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St Julian's, Norwich

St Julian's is a Grade I listed parish church in the Church of England in Norwich, England. It is part of the Diocese of Norwich. During the Middle Ages, when the city was prosperous and possibly the second largest city in medieval England, the anchoress Julian of Norwich lived in a cell attached to the church. The cell was demolished during the 1530s.

St Julian
St Julian's Church, Norwich
View from north
52°37′29.4″N 1°18′02.4″E / 52.624833°N 1.300667°E / 52.624833; 1.300667
LocationNorwich, Norfolk
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
Websitehttps://www.stjohnstimberhill.org/
History
Founded11th century
DedicationJulian of Le Mans, or possibly Julian the Hospitaller
EventsDestroyed by bombing in 1942; rebuilt 1953.
Associated peopleJulian of Norwich
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Heritage designationGrade I listed[1]
Specifications
Bells1
Administration
ProvinceCanterbury
DioceseNorwich
ArchdeaconryNorwich
DeaneryNorwich East
ParishNorwich, St John the Baptist, Timberhill with Norwich St Julian
Clergy
Priest(s)Fr Richard Stanton

Due to a lack of funds, the church slowly became dilapidated during the 18th century. It underwent a restoration after one side of the building collapsed in 1845. The tower, also in danger of collapsing, was repaired in 1934. In June 1942, St Julian's received a direct hit during the Norwich Blitz. The only one of the four churches destroyed in Norwich during World War II that was rebuilt, it reopened in 1953. The medieval bell, damaged in 1942, was rehung in 1992.

The rebuilt church is a flint building with stone and brick dressings with a pantile roof. A small church, it consists of a nave, single-bay chancel, and a round tower. The south chapel and sacristry and the single-storey porch was added in the 1950s. The octagonal baptismal font, a replacement for the original one destroyed in 1942, was moved from the now redundant All Saints' Church, Norwich in 1977. The church has an 1860 pipe organ, which was installed in 1966.

Organisation edit

St Julian's is one of the churches of the parish of St John the Baptist, Timberhill, with St Julian's, Norwich, in the Diocese of Norwich. It lies within the deanery of Norwich East and the archdeaconry of Norwich.[2] In January 2023, the Revd Richard Stanton, the Interim Priest-in-Charge of the parish, was appointed Priest-in-Charge.[3]

The church is open each day of the week for worshippers and visitors as a place of prayer. The Mass is held on Sunday mornings.[4]

History edit

Medieval period edit

An early church on the site of St Julian's Church was destroyed in 1004 when the Vikings attacked Norwich.[5] The medieval church was built in the 11th and 12th centuries.[1] Between 1269 and 1305 the parish associated with the nearby church of St Edward King and Confessor was united with St Julian's.[6]

The original dedication of the church is uncertain;[7] it was possibly dedicated to Julian the Hospitaller,[8] but was also considered to have been dedicated to a female saint, Juliana of Nicomedia.[9] Alan Butler, chaplain to Edward Howard, 9th Duke of Norfolk (1686–1777), suggested that the dedication was to Saint Julian of Le Mans, an idea refuted by the Norwich stonemason Robert Flood in his 1936 booklet A Description of St Julian's Church, Norwich and an Account of Dame Julian's Connection with it.[6][10] In 1135, Stephen, King of England put the church under the authority of Carrow Abbey.[11] The prioress and nuns appointed the priest at St Julian's, and maintained the church.[12]

By the middle of the 14th century, Norwich likely had a population approaching 25,000, a figure not reached again until the late 16th century. Second only in size to London, it was a relatively wealthy city with a densely populated and prosperous hinterland.[13] Besides possessing a cathedral, it had five monasteries, a convent, and a greater number of parish churches than any city in medieval England other than London.[note 1] Through its trading links with the Low Countries and the Rhineland, at that time the most fertile areas for religious developments north of the Alps, the region probably had access to new religious ideas then prevalent in northern Europe.[15]

Julian of Norwich edit

 
Julian of Norwich depicted in an interior window in the church

During the late Middle Ages, Norwich had an exceptionally large number of hermits and anchorites in comparison with other English towns.[16] The mystic and anchoress (or female recluse) now known as Julian of Norwich lived in a cell attached to the church, which was then in an industrial area of the city, close to the quays of the River Wensum.[17][18]

