January 655 A.D. Peterborough Abbey, Cambridgeshire—Saxon
Monastery Founded c.655 by (Monk) Saxult and Peada, King of Mercia; Destroyed
in Danish Raids 870; Derelict to
966; Benedictines Refounded by
Ethelwold, Bishop of Winchester, with King Edgar and St. Dunstan; (Romanesque/Gothic) Cathedral Built
1118-1237; Consecrated by Robert Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln; Catherine of Aragon Buried Here in 1536;
Dissolved 29 Nov 1539; Mary Queen of
Scots Buried Here in 1587, But Removed to Westminster Abbey by Her Son, King
James 1; Episcopal Diocesan Cathedral Continued to Present; Called “Cathedral Church of St. Peter, St.
Paul and St. Andrew, Peterborough
Project Gutenberg's The Cathedral Church of
Peterborough, by W.D. Sweeting
THE CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF
PETERBOROUGH
A DESCRIPTION
OF ITS FABRIC
AND A BRIEF HISTORY OF
THE EPISCOPAL SEE
BY
THE REV. W.D. SWEETING, M.A.
WITH FIFTY
ILLUSTRATIONS
LONDON: G. BELL
AND SONS, LTD. 1926
First Published, February 1898
Second Edition, Revised, 1899.
Reprinted, 1906, 1911, 1922, 1926.
PREFACE.
The chief authorities
consulted in the preparation of this book are named in the text. Besides the
well-known works of reference on the English Cathedrals, and the "Monastic
Chronicles," there are several that deal with Peterborough alone, of which
the most important and valuable are "Gunton's History" with Dean
Patrick's Supplement, "Craddock's History," the monographs by
Professor Paley and Mr Poole, and the Guide of Canon Davys. If I have ventured
to differ from some of these writers on various points, I must appeal, in
justification, to a careful and painstaking study of the Cathedral and its
history, during a residence at Peterborough of more than twenty years.
My best thanks are due to Mr
Caster of Peterborough, for permission to incorporate with this account the
substance of a Guide, which I prepared for him, published in 1893; and to Mr
Robert Davison of London, for his description of the Mosaic Pavement, executed
by him for the Choir. I desire also to express my thanks for the drawings
supplied by Mr W.H. Lord, Mr H.P. Clifford, and Mr O.R. Allbrow; and to
acknowledge my indebtedness to the Photochrom Company, Ld., and to Messrs S.B.
Bolas & Co., for their excellent photographs.
W.D. SWEETING.
In this new edition the
corrections are limited almost entirely to alterations necessitated by lapse of
time. In connexion with which I have to thank Mr H. Plowman of Minster
Precincts, Peterborough.
E. BELL.
June 1922.
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER I.—History of the Cathedral Church of S. Peter
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CHAPTER II.—The Cathedral—Exterior
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The West Front
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The Towers
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The Porch and Parvise
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The Bell-Tower
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The Dean's Door
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The Lantern-Tower
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The North Transept
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The New Building
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The South Transept
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CHAPTER III.—The Cathedral—Interior
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The Choir
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The Choir Stalls
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The Pulpit and Throne
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The Organ, Baldachino, and Pavement
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The Screens
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The Lectern
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The New Building
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The Transepts
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The Saxon Church
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The Nave
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The Nave Ceiling
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The West Transept
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Altars
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Stained Glass
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The Parvise
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Monuments and Inscriptions
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CHAPTER IV.—The Minster Precincts and City
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The Chapel of S. Thomas of Canterbury
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The Knights' Chamber
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The Deanery Gateway
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The Infirmary and Cloisters
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The Palace
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The City and Guild Hall
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The Tithe Barn
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CHAPTER V.—History of the Monastery
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CHAPTER VI.—History of the Diocese
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Deans of Peterborough Cathedral
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Footnotes
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Index
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ILLUSTRATIONS.
The Cathedral, from the South-East
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Arms of the Diocese
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The Cathedral and Palace
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The Cathedral; from the North, c. 1730
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Remains of Saxon Church
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Map, 1610
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The West Front in the Seventeenth Century
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Iron Railings, 1721
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Finial of the Central Gable of the West Front
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The West Front
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Plan of Central Portion of the West Front
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West Porch and Parvise
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Gates to West Porch
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South-West Spire and Bell-Tower
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The West Front, restored according to Gunton, 1780
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The Dean's Door
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Apse and New Building, from the South-East
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Plan of Monastery Buildings
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The Choir
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View from the Triforium South of Choir
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North Transept and Morning Chapel
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The Pulpit
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Apse and Canopied Reredos
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The New Building—Interior
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The Transepts, looking North
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Evangelistic Symbols, from Lantern Tower Roof
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Boss from Lantern Tower Roof
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The Nave, looking East
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The Choir and Nave, looking West
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Head of S. Peter in Ancient Stained Glass
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Part of the Monks' Stone
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Saxon Coffin Lids in North Transept
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Portions of Abbots' Tombs
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South Aisles of Choir and Nave
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South Side of the Close, 1801
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Cathedral Gateway, 1791
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Door to Palace Grounds from the Cloisters, 1797
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Door way to Cathedral from the Cloisters
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Archway from Cloisters, North-West
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Church of S. John the Baptist and Guildhall
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Rose Windows and Details of West Front
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Tomb of an Abbot, possibly Abbot Andrew, 1201
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Iron Railings, 1721
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Details of Chasuble on Abbot's Tomb
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Details of Albs on Abbots' Tombs
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PLAN OF THE CATHEDRAL.
