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Lincoln Cathedral

Lincoln Cathedral, Lincoln Minster, or the Cathedral Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Lincoln and sometimes St Mary's Cathedral, in Lincoln, England, is a Grade I listed cathedral and is the seat of the Anglican Bishop of Lincoln. Construction commenced in 1072 and continued in several phases throughout the High Middle Ages. Like many of the medieval cathedrals of England, it was built in the Early Gothic style.

Lincoln Cathedral
The Cathedral Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Lincoln
Lincoln Cathedral viewed from Lincoln Castle
Lincoln Cathedral
Shown within Lincoln
Coordinates: 53°14′04″N 0°32′10″W / 53.23444°N 0.53611°W / 53.23444; -0.53611
LocationLincoln, Lincolnshire
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
Previous denominationRoman Catholicism
TraditionAnglo-Catholic
Websitelincolncathedral.com
History
DedicationVirgin Mary
Consecrated11 May 1092
Architecture
StyleGothic
Years built1185–1311
Groundbreaking1072[1]
Specifications
Length147 metres (482 ft)
Width24 metres (78 ft)
Nave height24 metres (78 ft)
Number of towers3
Tower height83 metres (272 ft) (crossing)
Number of spires3 (now lost)
Spire height160 metres (520 ft) (crossing tower)
Bells13 hung for change ringing; 20 in total (13 in South West tower, 2 in North West tower and 5 in the central tower)
Tenor bell weight23cwt 3qr 23lb (1212kg) in D
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseLincoln (since 1072)
Clergy
DeanChristine Wilson
PrecentorNick Brown
ChancellorPaul Overend
Laity
Director of musicAric Prentice
Organist(s)Jeffrey Makinson
Chapter clerkWilliam Harrison
Building details
Record height
Tallest in the world from 1311 to 1548[dubious ][I]
Preceded byGreat Pyramid of Giza
Surpassed byTower of St. Mary's Church, Stralsund

Some historians claim it became the tallest building in the world upon the completion of its 160 metres (525 ft) high central spire in 1311, although this is disputed. If so, it was the first building to hold that title after the Great Pyramid of Giza, and held it for 238 years until the spire collapsed in 1548,[2][3][4] and was not rebuilt. Had the central spire remained intact, Lincoln Cathedral would have remained the world's tallest structure until the completion of the Washington Monument in 1884. For hundreds of years the cathedral held one of the four remaining copies of the original Magna Carta, now securely displayed in Lincoln Castle. The cathedral is the fourth largest in the UK (in floor area) at around 5,000 square metres (54,000 sq ft), after Liverpool, St Paul's and York Minster.[5] It is highly regarded by architectural scholars; the Victorian writer John Ruskin declared: "I have always held ... that the cathedral of Lincoln is out and out the most precious piece of architecture in the British Isles and roughly speaking worth any two other cathedrals we have."[6]

History

Remigius de Fécamp, the first Bishop of Lincoln, moved the episcopal seat (cathedra) there "some time between 1072 and 1092".[7] About this, James Essex writes that "Remigius ... laid the foundations of his Cathedral in 1072" and "it is probable that he, being a Norman, employed Norman masons to superintend the building ... though he could not complete the whole before his death."[8]

Before that, writes B Winkles, "It is well known that Remigius appropriated the parish church of St Mary Magdalene in Lincoln, although it is not known what use he made of it."[9]

When Lincoln Cathedral was first built, William the Conqueror granted the parish of Welton to Remigius in order to endow six prebends which provided income to support six canons attached to the cathedral. These were subsequently confirmed by William II and Henry I.[10]

 
Model within the cathedral illustrating the cathedral's former spires
 
17th century print of Lincoln Cathedral with spires on the west towers

Until then St Mary's Church in Stow was considered to be the "mother church"[11] of Lincolnshire[12] (although it was not a cathedral, because the seat of the diocese was at Dorchester Abbey in Dorchester-on-Thames, Oxfordshire). However, Lincoln was more central to a diocese that stretched from the Thames to the Humber.

Remigius built the first Lincoln Cathedral on the present site, finishing it in 1092 and then dying on 7 May of that year,[13] two days before it was consecrated. In 1124, the timber roofing was destroyed in a fire. Alexander (bishop, 1123–48) rebuilt and expanded the cathedral, but it was mostly destroyed by an earthquake about forty years later, in 1185 (dated by the British Geological Survey as occurring 15 April 1185).[9][14] The earthquake was one of the largest felt in the UK: it has an estimated magnitude of over 5. The damage to the cathedral is thought to have been very extensive: the cathedral is described as having "split from top to bottom"; in the current building, only the lower part of the west end and its two attached towers remain of the pre-earthquake cathedral.[14]

Some (Kidson, 1986; Woo, 1991) have suggested that the damage to Lincoln Cathedral was probably exacerbated by poor construction or design, with the actual collapse most probably caused by a vault failure.[14]

After the earthquake, a new bishop was appointed. He was Hugh de Burgundy of Avalon, France, who became known as St Hugh of Lincoln. He began a massive rebuilding and expansion programme. With his appointment of William de Montibus as master of the cathedral school and chancellor, Lincoln briefly became one of the leading educational centres in England, producing writers such as Samuel Presbiter and Richard of Wetheringsett, though it declined in importance after William's death in 1213.[15] Rebuilding began with the choir (St Hugh's Choir) and the eastern transepts between 1192 and 1210.[16] The central nave was then built in the Early English Gothic architectural style. Lincoln Cathedral soon followed other architectural advances of the time – pointed arches, flying buttresses and ribbed vaulting were added to the cathedral. This allowed support for incorporating larger windows. There are thirteen bells in the south-west tower, two in the north-west tower, and five in the central tower (including Great Tom). Accompanying the cathedral's large bell, Great Tom of Lincoln, is a quarter-hour striking clock which was installed in the early 19th century.[17] The two large stained glass rose windows, the matching Dean's Eye and the Bishop's Eye were added to the cathedral during the late Middle Ages. The former, the Dean's Eye in the north transept dates from the 1192 rebuild begun by St Hugh, completed in 1235. The latter, the Bishop's Eye, in the south transept was reconstructed a hundred years later in 1330.[18] A contemporary record, “The Metrical Life of St Hugh”, refers to the meaning of these two windows (one on the dark, north, side and the other on the light, south, side of the building):

"For north represents the devil, and south the Holy Spirit and it is in these directions that the two eyes look. The bishop faces the south in order to invite in and the dean the north in order to shun; the one takes care to be saved, the other takes care not to perish. With these Eyes the cathedral's face is on watch for the candelabra of Heaven and the darkness of Lethe (oblivion)."

 
Main door of the cathedral
 
Norman West front
External video
 
  Lincoln Cathedral, 10:44, 15 July 2017 Smarthistory[19]
  Lincoln Cathedral Organ Refurbishment 2017, 9:17, 7 July 2017, Lincoln Cathedral

After the additions of the Dean's eye and other major Gothic additions it is believed some mistakes in the support of the tower occurred, for in 1237 the main tower collapsed. A new tower was soon started and in 1255 the cathedral petitioned Henry III to allow them to take down part of the town wall to enlarge and expand the cathedral, including the rebuilding of the central tower and spire. They replaced the small rounded chapels (built at the time of St Hugh) with a larger east end to the cathedral. This was to handle the increasing number of pilgrims to the cathedral, who came to worship at the shrine of Hugh of Lincoln.

In 1290 Eleanor of Castile died and King Edward I of England decided to honour her, his Queen Consort, with an elegant funeral procession. After her body had been embalmed, which in the 13th century involved evisceration, Eleanor's viscera were buried in Lincoln cathedral and Edward placed a duplicate of the Westminster Abbey tomb there. The Lincoln tomb's original stone chest survives; its effigy was destroyed in the 17th century and replaced with a 19th-century copy. On the outside of Lincoln Cathedral are two prominent statues often identified as Edward and Eleanor, but these images were heavily restored in the 19th century and they were probably not originally intended to depict the couple.[20]

Between 1307 and 1311 the central tower was raised to its present height of 271 feet (83 m). The western towers and front of the cathedral were also improved and heightened. At this time, a tall lead-encased wooden spire topped the central tower but was blown down in a storm in 1548. With its spire, the tower reputedly reached a height of 525 feet (160 m) (which would have made it the world's tallest structure, surpassing the Great Pyramid of Giza, which held the record for almost 4,000 years). Although still doubted,[2] this is the height agreed upon by the majority of historians.[21][22][23][disputed ]

Other additions to the cathedral at this time included its elaborate carved screen and the 14th-century misericords, as was the Angel Choir. For a large part of the length of the cathedral, the walls have arches in relief with a second layer in front to give the illusion of a passageway along the wall. However the illusion does not work, as the stonemason, copying techniques from France, did not make the arches the correct length needed for the illusion to be effective.[citation needed]

In 1398 John of Gaunt and Katherine Swynford founded a chantry in the cathedral to pray for the welfare of their souls. In the 15th century the building of the cathedral turned to chantry or memorial chapels. The chapels next to the Angel Choir were built in the Perpendicular style, with an emphasis on strong vertical lines, which survive today in the window tracery and wall panelling.