Julian was born in 1343 or late 1342; her date of death is unknown, but she is thought to have died after 1416. It is possible that her name may have been taken from St Julian's Church, but Julian was a common girl's name during the 14th century, and it is likely to have been her actual name.[18]

Upon entering her cell for the first time, Julian would have been cut off from the world of the living; the cell door connecting her with the church would have been sealed, with a small window to allow her to witness masses, and perhaps another to receive callers.[19]

Julian is the first woman whose writings in English have survived. Her book, commonly called Revelations of Divine Love, was written in two versions, now usually referred to as the Short Text and the Long Text. The earlier Short Text was written after she received a series of 16 mystical revelations, following her recovery from an illness that brought her close to death.[20]

It has been speculated that one of the prioresses of Carrow, Edith Wilton, provided Julian with her writing materials.[12] In 1428, another anchoress, Julian (or Juliana) Lampet, was installed in the cell and lived there for 50 years.[21]

Decline and restoration edit

 
Lithograph of the church by James Sillett (1828), Norwich Museums Collections

As a consequence of the English Reformation, the priory at Carrow was dissolved. No rector was appointed at St Julian's for 45 years, until the appointment of Gawin Browne in 1581. During the Reformation, the cell at St Julian's was demolished.[22]

After merchants ceased living in the area around St Julian's, the church entered a period of slow decline. By 1827, when the church was drawn by the Norfolk artist James Sillett, most of the east window had been blocked up. According to Flood, "Mrs Gunn made fifteen drawings from remains of coloured glass that lay much broken on the floor. No services were held, and the place was overrun with boys."[23] Part of the chancel collapsed in 1845, by which time the church was in a very poor state of repair and no longer in use for services.[24]

Following the collapse of the east wall, an appeal was made for funds, and the church then underwent a restoration.[25][note 2] The priest's door was blocked up, and the medieval wall paintings and biblical texts were painted over or destroyed, the interior fixtures removed and the vestry built on the south side of the building. The tower's height was reduced, and a new east window was installed. By 1860, the thatching on the roof had been replaced with tiles.[26] By the beginning of the 20th century, the tower was close to collapsing; it was repaired in 1934.[27]

Destruction during World War Two, and rebuilding edit

St Julian's suffered almost complete destruction during the Norwich Blitz of 1942, when in June that year it received a direct hit.[1] After the war, funds were raised to rebuild the church, the only one of the churches destroyed in Norwich during the war that was later rebuilt.[17] Redesigned by the architect A. J. Chaplin, it was reopened in 1953,[1][note 3] with a chapel built in place of the long-lost anchorite cell.[29]

The church's bell was made in 1450 by the bellfounder Richard Brayser, when it was inscribed with the words Ave gracia Plena Dominus Tecum. One of the oldest bells in the city, it crashed to the ground and was badly damaged when the church was destroyed.[30][31] After being repaired, it was returned to the church and rehung in 1992.[17]

Architecture edit

St Julian's Church was granted Grade I Listed status in 1954. The flint building has stone and brick dressings with a pantile roof. It consists of a nave, the single-bay chancel, a circular west tower, a south chapel, and a vestry.[1]

The remains of the original church possesses a number of Late Anglo-Saxon windows, though the building dates largely to the 11th and 12th centuries.[17] Enough of the north wall has survived to preserve three Anglo-Saxon windows revealed during repairs, two of which are circular.[32]

The round tower was not rebuilt to its former height after the war, but is truncated at the level of the top of the nave. The south chapel and sacristry were added during the 20th century. The single-storey porch was added when the church was rebuilt in the 1950s. The Norman doorway connecting the nave to the chapel is from St Michael at Thorn, a church that like St Julian's, was destroyed by enemy bombing in 1942.[1]

Font edit

 
Interior view of the church, facing west
 
The church's baptismal font

The octagonal baptismal font is a replacement for the original one, which was lost when the church was bombed. The current font was moved from the now redundant All Saints' Church, Norwich in 1977. It has eight standing figures representing the Apostles, Saint Michael the Archangel, Saint George, and two other saints.[32][note 4]

Organ edit

The church has an organ dating to 1860 by Henry Jones of London, which was installed there in 1966. Originally built for a house in the Essex village of Abbess Roding, it was found in a warehouse in Chelmsford, where it was rebuilt. A specification of the organ can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register.[34]