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CHAPTER I.
HISTORY OF THE CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF S. PETER.
Until the middle of the
nineteenth century, Peterborough remained one of the most unchanged examples in
the kingdom of the monastic borough. The place was called into existence by the
monastery and was entirely dependent on it. The Abbot was supreme lord, and had
his own gaol. He possessed great power over the whole hundred. And even after
the See of Peterborough was constituted, and the Abbey Church became a
cathedral, many of the ancient privileges were retained by the newly formed
Dean and Chapter. They still retained the proclamation and control of the
fairs; their officer, the high bailiff, was the returning officer at elections
for parliament; they regulated the markets; they appointed the coroner.
Professor Freeman contrasts an Abbot's town with a Bishop's town, when speaking
about the city of Wells.[1] "An Abbot's borough might arise anywhere; no
better instance can be found than the borough of S. Peter itself, that Golden
Borough which often came to be called distinctively the Borough without further
epithet." And again, "the settlement which arose around the great
fenland monastery of S. Peter, the holy house of Medeshampstead, grew by
degrees into a borough, and by later ecclesiastical arrangements, into a city,
a city and borough to which the changes of our own day have given a growth such
as it never knew before."
Situated on the edge of the Fens, some miles to the east of the
great north road, without any special trade, and without any neighbouring
territorial magnates, it is hardly surprising that the place seemed incapable
of progress, and remained long eminently respectable and stagnant. In one of
his caustic epigrams Dean Duport does indeed speak of the wool-combers as if
there were a recognised calling that employed some numbers of men; but he is
not complimentary to those employed, for he says that the men that comb the
wool, and the sheep that bear it, are on a par as regards intelligence:
"At vos simplicitate pares et moribus
estis, Lanificique homines, lanigerique greges."
In another epigram he derides
the city itself, calling it contemptuously "Urbicula"; and he
suggests, with a humour that to modern ideas savours of irreverence, that this
little city of S. Peter's, "Petropolis," unless S. Peter had the
keys, would run away through its own gates.
The great development of the
last half of the nineteenth century is due to the railway works at New England,
and to the Great Northern Line making Peterborough an important railway centre.
In 1807 the entire population of the city and hamlets was under 3,500. In 1843
it was just over 5,500, and when the railway was laid it was not much more than
6,000. It has since gone up by leaps and bounds. In 1861 the population
exceeded 11,000. By 1911 it had grown by steady increments to 33,578. The
private diary of a resident of about 1850 would read like an old world record.
The watchman in the Minster Precincts still went his rounds at night and called
out the time and the weather; sedan-chairs were in use; the corn-market of the
neighbourhood was held in the open street; turnpikes took toll at every road
out of the town; a weekly paper had only just been started on a humble scale,
being at first little more than a railway time-table with a few items of local
news at the back; a couple of rooms more than sufficed for the business of the
post office.
In 1874 a charter of
incorporation was granted, not without some opposition; it had been, up to that
time, the only city in England without a mayor, except Ely and Westminster.
An account of the church which is now the cathedral church of a
diocese that was only constituted in 1541, must of necessity trace its history
for some centuries before it attained its present dignity, and when it was
simply the church of an abbey. Three centuries and a half of cathedral dignity
have not made its old name of Minster obsolete; it is indeed the term usually
employed.[2]
The village was first known by
the name of Medeshamstede, the homestead in the meadows. There is no evidence
that any houses were built at all before the foundation of the monastery. There
was probably not a single habitation on the spot before the rising walls of the
religious house made dwelling-places for the workmen a necessity. As time went
on the requirements of the inmates brought together a population, which for
centuries had no interests unconnected with the abbey. The establishment of the
monastery is due to the conversion of the royal family to Christianity. It was
in the middle of the seventh century when Penda was King of the Mercians, and
his children, three sons, Peada, Wulfere, and Ethelred, and two daughters,
Kyneburga, and Kyneswitha, became converted to the Christian faith. On
succeeding to the throne, Peada the eldest son, founded this monastery of
Medeshamstede. The first Abbot, Saxulf, had been in a high position at court;
he is described as an earl (comes); and most likely had the practical
duty of building and organising the monastery, as he is called by Bede the
builder of the place as well as first Abbot (Constructor et abbas). This
was in the year 654 or 655 (for the date is given differently by different
authorities), and Peada only lived two or three years afterwards. His brothers
in turn came to the throne, and both helped to enrich the rising foundation.