Magna Carta

Hugh of Wells, Bishop of Lincoln, was one of the signatories to Magna Carta and for hundreds of years the cathedral held one of the four remaining copies of the original, now securely displayed in Lincoln Castle.[24]

The Lincoln Magna Carta was on display at the British Pavilion during the 1939 New York World's Fair.[25] In March 1941, the Foreign Office proposed that the Lincoln Magna Carta be gifted to the United States, citing the "many thousands of Americans who waited in long queues to view it" and the US passage of the Lend-Lease Act, among other reasons.[25] In 2009 the Lincoln Magna Carta was lent to the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California.[24]

There are three other surviving copies: two at the British Library and one at Salisbury Cathedral.[26]

Little Saint Hugh

In August 1255 the body of an eight-year-old boy was found in a well in Lincoln. He had been missing for nearly a month. This incident became the source of a blood libel in the city, with Jews accused of his abduction, torture, and murder. Many Jews were arrested and eighteen were hanged. The boy became known as Little Saint Hugh, to distinguish him from Saint Hugh of Lincoln, but he was never canonised.

The cathedral benefited from these events because Hugh was seen as a martyr, and many devotees came to the city and cathedral to venerate him. Geoffrey Chaucer mentions the case in "The Prioress's Tale" and a ballad was written about it in 1783. In 1955 a plaque was placed near "the remains of the shrine of 'Little St Hugh'" in the cathedral, that decries the "Trumped up stories of 'ritual murders' of Christian boys by Jewish communities."

Features

Lincoln Imp

 
The Lincoln Imp

One of the stone carvings within the cathedral is the Lincoln Imp. There are several variations of the legend surrounding the figure. According to 14th-century legend, two mischievous imps were sent by Satan to do evil work on Earth. After causing mayhem elsewhere in Northern England the two imps headed to Lincoln Cathedral, where they smashed tables and chairs and tripped up the bishop. An angel appeared in the Angel Choir and ordered them to stop. One of the imps sat atop a stone pillar and started throwing stones at the angel whilst the other cowered under the broken tables and chairs. The angel turned the first imp to stone, allowing the second imp to escape. The imp that turned to stone can still be found sitting atop his stone column in the Angel Choir. They also are one of the many carved animals on the structure.

Wren library

The Wren Library houses a rare collection of over 277 manuscripts, including the text of the Venerable Bede.

Rose windows

 
The Bishop's Eye rose window

Lincoln Cathedral features two major rose windows, which are a highly uncommon feature among medieval architecture in England. On the north side of the cathedral is the “Dean's Eye” which survives from the original structure of the building and on the south side is the “Bishop's Eye” which was most likely rebuilt circa 1325–1350. This south window is one of the largest examples of curvilinear tracery seen in medieval architecture. Curvilinear tracery is a form of tracery where the patterns are continuous curves. This form was often done within pointed arches and squared windows because those are the easiest shapes, so the circular space of the window was a unique challenge to the designers. A solution was created that called for the circle to be divided into smaller shapes that would make it simpler to design and create. Curves were drawn within the window which created four distinct areas of the circle. This made the spaces within the circle where the tracery would go much smaller, and easier to work with. This window is also unique in that the focus of the tracery was shifted away from the centre of the circle and instead placed in other sections. The glazing of the window was difficult as the tracery for many of the same reasons; therefore, the designers cut back on the amount of iconography within the window.

Most cathedral windows during this time displayed many colourful images of the Bible; however, at Lincoln there are very few images. Some of those images that can be seen within the window include saints Paul, Andrew, and James.

Vaults

 
Lincoln Cathedral "crazy vaults"

One major architectural features of Lincoln Cathedral are the vaults. The varying vaults within the cathedral are said to be both original and experimental. They demonstrate the experimental aspect seen at Lincoln. The vaults differ between the nave, aisles, choir, and chapels. Along the North Aisle there is a continuous ridge rib with a regular arcade that ignores the bays. In the South Aisle there is a discontinuous ridge rib that puts an emphasis on each bay. The North West Chapel has quadripartite vaults and the South Chapel has vaults that stem from one central support column. The use of sexpartite vaults allowed for more natural light to enter the cathedral through the clerestory windows, which were placed inside of each bay.

Saint Hugh's Choir exhibits a series of asymmetrical vaults that appear to almost be a diagonal line created by two ribs on one side translating into only a single rib on the other side of the vault. This pattern divides the space of the vaults and bays, placing the emphasis on the bays.

The chapter house is a decagonal building with a single, central column from which twenty ribs rise producing unusual vaulting.

Each area of Lincoln can be identified solely by the different vaults of the space. Each vault, or each variation of the vault, is unique. The vaults are attributed to French-Normand master mason Geoffrey de Noiers.[27][28] de Noiers was succeeded by Alexander the Mason, who developed the nave's more elaborate, but symmetrical tierceron vaulting, the crossing vaulting, Galilee Porch and western facade screen.[29][30]

 
Vault of Angel Choir
 
Crossing of Secondary transept
 
Vault of Entrance to Chapter House
 
Vault of Secondary Transept
 
Vault of Main Transepts
 
Vault of Nave

Tower clock

A clock by John Thwaite[31] was installed in the north west tower in 1775. This was later improved by Benjamin Vulliamy and moved to the broad tower around 1835. It was replaced in 1880 by a new clock built by Potts and Sons of Leeds, under the instruction of Edmund Beckett QC. Cambridge Chimes were a feature of the new clock.[32] The machinery, featuring a double three-legged gravity escapement to Beckett's designs, weighs about 4 long tons (4.5 short tons), with the driving weights being 1.5 long tons (1.7 short tons), suspended by steel-wire ropes 270 feet (82 m) long, and the pendulum weight of 2 long hundredweight (100 kg). The beat is 1.5 seconds. The hour hammer is 224 pounds (102 kg), striking upon the Great Tom bell. The striking trains require winding daily, when done manually it took 20 minutes. The going train required winding twice per week. The clock mechanism contains the inscription Quod bene vortat Deus Opt. Max., Consiliis Edmundi Beckett, Baronetti, LL.D., Opera Gul. Potts et Filiorum, civium Leodiensium, Sumptibus Decani et Capituli, Novum in Turri positum est Horologium, A.D. MDCCCLXXX.

Bells

The South West tower of the cathedral contains a fine ring of 13 bells all cast by John Taylor and Co in Loughborough. The back 8 bells were cast in 1913, with 4 new trebles being added in 1927. In 1948 a flat 6th was added to allow for ringing on the middle 8 bells. The treble bell weighs 5cwt 0qr 2lb, with the tenor weighing 23cwt 3qr 23lb and striking the note D (nominal 600.0Hz). The bells are rung from the section of the tower just above The Great West Front, with the ringing chamber having 3 windows on all but one side. The bells themselves are hung below the louvers to minimise tower movement as much as possible.

 
Angel Choir Details

Modern history

 
Floor plan
 
Interior view of the crossing tower vaulting

Wartime history

Sometime during the later stages of the Second World War, the accomplished RAF pilot and future Black British civil rights leader, Billy Strachan, almost crashed his aircraft into Lincoln Cathedral. Strachan credited this experience with ending his piloting career, as he found it psychologically impossible to continue flying combat missions.[33]

Lincolnshire was home to many Bomber Command airfields during the Second World War, giving rise to the nickname of "Bomber County".[34] The station badge for the nearby RAF Waddington depicts Lincoln Cathedral rising through the clouds.[35] Until the opening of the RAF Bomber Command Memorial in 2012, the cathedral had the only memorial in the United Kingdom dedicated to Bomber Command's large losses of aircrew in the Second World War.[36][37]

During the war, "priceless British treasures" were placed in a chamber sixty feet beneath the cathedral for safekeeping.[38] This did not include the cathedral's copy of the Magna Carta as it was on loan in the United States.[38]

21st century

 
A gilded crown recently installed on one of the towers.
 
Stonework commemorating the end of fox hunting – a fox can be seen hiding in the foliage.

