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Portsmouth Cathedral

The Cathedral Church of St Thomas of Canterbury, commonly known as Portsmouth Cathedral, is an Anglican cathedral church in the centre of Old Portsmouth in Portsmouth, England. It is the cathedral of the Diocese of Portsmouth and the seat of the bishop of Portsmouth.

Portsmouth Cathedral
Cathedral Church of St Thomas of Canterbury
Coordinates: 50°47′26″N 1°06′15″W / 50.7905°N 1.1043°W / 50.7905; -1.1043
LocationPortsmouth, Hampshire
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
Previous denominationRoman Catholic
Websiteportsmouthcathedral.org.uk
History
StatusCathedral
Founded1180
DedicationSt Thomas Becket
Dedicated1188
Architecture
Functional statusActive
StyleRomanesque (Germanic)
Years built
  • 12th century (chapel)
  • 17th century (rebuilt)
  • 1980s–1991
Specifications
Number of towers3
Tower height121 feet (37 m) (tallest tower)
Bells12
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DiocesePortsmouth (since 1927)
Clergy
Bishop(s)Christopher Foster
DeanAnthony Cane
Canon Chancellor
and Vice Dean
Kathryn Percival
PrecentorJo Spreadbury
Canon(s)
  • Nick Ralph
    (Social Enterprise and Engagement)
  • Anthony Rustell
    (Mission, Discipleship, and Ministry)
Laity
Director of musicDavid Price (Organist and Master of the Choristers)
Organist(s)Sachin Gunga (Sub-Organist)
Organ scholarBenedict King

The Anglican cathedral is one of the two cathedral churches in the city, the other being the Roman Catholic Cathedral of St John the Evangelist, Portsmouth, about one mile to the north.

History

 
The font beneath the tower, part of the original medieval building

Around the year 1180, Jean de Gisors, a wealthy Norman merchant and Lord of the Manor of Titchfield, gave land in his new town of Portsmouth to the Augustinian canons of Southwick Priory so that they could build a chapel "to the Glorious Honour of the Martyr Thomas of Canterbury, one time Archbishop, on (my) land which is called Sudewede, the island of Portsea".[1] It was given so that they could build a chapel dedicated to the honour of St Thomas of Canterbury, who was assassinated and martyred ten years earlier. This chapel was to become, in turn, a parish church in the 14th century and then a cathedral in the 20th century.

The medieval building, dedicated in 1188, was cruciform in shape, with a central tower, which was used as a lookout point and lighthouse, over the crossing. Of the original building, only the chancel and the transepts remain. The church survived a French raid in 1337 which had laid waste most of Portsmouth during the Hundred Years War. However, in 1449, Adam Moleyns, Bishop of Chichester, was murdered by local sailors. The town's inhabitants were excommunicated and the church was closed. In 1591, Elizabeth I worshipped in St Thomas's Church.[2]

During the English Civil War, when the Parliamentary forces attacked the town in 1642, the Royalist garrison used the church tower to observe the movement of enemy forces. Parliamentary gunners positioned in Gosport fired on the tower and inflicted damage to the church. This resulted in the ruin of the medieval tower and nave. With the restoration of the monarchy in 1660 came the authorisation by Charles II for a collection in churches across the country to raise the £9,000 required to rebuild the tower and nave, which took place from 1683 to 1693. The nave was built in the classical style. Galleries were added in 1708 to cater for growing congregations, and were extended in 1750. The wooden cupola with a lantern for shipping was added to the top of the tower in 1703. A ring of eight bells was given at the same time. Two additional bells were cast in 1957 and currently the central tower contains a total of 12 bells. All of the bells were cast at Taylor's Bell Foundry and are hung in the wooden octagonal part of the tower. Various repairs and alterations were made during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. In 1902, the church was closed for two years so that much-needed work on the foundations could be carried out. During this period, St Mary's Colewort, a chapel of ease, served as the temporary parish church.[2]

