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How to Visit the English Cathedrals

Chapter 5: ILLUSTRATIONS
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About This Book

This guide offers concise, illustrated descriptions of England's great cathedrals, combining readable architectural explanation with historical context and practical visiting advice. It surveys building phases and stylistic features—Norman massing, Decorated tracery, and the distinctly English Perpendicular, including fan vaulting and panelling—while noting how interiors were adapted over time. Individual cathedral accounts highlight distinctive elements such as cloisters, choirs, crypts, and notable doorways, and explain construction methods and decorative programmes. Arranged for travelers, the text balances clear architectural terminology with accessible commentary and visual references aimed at enhancing on-site appreciation.

“This change began to show itself in the choir and transepts of Gloucester Cathedral before the middle of the Fourteenth Century. The panelling and the window-tracery have so much the appearance of the Perpendicular Style, that they have been commonly supposed to have been rebuilt or altered at a late period; but the vaultings and the mouldings are pure Decorated, and the painted glass of the Fourteenth Century is evidently made for the places which it now occupies in the heads of the windows with Perpendicular tracery; it must therefore be considered as the earliest known example of this great change of style. In this work of alteration the walls and arches of the Norman church were not rebuilt but cased with panelling over the inner surface, so as to give the effect of the latter style to the interior. This was just the same process as was afterwards followed at Winchester by William of Wykeham, in changing the Norman to the Perpendicular style without any actual rebuilding.”—(J. H. P.)

The work at Gloucester was begun as early as 1337. Another fine example is the nave of Winchester Cathedral.

Bishop Edington, who died in 1366, began to alter Winchester into the Perpendicular style. His work was continued by William of Wykeham.

“Before the death of Bishop Edington the great principles of the Perpendicular style were fully established. These chiefly consist of the Perpendicular lines through the head of the window, and in covering the surface of the wall with panelling of the same kind. These features are as distinctly marked at Winchester as in any subsequent building, or as they well could be.”—(J. H. P.)

The cloisters of Gloucester Cathedral are decidedly Perpendicular in the fan-tracery of the vaults, but are partly of earlier date and character. Another example of the transition from Decorated to Perpendicular is the choir of York Minster, begun in 1361 and finished in 1408. Its general appearance is Perpendicular.

“This style is exclusively English, it is never found on the Continent, and it has the advantage of being more economical in execution than the earlier styles. It remains to describe its characteristic features. The broad distinction of the Perpendicular style lies in the form of the tracery in the head of the windows; and in fully developed examples the distinction is sufficiently obvious. We have no longer the head of the window filled with the gracefully flowing lines of the Decorated tracery, but their place is supplied by the rigid lines of the mullions, which are carried through to the architrave mouldings, the spaces between being frequently divided and subdivided by similar Perpendicular lines; so that Perpendicularity is so clearly the characteristic of these windows that no other word could have been found which would at once so well express the predominating feature. The same character prevails throughout the buildings of this period: the whole surface of a building, including its buttresses, parapets, basements, and every part of the flat surface, is frequently covered with panelling in which the Perpendicular line clearly predominates; and to such an excess is this carried that the windows frequently appear to be only openings in the panel-work. Panelling, indeed, now forms an important feature of the style; for though it was used in the earlier styles, it was not to the same extent, and was of very different character, the plain surfaces in those styles being relieved chiefly by diaper-work.”—(J. H. P.)

The great idea of the architect was to correct and restrain the exuberant tracery by introducing vigorous straight vertical and horizontal lines. Another feature of the Perpendicular style was the groined roof. The ribs of the vaulting were now enriched by cross ribs, which were intersected by more ribs into small panels, which were filled in with tracery. The key-stones were formed into pendants. This network of ribs is called fan-tracery because the ribs spread out like the sticks of a fan. Very beautiful examples occur in Henry VII.’s Chapel, Westminster Abbey, and in the cloisters of Gloucester Cathedral.