A major renovation of the West Front was undertaken in 2000. It was discovered that the flying buttresses on the east end were no longer connected to the adjoining stonework, and repairs were made to prevent collapse. Additionally, the stonework of the Dean's Eye window in the transept was crumbling, meaning that a complete reconstruction of the window has had to be carried out according to the conservation criteria set out by the International Council on Monuments and Sites. There was a period of great anxiety when it emerged that the stonework needed to shift only 5 mm (0.20 in) for the entire window to collapse. Specialist engineers removed the window's tracery before installing a strengthened, more stable replacement. In addition to this the original stained glass was cleaned and set behind a new clear isothermal glass which offers better protection from the elements. By April 2006 the renovation project was completed at a cost of £2 million.

An announcement in January 2020 stated that since 2016, archaeologists had found over 50 burials during the renovations, including a priest buried with a chalice and paten. Among the artifacts recovered was a coin depicting Edward the Confessor who was king from 1042 to 1066. During the dig, sections of some extensively decorated Roman buildings and related artifacts were also discovered. Some of the Roman, medieval and Saxon objects were to be displayed at the visitor centre which was expected to open later in 2020.[39][40] In 2022 the scaffolding of the Lincoln Cathedral was removed from its west front after 36 years.[41]

Maintaining the cathedral costs £5.86 million a year.[42] Between 2006 and 2009, 200,000 to 208,000 people visited Lincoln Cathedral annually. In 2010 the figure dropped to 150,000, making it the 16th-most visited attraction in the East Midlands.[43] The fall in visitor numbers was attributed to the cancellation of the Lincoln Christmas Market that year.[44]

The cathedral website states; "Everyone is free to enter and gaze at the glory of the nave; you can sit in the peace of the Morning Chapel or visit the shop. If you want to explore further, we do ask you to pay."[45] The cathedral offers tours of the cathedral, the tower and the roof. The peak of its season is the Lincoln Christmas Market, accompanied by an annual production of Handel's Messiah.[46]

Cathedral stone

Lincoln Cathedral is one of the few English cathedrals built from the rock it is standing on.[47] It is mostly built from Lincolnshire Limestone.[48] The cathedral has owned the existing quarry, on Riseholme Road, Lincoln, since 1876.[49] As of 2016, the quarry was expected to run out of stone in 2021.[50] The cathedral's stonemasons use more than 100 tonnes of stone per year for maintenance and repairs.[50]

Dean and chapter

As of 10 December 2021:[51]

  • DeanChristine Wilson (installed 22 October 2016)[52]
  • Precentor – Nick Brown (since December 2020 installation, also Subdean from January 2021, in addition to being Precentor)[53]
  • Chancellor – Paul Overend (since February 2018 installation[54][55])
  • Vice Chancellor – Neil Burgess (temporary post to January 2022)
  • Residentiary Canon – David Dadswell

Music

Choir and organists

 
Aisle at the east end

The choir is currently formed of adult singers (who are either lay vicars or choral scholars), and teams of about 20 girls and 20 boys. The cathedral accepted female choristers in 1995. Lincoln was the second cathedral in the country to adopt a separate girls' choir (after Salisbury Cathedral) and remains one of few which provides the same musical opportunities and equal weekly singing duties to both girls and boys. The choristers can now attend any school and are currently drawn from over ten local schools.

The Master of the Choristers (director of music) is Aric Prentice, who conducts the choir of boys and men; the Cathedral Organist and assistant director of music is Jeffrey Makinson, who conducts the choir of girls and men. The organist emeritus is Colin Walsh, previously organist and master of the choristers and then organist laureate. The assistant organist is Alana Brook.

The records of cathedral organists at Lincoln are continuous from 1439 when John Ingleton was the incumbent. Notable organists have included the Renaissance composers William Byrd and John Reading and the biographer of Mendelssohn, William Thomas Freemantle.

Organ

One of the best examples of the work of "Father" Henry Willis, and the last he designed before his death, the cathedral organ dates from 1898. Willis had completed the design by 1885 but a shortfall in funding delayed construction and installation. This was made possible in 1898, after a donation of £1,000 (equivalent to £550,000 in 2021)[56] from Alfred Shuttleworth, an engineer and later chairman of Clayton & Shuttleworth.[57] This, together with other private gifts and a public subscription, allowed work to progress. On St Hugh's Day, 17 November 1898, the organ was inaugurated at a service attended by 4,700 people. Willis had intended that the organ be electrically-powered, the first organ in an English cathedral to be powered in this way. As the Brayford Wharf Power Station had not yet been completed,[58] manual power was instead provided by infantrymen from the Lincolnshire Regiment.[59]

The organ has been restored twice, in 1960 and in 1998. On both occasions the work was undertaken by Harrison & Harrison. It is one of only two Willis organs in English cathedrals with its original tonal scheme.[59] The organ specification is held on the National Pipe Organ Register.[60]

Burials

Other memorials

In literature and media

In literature

In Letitia Elizabeth Landon' s poetical illustration Lincoln Cathedral to a painting by Thomas Allom, she remarks on the derivation of Gothic tracery from 'the arches of the old oak trees'. This was published in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1837.[62]

In media

The cathedral was used for the filming of The Da Vinci Code (based on the book of the same name).[63] Filming took place mainly within the cloisters, and chapter house,[63] of the cathedral, and remained a closed set. The cathedral took on the role of Westminster Abbey, as the abbey had refused to permit filming.[63] Although there was protest at the filming,[64] the filming was completed by the end of August 2005. To make the Lincoln chapter house appear similar to the Westminster chapter house, murals were painted on a special layer over the existing wall, and elsewhere polystyrene replicas of Isaac Newton's tomb and other abbey monuments were set up.[63] For a time these murals and replicas remained in the chapter house, as part of a Da Vinci Code exhibit for visitors, but in January 2008 they were all sold off in an auction to raise money for the cathedral.[63]

The cathedral also doubled as Westminster Abbey for the film Young Victoria, filmed in September 2007,[65][66] and did again in June 2018 for the Netflix Shakespeare film The King.[67]