Churchyard edit

In 1906, some stonework, thought to be from the destroyed anchorite's cell, was recovered from the churchyard.[35]

During 2014 and 2015, archaeological work undertaken immediately to the east of the churchyard revealed medieval features, including graves. The work done showed that St Julian's churchyard originally extended eastwards up to King Street.[17] The lost part of the churchyard was developed by the 17th century, but it is not known exactly when this occurred.[17]

Notes edit

  1. ^ By the middle of the 13th century, the number of churches in the city had reached around sixty. A gradual process of parish amalgamation, closure and destruction has left 31 remaining medieval churches in the city.[14]
  2. ^ The records relating to the restoration of the church no longer exist, so that the identity of the restorer is unknown.[26]
  3. ^ The three churches not rebuilt were St Michael-at-Thorn, St Benedict's, and St Paul's.[28]
  4. ^ All Saints Church was united with St Julian's from 1760 to 1929.[33]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Historic England. "Church of St Julian, St Julian's Alley (Grade I) (1051852)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 13 March 2023.
  2. ^ "A Church near You: St Julian's, Norwich". Diocese of Norwich. Retrieved 14 March 2023.
  3. ^ "Appointments". Church Times. 20 January 2023. Retrieved 14 March 2023.
  4. ^ "St John the Baptist, Timberhill with St Julian, Norwich". St John the Baptist, Timberhill with St Julian, Norwich. 2022. Retrieved 14 March 2023.
  5. ^ Flood 1936, p. 12.
  6. ^ a b Flood 1936, p. 10.
  7. ^ Flood 1936, p. 8.
  8. ^ "The Shrine of Julian of Norwich". St John the Baptist, Timberhill with St Julian, Norwich. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  9. ^ Flood 1936, p. 9.
  10. ^ "Robert Herbert Flood Of Norwich, Stonemason and Antiquary, 1870s–1936". The National Archives (United Kingdom). Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  11. ^ Upjohn & Groves 2018, p. 12.
  12. ^ a b Marilyn 2015.
  13. ^ Rutledge 2006, pp. 157–158.
  14. ^ Finch 2006, p. 58.
  15. ^ Tanner 1984, pp. xvi–xviii.
  16. ^ Tanner 1984, p. 130.
  17. ^ a b c d e f "St Julian's Church, St Julian's Alley, Norwich". Norfolk Heritage Explorer. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
  18. ^ a b Windeatt 2015, pp. xiv–xv.
  19. ^ Windeatt 2015, pp. x–xi.
  20. ^ Windeatt 2015, p. ix.
  21. ^ Marilyn 2014.
  22. ^ Upjohn & Groves 2018, pp. 8, 15.
  23. ^ Flood 1936, p. 25.
  24. ^ Upjohn & Groves 2018, p. 17.
  25. ^ Upjohn & Groves 2018, pp. 17–18.
  26. ^ a b Upjohn & Groves 2018, p. 20.
  27. ^ Upjohn & Groves 2018, p. 27.
  28. ^ Upjohn & Groves 2018, p. 29.
  29. ^ Upjohn & Groves 2018, p. 28.
  30. ^ Upjohn & Groves 2018, p. 14.
  31. ^ Flood 1936, p. 17.
  32. ^ a b Pevsner & Wilson 2002, p. 241.
  33. ^ Upjohn & Groves 2018, p. 40.
  34. ^ "NPOR N06503". National Pipe Organ Register. British Institute of Organ Studies. from the original on 2 February 2015. Retrieved 2 February 2015.
  35. ^ Upjohn & Groves 2018, p. 25.

