good families were removed, there would not be much conversation, except what is to be found among the canons, and the dignitaries of the cathedral.[5]

The spire of Chichester Cathedral, rising above its green copper roof, can be seen for many miles across the flat meadows of West Sussex and is a landmark for sailors, Chichester being the only medieval English cathedral which is visible from the sea.[4][6][a]

History

 
Chichester Cathedral, circa 1650

Chichester Cathedral was built to replace the cathedral founded in 681 by St Wilfrid for the South Saxons at Selsey. The seat of the bishop was transferred in 1075.[2]

It was consecrated in 1108 under bishop Ralph de Luffa. An early addition was the Chapel of Saint Pantaleon off the south transept (now the Canons' Vestry), probably begun just before an 1187 fire which burnt out the cathedral and destroyed much of the town.[8] That fire necessitated a substantial rebuilding, which included refacing the nave and replacing the destroyed wooden ceiling with the present stone vault, possibly by Walter of Coventry. The cathedral was reconsecrated in 1199.[1][2]

In the 13th century, the central tower was completed, the Norman apsidal eastern end rebuilt with a Lady chapel and a row of chapels added on each side of the nave, forming double aisles such as are found on many French cathedrals. The spire was completed about 1402 and a free-standing bell tower constructed to the north of the west end.[1][2][b]

In 1262, Richard de la Wyche, who was bishop from 1245 to 1253, was canonised as Saint Richard of Chichester. His shrine made the cathedral a place of pilgrimage. The shrine was ordered to be destroyed in 1538 during the first stages of the English Reformation. In 1642 the cathedral came under siege by Parliamentary troops.[2]

 
The collapse of the spire in 1861

The towers at Chichester have had a particularly unfortunate history because of subsidence, which explains the positioning of the 15th century bell tower at some distance from the cathedral. The south-west tower of the façade collapsed in 1210 and was rebuilt. The north-west tower collapsed in 1635 and was not rebuilt until 1901.[2] The masonry spire was built in the 14th century and was repaired in the 17th century by Christopher Wren. It survived a lightning strike in 1721 and stood for 450 years.[citation needed]

On 21 February 1861, the spire telescoped in on itself, without loss of life. A restoration programme had been started under George Chandler, Dean in the 1840s. The project was to be completed by Walter Hook who took over as dean in 1849. It included the removal of a stone screen (known as the Arundel screen) that separated the choir from the nave. There was some discussion that its removal had caused the collapse of the spire. A more likely cause was thought to be that the spire's foundations had been subject to subsidence over the years and had become detached from the tower, leaving the tower freestanding. Also that the rubble cores of the columns holding the spire had become dust. Thus a weakened tower collapsed in the face of high winds.[9]

A fund was set up to raise the £48,000 needed for the rebuilding, and the contributors included Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.[10] A replica of the old tower and spire was rebuilt along the original lines by George Gilbert Scott from drawings which had been made by Joseph Butler, architect to the fabric (1847–88).[8] The construction was raised by about 6 feet (1.8 m), by Scott and was completed in five years.[11] It now rises to a height of 82 metres (269 ft).[2][4] The rubble from the original spire was used to construct the former West Ashling Congregational Chapel.[c][13][14]

In 2008, the cathedral community celebrated the 900th anniversary of the building's consecration. Rowan Williams, then Archbishop of Canterbury, was invited to preach at a festival eucharist and dedicate the new guest house, which was originally named after Bishop George Bell.[15][16]

Architecture

 
Plan of Chichester Cathedral, produced in 1875
 
Exterior from southeast
 
Exterior from northwest

Typically for English cathedrals, Chichester has had a long and varied building history marked by a number of disasters. The architectural history of the building is revealed in its fabric because the builders of different periods constructed in different styles and with changing technology. Both inside and outside portions of the original Norman cathedral can be distinguished from the later Gothic work by the massive construction and round-topped windows. Different Gothic styles from the late 12th century through to the 15th can also be identified.

The plan of Chichester is in the shape of a cross, with an aisled nave and choir, crossed by a transept. In typically English manner, the eastern end of the building is long by comparison with the nave, is square ended and has a projecting Lady chapel. Also typically English is the arrangement of paired towers on the western front, and a taller central tower over the crossing.[17] Its plan is unusual for England in having double aisles. Chichester has a cloister on the south side of the building.