“The light and elegant style of vaulting known as fan-tracery, which is peculiar to this style, with its delicate pendants and lace-like ornaments, harmonises finely with the elaborate ornament of the tabernacle-work ornament. Fan-tracery vaulting is peculiarly English. The principle of it began with the earliest English Gothic style, as in the cloisters of Lincoln Cathedral, each stone of the vaulting being cut to fit its place. In France this is never done, each block of stone is oblong, as in those for the walls, and is only made to curve over in a vault by the mortar between the joints.

“Arches are not so acute as in the earlier periods; capitals and bases of columns are distinguished by the shallowness of the mouldings; mullions are carried straight through the arch of the windows; doorways consist of a depressed arch within a square frame with a label above; the label moulding is frequently filled with foliage and the space round the arch parallel; towers are often extremely rich and elaborately ornamented with four or five stories of windows, canopies, pinnacles and tabernacles; porches are also fine, highly enriched with panel-work, buttresses and pinnacles, and often with a richly-groined vault in the interior; and mouldings are generally more shallow than the earlier ones.

“There is an ornament which was introduced in this style and which is very characteristic. This is called the ‘Tudor-flower,’ not because it was introduced in the time of the Tudors, but because it was so much used at that period. It generally consists of some modification of the fleur-de-lis alternately with a small trefoil or ball, and is much used as a crest for screens on fonts, niches, capitals and in almost all places where such ornament can be used. The foliage of this style is frequently very beautifully executed, almost as faithful to nature as in the Decorated style, in which the fidelity to nature is one of the characteristic features. There is comparatively a squareness about the Perpendicular foliage, which takes from the freshness and beauty which distinguished that of the Decorated style. Indeed, the use of square and angular forms is one of the characteristics of the style; we have square panels, square foliage, square crockets and finials, square forms in the windows—caused by the introduction of so many transoms—and an approach to squareness in the depressed and low pitch of the roofs in late examples.”—(J. H. P.)

The woodwork of the Perpendicular period is very beautiful: open timber roofs (met with in the eastern counties), screens and lofts across the chancel-arch and richly carved bench ends exist in considerable numbers.

“The frequent use of figures, simply as corbels between the windows of the clerestory to carry the roof, is a good characteristic of the late Perpendicular style; they are generally of the time of Henry the Seventh or Eighth. The figure used is generally that of an angel, and each angel is sometimes represented as carrying a different musical instrument so as to make up a heavenly choir.”—(J. H. P.)

Among the best examples of late Perpendicular are Henry VII.’s Chapel, Westminster Abbey; St. George’s Chapel, Windsor; King’s College Chapel, Cambridge; and Bath Abbey Church.

In writing of the latter W. D. Howells so beautifully describes this style that no excuse is needed for bringing his definition into this place. He says:

“It is mostly of that Perpendicular Gothic which I suppose more mystically lifts the soul than any other form of architecture, and it is in a gracious harmony with itself through its lovely proportions; from the stems of its clustered column, the tracery of their fans spreads and delicately feels its way over the vaulted roof as if it were a living growth of something rooted in the earth beneath.”

ABBREVIATIONS OF AUTHORS QUOTED

A. A.—Alexander Ansted

F. B.—Frederic Bond
J. E. B.—J. E. Bygate

A. B. C.—A. B. Clifton
A. C.-B.—A. Clutton-Brock
J. C.-B.—J. Cavis-Brown
H. C. C.—Hubert C. Corlette

A. D.—Arthur Dimock
C. D.—Charles Dickens, Jr.
P. D.—Percy Dearmer
P. H. D.—P. H. Ditchfield
T. F. D.—Thomas Frognall Dibdin

A. H. F.—A. Hugh Fisher
E. A. F.—E. A. Freeman
F. W. F.—F. W. Farrar
W. H. F.—W. H. Fremantle

H.—Hope
C. H.—Cecil Hallet
L. H.—Leigh Hunt
W. H. H.—W. H. Hart

A. F. K.—A. F. Kendrick
G. W. K.—Dean Kitchin
R. J. K.—Richard J. Knight

L.—Dr. Luckock
W. J. L.—W. J. Loftie

M.—Dean Milman
J. McC.—Justin McCarthy
H. J. L. J. M.—H. J. L. J. Massé

P.—Dean Patrick
P.-C.—Dean Pury-Cust
F. A. P.—F. A. Paley
G. H. P.—G. H. Palmer
J. H. P.—J. H. Parker
T. P.—T. Perkins