Cathedral

 
Quire

The establishment of the Diocese of Portsmouth out of part of the Diocese of Winchester in 1927 brought about significant changes. On 1 May of that year, the parish church of St Thomas of Canterbury became the pro-cathedral of the new diocese, becoming the second cathedral in Portsmouth, as the Roman Catholic Cathedral of St John the Evangelist had already opened in 1882. At a chapter meeting in October 1932, a first sketch plan for an extension to the church was submitted by Charles Nicholson. He was called upon to extend the church to a size that would dignify its cathedral status; by 1935 the "provisional" nature of its title had been dropped.[citation needed]

The style that Nicholson chose is that of a round-arched "Neo-Byzantine" style that echoed the "classical" style of the late seventeenth century quire. By 1939 the outer quire aisles, the tower, the transepts and three bays of the nave had been completed.[2] The base of the seventeenth century tower had been opened up to form the tower arch. However, with the Fall of France in June 1940 during World War II, work on the extension scheme stopped and the bays of the nave were blocked off with a "temporary" brick wall. This wall remained there for over fifty years. During the Second World War, the Cathedral suffered minor damage to the windows and the roof. Nicholson died in 1949 and attempts headed by Bernard Montgomery to finish the structure in the 1960s proved unsuccessful due to substantive failure to find sufficient funds.[citation needed] Plans published in 1966 by Seely & Paget, with Pier Luigi Nervi as consulting engineer, envisaged a large semi-circular western extension 76 feet wide, constructed of reinforced concrete. The vast extension would have allowed for a congregation of 1,200 to have an interrupted view of the nave altar.[3] However, as the building had been used for many years without its extension, it was quite usable and there was no urgency to finish the work. By the mid-1980s, however, the "temporary" brick wall was found to have become unstable and in danger of collapse, which made the completion work pressing. The task of the architects was to find a solution to the problem of finishing Nicholson's truncated nave: the nave was originally intended in the 1930s plans to be longer, in the traditional style of an English cathedral, but the changing needs of the diocese meant that the building was finally built with a foreshortened nave, the final west wall being located close to where the temporary structure had been. Efforts were started to raise the £3 million necessary to carry out the plans. Work began in January 1990 and eventually a fourth bay of the nave, western towers, tower rooms, rose window, gallery, ambulatory, together with the stone altar beneath Nicholson's tester and the new stone font were added. In November 1991, the completed building, much smaller than the original plans envisaged, was consecrated in the presence of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother.[citation needed]

Architecture

 
Nave looking west

The formal entrance into the cathedral is through the bronze west doors, designed by Bryan Kneale. The design is based on the tree of life, an ancient symbol representing the renewal of life. The completed nave is a square space that is enclosed by an outer ambulatory. The ambulatory is low and vaulted. Because the furniture in the nave is not fixed, it can be used for various means, including concerts and exhibitions as well as services. On the rood screen, beneath the nave organ case is a sculpture called Christus by Peter Eugene Ball. The nave organ case was designed by Didier Grassin in 2001; the inside of the panels were designed by Patrick Caulfield. The left side depicts night, with a stylised lighthouse shining on the sea (which alludes to the City of Portsmouth's motto, "Heaven's Light Our Guide"). The right door depicts day, showing the sun and the hull of a fishing boat.[2]

The tower is pierced to provide an organ loft raised on a low dark passage. The font (1991), made to a Greek design of the ninth century, is placed centrally between the nave and the quire. In the south tower transept is the bronze statue of St John the Baptist by David Wynne. It was cast in 1951 as a memorial to a Winchester College pupil killed on the Matterhorn. On the north wall of the south tower transept is the painting The Miraculous Draught of Fishes by William Lionel Wyllie. The north tower transept contains a ceramic plaque of the Virgin and Child by the Florentine sculptor Andrea della Robbia. The principal altar stands on a podium of Purbeck stone, with mosaic work by Richard Noviss. The lectern was the gift of Edward VII in 1903. The pulpit was installed in 1693 and is all that remains of a three-decker pulpit. The organ case, built by Francis Bird, with carved figures of cherubs and King David playing his harp, belongs to the Nicholson Organ and bears the date 1718.[2]