Chichester is small for a Norman cathedral when compared to Winchester, Ely and Peterborough. Much of the original Norman construction remains in the nave, transept, crossing and adjacent bays of the choir. The elevation rises in the usual three stages of arcade, gallery and clerestory. It is similar to remaining Norman work at Winchester, where the arcade is proportionally low, and rests on solid piers rather than columns. In the gallery above, each wide space is divided into two by a colonnettes in a manner typical of Romanesque architecture.[4]

After the fire of 1187, the clerestory was rebuilt and the entire building given a ribbed vault. The eastern end was extended from the round ambulatory to form a square retrochoir or presbytery with lancet windows in a style that is transitional between Norman and Gothic. The newer arcades and the clerestory maintain the round arches of the earlier Norman architecture. The vault is in the Early English Gothic style, supported externally by flying buttresses and large terminal pinnacles at the eastern end. At this time the entire interior was refurbished, much of it being refaced with ashlar masonry. Each pier was decorated with delicate shafts of dark Purbeck marble with foliate capitals, contrasting with the squat cushion capitals of the limestone shafts. The entire programme of work was probably directed by Walter of Coventry.[1] The nave was later divided from the choir by an elegant Perpendicular screen or pulpitum with three arched openings, called the Arundel Screen, which was removed in the mid 19th century but reinstated in 1961.[1][2][4]

The design of the central tower, faithfully reproduced by George Gilbert Scott, was of the Early English style, having on each side two tall pairs of openings, surrounded by deep mouldings.[8]

The original spire, which also was of masonry rather than of sheathed wood, was built in the late 14th century, by John Mason (died ca 1403), who also built the Vicars' Hall.[1] The style and construction of the spire are obviously based on that of Salisbury Cathedral but it is not as ambitiously tall, probably because of the problem of subsidence. At 277 ft (84 m) high, it is the fourth tallest cathedral spire in the UK after Salisbury, Norwich and Coventry. The Lady chapel, constructed to the east of the retro-choir, is a long narrow space, with large windows in the Decorated Gothic style of the late 13th century.[1][2][4]

The other buildings related to the cathedral are the free-standing bell-tower of the early 15th century, probably the work of William Wynford who also designed the cloisters, with openings in the Perpendicular style.[1] St Mary's Almshouses in Chichester, which are linked to the cathedral, is a Christian charity dating from the 13th century. The medieval Hospital, associated with the Alms House, is one of only two such buildings in the world, the other being in Germany.[18]

Treasures

 
Stained-glass window by Marc Chagall

The cathedral has many treasures and artworks, the most precious being two carved reliefs dating from the 12th century which are of exceptional rarity among English sculpture.[2][4] Other ancient treasures include the remains of a Roman mosaic pavement, which can be viewed through a glass window, and a set of thirty-eight medieval misericords, dating from 1330, which remain beneath the seats of the choir, despite the fact that other parts of the choir stalls are largely a Victorian reconstruction.[4]

Among the famous graves are those of the composer Gustav Holst and the Gothic "Arundel tomb", showing the recumbent Richard FitzAlan, 10th Earl of Arundel (1313–1376), holding hands with his second wife, Eleanor of Lancaster (1318–1372). The tomb was celebrated in the poem "An Arundel Tomb" by Philip Larkin. Also resting there is Joan de Vere, grandmother of Richard FitzAlan, who died in 1293. She, as was her grandson, was first buried at Lewes Priory, but their tombs were relocated to Chichester at the time of the dissolution.

The cathedral contains many modern works of art, including tapestries by John Piper and Ursula Benker-Schirmer, a window by Marc Chagall, a painting by Graham Sutherland (Noli me Tangere), a sculpture and a font by John Skelton and a reredos for the St John the Baptist's Chapel by Patrick Procktor. Outside the cathedral stands a bronze statue of St Richard of Chichester by Philip Jackson.[18]

The cathedral also contains a pennant presented by Francis Chichester, which hung on his ship when he circumnavigated the globe.

Dean and chapter

 
The 15th century bell tower

There is currently no Dean of Chichester. Canon Simon Holland will be the Interim Dean from 30 April 2023.

The Canon Precentor is Dr Jack Dunn, installed on 26 September 2021.

The Canon Chancellor is Dr Daniel Inman, installed on 6 October 2019.[19]

The Canon Treasurer is Vanessa Baron, installed on 26 September 2021.

Lay members of the chapter include Howard Castle-Smith, Anita Rolls and Duncan Irvine.