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Timeline - Lincoln Cathedral". from the original on 4 October 2018. Retrieved 4 October 2018.
  2. ^ a b Kendrick, A. F. (1902). "2: The Central Tower". The Cathedral Church of Lincoln: A History and Description of its Fabric and a List of the Bishops. London: George Bell & Sons. p. 60. ISBN 978-1-178-03666-4. The tall spire of timber, covered with lead, which originally crowned this tower reached an altitude, it is said, of 525 feet; but this is doubtful. This spire was blown down during a tempest in January 1547-8.
  3. ^ Mary Jane Taber (1905), The cathedrals of England: an account of some of their distinguishing characteristics, p.100.
  4. ^ "Lincoln Cathedral — History". The Dean and Chapter of Lincoln Cathedral. from the original on 19 January 2012. Retrieved 13 November 2018. Between 1307 and 1311 the central tower was raised to its present height. Then around 1370 to 1400 the western towers were heightened. All three towers had spires until 1548 when the central tower's spire blew down.
  5. ^ "Floorplan - Lincoln Cathedral". from the original on 15 September 2018. Retrieved 4 October 2018.
  6. ^ "Lincoln Cathedral - Guide | Cathedrals Plus". www.cathedralsplus.org.uk. Retrieved 9 December 2021.
  7. ^ The Penny magazine of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, Volumes 1–2, 1832, p. 132.
  8. ^ Essex, J, Some observations on Lincoln Cathedral. Read at the Society of Antiquaries, 16 March 1775, printed by W Bowyer and J Nichols, 1776.[1] 10 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ a b Winkles, B, Winkles's Architectural and Picturesque Illustrations of the Cathedral Churches of England and Wales: Lincoln cathedral. Chichester cathedral. Ely cathedral. Peterborough cathedral. Norwich cathedral. Exeter cathedral. Bristol cathedral. Oxford cathedral, Wilson, 1838, p. 1.
  10. ^ "Welton Prebends: Survey of English Place-Names". epns.nottingham.ac.uk. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  11. ^ Criddle, Peter (October 2008). (PDF). Lincolnshire Life. County Life Ltd: 16. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 March 2012. Retrieved 10 April 2012. At Stow, Lincolnshire's mother-church before the building of Lincoln's Cathedral, the bishop was murdered and the church burnt down.
  12. ^ Kendrick, AF (1902) [1898]. "chapter 1 The History of the Building". . London, United Kingdom: George Bell & Sons. p. 4. Archived from the original on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 10 April 2012. The venerable church of St Mary at Stow was called by Camden "the mother-church to Lincoln."
  13. ^ Kendrick, AF (1902) [1898]. . London, United Kingdom: George Bell & Sons. p. 20. Archived from the original on 4 February 2012. Retrieved 10 April 2012. [Bishop Remigius] then gave directions for his funeral, and instructions that he was to be buried in the mother-church of his diocese dedicated to the Mother of God, near the altar of St John the Baptist.
  14. ^ a b c Musson, RMW (2008). The seismicity of the British Isles to 1600. BGS, Earth Hazards and Systems, Internal Report OR/08/049 (PDF). British Geological Survey. (PDF) from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 18 May 2013.
  15. ^ van Liere, Frans (2003). (PDF). History of Universities. 18: 1–13. ISSN 0144-5138. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 September 2011.
  16. ^ Hendrix, John Shannon (2011). Architecture as Cosmology: Lincoln Cathedral and English Gothic Architecture. New York: Peter Lang. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-433113-16-1.
  17. ^ "Dove Details". dove.cccbr.org.uk. Retrieved 5 May 2015.
  18. ^ Hendrix, John Shannon (2014). "The Architecture of Lincoln Cathedral and the Cosmologies of Bishop Grosseteste". In Temple, Nicholas; Hendrix, John Shannon; Frost, Christian (eds.). Bishop Robert Grosseteste and Lincoln Cathedral: Tracing Relationships between Medieval Concepts of Order and Built Form. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate. ISBN 978-1-472412-75-1.
  19. ^ "Lincoln Cathedral". Smarthistory. 15 July 2017. from the original on 13 August 2019. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  20. ^ "The Eleanor Crosses: A Journey Set in Stone". English Heritage. Retrieved 7 October 2022.
  21. ^ Haughton, Brian (2007), Hidden History: Lost Civilizations, Secret Knowledge, and Ancient Mysteries, p. 167.
  22. ^ Michael Woods, Mary B Woods (2009), Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, p. 41.
  23. ^ Darwin Porter, Danforth Prince (2010), Frommer's England 2010, p. 588.
  24. ^ a b "Magna Carta displayed at castle". BBC News Online. BBC. 18 July 2009. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  25. ^ a b "Magna has no 'intrinsic value', 1941". National Archives UK. Flickr. 6 February 2015. from the original on 10 December 2015. Retrieved 22 August 2015. This Foreign Office document from 1941 proposes that Magna Carta be gifted to the USA during the Second World War. The document notes that Magna Carta holds no 'intrinsic value'. The proposal was eventually rejected.
  26. ^ "Award for cathedral Magna Carta". BBC News Online. BBC. 4 August 2009. from the original on 6 August 2012. Retrieved 30 April 2010.
  27. ^ Curl, James Stevens; Wilson, Susan (2016). Oxford Dictionary of Architecture. Oxford University Press. p. 527. ISBN 978-0-19-967499-2.
  28. ^ Acland, James H. (1972). Medieval Structure: The Gothic Vault. University of Toronto Press. pp. 134–135. ISBN 0-8020-1886-6.
  29. ^ Curl, James Stevens; Wilson, Susan (2016). Oxford Dictionary of Architecture. Oxford University Press. p. 16. ISBN 978-0-19-967499-2.
  30. ^ Acland, James H. (1972). Medieval Structure: The Gothic Vault. University of Toronto Press. p. 135. ISBN 0-8020-1886-6.
  31. ^ North, Thomas (1882). The Church Bells of the County and City of Lincoln. S. Clarke. p. 542.
  32. ^ "New Clock and Bells for Lincoln Cathedral". Nottinghamshire Guardian. England. 17 December 1880. Retrieved 20 August 2017 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  33. ^ Horsley, David (2019). Billy Strachan 1921-1988 RAF Officer, Communist, Civil Rights Pioneer, Legal Administrator, Internationalist and Above All Caribbean Man. London: Caribbean Labour Solidarity. p. 11. ISSN 2055-7035.
  34. ^ Halpenny, Bruce (29 October 2009). "The Airfields of 'Bomber County'". BBC Lincolnshire. from the original on 4 August 2012. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  35. ^ . Royal Air Force. Archived from the original on 6 December 2011. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  36. ^ Antiques Roadshow, from Lincoln Cathedral
  37. ^ "'Bomber county' to get memorial". BBC News. 24 August 2006. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  38. ^ a b "Planted Under Lincoln Cathedral". Singleton Argus (NSW : 1880–1954). NSW: National Library of Australia. 18 January 1943. p. 1. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
  39. ^ "Lincoln Cathedral: Medieval priest's items 'rare find'". BBC News. 24 January 2020. Retrieved 24 January 2020.
  40. ^ "Skeleton of 'medieval priest' among more than 50 skeletons found in grounds of Lincoln Cathedral". Lincolnshire Live. 23 January 2020. Retrieved 16 January 2020.
  41. ^ "Flashback 2022: Lincoln Cathedral west front scaffolding-free for first time in 36 years". 24 December 2022. Retrieved 25 February 2023.
  42. ^ "Cathedral Times from Lincoln Cathedral". Lincoln Cathedral. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  43. ^ "Visitor Attractions Trends in England 2010: Annual Report" (PDF). VisitEngland. 2011. p. 51. (PDF) from the original on 4 May 2012. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
  44. ^ Ionescu, Daniel (17 August 2011). . The Lincolnite. Archived from the original on 6 January 2012. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
  45. ^ "Planning your visit". Lincoln Cathedral. from the original on 1 May 2015. Retrieved 5 May 2015.
  46. ^ "Handel's Messiah". Lincoln Cathedral. 11 March 2017. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
  47. ^ Buckler, John Chessell (1866). A description and defence of the restorations of the exterior of Lincoln Cathedral: with a comparative examination of the restorations of other cathedrals, parish churches. HathiTrust Digital Library. HathiTrust. Retrieved 27 January 2017.
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  61. ^ "Air Vice Marshall Sir E A B Rice". IWM. Retrieved 25 February 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  62. ^ Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (1836). "picture". Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1837. Fisher, Son & Co.Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (1836). "poetical illustration". Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1837. Fisher, Son & Co.
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  66. ^ Bates, Stephen (28 August 2007). "People". The Guardian. from the original on 5 October 2014. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  67. ^ "The King Netflix Movie filmed at Lincoln Cathedral". The LIncolnite. The Lincolnite. 25 June 2018. from the original on 27 June 2018. Retrieved 25 June 2018.

Further reading

External links

  • Official website
    • Lincoln Cathedral Choir & Old Choristers Association
    • Friends of Lincoln Cathedral
  • Interactive panoramic tour of the cathedral's interior
  • Capturing Lincoln Cathedral
  • , December 2007
  • Detailed historic record for Lincoln Cathedral
Records
Preceded by World's tallest structure
1311–1548
160 m
Succeeded by