In 1939, an extension of the Portsmouth Cathedral used granite from a quarry as far away as Pulau Ubin, Singapore, which was then a British colony.[4]

Music

Music department

There are three choirs at the cathedral. The cathedral choir consists of up to 20 boys and a 'back row' of adult alto, tenor and bass singers made up of six choral scholars and six layclerks. They sing Choral Evensong each Monday (low voices only), and Tuesday, Friday and Sunday (with the boys). Cantate is the girls' choir, established in 2006[5] to sing Choral Evensong each Thursday. The Cathedral Consort (previously known as the Parish Choir) is a mixed choir of adults and younger singers which sings Choral Evensong on Saturdays and other periods outside term time. Often, the choirs combine to form the Great Choir, usually at large services and events.[citation needed]

The choirs regularly go on tour, with recent European visits including destinations such as Tallinn (Estonia), Stockholm (Sweden), Salzburg (Austria), Berlin (Germany), Gozo (Malta), Ypres (Belgium) and Notre Dame des Neiges in the Alpe d'Huez (France).[citation needed]

The Organist and Master of the Choristers, currently David Price, oversees the Music Department and is assisted by the sub-organist and Michael James Organ Scholar. Sachin Gunga has been sub-organist since January 2018. The Michael James Organ Scholar is appointed annually and is usually undertaken by an undergraduate during their gap year.[citation needed]

 
 
(L-R) The West Great Organ and the Nicholson Organ.

Cathedral organs

The cathedral's three-manual and pedal, forty-nine stop organ was installed in 1994 by Nicholson & Co Ltd. The pipes were taken from the John Nicholson organ of 1861 built for Manchester Cathedral, which had been relocated to Holy Trinity Church, Bolton, in 1874; it was rebuilt by Jardine & Co in 1905.[6] In 2001, the West Great Organ was added, in order to provide music direct into the nave, which is pretty much a separate space. The renovated organ was officially inaugurated in November 2001, by a recital given by Olivier Latry, titular organist at Notre Dame de Paris. Finally, in 2017, horizontal Trompete de Maris fanfare reed division above the main entrance was added.[citation needed]

In 2007, the cathedral introduced a single manual, three-stop chamber organ built by Kenneth Tickell & Co of Northampton.[citation needed]

Dean and chapter

As of 30 December 2020:[7]

  • DeanAnthony Cane (since 16 March 2019 installation)[8]
  • Canon Chancellor and Vice Dean — Kathryn Percival (since December 2019)
  • Canon Precentor — Jo Spreadbury (since September 2015)
  • Diocesan Director of Social Enterprise and Engagement (Diocesan Canon) — Nick Ralph (since 2009)
  • Diocesan Head of Mission, Discipleship, and Ministry (Diocesan Canon) — Anthony Rustell (since 2014)

See also

References

  1. ^ . Cathedral website. Archived from the original on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 18 September 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e Knowles, Graeme (2006). Portsmouth Cathedral. Shropshire: RJL Smith & Associates Much Wenlock. ISBN 1-872665-94-2.
  3. ^ Nikolaus Pevsner; David Lloyd (1967). The Buildings of England: Hampshire and the Isle of Wight. London: Penguin Books. p. 402. ISBN 0-14-0710-32-9.
  4. ^ http://www.nlb.gov.sg/biblio/202560351 Page 18
  5. ^ "Girls to join new cathedral choir" (PDF). Pompey Chimes. March 2006. (PDF) from the original on 16 May 2008. Retrieved 27 April 2014.
  6. ^ . Nicholson Organs. Archived from the original on 28 April 2014. Retrieved 28 April 2014.
  7. ^ Portsmouth Cathedral — About Us 6 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine (Accessed 29 May 2019)
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 March 2019. Retrieved 2 February 2019.