Robert Sherburne, the Bishop of Chichester, founded four prebends known as the Wiccamical prebends in 1524.[20]

Music

The music at Chichester Cathedral is largely led by the organ and the cathedral choir, as there are services daily and on special days in the calendar. Outside the regular services the cathedral also supports all kinds of music both religious and secular. Visiting choirs, who come from the diocese's parishes and elsewhere, sing in the cathedral from time to time. It is common for guest choirs to sing at Evensong during the week.[21]

The cathedral hosts a variety of concerts that, along with those in the evening, includes a popular series of free lunchtime concerts.[22] It provides a venue for visiting artists from across the world as well as those who are locally based, such as the Chichester Singers, who although an independent organisation, have since their formation in 1954, performed all their major concerts in the cathedral.[22][23][24]

Organs and organists

 
Main organ

There has been organ music at Chichester Cathedral almost continuously since the medieval period, with a break during the Commonwealth. There are now five pipe organs of different sizes and styles at Chichester Cathedral, with pipes of the Main Organ dating to the Restoration, the Hurd Organ to the late 18th century and the three most recent organs, the Nave Organ, the Walker Organ, which is a small portable organ in the Baroque style, and the Allen Organ, an early example of a digital electronic organ, dating to the late 20th century.

Several well-known composers, including Thomas Weelkes and John Reading, have served as cathedral organist. Anne Maddocks (assistant organist, 1942–49) was the first woman in the country to hold such a post in a cathedral, and Sarah Baldock (organist and master of the choristers, 2008–14) was the second woman to hold the most senior musical post in a Church of England cathedral.[25]

The current organist and master of the choristers is Charles Harrison. The assistant organist is Timothy Ravalde.

Cathedral choir

Chichester Cathedral Choir consists of eighteen choristers and four probationers, all of whom are educated at the Prebendal School (which sits adjacent to the Cathedral precinct and is the Cathedral Choir School), and six lay vicars, who are professional musicians.

During school term the cathedral choir sing at eight services each week. As well as singing, choristers learn the piano and an orchestral instrument, spending at least eighteen hours a week on musical performance.[18]

The choir regularly tours abroad and in recent years has visited France and Northern Bavaria (Bamberg, Bayreuth, Nuremberg and Würzburg) and makes frequent visits to Chartres. In 2005, the choir made a tour to South Africa.[18]

Art and popular culture

 
Chichester Cathedral by Joseph Francis Gilbert in 1833

The cathedral has been the subject of a number of depictions in art, literature, and television media. Its spire and towers are visible in the 1828 painting, Chichester Canal, by J. M. W. Turner. It is also speculated, by Eric Shanes, that Chichester Cathedral is the subject of one of Turner's colour studies for Picturesque Views in England and Wales.[26] In 1833, Joseph Francis Gilbert produced an oil painting of the cathedral, showing the surrounding cityscape. It was collected by Paul Mellon and gifted to the Yale Center for British Art, which he established, in 1966.[27] John Constable completed his own watercolour of the cathedral in 1824, now located in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.[28]

The building and grounds are occasionally used as a film location. Credits include Rumpole of the Bailey (s05e03) as "Lawnchester Cathedral", The Ruth Rendell Mysteries (s10e08) as "Marchester Cathedral", and Rosemary & Thyme (s03e02) as "Wellminster Cathedral".[29]

Chichester Cathedral is referenced in s01e10 of Monty Python's Flying Circus: one of Ron Obvious's tasks to gain public fame involves eating the cathedral. He is shown brushing his teeth, putting on a bib, and flexing his jaws, before biting into the corner of the cathedral and breaking his jaw.[30]

Wildlife

 
Peregrine falcons in flight over the cathedral

The cathedral is a nesting site for peregrine falcons, which use a crenellated turret at the base of the spire. Three female and one male chick were hatched in April 2009. During the nesting season live video of the chicks is shown inside the cathedral and on the website.[31][32][33]