lincoln, cathedral, lincoln, minster, cathedral, church, blessed, virgin, mary, lincoln, sometimes, mary, cathedral, lincoln, england, grade, listed, cathedral, seat, anglican, bishop, lincoln, construction, commenced, 1072, continued, several, phases, through. Lincoln Cathedral Lincoln Minster or the Cathedral Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Lincoln and sometimes St Mary s Cathedral in Lincoln England is a Grade I listed cathedral and is the seat of the Anglican Bishop of Lincoln Construction commenced in 1072 and continued in several phases throughout the High Middle Ages Like many of the medieval cathedrals of England it was built in the Early Gothic style Lincoln CathedralThe Cathedral Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary of LincolnLincoln Cathedral viewed from Lincoln CastleLincoln CathedralShown within LincolnCoordinates 53 14 04 N 0 32 10 W 53 23444 N 0 53611 W 53 23444 0 53611LocationLincoln LincolnshireCountryEnglandDenominationChurch of EnglandPrevious denominationRoman CatholicismTraditionAnglo CatholicWebsitelincolncathedral wbr comHistoryDedicationVirgin MaryConsecrated11 May 1092ArchitectureStyleGothicYears built1185 1311Groundbreaking1072 1 SpecificationsLength147 metres 482 ft Width24 metres 78 ft Nave height24 metres 78 ft Number of towers3Tower height83 metres 272 ft crossing Number of spires3 now lost Spire height160 metres 520 ft crossing tower Bells13 hung for change ringing 20 in total 13 in South West tower 2 in North West tower and 5 in the central tower Tenor bell weight23cwt 3qr 23lb 1212kg in DAdministrationProvinceCanterburyDioceseLincoln since 1072 ClergyDeanChristine WilsonPrecentorNick BrownChancellorPaul OverendLaityDirector of musicAric PrenticeOrganist s Jeffrey MakinsonChapter clerkWilliam HarrisonBuilding detailsRecord heightTallest in the world from 1311 to 1548 dubious discuss I Preceded byGreat Pyramid of GizaSurpassed byTower of St Mary s Church StralsundSome historians claim it became the tallest building in the world upon the completion of its 160 metres 525 ft high central spire in 1311 although this is disputed If so it was the first building to hold that title after the Great Pyramid of Giza and held it for 238 years until the spire collapsed in 1548 2 3 4 and was not rebuilt Had the central spire remained intact Lincoln Cathedral would have remained the world s tallest structure until the completion of the Washington Monument in 1884 For hundreds of years the cathedral held one of the four remaining copies of the original Magna Carta now securely displayed in Lincoln Castle The cathedral is the fourth largest in the UK in floor area at around 5 000 square metres 54 000 sq ft after Liverpool St Paul s and York Minster 5 It is highly regarded by architectural scholars the Victorian writer John Ruskin declared I have always held that the cathedral of Lincoln is out and out the most precious piece of architecture in the British Isles and roughly speaking worth any two other cathedrals we have 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Magna Carta 1 2 Little Saint Hugh 2 Features 2 1 Lincoln Imp 2 2 Wren library 2 3 Rose windows 2 4 Vaults 2 5 Tower clock 2 6 Bells 3 Modern history 3 1 Wartime history 3 2 21st century 3 2 1 Cathedral stone 4 Dean and chapter 5 Music 5 1 Choir and organists 5 2 Organ 6 Burials 7 Other memorials 8 In literature and media 8 1 In literature 8 2 In media 9 Gallery 10 See also 11 Notes 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory EditRemigius de Fecamp the first Bishop of Lincoln moved the episcopal seat cathedra there some time between 1072 and 1092 7 About this James Essex writes that Remigius laid the foundations of his Cathedral in 1072 and it is probable that he being a Norman employed Norman masons to superintend the building though he could not complete the whole before his death 8 Before that writes B Winkles It is well known that Remigius appropriated the parish church of St Mary Magdalene in Lincoln although it is not known what use he made of it 9 When Lincoln Cathedral was first built William the Conqueror granted the parish of Welton to Remigius in order to endow six prebends which provided income to support six canons attached to the cathedral These were subsequently confirmed by William II and Henry I 10 Model within the cathedral illustrating the cathedral s former spires 17th century print of Lincoln Cathedral with spires on the west towers Until then St Mary s Church in Stow was considered to be the mother church 11 of Lincolnshire 12 although it was not a cathedral because the seat of the diocese was at Dorchester Abbey in Dorchester on Thames Oxfordshire However Lincoln was more central to a diocese that stretched from the Thames to the Humber Remigius built the first Lincoln Cathedral on the present site finishing it in 1092 and then dying on 7 May of that year 13 two days before it was consecrated In 1124 the timber roofing was destroyed in a fire Alexander bishop 1123 48 rebuilt and expanded the cathedral but it was mostly destroyed by an earthquake about forty years later in 1185 dated by the British Geological Survey as occurring 15 April 1185 9 14 The earthquake was one of the largest felt in the UK it has an estimated magnitude of over 5 The damage to the cathedral is thought to have been very extensive the cathedral is described as having split from top to bottom in the current building only the lower part of the west end and its two attached towers remain of the pre earthquake cathedral 14 Some Kidson 1986 Woo 1991 have suggested that the damage to Lincoln Cathedral was probably exacerbated by poor construction or design with the actual collapse most probably caused by a vault failure 14 After the earthquake a new bishop was appointed He was Hugh de Burgundy of Avalon France who became known as St Hugh of Lincoln He began a massive rebuilding and expansion programme With his appointment of William de Montibus as master of the cathedral school and chancellor Lincoln briefly became one of the leading educational centres in England producing writers such as Samuel Presbiter and Richard of Wetheringsett though it declined in importance after William s death in 1213 15 Rebuilding began with the choir St Hugh s Choir and the eastern transepts between 1192 and 1210 16 The central nave was then built in the Early English Gothic architectural style Lincoln Cathedral soon followed other architectural advances of the time pointed arches flying buttresses and ribbed vaulting were added to the cathedral This allowed support for incorporating larger windows There are thirteen bells in the south west tower two in the north west tower and five in the central tower including Great Tom Accompanying the cathedral s large bell Great Tom of Lincoln is a quarter hour striking clock which was installed in the early 19th century 17 The two large stained glass rose windows the matching Dean s Eye and the Bishop s Eye were added to the cathedral during the late Middle Ages The former the Dean s Eye in the north transept dates from the 1192 rebuild begun by St Hugh completed in 1235 The latter the Bishop s Eye in the south transept was reconstructed a hundred years later in 1330 18 A contemporary record The Metrical Life of St Hugh refers to the meaning of these two windows one on the dark north side and the other on the light south side of the building For north represents the devil and south the Holy Spirit and it is in these directions that the two eyes look The bishop faces the south in order to invite in and the dean the north in order to shun the one takes care to be saved the other takes care not to perish With these Eyes the cathedral s face is on watch for the candelabra of Heaven and the darkness of Lethe oblivion Main door of the cathedral Norman West front External video Lincoln Cathedral 10 44 15 July 2017 Smarthistory 19 Lincoln Cathedral Organ Refurbishment 2017 9 17 7 July 2017 Lincoln CathedralAfter the additions of the Dean s eye and other major Gothic additions it is believed some mistakes in the support of the tower occurred for in 1237 the main tower collapsed A new tower was soon started and in 1255 the cathedral petitioned Henry III to allow them to take down part of the town wall to enlarge and expand the cathedral including the rebuilding of the central tower and spire They replaced the small rounded chapels built at the time of St Hugh with a larger east end to the cathedral This was to handle the increasing number of pilgrims to the cathedral who came to worship at the shrine of Hugh of Lincoln In 1290 Eleanor of Castile died and King Edward I of England decided to honour her his Queen Consort with an elegant funeral procession After her body had been embalmed which in the 13th century involved evisceration Eleanor s viscera were buried in Lincoln cathedral and Edward placed a duplicate of the Westminster Abbey tomb there The Lincoln tomb s original stone chest survives its effigy was destroyed in the 17th century and replaced with a 19th century copy On the outside of Lincoln Cathedral are two prominent statues often identified as Edward and Eleanor but these images were heavily restored in the 19th century and they were probably not originally intended to depict the couple 20 Between 1307 and 1311 the central tower was raised to its present height of 271 feet 83 m The western towers and front of the cathedral were also improved and heightened At this time a tall lead encased wooden spire topped the central tower but was blown down in a storm in 1548 With its spire the tower reputedly reached a height of 525 feet 160 m which would have made it the world s tallest structure surpassing the Great Pyramid of Giza which held the record for almost 4 000 years Although still doubted 2 this is the height agreed upon by the majority of historians 21 22 23 disputed discuss Other additions to the cathedral at this time included its elaborate carved screen and the 14th century misericords as was the Angel Choir For a large part of the length of the cathedral the walls have arches in relief with a second layer in front to give the illusion of a passageway along the wall However the illusion does not