Sources edit

  • Finch, Jonathan (2006). "The Churches". In Rawcliffe, Carol; Wilson, Richard (eds.). Medieval Norwich. London: Hambledon and London. pp. 157–189. ISBN 978-1-85285-546-8.
  • Flood, Robert (1936). A Description of St. Julian's Church, Norwich and an Account of Dame Julian's Connection with it. Norwich: Wherry Press. OCLC 77655908.
  • Marilyn, Oliva (2014) [2004]. "Pygot, Margaret (d. in or after 1474), prioress of Carrow". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/105620. ISBN 978-0-198-61412-8. Retrieved 30 March 2021. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Marilyn, Oliva (2015) [2004]. "Wilton, Edith (d. 1430), prioress of Carrow". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/107180. ISBN 978-0-198-61412-8. Retrieved 29 March 2021. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Pevsner, Nikolaus; Wilson, Bill (2002) [1962]. Norfolk. The Buildings of England. Vol. 1. Norwich and North-East. New Haven, Connecticut; London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-09607-1.
  • Rutledge, Elizabeth (2006). "Economic Life". In Rawcliffe, Carol; Wilson, Richard (eds.). Medieval Norwich. London: Hambledon and London. pp. 157–189. ISBN 978-1-85285-546-8.
  • Tanner, Norman P. (1984). The Church in Late Medieval Norwich, 1370-1532. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. ISBN 978-08884-4-066-2.
  • Upjohn, Sheila; Groves, Nicholas (2018). St Julian's Church Norwich. Norwich: The Friends of Julian of Norwich. ISBN 978-0-954-15246-8.
  • Windeatt, Barry, ed. (2015). Revelations of Divine Love. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-811206-8.

Further reading edit

  • Groves, Nicholas (2010). The Medieval Churches of the City of Norwich. Norwich: Norwich Heritage Economic and Regeneration Trust (HEART) and East Publishing. ISBN 978-0-956-03852-4.
  • Richard C., Taylor (1821). Index Monasticus. London: Richard & Arthur Taylor. OCLC 6458843.
  • Yuskaitis, Victoria (2020). Fugelso, Karl (ed.). "Archaeology and Medievalism at Julian of Norwich's Anchorite Cell". Studies in Medievalism XXIX: Politics and Medievalism. Studies in Medievalism. Boydell & Brewer: 123–154. doi:10.1017/9781787448957.011. ISBN 9781787448957.

External links edit

  • Norwich St Julian from the European Round Tower Churches website
  • Norwich, St Julian's Church, Isaac's House and Carrow Priory from the Umilta website
  • Julian of Norwich from the Friends of Julian of Norwich website
  • "St Julian, Norwich". Norfolk Churches. from the original on 4 September 2019.
  • "Blitz Ghosts: Church of St Julian Norwich". Invisible Works. 8 February 2016. from the original on 12 November 2016.
  • Norwich – Norfolk LXIII.15.9—the 1885 edition of the Ordnance Survey 1:5000 map that includes St Julian's, from the National Library of Scotland website.
  • Photographs of the church by George Plunkett, taken between 1934 and 1962.
  • 1870 plan of St Julian's Church by Walter E. MacCarthy, from the Lambeth Palace Library collection