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Its near neighbour, Portsmouth Cathedral, a parish church founded in the 12th century and raised to cathedral status in the 20th century, can also be seen from the sea.[7]
  2. ^ The practice of separating the campanile from the main building is common in Italy, where ground movement is a problem because of both subsidence and earthquake.
  3. ^ The old Congregational Chapel closed between 1934 and 1938 and became a clock museum run by the Clock trust. The museum closed when the Clock Trust was dissolved in 2018.[12]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k John Harvey, English Cathedrals, Batsford (1961)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Tim Tatton-Brown and John Crook, The English Cathedral, New Holland (2002), ISBN 1-84330-120-2
  3. ^ Nikolaus Pevsner and Ian Nairn, Buildings of England: Sussex, Penguin Books (1965) (now published by Yale University Press) ISBN 0-300-09677-1
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Alec Clifton-Taylor, The Cathedrals of England, Thames & Hudson (1967)
  5. ^ Daniel Defoe, A Tour Through the Whole Island of Great Britain (1724)
  6. ^ The Argus[permanent dead link] Cathedral troubled by many calamities, first published Monday 16 April 2007. Retrieved 29 October 2008.
  7. ^ Pepin, David (2016). Cathedrals of Britain. Oxford: Bloomsbury Shire Publications. pp. 173–176. ISBN 978-1-7844-2049-9.
  8. ^ a b c "Chichester cathedral: Historical survey | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk.
  9. ^ Urban, Sylvanus (1861). "Fall of Chichester Spire". The Gentleman's Magazine and Historical Review. London: John Henry and James Parker. 210: 526–529.
  10. ^ Kelly, Tessa (2005). "The Collapse of the Crossing Tower and Spire - a critical review". In Foster, Paul (ed.). Chichester Cathedral Spire The Collapse (1861). Otter Memorial Paper. Vol. 13. University College Chichester. p. 44. ISBN 0-948765-18-6.
  11. ^ Tatton-Brown, Tim (1994). "Destruction, Repair and Restoration". In Hobbs, Mary (ed.). Chichester Cathedral an Historical Survey. Chichester: Phillimore. pp. 148–153. ISBN 0-85033-924-3.
  12. ^ "The Clock Trust". Companies House. Retrieved 21 April 2022.
  13. ^ . Clock Trust. Archived from the original on 13 April 2017. Retrieved 12 April 2017.
  14. ^ "Congregational Chapel". Funtington Archive. Retrieved 12 April 2017.
  15. ^ "Cathedral's 900 years celebrated". BBC News. 5 October 2008.
  16. ^ Sally Shalam (27 November 2010). "Hotel review | George Bell House, Chichester". The Guardian.
  17. ^ Banister Fletcher, A History of Architecture on the Comparative Method, Elsevier Science & Technology. ISBN 0-7506-2267-9
  18. ^ a b c d Chichester Cathedral website accessed 2 October 2010
  19. ^ https://www.chichester.anglican.org/glitter_news/2019/06/10/new-canon-chancellor/[permanent dead link]
  20. ^ Hilly Sloan Chichester Cathedral at the time of the Reformation
  21. ^ . Chichester Cathedral. Archived from the original on 6 June 2011. Retrieved 15 January 2011.
  22. ^ a b . Chichester Cathedral. Archived from the original on 15 August 2010. Retrieved 15 January 2011.
  23. ^ "Events at Chichester Cathedral". Chichester Cathedral. Retrieved 15 January 2011.
  24. ^ John Wheatley (15 March 2010). "REVIEW: Chichester Singers, Chichester Cathedral". Chichester Observer. Archived from the original on 24 July 2012. Retrieved 13 September 2010.
  25. ^ "Quiet revolution in the south".
  26. ^ Eric Shanes (1997). Turner's Watercolour Explorations, 1810-42. Tate Publishing. pp. 94, 96, 105.
  27. ^ "Paul Mellon Collection: Chichester Cathedral". Yale Center for British Art. Retrieved 2 April 2019.
  28. ^ "Chichester Cathedral". V&A website.
  29. ^ "Filming Location "Chichester Cathedral"". IMDb (Internet Movie Database).
  30. ^ Chapman, Graham (1989). The Complete Monty Python's Flying Circus: All the Words. New York City: Pantheon Books. p. 127. ISBN 9780679726470.
  31. ^ . www.chichesterperegrines.com. Archived from the original on 19 April 2012. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  32. ^ Mid Sussex Times article on the Sussex peregrines. Retrieved 7 July 2009.
  33. ^ RSPB news piece about Chichester peregrines in 2012. Retrieved 16 August 2012.