work as the stonemason copying techniques from France did not make the arches the correct length needed for the illusion to be effective citation needed In 1398 John of Gaunt and Katherine Swynford founded a chantry in the cathedral to pray for the welfare of their souls In the 15th century the building of the cathedral turned to chantry or memorial chapels The chapels next to the Angel Choir were built in the Perpendicular style with an emphasis on strong vertical lines which survive today in the window tracery and wall panelling Magna Carta Edit Hugh of Wells Bishop of Lincoln was one of the signatories to Magna Carta and for hundreds of years the cathedral held one of the four remaining copies of the original now securely displayed in Lincoln Castle 24 The Lincoln Magna Carta was on display at the British Pavilion during the 1939 New York World s Fair 25 In March 1941 the Foreign Office proposed that the Lincoln Magna Carta be gifted to the United States citing the many thousands of Americans who waited in long queues to view it and the US passage of the Lend Lease Act among other reasons 25 In 2009 the Lincoln Magna Carta was lent to the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley California 24 There are three other surviving copies two at the British Library and one at Salisbury Cathedral 26 Little Saint Hugh Edit Main article Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln In August 1255 the body of an eight year old boy was found in a well in Lincoln He had been missing for nearly a month This incident became the source of a blood libel in the city with Jews accused of his abduction torture and murder Many Jews were arrested and eighteen were hanged The boy became known as Little Saint Hugh to distinguish him from Saint Hugh of Lincoln but he was never canonised The cathedral benefited from these events because Hugh was seen as a martyr and many devotees came to the city and cathedral to venerate him Geoffrey Chaucer mentions the case in The Prioress s Tale and a ballad was written about it in 1783 In 1955 a plaque was placed near the remains of the shrine of Little St Hugh in the cathedral that decries the Trumped up stories of ritual murders of Christian boys by Jewish communities Features EditLincoln Imp Edit Main article Lincoln Imp The Lincoln Imp One of the stone carvings within the cathedral is the Lincoln Imp There are several variations of the legend surrounding the figure According to 14th century legend two mischievous imps were sent by Satan to do evil work on Earth After causing mayhem elsewhere in Northern England the two imps headed to Lincoln Cathedral where they smashed tables and chairs and tripped up the bishop An angel appeared in the Angel Choir and ordered them to stop One of the imps sat atop a stone pillar and started throwing stones at the angel whilst the other cowered under the broken tables and chairs The angel turned the first imp to stone allowing the second imp to escape The imp that turned to stone can still be found sitting atop his stone column in the Angel Choir They also are one of the many carved animals on the structure Wren library Edit Main article Lincoln Cathedral Library The Wren Library houses a rare collection of over 277 manuscripts including the text of the Venerable Bede Rose windows Edit The Bishop s Eye rose window Lincoln Cathedral features two major rose windows which are a highly uncommon feature among medieval architecture in England On the north side of the cathedral is the Dean s Eye which survives from the original structure of the building and on the south side is the Bishop s Eye which was most likely rebuilt circa 1325 1350 This south window is one of the largest examples of curvilinear tracery seen in medieval architecture Curvilinear tracery is a form of tracery where the patterns are continuous curves This form was often done within pointed arches and squared windows because those are the easiest shapes so the circular space of the window was a unique challenge to the designers A solution was created that called for the circle to be divided into smaller shapes that would make it simpler to design and create Curves were drawn within the window which created four distinct areas of the circle This made the spaces within the circle where the tracery would go much smaller and easier to work with This window is also unique in that the focus of the tracery was shifted away from the centre of the circle and instead placed in other sections The glazing of the window was difficult as the tracery for many of the same reasons therefore the designers cut back on the amount of iconography within the window Most cathedral windows during this time displayed many colourful images of the Bible however at Lincoln there are very few images Some of those images that can be seen within the window include saints Paul Andrew and James Vaults Edit Lincoln Cathedral crazy vaults One major architectural features of Lincoln Cathedral are the vaults The varying vaults within the cathedral are said to be both original and experimental They demonstrate the experimental aspect seen at Lincoln The vaults differ between the nave aisles choir and chapels Along the North Aisle there is a continuous ridge rib with a regular arcade that ignores the bays In the South Aisle there is a discontinuous ridge rib that puts an emphasis on each bay The North West Chapel has quadripartite vaults and the South Chapel has vaults that stem from one central support column The use of sexpartite vaults allowed for more natural light to enter the cathedral through the clerestory windows which were placed inside of each bay Saint Hugh s Choir exhibits a series of asymmetrical vaults that appear to almost be a diagonal line created by two ribs on one side translating into only a single rib on the other side of the vault This pattern divides the space of the vaults and bays placing the emphasis on the bays The chapter house is a decagonal building with a single central column from which twenty ribs rise producing unusual vaulting Each area of Lincoln can be identified solely by the different vaults of the space Each vault or each variation of the vault is unique The vaults are attributed to French Normand master mason Geoffrey de Noiers 27 28 de Noiers was succeeded by Alexander the Mason who developed the nave s more elaborate but symmetrical tierceron vaulting the crossing vaulting Galilee Porch and western facade screen 29 30 Vault of Angel Choir Crossing of Secondary transept Vault of Entrance to Chapter House Vault of Secondary Transept Vault of Main Transepts Vault of Nave Tower clock Edit A clock by John Thwaite 31 was installed in the north west tower in 1775 This was later improved by Benjamin Vulliamy and moved to the broad tower around 1835 It was replaced in 1880 by a new clock built by Potts and Sons of Leeds under the instruction of Edmund Beckett QC Cambridge Chimes were a feature of the new clock 32 The machinery featuring a double three legged gravity escapement to Beckett s designs weighs about 4 long tons 4 5 short tons with the driving weights being 1 5 long tons 1 7 short tons suspended by steel wire ropes 270 feet 82 m long and the pendulum weight of 2 long hundredweight 100 kg The beat is 1 5 seconds The hour hammer is 224 pounds 102 kg striking upon the Great Tom bell The striking trains require winding daily when done manually it took 20 minutes The going train required winding twice per week The clock mechanism contains the inscription Quod bene vortat Deus Opt Max Consiliis Edmundi Beckett Baronetti LL D Opera Gul Potts et Filiorum civium Leodiensium Sumptibus Decani et Capituli Novum in Turri positum est Horologium A D MDCCCLXXX Bells EditThe South West tower of the cathedral contains a fine ring of 13 bells all cast by John Taylor and Co in Loughborough The back 8 bells were cast in 1913 with 4 new trebles being added in 1927 In 1948 a flat 6th was added to allow for ringing on the middle 8 bells The treble bell weighs 5cwt 0qr 2lb with the tenor weighing 23cwt 3qr 23lb and striking the note D nominal 600 0Hz The bells are rung from the section of the tower just above The Great West Front with the ringing chamber having 3 windows on all but one side The bells themselves are hung below the louvers to minimise tower movement as much as possible Angel Choir DetailsModern history Edit Floor plan Interior view of the crossing tower vaulting Wartime history Edit Sometime during the later stages of the Second World War the accomplished RAF pilot and future Black British civil rights leader Billy Strachan almost crashed his aircraft into Lincoln Cathedral Strachan credited this experience with ending his piloting career as he found it psychologically impossible to continue flying combat missions 33 Lincolnshire was home to many Bomber Command airfields during the Second World War giving rise to the nickname of Bomber County 34 The station badge for the nearby RAF Waddington depicts Lincoln Cathedral rising through the clouds 35 Until the opening of the RAF Bomber Command Memorial in 2012 the cathedral had the only memorial in the United Kingdom dedicated to Bomber Command s large losses of aircrew in the Second World War 36 37 During the war priceless British treasures were placed in a chamber sixty feet beneath the cathedral for safekeeping 38 This did not include the cathedral s copy of the Magna Carta as it was on loan in the United States 38 21st century Edit A gilded crown recently installed on one of the towers Stonework commemorating the end of fox hunting a fox can be seen hiding in the foliage A major renovation of the West Front was undertaken in 2000 It was discovered that the flying buttresses on the east end were no longer connected to the adjoining stonework and repairs were made to prevent collapse Additionally the stonework of the Dean s Eye window in the transept was crumbling meaning that a complete reconstruction of the window has had to be carried out according to the conservation criteria set out by the International Council on Monuments and Sites There was a period of great anxiety when it emerged that the stonework needed to shift only 5 mm 0 20 in for the entire