Executive summary by darmansjah
Salisbury Cathedral, formally known as the Cathedral Church
of the Blessed Virgin Mary, is an Anglican cathedral in Salisbury, England, and
is considered one of the leading examples of Early English architecture. The
main body was completed in only 38 years, from 1220 to 1258.
The cathedral has the tallest church spire in the United
Kingdom (123m/404 ft). Visitors can take the "Tower Tour" where the
interior of the hollow spire, with its ancient wood scaffolding, can be viewed.
The cathedral also has the largest cloister and the largest cathedral close in
Britain (80 acres (320,000 m2)). The cathedral contains the world's oldest
working clock (from AD 1386) and has the best surviving of the four original
copies of the Magna Carta (all four original copies are in England). Although
commonly known as Salisbury Cathedral, the official name is the Cathedral of
Saint Mary. In 2008, the cathedral celebrated the 750th anniversary of its
consecration in 1258.
The cathedral is the Mother Church of the Diocese of
Salisbury and seat of the Bishop of Salisbury, the Rt Revd Nick Holtam
History
As a response to deteriorating relations between the clergy
and the military at Old Sarum, the decision was taken to resite the cathedral
and the bishopric was moved to its present place in Salisbury. The move
occurred during the tenure of Bishop Richard Poore, who was a wealthy man and
donated the new land for construction. The new cathedral was also paid for by
donations, principally by all the canons and vicars of South East England, who
were asked to contribute a fixed annual sum until its completion. Legend has it
that the Bishop of Old Sarum shot an arrow in the direction he would build t
The foundation stone was laid on 28 April 1220. Much of the
freestone for the cathedral came from Teffont Evias quarries. Due to the high
water table in the new location, the cathedral was built on only four feet of
foundations, and by 1258 the nave, transepts and choir were complete. The west
front was ready by 1265. The cloisters and chapter house were completed around
1280. Because the cathedral was built in only 38 years, it has a single
consistent architectural style, Early English Gothic.
The only major sections of the cathedral built later were
the cloisters, chapter house, tower and spire, which at 404 feet (123 m)
dominated the skyline from 1320. Although the spire is the cathedral's most
impressive feature, it has also proved to be troublesome. Together with the
tower, it added 6,397 tons (6,500 tonnes) to the weight of the building.
Without the addition of buttresses, bracing arches and anchor irons over the
succeeding centuries, it would have suffered the fate of spires on later great
ecclesiastical buildings (such as Malmesbury Abbey) and fallen down; instead,
Salisbury remains the tallest church spire in the UK. To this day the large
supporting pillars at the corners of the spire are seen to bend inwards under
the stress. The addition of reinforcing tie beams above the crossing, designed
by Christopher Wren in 1668, arrested further deformation.The beams were hidden
by a false ceiling, installed below the lantern stage of the tower.
Significant changes to the cathedral were made by the
architect James Wyatt in 1790, including replacement of the original rood
screen and demolition of the bell tower which stood about 320 feet (100 m)
north west of the main building. Salisbury is one of only three English
cathedrals to lack a ring of bells, the others being Norwich Cathedral and Ely
Cathedral. However it does strike the time every 15 minutes with bells.
Chapter house and the
Magna Carta
The chapter house is notable for its octagonal shape,
slender central pillar and decorative medieval frieze. It was redecorated in
1855-9 by William Burges. The frieze circles the interior above the stalls and
depicts scenes and stories from the books of Genesis and Exodus, including Adam
and Eve, Noah, the Tower of Babel, and Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. The chapter
house also displays the best-preserved of the four surviving original copies of
the Magna Carta. This copy came to Salisbury because Elias of Dereham, who was
present at Runnymede in 1215, was given the task of distributing some of the
original copies. Elias later became a canon of Salisbury and supervised the
construction of the cathedral.
West front
The west front is composed of two stair turrets at each
extremity, with two niched buttresses nearer the centre line supporting the
large central triple window. The stair turrets are topped with spirelets and
the central section is topped by a gable which contains four lancet windows
topped by two round quatrefoil windows surmounted by a mandorla containing
Christ in Majesty. At ground level there is a principal door flanked by two
smaller doors. The whole is highly decorated with quatrefoil motifs, columns,
trefoil motifs and bands of diapering. The west front was almost certainly
constructed at the same time as the cathedral. This is apparent from the way in
which the windows coincide with the interior spaces. The entire façade is about
33 metres high and wide.
The front accommodates over 130 shallow niches of varying
sizes, 73 of these niches contains a statue. The line of niches extend round
the turrets to the north, south and east faces. There are five levels of niches
(not including the mandorla) which show, from the top, angels and archangels,
Old Testament patriarchs, apostles and evangelists, martyrs, doctors and
philosophers and, on the lower level, royalty, priests and worthy people
connected with the cathedral. The majority of the statues were placed during
the middle of the 19th century, however seven are from the 14th century and
several have been installed within the last decade.
The Clock
The Salisbury cathedral clock dating from about AD 1386 is
supposedly the oldest working modern clock in the world.[9] The clock has no
face because all clocks of that date rang out the hours on a bell. It was
originally located in a bell tower that was demolished in 1792. Following this
demolition, the clock was moved to the Cathedral Tower where it was in
operation until 1884. The clock was then placed in storage and forgotten until
it was discovered in 1929, in an attic of the cathedral. It was repaired and restored
to working order in 1956. In 2007 remedial work and repairs were carried out to
the clock.
Depictions in art,
literature and film
The cathedral is the subject of famous paintings by John
Constable. The view depicted in the paintings has changed very little in almost
two centuries.
The cathedral is also the subject of William Golding's novel
The Spire which deals with the fictional Dean Jocelin who makes the building of
the spire his life's work.
In Edward Rutherfurd's historical novel Sarum the narrative
deals with the human settlement of the Salisbury area from pre-historic times
just after the last Ice Age to the modern era. The construction of the
cathedral itself, its famous spire, bell tower and chapter house are all
important plot points in the novel, which blends historic characters with
invented ones.
The cathedral has been mentioned by the author Ken
Follett as one of two models for the fictional Kingsbridge Cathedral in his
historical novel, The Pillars of the Earth. It was also used for some external
shots in the 2010 miniseries based on Follett's book and was shown as it is
today in the final scene.
The cathedral was the setting for the 2005 BBC television
drama Mr. Harvey Lights a Candle, written by Rhidian Brook and directed by
Susanna White.
Kevin McCloud climbed the cathedral in his programme called
Don't Look Down! in which he climbed high structures to conquer his fear of
heights.
The cathedral was the subject of a Channel 4 Time Team
programme which was first broadcast on 8 February 2009.
Cathedral constables
The cathedral previously employed five cathedral constables
(known as "Close Constables"). Their duties mainly concerned the
maintenance of law and order in the cathedral close. They were made redundant
in 2010 as part of cost-cutting measures and replaced with "traffic
managers". The constables were first appointed when the cathedral became a
liberty in 1611 and survived until the introduction of municipal police forces
in 1835 with the Municipal Corporations Act. In 1800 they were given the power,
along with the city constables, to execute any justices' or court order
requiring the conveyance of prisoners to or from the county gaol (at Fisherton
Anger, then outside the city of Salisbury) as if it were the city gaol (and, in
so doing, they were made immune from any legal action for acting outside their
respective jurisdictions). The right of the Cathedral, as a liberty, to
maintain a separate police force was conclusively terminated by the Local
Government Act 1888.
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