External links

  • Official website
  • The Chichester Customary, 1948

chichester, cathedral, formally, known, cathedral, church, holy, trinity, seat, anglican, bishop, chichester, located, chichester, west, sussex, england, founded, cathedral, 1075, when, seat, bishop, moved, from, selsey, cathedral, church, holy, trinitygb, 836. Chichester Cathedral formally known as the Cathedral Church of the Holy Trinity is the seat of the Anglican Bishop of Chichester It is located in Chichester in West Sussex England It was founded as a cathedral in 1075 when the seat of the bishop was moved from Selsey 2 Chichester CathedralCathedral Church of the Holy TrinityChichester CathedralGB WSX 50 50 11 N 0 46 51 W 50 8363 N 0 7808 W 50 8363 0 7808 Coordinates GB WSX 50 50 11 N 0 46 51 W 50 8363 N 0 7808 W 50 8363 0 7808LocationChichester West SussexCountryUnited KingdomDenominationChurch of EnglandPrevious denominationRoman CatholicWebsitechichestercathedral org ukHistoryConsecrated1108ArchitectureStyleNorman GothicSpecificationsLength408 ft 124 m 1 Width157 ft 48 m 1 Height61 ft 19 m 1 Spire height277 ft 84 m 1 AdministrationProvinceCanterburyDioceseChichesterClergyArchbishopJustin WelbyBishop s Martin WarnerDeanvacantPrecentorJack DunnChancellorDaniel InmanTreasurerVanessa BaronLaityDirector of musicCharles HarrisonOrganist s Timothy RavaldeChichester Cathedral has fine architecture in both the Norman and the Gothic styles and has been described by the architectural critic Ian Nairn as the most typical English Cathedral 3 Despite this Chichester has two architectural features that are unique among England s medieval cathedrals a free standing medieval bell tower or campanile and double aisles 4 The cathedral contains two rare medieval sculptures and many modern art works including tapestries stained glass and sculpture many of these commissioned by Walter Hussey Dean 1955 77 2 The city of Chichester though it retains two main cross streets laid out by the Romans has always been small enough for the city s entire population to fit inside the cathedral at once causing Daniel Defoe to comment I cannot say much of Chichester in which if six or seven good families were removed there would not be much conversation except what is to be found among the canons and the dignitaries of the cathedral 5 The spire of Chichester Cathedral rising above its green copper roof can be seen for many miles across the flat meadows of West Sussex and is a landmark for sailors Chichester being the only medieval English cathedral which is visible from the sea 4 6 a Contents 1 History 2 Architecture 3 Treasures 4 Dean and chapter 5 Music 5 1 Organs and organists 5 2 Cathedral choir 6 Art and popular culture 7 Wildlife 8 See also 9 Explanatory notes 10 References 11 External linksHistory Edit Chichester Cathedral circa 1650 Chichester Cathedral was built to replace the cathedral founded in 681 by St Wilfrid for the South Saxons at Selsey The seat of the bishop was transferred in 1075 2 It was consecrated in 1108 under bishop Ralph de Luffa An early addition was the Chapel of Saint Pantaleon off the south transept now the Canons Vestry probably begun just before an 1187 fire which burnt out the cathedral and destroyed much of the town 8 That fire necessitated a substantial rebuilding which included refacing the nave and replacing the destroyed wooden ceiling with the present stone vault possibly by Walter of Coventry The cathedral was reconsecrated in 1199 1 2 In the 13th century the central tower was completed the Norman apsidal eastern end rebuilt with a Lady chapel and a row of chapels added on each side of the nave forming double aisles such as are found on many French cathedrals The spire was completed about 1402 and a free standing bell tower constructed to the north of the west end 1 2 b In 1262 Richard de la Wyche who was bishop from 1245 to 1253 was canonised as Saint Richard of Chichester His shrine made the cathedral a place of pilgrimage The shrine was ordered to be destroyed in 1538 during the first stages of the English Reformation In 1642 the cathedral came under siege by Parliamentary troops 2 The collapse of the spire in 1861 The towers at Chichester have had a particularly unfortunate history because of subsidence which explains the positioning of the 15th century bell tower at some distance from the cathedral The south west tower of the facade collapsed in 1210 and was rebuilt The north west tower collapsed in 1635 and was not rebuilt until 1901 2 The masonry spire was built in the 14th century and was repaired in the 17th century by Christopher Wren It survived a lightning strike in 1721 and stood for 450 years citation needed On 21 February 1861 the spire telescoped in on itself without loss of life A restoration programme had been started under George Chandler Dean in the 1840s The project was to be completed by Walter Hook who took over as dean in 1849 It included the removal of a stone screen known as the Arundel screen that separated the choir from the nave There was some discussion that its removal had caused the collapse of the spire A more likely cause was thought to be that the spire s foundations had been subject to subsidence over the years and had become detached from the tower leaving the tower freestanding Also that the