julian, norwich, julian, grade, listed, parish, church, church, england, norwich, england, part, diocese, norwich, during, middle, ages, when, city, prosperous, possibly, second, largest, city, medieval, england, anchoress, julian, norwich, lived, cell, attach. St Julian s is a Grade I listed parish church in the Church of England in Norwich England It is part of the Diocese of Norwich During the Middle Ages when the city was prosperous and possibly the second largest city in medieval England the anchoress Julian of Norwich lived in a cell attached to the church The cell was demolished during the 1530s St JulianSt Julian s Church NorwichView from north52 37 29 4 N 1 18 02 4 E 52 624833 N 1 300667 E 52 624833 1 300667LocationNorwich NorfolkCountryEnglandDenominationChurch of EnglandWebsitehttps www stjohnstimberhill org HistoryFounded11th centuryDedicationJulian of Le Mans or possibly Julian the HospitallerEventsDestroyed by bombing in 1942 rebuilt 1953 Associated peopleJulian of NorwichArchitectureFunctional statusActiveHeritage designationGrade I listed 1 SpecificationsBells1AdministrationProvinceCanterburyDioceseNorwichArchdeaconryNorwichDeaneryNorwich EastParishNorwich St John the Baptist Timberhill with Norwich St JulianClergyPriest s Fr Richard StantonDue to a lack of funds the church slowly became dilapidated during the 18th century It underwent a restoration after one side of the building collapsed in 1845 The tower also in danger of collapsing was repaired in 1934 In June 1942 St Julian s received a direct hit during the Norwich Blitz The only one of the four churches destroyed in Norwich during World War II that was rebuilt it reopened in 1953 The medieval bell damaged in 1942 was rehung in 1992 The rebuilt church is a flint building with stone and brick dressings with a pantile roof A small church it consists of a nave single bay chancel and a round tower The south chapel and sacristry and the single storey porch was added in the 1950s The octagonal baptismal font a replacement for the original one destroyed in 1942 was moved from the now redundant All Saints Church Norwich in 1977 The church has an 1860 pipe organ which was installed in 1966 Contents 1 Organisation 2 History 2 1 Medieval period 2 1 1 Julian of Norwich 2 2 Decline and restoration 2 3 Destruction during World War Two and rebuilding 3 Architecture 3 1 Font 3 2 Organ 3 3 Churchyard 4 Notes 5 References 6 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksOrganisation editSt Julian s is one of the churches of the parish of St John the Baptist Timberhill with St Julian s Norwich in the Diocese of Norwich It lies within the deanery of Norwich East and the archdeaconry of Norwich 2 In January 2023 the Revd Richard Stanton the Interim Priest in Charge of the parish was appointed Priest in Charge 3 The church is open each day of the week for worshippers and visitors as a place of prayer The Mass is held on Sunday mornings 4 History editMedieval period edit An early church on the site of St Julian s Church was destroyed in 1004 when the Vikings attacked Norwich 5 The medieval church was built in the 11th and 12th centuries 1 Between 1269 and 1305 the parish associated with the nearby church of St Edward King and Confessor was united with St Julian s 6 The original dedication of the church is uncertain 7 it was possibly dedicated to Julian the Hospitaller 8 but was also considered to have been dedicated to a female saint Juliana of Nicomedia 9 Alan Butler chaplain to Edward Howard 9th Duke of Norfolk 1686 1777 suggested that the dedication was to Saint Julian of Le Mans an idea refuted by the Norwich stonemason Robert Flood in his 1936 booklet A Description of St Julian s Church Norwich and an Account of Dame Julian s Connection with it 6 10 In 1135 Stephen King of England put the church under the authority of Carrow Abbey 11 The prioress and nuns appointed the priest at St Julian s and maintained the church 12 By the middle of the 14th century Norwich likely had a population approaching 25 000 a figure not reached again until the late 16th century Second only in size to London it was a relatively wealthy city with a densely populated and prosperous hinterland 13 Besides possessing a cathedral it had five monasteries a convent and a greater number of parish churches than any city in medieval England other than London note 1 Through its trading links with the Low Countries and the Rhineland at that time the most fertile areas for religious developments north of the Alps the region probably had access to new religious ideas then prevalent in northern Europe 15 Julian of Norwich edit Main article Julian of Norwich nbsp Julian of Norwich depicted in an interior window in the churchDuring the late Middle Ages Norwich had an exceptionally large number of hermits and anchorites in comparison with other English towns 16 The mystic and anchoress or female recluse now known as Julian of Norwich lived in a cell attached to the church which was then in an industrial area of the city close to the quays of the River Wensum 17 18 Julian was born in 1343 or late 1342 her date of death is unknown but she is thought to have died after 1416 It is possible that her name may have been taken from St