Gloucester Cathedral

Gloucester Cathedral
Cathedral Church of St Peter
and the Holy and Indivisible Trinity
Gloucester Cathedral
Shown within Gloucester
Coordinates: 51°52′03″N 2°14′48″W / 51.8675°N 2.246667°W / 51.8675; -2.246667
Location Gloucester, Gloucestershire
Country England
Denomination Church of England
Website gloucestercathedral.org.uk
Architecture
Style Romanesque & Gothic
Years built 1089–1499
Specifications
Length 130m
Nave length 174ft (53m) [1]
Choir length 140ft (42m) [1]
Nave width 34ft (10m) [1]
Width across transepts 43.9m
Height 68.6m
Nave height 68ft (21m) [1]
Choir height 86ft (26m) [1]
Number of towers 1
Tower height 68.6m
Administration
Diocese Gloucester (since 1541)
Province Canterbury
Clergy
Dean Stephen Lake
Precentor Richard Mitchell
Canon(s)

Celia Thomson

Nikki Arthy

Andrew Braddock
Archdeacon Jackie Searle
Laity
Director of music Adrian Partington
Organist(s) Jonathan Hope
Chapter clerk Emily Shepherd (Chief Operating Officer)

Gloucester Cathedral, formally the Cathedral Church of St Peter and the Holy and Indivisible Trinity, in Gloucester, England, stands in the north of the city near the River Severn. It originated in 678 or 679 with the foundation of an abbey dedicated to Saint Peter (dissolved by King Henry VIII).

History

Foundations

Wardle records that in 1058 Ealdred, Bishop of Worcester at the time, rebuilt the church of St Peter.[2] The foundations of the present church were laid by Abbot Serlo (1072–1104). Walter Frocester (d. 1412) the abbey's historian, became its first mitred abbot in 1381.[3] Until 1541, Gloucester lay in the see of Worcester, but the separate see was then constituted, with John Wakeman, last abbot of Tewkesbury, as its first bishop. The diocese covers the greater part of Gloucestershire, with small parts of Herefordshire and Wiltshire. The cathedral has a stained glass window containing the earliest images of golf. This dates from 1350, over 300 years earlier than the earliest image of golf from Scotland.[4] There is also a carved image of people playing a ball game, believed by some to be one of the earliest images of medieval football.

Construction and architecture

The soaring stained glass windows behind the high altar
Gloucester Cathedral West Window
Gloucester Cathedral Vaulted Ceiling

The cathedral, built as the abbey church, consists of a Norman nucleus (Walter de Lacy is buried there), with additions in every style of Gothic architecture. It is 420 feet (130 m) long, and 144 feet (44 m) wide, with a fine central tower of the 15th century rising to the height of 225 ft (69 m) and topped by four delicate pinnacles, a famous landmark. The nave is massive Norman with an Early English roof; the crypt, under the choir, aisles and chapels, is Norman, as is the chapter house. The crypt is one of the four apsidal cathedral crypts in England, the others being at Worcester, Winchester and Canterbury.

The nave looking east toward the choir

The south porch is in the Perpendicular style, with a fan-vaulted roof, as also is the north transept, the south being transitional Decorated Gothic. The choir has Perpendicular tracery over Norman work, with an apsidal chapel on each side: the choir vaulting is particularly rich. The late Decorated east window is partly filled with surviving medieval stained glass. Between the apsidal chapels is a cross Lady chapel, and north of the nave are the cloisters, the carrels or stalls for the monks' study and writing lying to the south. The cloisters at Gloucester are the earliest surviving fan vaults, having been designed between 1351 and 1377 by Thomas de Canterbury.[5]

The most notable monument is the canopied shrine of King Edward II of England who was murdered at nearby Berkeley Castle (illustration below). The building and sanctuary were enriched by the visits of pilgrims to this shrine. In a side-chapel is a monument in coloured bog oak of Robert Curthose, eldest son of William the Conqueror and a great benefactor of the abbey, who was interred there. Monuments of Bishop Warburton and Dr Edward Jenner are also worthy of note.

Between 1873 and 1890, and in 1897, the cathedral was extensively restored by George Gilbert Scott.

Recent Construction

In September 2016 Gloucester Cathedral joined the Church of England’s ‘Shrinking the Footprint’ campaign. The aim of this campaign is to reduce The Church of England’s carbon emissions collectively, by 80%. In order to help reach this target Gloucester Cathedral commissioned local solar company Mypower to install an array on the nave of Gloucester Cathedral. Purportedly the solar array will reduce Gloucester Cathedral’s energy costs by 25%.[6] The installation was completed by November 2016. The 1000 year old Cathedral is now the oldest building in the world to have undergone a solar installation.

Misericords

The cathedral has forty-six 14th-century misericords and twelve 19th-century replacements by Gilbert Scott. Both types have a wide range of subject matter: mythology, everyday occurrences, religious symbolism and folklore.

Clergy

Music

Facing west towards the choir, with the organ above.