rubble cores of the columns holding the spire had become dust Thus a weakened tower collapsed in the face of high winds 9 A fund was set up to raise the 48 000 needed for the rebuilding and the contributors included Queen Victoria and Prince Albert 10 A replica of the old tower and spire was rebuilt along the original lines by George Gilbert Scott from drawings which had been made by Joseph Butler architect to the fabric 1847 88 8 The construction was raised by about 6 feet 1 8 m by Scott and was completed in five years 11 It now rises to a height of 82 metres 269 ft 2 4 The rubble from the original spire was used to construct the former West Ashling Congregational Chapel c 13 14 In 2008 the cathedral community celebrated the 900th anniversary of the building s consecration Rowan Williams then Archbishop of Canterbury was invited to preach at a festival eucharist and dedicate the new guest house which was originally named after Bishop George Bell 15 16 Architecture Edit Plan of Chichester Cathedral produced in 1875 Exterior from southeast Exterior from northwest Typically for English cathedrals Chichester has had a long and varied building history marked by a number of disasters The architectural history of the building is revealed in its fabric because the builders of different periods constructed in different styles and with changing technology Both inside and outside portions of the original Norman cathedral can be distinguished from the later Gothic work by the massive construction and round topped windows Different Gothic styles from the late 12th century through to the 15th can also be identified The plan of Chichester is in the shape of a cross with an aisled nave and choir crossed by a transept In typically English manner the eastern end of the building is long by comparison with the nave is square ended and has a projecting Lady chapel Also typically English is the arrangement of paired towers on the western front and a taller central tower over the crossing 17 Its plan is unusual for England in having double aisles Chichester has a cloister on the south side of the building Chichester is small for a Norman cathedral when compared to Winchester Ely and Peterborough Much of the original Norman construction remains in the nave transept crossing and adjacent bays of the choir The elevation rises in the usual three stages of arcade gallery and clerestory It is similar to remaining Norman work at Winchester where the arcade is proportionally low and rests on solid piers rather than columns In the gallery above each wide space is divided into two by a colonnettes in a manner typical of Romanesque architecture 4 After the fire of 1187 the clerestory was rebuilt and the entire building given a ribbed vault The eastern end was extended from the round ambulatory to form a square retrochoir or presbytery with lancet windows in a style that is transitional between Norman and Gothic The newer arcades and the clerestory maintain the round arches of the earlier Norman architecture The vault is in the Early English Gothic style supported externally by flying buttresses and large terminal pinnacles at the eastern end At this time the entire interior was refurbished much of it being refaced with ashlar masonry Each pier was decorated with delicate shafts of dark Purbeck marble with foliate capitals contrasting with the squat cushion capitals of the limestone shafts The entire programme of work was probably directed by Walter of Coventry 1 The nave was later divided from the choir by an elegant Perpendicular screen or pulpitum with three arched openings called the Arundel Screen which was removed in the mid 19th century but reinstated in 1961 1 2 4 The design of the central tower faithfully reproduced by George Gilbert Scott was of the Early English style having on each side two tall pairs of openings surrounded by deep mouldings 8 The original spire which also was of masonry rather than of sheathed wood was built in the late 14th century by John Mason died ca 1403 who also built the Vicars Hall 1 The style and construction of the spire are obviously based on that of Salisbury Cathedral but it is not as ambitiously tall probably because of the problem of subsidence At 277 ft 84 m high it is the fourth tallest cathedral spire in the UK after Salisbury Norwich and Coventry The Lady chapel constructed to the east of the retro choir is a long narrow space with large windows in the Decorated Gothic style of the late 13th century 1 2 4 The other buildings related to the cathedral are the free standing bell tower of the early 15th century probably the work of William Wynford who also designed the cloisters with openings in the Perpendicular style 1 St Mary s Almshouses in Chichester which are linked to the cathedral is a Christian charity dating from the 13th century The medieval Hospital associated with the Alms House is one of only two such buildings in the world the other being in Germany 18 Cathedral interior Arundel Screen High altar Choir North transeptTreasures Edit Stained glass window by Marc Chagall The cathedral has many treasures and artworks the most precious being two carved reliefs dating from the 12th century which are of exceptional rarity among English sculpture 2 4 Other ancient treasures include the remains of a