External links

  • Official website
  • Flickr images tagged Portsmouth Cathedral
  • 32 Cathedral Images With Descriptions

portsmouth, cathedral, roman, catholic, cathedral, portsmouth, cathedral, john, evangelist, portsmouth, cathedral, church, thomas, canterbury, commonly, known, anglican, cathedral, church, centre, portsmouth, portsmouth, england, cathedral, diocese, portsmouth. For the Roman Catholic cathedral in Portsmouth see Cathedral of St John the Evangelist Portsmouth The Cathedral Church of St Thomas of Canterbury commonly known as Portsmouth Cathedral is an Anglican cathedral church in the centre of Old Portsmouth in Portsmouth England It is the cathedral of the Diocese of Portsmouth and the seat of the bishop of Portsmouth Portsmouth CathedralCathedral Church of St Thomas of CanterburyCoordinates 50 47 26 N 1 06 15 W 50 7905 N 1 1043 W 50 7905 1 1043LocationPortsmouth HampshireCountryEnglandDenominationChurch of EnglandPrevious denominationRoman CatholicWebsiteportsmouthcathedral org ukHistoryStatusCathedralFounded1180DedicationSt Thomas BecketDedicated1188ArchitectureFunctional statusActiveStyleRomanesque Germanic Years built12th century chapel 17th century rebuilt 1980s 1991SpecificationsNumber of towers3Tower height121 feet 37 m tallest tower Bells12AdministrationProvinceCanterburyDiocesePortsmouth since 1927 ClergyBishop s Christopher FosterDeanAnthony CaneCanon Chancellorand Vice DeanKathryn PercivalPrecentorJo SpreadburyCanon s Nick Ralph Social Enterprise and Engagement Anthony Rustell Mission Discipleship and Ministry LaityDirector of musicDavid Price Organist and Master of the Choristers Organist s Sachin Gunga Sub Organist Organ scholarBenedict KingThe Anglican cathedral is one of the two cathedral churches in the city the other being the Roman Catholic Cathedral of St John the Evangelist Portsmouth about one mile to the north Contents 1 History 1 1 Cathedral 2 Architecture 3 Music 4 Dean and chapter 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory Edit The font beneath the tower part of the original medieval building Around the year 1180 Jean de Gisors a wealthy Norman merchant and Lord of the Manor of Titchfield gave land in his new town of Portsmouth to the Augustinian canons of Southwick Priory so that they could build a chapel to the Glorious Honour of the Martyr Thomas of Canterbury one time Archbishop on my land which is called Sudewede the island of Portsea 1 It was given so that they could build a chapel dedicated to the honour of St Thomas of Canterbury who was assassinated and martyred ten years earlier This chapel was to become in turn a parish church in the 14th century and then a cathedral in the 20th century The medieval building dedicated in 1188 was cruciform in shape with a central tower which was used as a lookout point and lighthouse over the crossing Of the original building only the chancel and the transepts remain The church survived a French raid in 1337 which had laid waste most of Portsmouth during the Hundred Years War However in 1449 Adam Moleyns Bishop of Chichester was murdered by local sailors The town s inhabitants were excommunicated and the church was closed In 1591 Elizabeth I worshipped in St Thomas s Church 2 During the English Civil War when the Parliamentary forces attacked the town in 1642 the Royalist garrison used the church tower to observe the movement of enemy forces Parliamentary gunners positioned in Gosport fired on the tower and inflicted damage to the church This resulted in the ruin of the medieval tower and nave With the restoration of the monarchy in 1660 came the authorisation by Charles II for a collection in churches across the country to raise the 9 000 required to rebuild the tower and nave which took place from 1683 to 1693 The nave was built in the classical style Galleries were added in 1708 to cater for growing congregations and were extended in 1750 The wooden cupola with a lantern for shipping was added to the top of the tower in 1703 A ring of eight bells was given at the same time Two additional bells were cast in 1957 and currently the central tower contains a total of 12 bells All of the bells were cast at Taylor s Bell Foundry and are hung in the wooden octagonal part of the tower Various repairs and alterations were made during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries In 1902 the church was closed for two years so that much needed work on the foundations could be carried out During this period St Mary s Colewort a chapel of ease served as the temporary