window to collapse Specialist engineers removed the window s tracery before installing a strengthened more stable replacement In addition to this the original stained glass was cleaned and set behind a new clear isothermal glass which offers better protection from the elements By April 2006 the renovation project was completed at a cost of 2 million An announcement in January 2020 stated that since 2016 archaeologists had found over 50 burials during the renovations including a priest buried with a chalice and paten Among the artifacts recovered was a coin depicting Edward the Confessor who was king from 1042 to 1066 During the dig sections of some extensively decorated Roman buildings and related artifacts were also discovered Some of the Roman medieval and Saxon objects were to be displayed at the visitor centre which was expected to open later in 2020 39 40 In 2022 the scaffolding of the Lincoln Cathedral was removed from its west front after 36 years 41 Maintaining the cathedral costs 5 86 million a year 42 Between 2006 and 2009 200 000 to 208 000 people visited Lincoln Cathedral annually In 2010 the figure dropped to 150 000 making it the 16th most visited attraction in the East Midlands 43 The fall in visitor numbers was attributed to the cancellation of the Lincoln Christmas Market that year 44 The cathedral website states Everyone is free to enter and gaze at the glory of the nave you can sit in the peace of the Morning Chapel or visit the shop If you want to explore further we do ask you to pay 45 The cathedral offers tours of the cathedral the tower and the roof The peak of its season is the Lincoln Christmas Market accompanied by an annual production of Handel s Messiah 46 Cathedral stone Edit Lincoln Cathedral is one of the few English cathedrals built from the rock it is standing on 47 It is mostly built from Lincolnshire Limestone 48 The cathedral has owned the existing quarry on Riseholme Road Lincoln since 1876 49 As of 2016 the quarry was expected to run out of stone in 2021 50 The cathedral s stonemasons use more than 100 tonnes of stone per year for maintenance and repairs 50 Dean and chapter EditAs of 10 December 2021 51 Dean Christine Wilson installed 22 October 2016 52 Precentor Nick Brown since December 2020 installation also Subdean from January 2021 in addition to being Precentor 53 Chancellor Paul Overend since February 2018 installation 54 55 Vice Chancellor Neil Burgess temporary post to January 2022 Residentiary Canon David DadswellMusic EditChoir and organists Edit Aisle at the east end See also List of musicians at English cathedrals The choir is currently formed of adult singers who are either lay vicars or choral scholars and teams of about 20 girls and 20 boys The cathedral accepted female choristers in 1995 Lincoln was the second cathedral in the country to adopt a separate girls choir after Salisbury Cathedral and remains one of few which provides the same musical opportunities and equal weekly singing duties to both girls and boys The choristers can now attend any school and are currently drawn from over ten local schools The Master of the Choristers director of music is Aric Prentice who conducts the choir of boys and men the Cathedral Organist and assistant director of music is Jeffrey Makinson who conducts the choir of girls and men The organist emeritus is Colin Walsh previously organist and master of the choristers and then organist laureate The assistant organist is Alana Brook The records of cathedral organists at Lincoln are continuous from 1439 when John Ingleton was the incumbent Notable organists have included the Renaissance composers William Byrd and John Reading and the biographer of Mendelssohn William Thomas Freemantle Organ Edit One of the best examples of the work of Father Henry Willis and the last he designed before his death the cathedral organ dates from 1898 Willis had completed the design by 1885 but a shortfall in funding delayed construction and installation This was made possible in 1898 after a donation of 1 000 equivalent to 550 000 in 2021 56 from Alfred Shuttleworth an engineer and later chairman of Clayton amp Shuttleworth 57 This together with other private gifts and a public subscription allowed work to progress On St Hugh s Day 17 November 1898 the organ was inaugurated at a service attended by 4 700 people Willis had intended that the organ be electrically powered the first organ in an English cathedral to be powered in this way As the Brayford Wharf Power Station had not yet been completed 58 manual power was instead provided by infantrymen from the Lincolnshire Regiment 59 The organ has been restored twice in 1960 and in 1998 On both occasions the work was undertaken by Harrison amp Harrison It is one of only two Willis organs in English cathedrals with its original tonal scheme 59 The organ specification is held on the National Pipe Organ Register 60 Burials EditRemigius de Fecamp Bishop of Lincoln 1072 92 began the construction of Lincoln Cathedral which was consecrated in 1092 two days after his death Robert Bloet Lord Chancellor of England and Bishop of Lincoln 1093 1123 Robert de Chesney Bishop of Lincoln 1148 1166 Hugh of Lincoln Bishop of Lincoln 1186 1200 and Saint at the time of the Reformation the best known by whom English saint after Thomas Becket William de Blois Bishop of Lincoln 1203 06 Hugh of Wells Bishop of Lincoln 1209 35 Robert Grosseteste English statesman scholastic philosopher theologian and Bishop of Lincoln 1235 53 Queen Eleanor of Castile wife of King Edward I died in Lincoln 1290 monumental full effigy and escutcheoned heart and viscera tomb erected in the Angel Choir Katherine Swynford Duchess of Lancaster 1350 1403 wife of John of Gaunt 1st Duke of Lancaster son of King Edward III of England Joan Beaufort Countess of Westmorland 1379 1440 wife of Ralph Neville 1st Earl of Westmorland daughter of the Duke amp Duchess of Lancaster Philip Repyngdon Bishop of Lincoln 1405 20 and Cardinal John Russell Lord Privy Seal and Lord Chancellor of England and Bishop of Lincoln 1480 94 William Smyth Bishop of Lincoln 1496 1514 Sir Edward Lake 1st Baronet 1600 1674 Born in Tetney Lincolnshire A Lawyer and Royalist badly wounded at the Battle of Edgehill Died on 18 July 1674 at Bishop Norton Lincolnshire Buried in the cathedral on 20 July 1674 John Featley Samuel Fuller 1635 1700 Dean of Lincoln William Fuller Bishop of Lincoln 1667 75 Sir Richard Kaye 6th Baronet 1736 1809 Dean of Lincoln William Hilton RA 1786 1839 artist Bishop Christopher Wordsworth 1807 1885 Bishop of Lincoln William John Butler Dean of Lincoln The Blessed Edward King 1829 1910 Regius Professor of Pastoral Theology at Oxford Canon of Christ Church Bishop of Lincoln 1885 1910 Buried in the Cathedral Cloister seated statue in bronze by Sir William Blake Richmond in Lincoln Cathedral Viscount Harry CrookshankOther memorials EditAir Vice Marshall Sir Edward Arthur Beckton Rice d 1948 61 Rev Charles Wilmer Foster 1866 1935 historian Welbore MacCarthy 1840 1925 Bishop of Grantham Bishop Nugent Hicks 1872 1942 In literature and media EditIn literature Edit In Letitia Elizabeth Landon s poetical illustration Lincoln Cathedral to a painting by Thomas Allom she remarks on the derivation of Gothic tracery from the arches of the old oak trees This was published in Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1837 62 Wikisource has original text related to this article Lincoln Cathedral a poetical illustrationby L E L In media Edit The cathedral was used for the filming of The Da Vinci Code based on the book of the same name 63 Filming took place mainly within the cloisters and chapter house 63 of the cathedral and remained a closed set The cathedral took on the role of Westminster Abbey as the abbey had refused to permit filming 63 Although there was protest at the filming 64 the filming was completed by the end of August 2005 To make the Lincoln chapter house appear similar to the Westminster chapter house murals were painted on a special layer over the existing wall and elsewhere polystyrene replicas of Isaac Newton s tomb and other abbey monuments were set up 63 For a time these murals and replicas remained in the chapter house as part of a Da Vinci Code exhibit for visitors but in January 2008 they were all sold off in an auction to raise money for the cathedral 63 The cathedral also doubled as Westminster Abbey for the film Young Victoria filmed in September 2007 65 66 and did again in June 2018 for the Netflix Shakespeare film The King 67 Gallery Edit Flying buttresses at the decagonal chapter house 12th century carving of Adam and Eve eating apples Typical Norman 12th century decoration on the west front The Tournai font The nave The choir The chapter house Lincoln Cathedral nave England Angel Choir Bell Ringers Chapel Lincoln Cathedral Lincoln Cathedral choirs Nave roof space Lincoln Cathedral Lincoln nave Lincoln nave from the west wall Chapter house The Chapterhouse at Lincoln Cathedral with flying buttresses surrounding the buildingSee also EditLincoln Medieval Bishop s Palace Vicars Court Lincoln Architecture of the medieval cathedrals of England English Gothic architecture Gothic architecture Gothic cathedrals and churches List of Gothic Cathedrals in Europe List of cathedrals in England and Wales List of tallest church buildings List of tallest structures built before the 20th century Romanesque architecture List of ecclesiastical restorations and alterations by J L PearsonNotes Edit Timeline Lincoln Cathedral Archived from the original on 4 October 2018 Retrieved 4 October 2018 a b Kendrick A F 1902 2 The Central Tower The Cathedral Church of Lincoln A History and Description of its Fabric and a List of the Bishops London George Bell amp Sons p 60 ISBN 978 1 178 03666 4 The tall spire of timber covered with lead which originally crowned this tower reached an altitude it is said of 525 feet but this is doubtful This spire was blown down during a tempest in January 1547 8 Mary Jane Taber 1905 The cathedrals of England an account of some of their distinguishing characteristics p 100 Lincoln Cathedral History The Dean and Chapter of Lincoln Cathedral Archived from the original on 19 