Roman mosaic pavement which can be viewed through a glass window and a set of thirty eight medieval misericords dating from 1330 which remain beneath the seats of the choir despite the fact that other parts of the choir stalls are largely a Victorian reconstruction 4 Among the famous graves are those of the composer Gustav Holst and the Gothic Arundel tomb showing the recumbent Richard FitzAlan 10th Earl of Arundel 1313 1376 holding hands with his second wife Eleanor of Lancaster 1318 1372 The tomb was celebrated in the poem An Arundel Tomb by Philip Larkin Also resting there is Joan de Vere grandmother of Richard FitzAlan who died in 1293 She as was her grandson was first buried at Lewes Priory but their tombs were relocated to Chichester at the time of the dissolution The cathedral contains many modern works of art including tapestries by John Piper and Ursula Benker Schirmer a window by Marc Chagall a painting by Graham Sutherland Noli me Tangere a sculpture and a font by John Skelton and a reredos for the St John the Baptist s Chapel by Patrick Procktor Outside the cathedral stands a bronze statue of St Richard of Chichester by Philip Jackson 18 The cathedral also contains a pennant presented by Francis Chichester which hung on his ship when he circumnavigated the globe Dean and chapter Edit The 15th century bell tower There is currently no Dean of Chichester Canon Simon Holland will be the Interim Dean from 30 April 2023 The Canon Precentor is Dr Jack Dunn installed on 26 September 2021 The Canon Chancellor is Dr Daniel Inman installed on 6 October 2019 19 The Canon Treasurer is Vanessa Baron installed on 26 September 2021 Lay members of the chapter include Howard Castle Smith Anita Rolls and Duncan Irvine Robert Sherburne the Bishop of Chichester founded four prebends known as the Wiccamical prebends in 1524 20 Music EditThe music at Chichester Cathedral is largely led by the organ and the cathedral choir as there are services daily and on special days in the calendar Outside the regular services the cathedral also supports all kinds of music both religious and secular Visiting choirs who come from the diocese s parishes and elsewhere sing in the cathedral from time to time It is common for guest choirs to sing at Evensong during the week 21 The cathedral hosts a variety of concerts that along with those in the evening includes a popular series of free lunchtime concerts 22 It provides a venue for visiting artists from across the world as well as those who are locally based such as the Chichester Singers who although an independent organisation have since their formation in 1954 performed all their major concerts in the cathedral 22 23 24 Organs and organists Edit Main organ Main article Organs and organists of Chichester Cathedral There has been organ music at Chichester Cathedral almost continuously since the medieval period with a break during the Commonwealth There are now five pipe organs of different sizes and styles at Chichester Cathedral with pipes of the Main Organ dating to the Restoration the Hurd Organ to the late 18th century and the three most recent organs the Nave Organ the Walker Organ which is a small portable organ in the Baroque style and the Allen Organ an early example of a digital electronic organ dating to the late 20th century Several well known composers including Thomas Weelkes and John Reading have served as cathedral organist Anne Maddocks assistant organist 1942 49 was the first woman in the country to hold such a post in a cathedral and Sarah Baldock organist and master of the choristers 2008 14 was the second woman to hold the most senior musical post in a Church of England cathedral 25 The current organist and master of the choristers is Charles Harrison The assistant organist is Timothy Ravalde Cathedral choir Edit Main article Choir of Chichester Cathedral Chichester Cathedral Choir consists of eighteen choristers and four probationers all of whom are educated at the Prebendal School which sits adjacent to the Cathedral precinct and is the Cathedral Choir School and six lay vicars who are professional musicians During school term the cathedral choir sing at eight services each week As well as singing choristers learn the piano and an orchestral instrument spending at least eighteen hours a week on musical performance 18 The choir regularly tours abroad and in recent years has visited France and Northern Bavaria Bamberg Bayreuth Nuremberg and Wurzburg and makes frequent visits to Chartres In 2005 the choir made a tour to South Africa 18 Art and popular culture Edit Chichester Cathedral by Joseph Francis Gilbert in 1833 The cathedral has been the subject of a number of depictions in art literature and television media Its spire and towers are visible in the 1828 painting Chichester Canal by J M W Turner It is also speculated by Eric Shanes that Chichester Cathedral is the subject of one of Turner s colour studies for Picturesque Views in England and Wales 26 In 1833 Joseph Francis Gilbert produced an oil painting of the cathedral showing the surrounding cityscape It was collected by Paul Mellon and gifted to the Yale Center for British Art which he established in 1966 27 John Constable completed his own watercolour of the cathedral in 1824 now located