Organ

Details of the organ from the National Pipe Organ Register

The organ was originally constructed in 1666 by Thomas Harris and has the only complete 17th-century cathedral organ case surviving in the country. The pipes displayed on the front of the case are still functional. The organ was extended and modified by nearly all of the established UK organ builders, including Henry "Father" Willis who worked on the organ in 1847 and rebuilt it in 1888-9. It was rebuilt again in 1920 by Harrison & Harrison.[11]

In 1971 Hill, Norman and Beard performed a total redesign, under the supervision of Cathedral Organist John Sanders and consultant Ralph Downes. In 1999 Nicholson & Co overhauled the organ, when the soundboards, pipework and wind supply were renovated and the computer system was updated. In 2010 Nicholson also added a Trompette Harmonique solo reed.[11]

The organ comprises four manuals and pedals. It is designed particularly to play from its position on the Quire screen to both East and West sides of the Cathedral. The Swell is situated in the centre of the case at console level and is controlled by two swell pedals, one for each side of the case. Directly above the Swell is the Great organ which is split into East and West divisions; it comprises two separate principal choruses. The fourth manual is a West Positive, mirroring the function of the Choir organ for the West side of the Cathedral.[11]

Organists

In 1582, Robert Lichfield is recorded as the organist of Gloucester Cathedral. Notable among the organists are composers and choral conductors of the Three Choirs Festival, Herbert Brewer, Herbert Sumsion and John Sanders.

Three Choirs Festival

An annual musical festival, the Three Choirs Festival, is hosted by turns in this cathedral and those of Worcester and Hereford in rotation.[12] The Three Choirs is the oldest annual musical festival in the world. Three Choirs Festival

Burials and monuments

Gloucester Cathedral has a large collection of funerary monuments from the Middle Ages to the present. Notable people buried at Gloucester Cathedral include:

Film and TV location

Cloisters with fan vaulted roof was used as a location in the Harry Potter film series
The cathedral has been used from as a location for filming the first, second and sixth Harry Potter films.
In 2008, the cathedral was used by BBC Wales as a location for the Doctor Who Christmas special.[14][15]
The cathedral was used as a filming location in the BBC's series The Hollow Crown (an adaption of Shakespeare's Henry IV parts 1 and 2).[16]
The interior of the cathedral represented the court of another King Henry, Henry VIII, in the BBC's adaptation of Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall, first broadcast in January 2015.[17]
In 2015, the cathedral was used as a location to film Sherlock.[18][19]

Academic use

Degree ceremonies of the University of Gloucestershire and the University of the West of England (through Hartpury College) both take place at the cathedral.[20][21]

The cathedral is also used during school term-time as the venue for assemblies (known as morning chapel) by The King's School, Gloucester, and for events by the High School for Girls (Denmark Road, Gloucester), the Crypt Grammar School for boys and Ribston Hall High School.

Timeline

Tomb of Edward II

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 http://www.basiccarpentrytechniques.com/English%20Medieval%20Cathedrals/Bell's%20Cathedrals%20Gloucester%20Cathedral/images/image51.png
  2. Wardle, Terry Heroes & Villains of Worcestershire 2010 The History Press, Stroud, Gloucestershire p. 10 ISBN 978-0-7524-5515-0
  3. Gransden, Antonia (2013). Historical Writing in England: 550 - 1307 and 1307 to the Early Sixteenth Century. Routledge. p. 391.
  4. "The first Golf record?". A Royal and Ancient Golf History video. Fore Tee Video. Retrieved 2009-01-16.
  5. Harvey, John (1978). The Perpendicular Style. Batsford. ISBN 0-7134-1610-6.
  6. "Let there be light - 1000 year old Gloucester Cathedral becomes the oldest building of its type in the world to install solar PV". MyPower.
  7. "Gloucester Cathedral". gloucestercathedral.org.uk. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  8. "Christ Church West Wimbledon – Information, Candlemas 2003" (PDF).
  9. "Church Times gazette". Church Times. p. 58. #7814. 21/28 December 2012
  10. "Gloucester Cathedral". gloucestercathedral.org.uk. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  11. 1 2 3 Edit, Gloucester Cathedral | powered by Church. "Gloucester Cathedral - Organ". gloucestercathedral.org.uk. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  12. "Three Choirs Festival". Retrieved 2009-01-16.
  13. "Burial vault discovered 'accidentally' at Gloucester Cathedral". BBC News. 2 November 2015. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
  14. "Gloucester Cathedral 'should be heritage site' - BBC News". 2008 the cathedral was used by BBC Wales as a location for the Doctor Who Christmas special. January 2014 via BBC.
  15. "Gloucester on film - The Tardis and David Tennant (right) arrived in the City as Gloucester Cathedral grounds were used as the filming location for Doctor Who’s 2008 Christmas Special - The Next Doctor.". thecityofgloucester.co.uk.
  16. "IT was a case of 'once more into the breach' for Gloucester Cathedral which has provided the backdrop for another star studded drama.". thisisgloucestershire.co.uk. 20 January 2012. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  17. "The Stately Homes of Wolf Hall", BBC website.
  18. "Sherlock watch: Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman set for filming in Gloucester Cathedral". Gloucester Citizen. 22 January 2015. Retrieved 23 January 2015.
  19. "Sherlock stars back filming at Gloucester Cathedral today". Gloucester Citizen. 23 January 2015.
  20. "Information for the Ceremonies held at Gloucester Cathedral". University of Gloucestershire. Retrieved 2012-05-04.
  21. "Higher Education Graduation". Hartpury College. Retrieved 2012-05-04.

References

  • Simmons, D A (1962). Who's who in music and musicians' international directory (4th. ed.). London: Burke's Peerage Ltd. OCLC 13309419.  Published in America as Simmons, David (1962). Who's who in music and musicians' international directory (4th. ed.). New York: Hafner Publishing Company. OCLC 12923270. 
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