Julian s Church but Julian was a common girl s name during the 14th century and it is likely to have been her actual name 18 Upon entering her cell for the first time Julian would have been cut off from the world of the living the cell door connecting her with the church would have been sealed with a small window to allow her to witness masses and perhaps another to receive callers 19 Julian is the first woman whose writings in English have survived Her book commonly called Revelations of Divine Love was written in two versions now usually referred to as the Short Text and the Long Text The earlier Short Text was written after she received a series of 16 mystical revelations following her recovery from an illness that brought her close to death 20 It has been speculated that one of the prioresses of Carrow Edith Wilton provided Julian with her writing materials 12 In 1428 another anchoress Julian or Juliana Lampet was installed in the cell and lived there for 50 years 21 Decline and restoration edit nbsp Lithograph of the church by James Sillett 1828 Norwich Museums CollectionsAs a consequence of the English Reformation the priory at Carrow was dissolved No rector was appointed at St Julian s for 45 years until the appointment of Gawin Browne in 1581 During the Reformation the cell at St Julian s was demolished 22 After merchants ceased living in the area around St Julian s the church entered a period of slow decline By 1827 when the church was drawn by the Norfolk artist James Sillett most of the east window had been blocked up According to Flood Mrs Gunn made fifteen drawings from remains of coloured glass that lay much broken on the floor No services were held and the place was overrun with boys 23 Part of the chancel collapsed in 1845 by which time the church was in a very poor state of repair and no longer in use for services 24 Following the collapse of the east wall an appeal was made for funds and the church then underwent a restoration 25 note 2 The priest s door was blocked up and the medieval wall paintings and biblical texts were painted over or destroyed the interior fixtures removed and the vestry built on the south side of the building The tower s height was reduced and a new east window was installed By 1860 the thatching on the roof had been replaced with tiles 26 By the beginning of the 20th century the tower was close to collapsing it was repaired in 1934 27 Destruction during World War Two and rebuilding edit St Julian s suffered almost complete destruction during the Norwich Blitz of 1942 when in June that year it received a direct hit 1 After the war funds were raised to rebuild the church the only one of the churches destroyed in Norwich during the war that was later rebuilt 17 Redesigned by the architect A J Chaplin it was reopened in 1953 1 note 3 with a chapel built in place of the long lost anchorite cell 29 The church s bell was made in 1450 by the bellfounder Richard Brayser when it was inscribed with the words Ave gracia Plena Dominus Tecum One of the oldest bells in the city it crashed to the ground and was badly damaged when the church was destroyed 30 31 After being repaired it was returned to the church and rehung in 1992 17 Architecture editSt Julian s Church was granted Grade I Listed status in 1954 The flint building has stone and brick dressings with a pantile roof It consists of a nave the single bay chancel a circular west tower a south chapel and a vestry 1 The remains of the original church possesses a number of Late Anglo Saxon windows though the building dates largely to the 11th and 12th centuries 17 Enough of the north wall has survived to preserve three Anglo Saxon windows revealed during repairs two of which are circular 32 The round tower was not rebuilt to its former height after the war but is truncated at the level of the top of the nave The south chapel and sacristry were added during the 20th century The single storey porch was added when the church was rebuilt in the 1950s The Norman doorway connecting the nave to the chapel is from St Michael at Thorn a church that like St Julian s was destroyed by enemy bombing in 1942 1 Font edit nbsp Interior view of the church facing west nbsp The church s baptismal font The octagonal baptismal font is a replacement for the original one which was lost when the church was bombed The current font was moved from the now redundant All Saints Church Norwich in 1977 It has eight standing figures representing the Apostles Saint Michael the Archangel Saint George and two other saints 32 note 4 Organ edit The church has an organ dating to 1860 by Henry Jones of London which was installed there in 1966 Originally built for a house in the Essex village of Abbess Roding it was found in a warehouse in Chelmsford where it was rebuilt A specification of the organ can be found on the National Pipe Organ Register 34 Churchyard edit In 1906 some stonework thought to be from the destroyed anchorite s cell was recovered from the churchyard 35 During 2014 and 2015 archaeological work undertaken immediately to the east of the churchyard revealed medieval features including graves The work done showed that St Julian s churchyard originally extended eastwards up to King Street 17 