in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London 28 The building and grounds are occasionally used as a film location Credits include Rumpole of the Bailey s05e03 as Lawnchester Cathedral The Ruth Rendell Mysteries s10e08 as Marchester Cathedral and Rosemary amp Thyme s03e02 as Wellminster Cathedral 29 Chichester Cathedral is referenced in s01e10 of Monty Python s Flying Circus one of Ron Obvious s tasks to gain public fame involves eating the cathedral He is shown brushing his teeth putting on a bib and flexing his jaws before biting into the corner of the cathedral and breaking his jaw 30 Wildlife Edit Peregrine falcons in flight over the cathedral The cathedral is a nesting site for peregrine falcons which use a crenellated turret at the base of the spire Three female and one male chick were hatched in April 2009 During the nesting season live video of the chicks is shown inside the cathedral and on the website 31 32 33 See also Edit Christianity portal South East England portalArchitecture of the medieval cathedrals of England List of current places of worship in Chichester district List of cathedrals in England and Wales List of deans of Chichester List of Gothic cathedrals in EuropeExplanatory notes Edit Its near neighbour Portsmouth Cathedral a parish church founded in the 12th century and raised to cathedral status in the 20th century can also be seen from the sea 7 The practice of separating the campanile from the main building is common in Italy where ground movement is a problem because of both subsidence and earthquake The old Congregational Chapel closed between 1934 and 1938 and became a clock museum run by the Clock trust The museum closed when the Clock Trust was dissolved in 2018 12 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k John Harvey English Cathedrals Batsford 1961 a b c d e f g h i j k Tim Tatton Brown and John Crook The English Cathedral New Holland 2002 ISBN 1 84330 120 2 Nikolaus Pevsner and Ian Nairn Buildings of England Sussex Penguin Books 1965 now published by Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 09677 1 a b c d e f g h Alec Clifton Taylor The Cathedrals of England Thames amp Hudson 1967 Daniel Defoe A Tour Through the Whole Island of Great Britain 1724 The Argus permanent dead link Cathedral troubled by many calamities first published Monday 16 April 2007 Retrieved 29 October 2008 Pepin David 2016 Cathedrals of Britain Oxford Bloomsbury Shire Publications pp 173 176 ISBN 978 1 7844 2049 9 a b c Chichester cathedral Historical survey British History Online www british history ac uk Urban Sylvanus 1861 Fall of Chichester Spire The Gentleman s Magazine and Historical Review London John Henry and James Parker 210 526 529 Kelly Tessa 2005 The Collapse of the Crossing Tower and Spire a critical review In Foster Paul ed Chichester Cathedral Spire The Collapse 1861 Otter Memorial Paper Vol 13 University College Chichester p 44 ISBN 0 948765 18 6 Tatton Brown Tim 1994 Destruction Repair and Restoration In Hobbs Mary ed Chichester Cathedral an Historical Survey Chichester Phillimore pp 148 153 ISBN 0 85033 924 3 The Clock Trust Companies House Retrieved 21 April 2022 Time Machine Clock Trust Archived from the original on 13 April 2017 Retrieved 12 April 2017 Congregational Chapel Funtington Archive Retrieved 12 April 2017 Cathedral s 900 years celebrated BBC News 5 October 2008 Sally Shalam 27 November 2010 Hotel review George Bell House Chichester The Guardian Banister Fletcher A History of Architecture on the Comparative Method Elsevier Science amp Technology ISBN 0 7506 2267 9 a b c d Chichester Cathedral website accessed 2 October 2010 https www chichester anglican org glitter news 2019 06 10 new canon chancellor permanent dead link Hilly Sloan Chichester Cathedral at the time of the Reformation Visiting Choir Information Chichester Cathedral Archived from the original on 6 June 2011 Retrieved 15 January 2011 a b Concerts Chichester Cathedral Archived from the original on 15 August 2010 Retrieved 15 January 2011 Events at Chichester Cathedral Chichester Cathedral Retrieved 15 January 2011 John Wheatley 15 March 2010 REVIEW Chichester Singers Chichester Cathedral Chichester Observer Archived from the original on 24 July 2012 Retrieved 13 September 2010 Quiet revolution in the south Eric Shanes 1997 Turner s Watercolour Explorations 1810 42 Tate Publishing pp 94 96 105 Paul Mellon Collection Chichester Cathedral Yale Center for British Art Retrieved 2 April 2019 Chichester Cathedral V amp A website Filming Location Chichester Cathedral IMDb Internet Movie Database Chapman Graham 1989 The Complete Monty Python s Flying Circus All the Words New York City Pantheon Books p 127 ISBN 9780679726470 Chichester Peregrines Home www chichesterperegrines com Archived from the original on 19 April 2012 Retrieved 11 January 2022 Mid Sussex Times article on the Sussex peregrines Retrieved 7 July 2009 RSPB news piece about Chichester peregrines in 2012 Retrieved 16 August 2012 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chichester Cathedral Official website The Chichester Customary 1948 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chichester Cathedral amp oldid 1152341479, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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