January 2012 Retrieved 13 November 2018 Between 1307 and 1311 the central tower was raised to its present height Then around 1370 to 1400 the western towers were heightened All three towers had spires until 1548 when the central tower s spire blew down Floorplan Lincoln Cathedral Archived from the original on 15 September 2018 Retrieved 4 October 2018 Lincoln Cathedral Guide Cathedrals Plus www cathedralsplus org uk Retrieved 9 December 2021 The Penny magazine of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge Volumes 1 2 1832 p 132 Essex J Some observations on Lincoln Cathedral Read at the Society of Antiquaries 16 March 1775 printed by W Bowyer and J Nichols 1776 1 Archived 10 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine a b Winkles B Winkles s Architectural and Picturesque Illustrations of the Cathedral Churches of England and Wales Lincoln cathedral Chichester cathedral Ely cathedral Peterborough cathedral Norwich cathedral Exeter cathedral Bristol cathedral Oxford cathedral Wilson 1838 p 1 Welton Prebends Survey of English Place Names epns nottingham ac uk Retrieved 22 April 2022 Criddle Peter October 2008 Lincolnshire and the Danes PDF Lincolnshire Life County Life Ltd 16 Archived from the original PDF on 30 March 2012 Retrieved 10 April 2012 At Stow Lincolnshire s mother church before the building of Lincoln s Cathedral the bishop was murdered and the church burnt down Kendrick AF 1902 1898 chapter 1 The History of the Building The Cathedral Church of Lincoln a history and description of its fabric and a list of the Bishops London United Kingdom George Bell amp Sons p 4 Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 10 April 2012 The venerable church of St Mary at Stow was called by Camden the mother church to Lincoln Kendrick AF 1902 1898 The Cathedral Church of Lincoln a history and description of its fabric and a list of the Bishops London United Kingdom George Bell amp Sons p 20 Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 10 April 2012 Bishop Remigius then gave directions for his funeral and instructions that he was to be buried in the mother church of his diocese dedicated to the Mother of God near the altar of St John the Baptist a b c Musson RMW 2008 The seismicity of the British Isles to 1600 BGS Earth Hazards and Systems Internal Report OR 08 049 PDF British Geological Survey Archived PDF from the original on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 18 May 2013 van Liere Frans 2003 The study of canon law and the eclipse of the Lincoln schools 1175 1225 PDF History of Universities 18 1 13 ISSN 0144 5138 Archived from the original PDF on 30 September 2011 Hendrix John Shannon 2011 Architecture as Cosmology Lincoln Cathedral and English Gothic Architecture New York Peter Lang p 59 ISBN 978 1 433113 16 1 Dove Details dove cccbr org uk Retrieved 5 May 2015 Hendrix John Shannon 2014 The Architecture of Lincoln Cathedral and the Cosmologies of Bishop Grosseteste In Temple Nicholas Hendrix John Shannon Frost Christian eds Bishop Robert Grosseteste and Lincoln Cathedral Tracing Relationships between Medieval Concepts of Order and Built Form Farnham Surrey Ashgate ISBN 978 1 472412 75 1 Lincoln Cathedral Smarthistory 15 July 2017 Archived from the original on 13 August 2019 Retrieved 20 July 2017 The Eleanor Crosses A Journey Set in Stone English Heritage Retrieved 7 October 2022 Haughton Brian 2007 Hidden History Lost Civilizations Secret Knowledge and Ancient Mysteries p 167 Michael Woods Mary B Woods 2009 Seven Wonders of the Ancient World p 41 Darwin Porter Danforth Prince 2010 Frommer s England 2010 p 588 a b Magna Carta displayed at castle BBC News Online BBC 18 July 2009 Retrieved 25 November 2009 a b Magna has no intrinsic value 1941 National Archives UK Flickr 6 February 2015 Archived from the original on 10 December 2015 Retrieved 22 August 2015 This Foreign Office document from 1941 proposes that Magna Carta be gifted to the USA during the Second World War The document notes that Magna Carta holds no intrinsic value The proposal was eventually rejected Award for cathedral Magna Carta BBC News Online BBC 4 August 2009 Archived from the original on 6 August 2012 Retrieved 30 April 2010 Curl James Stevens Wilson Susan 2016 Oxford Dictionary of Architecture Oxford University Press p 527 ISBN 978 0 19 967499 2 Acland James H 1972 Medieval Structure The Gothic Vault University of Toronto Press pp 134 135 ISBN 0 8020 1886 6 Curl James Stevens Wilson Susan 2016 Oxford Dictionary of Architecture Oxford University Press p 16 ISBN 978 0 19 967499 2 Acland James H 1972 Medieval Structure The Gothic Vault University of Toronto Press p 135 ISBN 0 8020 1886 6 North Thomas 1882 The Church Bells of the County and City of Lincoln S Clarke p 542 New Clock and Bells for Lincoln Cathedral Nottinghamshire Guardian England 17 December 1880 Retrieved 20 August 2017 via British Newspaper Archive Horsley David 2019 Billy Strachan 1921 1988 RAF Officer Communist Civil Rights Pioneer Legal Administrator Internationalist and Above All Caribbean Man London Caribbean Labour Solidarity p 11 ISSN 2055 7035 Halpenny Bruce 29 October 2009 The Airfields of Bomber County BBC Lincolnshire Archived from the original on 4 August 2012 Retrieved 13 December 2011 RAF Waddington History Royal Air Force Archived from the original on 6 December 2011 Retrieved 13 December 2011 Antiques Roadshow from Lincoln Cathedral Bomber county to get memorial BBC News 24 August 2006 Retrieved 13 December 2011 a b Planted Under Lincoln Cathedral Singleton Argus NSW 1880 1954 NSW National Library of Australia 18 January 1943 p 1 Retrieved 12 November 2013 Lincoln Cathedral Medieval priest s items rare find BBC News 24 January 2020 Retrieved 24 January 2020 Skeleton of medieval priest among more than 50 skeletons found in grounds of Lincoln Cathedral Lincolnshire Live 23 January 2020 Retrieved 16 January 2020 Flashback 2022 Lincoln Cathedral west front scaffolding free for first time in 36 years 24 December 2022 Retrieved 25 February 2023 Cathedral Times from Lincoln Cathedral Lincoln Cathedral Retrieved 30 October 2017 Visitor Attractions Trends in England 2010 Annual Report PDF VisitEngland 2011 p 51 Archived PDF from the original on 4 May 2012 Retrieved 29 May 2012 Ionescu Daniel 17 August 2011 Lincoln Cathedral visitor numbers plummet The Lincolnite Archived from the original on 6 January 2012 Retrieved 29 May 2012 Planning your visit Lincoln Cathedral Archived from the original on 1 May 2015 Retrieved 5 May 2015 Handel s Messiah Lincoln Cathedral 11 March 2017 Retrieved 7 March 2020 Buckler John Chessell 1866 A description and defence of the restorations of the exterior of Lincoln Cathedral with a comparative examination of the restorations of other cathedrals parish churches HathiTrust Digital Library HathiTrust Retrieved 27 January 2017 Religious Heritage Lincolnshire www heritagelincolnshire org New Lease of Life for Cathedral Quarry Lincoln Cathedral Lincoln Cathedral 20 October 2016 Archived from the original on 26 January 2018 Retrieved 25 January 2018 a b Stone running out at cathedral quarry BBC News 4 May 2016 Archived from the original on 30 November 2017 Retrieved 30 October 2017 Lincoln Cathedral Who s Who Archived 1 February 2019 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 31 January 2019 Special Announcement from the Bishop of Lincoln the new Dean of Lincoln lincoln anglican org Archived from the original on 5 January 2017 Retrieved 25 October 2016 New Precentor of Lincoln announced Lincoln Cathedral 18 October 2020 Retrieved 5 November 2021 New Canon Chancellor appointed at Lincoln Cathedral 20 November 2017 Archived from the original on 20 June 2018 Retrieved 4 October 2018 New Chancellor of Lincoln Lincoln Cathedral 19 November 2017 Archived from the original on 20 June 2018 Retrieved 4 October 2018 UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Alfred Shuttleworth Grace s Guide to British Industrial History Retrieved 30 November 2022 Lincoln Power Station Grace s Guide to British Industrial History Retrieved 30 November 2022 a b Father Willis Organ Lincoln Cathedral Retrieved 30 November 2022 The National Pipe Organ Register NPOR npor org uk Retrieved 5 May 2015 Air Vice Marshall Sir E A B Rice IWM Retrieved 25 February 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1836 picture Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1837 Fisher Son amp Co Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1836 poetical illustration Fisher s Drawing Room Scrap Book 1837 Fisher Son amp Co a b c d e Lincolnshire s Da Vinci Code BBC 23 August 2008 Archived from the original on 3 August 2014 Retrieved 30 December 2013 Da Vinci film arrives in Scotland The Guardian 27 September 2005 Archived from the original on 31 December 2013 Retrieved 30 December 2013 Cathedral auctions Da Vinci props BBC News 29 January 2008 Archived from the original on 1 February 2008 Retrieved 13 December 2011 Bates Stephen 28 August 2007 People The Guardian Archived from the original on 5 October 2014 Retrieved 13 December 2011 The King Netflix Movie filmed at Lincoln Cathedral The LIncolnite The Lincolnite 25 June 2018 Archived from the original on 27 June 2018 Retrieved 25 June 2018 Further reading EditLincoln Cathedral Official Guide Diocese of Lincoln Lincoln Cathedral Peter B G Binnall Pitkin Publishing ISBN 978 0 85372 203 8 The Grail Chronicles E C Coleman The History Press ISBN 978 0 7524 5532 7External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lincoln Cathedral Official website Lincoln Cathedral Choir amp Old Choristers Association Friends of Lincoln Cathedral Interactive panoramic tour of the cathedral s interior Capturing Lincoln Cathedral A history of the choristers of Lincoln Cathedral Conserving the Dean s Eye window Ingenia Magazine December 2007 Detailed historic record for Lincoln CathedralRecordsPreceded byGreat Pyramid of Giza World s tallest structure1311 1548160 m Succeeded bySt Mary s Church Stralsund Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lincoln Cathedral amp oldid 1150145649, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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