17
November. 1662 Book of Common
Prayer: Bishop Hugh of Lincoln &
Builder of Lincoln Cathedral
Norman Times
The heavy
rounded arches at the west front are believed to date from Remigius’s original
structure designed to set William’s Norman stamp on the country he had invaded.
Imagine the Anglo-Saxon inhabitants and how they may have responded to this
giant of a building rising amid their huts? Perhaps they may have felt
protected from the threat of Vikings from the north?
It was in
1092 that this first Cathedral at Lincoln built by Bishop Remigius was
consecrated. Remigius, a Benedictine monk was the first Norman Bishop of the
largest diocese in medieval England, extending from the Humber to the Thames.
The cathedral of this diocese had been at Dorchester, near Oxford, but in 1072
William instructed that the Bishopric should be moved to Lincoln.
A castle
had already been established in Lincoln by William, located in the south-west
corner of the old Roman upper city. The new cathedral was built of Lincolnshire
oolitic limestone opposite the castle in the south-east corner.
Moving to the Gothic
In 1141, or
possibly earlier, there was a fire which severely damaged the Cathedral. It
fell to Alexander ‘the Magnificent’ (Bishop of Lincoln, 1123-48) to see to its
rebuilding. Educated in Laon in northern France, Alexander had travelled widely
and was familiar with the most advanced architecture of his day. He gained high
praise from Henry of Huntingdon, who compiled his ‘History of the English’ at
Alexander’s request, who said that the Bishop had restored the Cathedral
‘with such subtle workmanship that it was more beautiful than before, and
second to none in England’. Perhaps the inhabitants of Lincoln began to view it
differently?
St Hugh
An
earthquake caused structural damage to Lincoln Cathedral in 1185. St Hugh
(Bishop of Lincoln, 1186-1200) began work on reconstructing the Cathedral in
1192. He used the Gothic style, where pointed arches (rather than round ones),
ribbed vaults and flying buttresses made it possible to make larger windows
(for stained glass) and larger roof spans. St. Hugh himself was said to have
carried a hod to help with the building work, but he died in 1200, before the
great Transept and Nave were finished. St Hugh was a saintly man and stories
about him tell of his concern for ordinary men and women and how he was
prepared to stand up to bullying kings (Henry and John). His restoration is
said to have be paid for by local people, including, famously, the Swineherd of
Stowe who gave his life savings towards the great work. His statue sits aloft
the northwest turret partnering that of St Hugh on the southwest.
Magna
Carta
It was
another Bishop Hugh who was among those who witnessed King John place his seal
on Magna Carta at Runnymeade in 1215. The battle of Lincoln Fair took place in
the shadow of the cathedral. It is thus fitting that one of the four surviving
1215 copies of Magna Carta belongs to
the cathedral and sits with the Charter of the Forest in Lincoln Castle.
Given the
experimental nature of Gothic architecture, mistakes occurred, and the central
tower’s collapse in 1237 or 1239 was a major setback. A new tower was started
immediately and in 1255 the Dean and Chapter petitioned Henry III to allow them
to take down part of the extended town wall to enlarge the Cathedral. They
replaced Hugh’s rounded chapels with a larger and loftier square east end to
provide more space for the increasing numbers of pilgrims venerating the
saint’s shrine.
This Angel
Choir was consecrated in 1280.
The tallest building in the world
Between
1307 and 1311 the central tower was raised to its present height. Then around
1370 to 1400 the western towers were heightened. All three towers had spires
until 1549 when the central tower’s spire blew down. It had been the tallest
building in the world.
Later
generations added the wonderful carved screen, the 14th century misericords,
the Wren Library and the Duncan Grant frescoes.
Modern Times
The north
side of the cathedral has seen the most recent repairs, including the
re-building of one of the pinnacles. Work to the North Transept culminated with
the restoration of the Dean’s Eye rose window. The Medieval glass was returned
to the all new stonework tracery and the project completed in early 2006.
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