The lost part of the churchyard was developed by the 17th century but it is not known exactly when this occurred 17 Notes edit By the middle of the 13th century the number of churches in the city had reached around sixty A gradual process of parish amalgamation closure and destruction has left 31 remaining medieval churches in the city 14 The records relating to the restoration of the church no longer exist so that the identity of the restorer is unknown 26 The three churches not rebuilt were St Michael at Thorn St Benedict s and St Paul s 28 All Saints Church was united with St Julian s from 1760 to 1929 33 References edit a b c d e f Historic England Church of St Julian St Julian s Alley Grade I 1051852 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 13 March 2023 A Church near You St Julian s Norwich Diocese of Norwich Retrieved 14 March 2023 Appointments Church Times 20 January 2023 Retrieved 14 March 2023 St John the Baptist Timberhill with St Julian Norwich St John the Baptist Timberhill with St Julian Norwich 2022 Retrieved 14 March 2023 Flood 1936 p 12 a b Flood 1936 p 10 Flood 1936 p 8 The Shrine of Julian of Norwich St John the Baptist Timberhill with St Julian Norwich Retrieved 11 March 2023 Flood 1936 p 9 Robert Herbert Flood Of Norwich Stonemason and Antiquary 1870s 1936 The National Archives United Kingdom Retrieved 11 March 2023 Upjohn amp Groves 2018 p 12 a b Marilyn 2015 Rutledge 2006 pp 157 158 Finch 2006 p 58 Tanner 1984 pp xvi xviii Tanner 1984 p 130 a b c d e f St Julian s Church St Julian s Alley Norwich Norfolk Heritage Explorer Retrieved 15 March 2020 a b Windeatt 2015 pp xiv xv Windeatt 2015 pp x xi Windeatt 2015 p ix Marilyn 2014 Upjohn amp Groves 2018 pp 8 15 Flood 1936 p 25 Upjohn amp Groves 2018 p 17 Upjohn amp Groves 2018 pp 17 18 a b Upjohn amp Groves 2018 p 20 Upjohn amp Groves 2018 p 27 Upjohn amp Groves 2018 p 29 Upjohn amp Groves 2018 p 28 Upjohn amp Groves 2018 p 14 Flood 1936 p 17 a b Pevsner amp Wilson 2002 p 241 Upjohn amp Groves 2018 p 40 NPOR N06503 National Pipe Organ Register British Institute of Organ Studies Archived from the original on 2 February 2015 Retrieved 2 February 2015 Upjohn amp Groves 2018 p 25 Sources editFinch Jonathan 2006 The Churches In Rawcliffe Carol Wilson Richard eds Medieval Norwich London Hambledon and London pp 157 189 ISBN 978 1 85285 546 8 Flood Robert 1936 A Description of St Julian s Church Norwich and an Account of Dame Julian s Connection with it Norwich Wherry Press OCLC 77655908 Marilyn Oliva 2014 2004 Pygot Margaret d in or after 1474 prioress of Carrow Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 105620 ISBN 978 0 198 61412 8 Retrieved 30 March 2021 Subscription or UK public library membership required Marilyn Oliva 2015 2004 Wilton Edith d 1430 prioress of Carrow Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 107180 ISBN 978 0 198 61412 8 Retrieved 29 March 2021 Subscription or UK public library membership required Pevsner Nikolaus Wilson Bill 2002 1962 Norfolk The Buildings of England Vol 1 Norwich and North East New Haven Connecticut London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 09607 1 Rutledge Elizabeth 2006 Economic Life In Rawcliffe Carol Wilson Richard eds Medieval Norwich London Hambledon and London pp 157 189 ISBN 978 1 85285 546 8 Tanner Norman P 1984 The Church in Late Medieval Norwich 1370 1532 Toronto Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies ISBN 978 08884 4 066 2 Upjohn Sheila Groves Nicholas 2018 St Julian s Church Norwich Norwich The Friends of Julian of Norwich ISBN 978 0 954 15246 8 Windeatt Barry ed 2015 Revelations of Divine Love Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 811206 8 Further reading editGroves Nicholas 2010 The Medieval Churches of the City of Norwich Norwich Norwich Heritage Economic and Regeneration Trust HEART and East Publishing ISBN 978 0 956 03852 4 Richard C Taylor 1821 Index Monasticus London Richard amp Arthur Taylor OCLC 6458843 Yuskaitis Victoria 2020 Fugelso Karl ed Archaeology and Medievalism at Julian of Norwich s Anchorite Cell Studies in Medievalism XXIX Politics and Medievalism Studies in Medievalism Boydell amp Brewer 123 154 doi 10 1017 9781787448957 011 ISBN 9781787448957 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to St Julian s Church Norwich Norwich St Julian from the European Round Tower Churches website Norwich St Julian s Church Isaac s House and Carrow Priory from the Umilta website Julian of Norwich from the Friends of Julian of Norwich website St Julian Norwich Norfolk Churches Archived from the original on 4 September 2019 Blitz Ghosts Church of St Julian Norwich Invisible Works 8 February 2016 Archived from the original on 12 November 2016 Norwich Norfolk LXIII 15 9 the 1885 edition of the Ordnance Survey 1 5000 map that includes St Julian s from the National Library of Scotland website Photographs of the church by George Plunkett taken between 1934 and 1962 1870 plan of St Julian s Church by Walter E MacCarthy from the Lambeth Palace Library collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Julian 27s Norwich amp oldid 1216900898, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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