parish church 2 Cathedral Edit Quire The establishment of the Diocese of Portsmouth out of part of the Diocese of Winchester in 1927 brought about significant changes On 1 May of that year the parish church of St Thomas of Canterbury became the pro cathedral of the new diocese becoming the second cathedral in Portsmouth as the Roman Catholic Cathedral of St John the Evangelist had already opened in 1882 At a chapter meeting in October 1932 a first sketch plan for an extension to the church was submitted by Charles Nicholson He was called upon to extend the church to a size that would dignify its cathedral status by 1935 the provisional nature of its title had been dropped citation needed The style that Nicholson chose is that of a round arched Neo Byzantine style that echoed the classical style of the late seventeenth century quire By 1939 the outer quire aisles the tower the transepts and three bays of the nave had been completed 2 The base of the seventeenth century tower had been opened up to form the tower arch However with the Fall of France in June 1940 during World War II work on the extension scheme stopped and the bays of the nave were blocked off with a temporary brick wall This wall remained there for over fifty years During the Second World War the Cathedral suffered minor damage to the windows and the roof Nicholson died in 1949 and attempts headed by Bernard Montgomery to finish the structure in the 1960s proved unsuccessful due to substantive failure to find sufficient funds citation needed Plans published in 1966 by Seely amp Paget with Pier Luigi Nervi as consulting engineer envisaged a large semi circular western extension 76 feet wide constructed of reinforced concrete The vast extension would have allowed for a congregation of 1 200 to have an interrupted view of the nave altar 3 However as the building had been used for many years without its extension it was quite usable and there was no urgency to finish the work By the mid 1980s however the temporary brick wall was found to have become unstable and in danger of collapse which made the completion work pressing The task of the architects was to find a solution to the problem of finishing Nicholson s truncated nave the nave was originally intended in the 1930s plans to be longer in the traditional style of an English cathedral but the changing needs of the diocese meant that the building was finally built with a foreshortened nave the final west wall being located close to where the temporary structure had been Efforts were started to raise the 3 million necessary to carry out the plans Work began in January 1990 and eventually a fourth bay of the nave western towers tower rooms rose window gallery ambulatory together with the stone altar beneath Nicholson s tester and the new stone font were added In November 1991 the completed building much smaller than the original plans envisaged was consecrated in the presence of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother citation needed Architecture Edit Nave looking west The formal entrance into the cathedral is through the bronze west doors designed by Bryan Kneale The design is based on the tree of life an ancient symbol representing the renewal of life The completed nave is a square space that is enclosed by an outer ambulatory The ambulatory is low and vaulted Because the furniture in the nave is not fixed it can be used for various means including concerts and exhibitions as well as services On the rood screen beneath the nave organ case is a sculpture called Christus by Peter Eugene Ball The nave organ case was designed by Didier Grassin in 2001 the inside of the panels were designed by Patrick Caulfield The left side depicts night with a stylised lighthouse shining on the sea which alludes to the City of Portsmouth s motto Heaven s Light Our Guide The right door depicts day showing the sun and the hull of a fishing boat 2 The tower is pierced to provide an organ loft raised on a low dark passage The font 1991 made to a Greek design of the ninth century is placed centrally between the nave and the quire In the south tower transept is the bronze statue of St John the Baptist by David Wynne It was cast in 1951 as a memorial to a Winchester College pupil killed on the Matterhorn On the north wall of the south tower transept is the painting The Miraculous Draught of Fishes by William Lionel Wyllie The north tower transept contains a ceramic plaque of the Virgin and Child by the Florentine sculptor Andrea della Robbia The principal