C. H. B. Q.—C. H. B. Quennell

R.—Rickman
F. and R.—Field and Routledge

S.—Dean Spence
A. P. S.—Dean Stanley
E. F. S.—Edward F. Strange
G. G. S.—G. G. Scott
W. D. S.—W. D. Sweeting

T.—Canon Talbot

W.—Willis
Wal.—Walcott
A.-à-W.—Anthony-à-Wood
C. W.—Winston
E. W.—Edward Walford
F. S. W.—F. S. Waller
G. W.—Gleeson White
Geo. W.—George Worley
H. W.—Hartley Wither

 

 

CONTENTS

 PAGE
Canterbury1
Rochester33
Winchester46
Chichester66
Salisbury76
Exeter90
Wells107
Bath Abbey134
Bristol140
Gloucester151
Hereford174
Worcester188
Lichfield200
Chester215
Manchester222
Carlisle227
Durham233
Ripon249
York Minster260
Lincoln284
Southwell313
Peterborough319
Ely334
Norwich349
St. Albans360
Oxford375
St. Paul’s, London393
St. Saviour’s, Southwark415
Westminster Abbey425
Index: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, V, W, Y, Z445

 

ILLUSTRATIONS

Salisbury: CloistersFrontispiece
 FACING PAGE
Canterbury: South Porch12
Canterbury: Nave, east13
Canterbury: Choir, east24
Rochester: West front25
Rochester: Nave, east40
Rochester: Choir, west41
Winchester: Nave, west52
Winchester: Font53
Winchester: Choir, east64
Winchester: West front65
Chichester72
Chichester: Nave, east73
Chichester: Screen76
Salisbury: North77
Salisbury: Nave, east88
Exeter: South-west89
Exeter: Nave, east98
Exeter: Choir, east99
Wells: West front114
Wells: North Porch115
Wells: Nave, east128
Wells: South-west129
Bath Abbey: West front136
Bath Abbey: Choir, west137
Bristol: North144
Bristol: Nave, east145
Gloucester: East154
Gloucester: Tomb of Edward II155
Gloucester: Choir, east164
Gloucester: Cloisters165
Hereford: Nave, east176
Hereford: North-east177
Hereford: Choir186
Worcester: South-west187
Worcester: Nave, east192
Worcester: Choir, east193
Lichfield: West front200
Lichfield: Nave, east201
Lichfield: from East window212
Chester: North213
Chester: Choir, west218
Chester: Choir-stalls219
Manchester: South224
Manchester: Nave, east225
Carlisle: South-west228
Carlisle: Choir229
Carlisle: East End232
Durham: West front233
Durham: Nave, east240
Durham: Galilee Chapel241
Durham: Neville Screen248
Ripon: South249
Ripon: Nave, east254
Ripon: Choir, east255
York Minster: West front268
York Minster: South269
York Minster: Choir, east278
York Minster: Choir, west279
Lincoln: West front288
Lincoln: Great West Door289
Lincoln: Angel Choir298
Lincoln: Choir, east299
Lincoln: East Window306
Southwell: North-west307
Southwell: Chapter-House316
Peterborough: West front317
Peterborough: Choir, east328
Peterborough: South329
Ely: West Towers336
Ely: Choir, east337
Ely: East End and Lady-Chapel346
Ely: Lady-Chapel347
Norwich: East356
Norwich: Choir357
St. Albans: North366
St. Albans: Nave, east367
Oxford: Tower and Entrance382
Oxford: Choir, east383
Oxford: Latin Chapel392
St. Paul’s: West front393
St. Paul’s: Choir, east414
St. Saviour’s, Southwark415
St. Saviour’s, Southwark: Nave, east424
Westminster Abbey: West front425
Westminster Abbey: Poets’ Corner432
Westminster Abbey: Choir, east433
Westminster Abbey: Chapel and Shrine of Edward the Confessor436
Westminster Abbey: Henry VII.’s Chapel437
Westminster Abbey: Cloisters440
Westminster Abbey: South-west441

 

CANTERBURY