altar stands on a podium of Purbeck stone with mosaic work by Richard Noviss The lectern was the gift of Edward VII in 1903 The pulpit was installed in 1693 and is all that remains of a three decker pulpit The organ case built by Francis Bird with carved figures of cherubs and King David playing his harp belongs to the Nicholson Organ and bears the date 1718 2 In 1939 an extension of the Portsmouth Cathedral used granite from a quarry as far away as Pulau Ubin Singapore which was then a British colony 4 Music EditSee also List of musicians at English cathedrals Music departmentThere are three choirs at the cathedral The cathedral choir consists of up to 20 boys and a back row of adult alto tenor and bass singers made up of six choral scholars and six layclerks They sing Choral Evensong each Monday low voices only and Tuesday Friday and Sunday with the boys Cantate is the girls choir established in 2006 5 to sing Choral Evensong each Thursday The Cathedral Consort previously known as the Parish Choir is a mixed choir of adults and younger singers which sings Choral Evensong on Saturdays and other periods outside term time Often the choirs combine to form the Great Choir usually at large services and events citation needed The choirs regularly go on tour with recent European visits including destinations such as Tallinn Estonia Stockholm Sweden Salzburg Austria Berlin Germany Gozo Malta Ypres Belgium and Notre Dame des Neiges in the Alpe d Huez France citation needed The Organist and Master of the Choristers currently David Price oversees the Music Department and is assisted by the sub organist and Michael James Organ Scholar Sachin Gunga has been sub organist since January 2018 The Michael James Organ Scholar is appointed annually and is usually undertaken by an undergraduate during their gap year citation needed L R The West Great Organ and the Nicholson Organ Cathedral organsThe cathedral s three manual and pedal forty nine stop organ was installed in 1994 by Nicholson amp Co Ltd The pipes were taken from the John Nicholson organ of 1861 built for Manchester Cathedral which had been relocated to Holy Trinity Church Bolton in 1874 it was rebuilt by Jardine amp Co in 1905 6 In 2001 the West Great Organ was added in order to provide music direct into the nave which is pretty much a separate space The renovated organ was officially inaugurated in November 2001 by a recital given by Olivier Latry titular organist at Notre Dame de Paris Finally in 2017 horizontal Trompete de Maris fanfare reed division above the main entrance was added citation needed In 2007 the cathedral introduced a single manual three stop chamber organ built by Kenneth Tickell amp Co of Northampton citation needed Dean and chapter EditAs of 30 December 2020 7 Dean Anthony Cane since 16 March 2019 installation 8 Canon Chancellor and Vice Dean Kathryn Percival since December 2019 Canon Precentor Jo Spreadbury since September 2015 Diocesan Director of Social Enterprise and Engagement Diocesan Canon Nick Ralph since 2009 Diocesan Head of Mission Discipleship and Ministry Diocesan Canon Anthony Rustell since 2014 See also EditList of cathedrals in the United Kingdom List of places of worship in PortsmouthReferences Edit History of Portsmouth Cathedral Cathedral website Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 18 September 2013 a b c d e Knowles Graeme 2006 Portsmouth Cathedral Shropshire RJL Smith amp Associates Much Wenlock ISBN 1 872665 94 2 Nikolaus Pevsner David Lloyd 1967 The Buildings of England Hampshire and the Isle of Wight London Penguin Books p 402 ISBN 0 14 0710 32 9 http www nlb gov sg biblio 202560351 Page 18 Girls to join new cathedral choir PDF Pompey Chimes March 2006 Archived PDF from the original on 16 May 2008 Retrieved 27 April 2014 Portfolio Portsmouth Cathedral Hampshire Nicholson Organs Archived from the original on 28 April 2014 Retrieved 28 April 2014 Portsmouth Cathedral About Us Archived 6 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 29 May 2019 Chichester Cathedral Cleric is New Dean of Portsmouth Archived from the original on 27 March 2019 Retrieved 2 February 2019 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Portsmouth Cathedral Official website Cathedral Innovation Centre Flickr images tagged Portsmouth Cathedral 32 Cathedral Images With Descriptions Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Portsmouth Cathedral amp oldid 1147879749, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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