The elder of the two, however, had lapsed from Christianity, and killed his own
two sons in his rage at finding they had become Christians; but afterwards
stung with remorse he confessed his offence to S. Chad, who had brought the
princes to the knowledge of Christ, and offered to expiate it in any way he was
directed. He was bidden to restore the Christian Religion, to repair the ruined
churches, and to found new ones. The whole story is told with great
particularity by the chronicler, and it was represented in stained glass in the
cloisters of the abbey, as described hereafter.
The church thus built must have been of considerable substance,
if, as recorded, Peada in the foundation of it "laid such stones as that
eight yoke of oxen could scarce draw one of them."[1] It has nevertheless,
utterly perished. We read of the continued support bestowed by a succession of
princes and nobles, of the increasing dignity of the house, and of the
privileges it acquired; but there is nowhere a single line descriptive of the
buildings themselves. Gunton does indeed speak of a goodly house for the Abbot
constructed by King Peada; but he must have been capable of strange credulity
if he imagined, as his words seem to imply, that this very house was in
existence in the time of Henry VIII. He writes thus:[3] "The
Royal Founder ... built also an house for the Abbot, which upon the dissolution
by Henry the Eighth, became the Bishop's Palace. A building very large and
stately, as the present age can testifie; all the rooms of common habitation
being built above stairs, and underneath are very fair vaults and goodly
cellars for several uses. The great Hall, a magnificent room, had, at the upper
end, in the Wall, very high above the ground, three stately Thrones, wherein
were placed sitting, the three Royal Founders carved curiously of Wood, painted
and guilt, which in the year 1644 were pulled down and broken to pieces."
There is no
doubt that this first monastery was utterly destroyed by the Danes about the
year 870. The very circumstantial account given in the chronicle of Abbot John,
derived from Ingulf, is well known; but as it is entirely without corroboration
in any of the historians who mention the destruction of the monastery, recent
criticism has not hesitated to pronounce the whole account a mere invention. It
is unnecessary, therefore, to give it here. The account "may have some
foundation in fact," Professor Freeman admits, "but if so, it is
strange to find no mention of it in Orderic."[4] But the
discredit thrown upon the minutely graphic story of Ingulf, does not of course
apply to the actual fact, of which there is ample evidence, that the monastery
was burnt by the Danes. Matthew
of Westminster says:[5]—"And so the
wicked leaders, passing through the district of York, burned the churches,
cities, and villages ... and thence advancing they destroyed all the
monasteries (coenobia) of monks and nuns situated in the fens, and slew
the inmates. The names of these monasteries are, Crowland, Thorney, Ramsey,
Hamstede, now called Burgh S. Peter, with the Isle of Ely, and that once very
famous house of nuns, wherein the holy Virgin and Queen Etheldreda laudably
discharged the office of abbess for many years."
The re-edification of the
monastery, henceforth known as Burgh, is due to Bishop Ethelwold, of
Winchester, with the approval and support of King Edgar. This was accomplished
in 972. We have now reached a point where all can take a practical interest in
the subject, because portions of this church are to be seen to this day. The
exact site of the Saxon church had always been a matter of conjecture until the
excavations made in the course of the works incidental to the rebuilding of the
lantern tower (1883-1893) finally settled the question. Many students of the
fabric supposed that the existing church practically followed the main outlines
of the former one, possibly with increased length and breadth, but at any rate
on the old site. It is now ascertained that the east end of the Saxon church
was nearly under the east wall of the present south transept and the south
walls of the south transepts of both buildings were but a very few feet apart.
The dimensions of the former church both its length and breadth, were as nearly
as possible half of those of the existing one. A description of the present
appearance of the remains will be found in a later chapter (see page 80).
The Church of Bishop Ethelwold
was not without its vicissitudes. Nothing was more promising than its origin,
and the circumstances of its building. King Edgar and Dunstan, whom he had made
Archbishop of Canterbury, were very enthusiastic in extending the growth of
monastic influence in the country. No less than forty Benedictine convents are
said to have been either founded or restored by Edgar. Bishop Ethelwold was
entirely of one mind with the King and Archbishop, in the ecclesiastical
reforms of the day. Mr Poole well describes the commencement of the work.
"At Medeshamstede the ruins were made to their hands, and they at once
commenced the grateful task of their restoration and
appropriation. As usual, we find certain supernatural interferences assigned as
indications of the divine approval of the work. It is related how Ethelwold was
directed by God, in a dream, to go to the monastery of S. Peter, among the
Mid-English; how he halted first at Oundle, supposing that to be the monastery
intended; but being warned in a dream to continue his eastward course, at
length discovered the ashes of the desolated Medeshamstede. It needs but little
ingenuity to collect from this that Ethelwold, having received some vague
intelligence of the present condition both of Oundle
and Medeshamstede, started from Winchester, determined on reaching either or
both; and that being less pleased with what he saw at Oundle than he expected,
he extended his progress to Medeshamstede."[6] The Queen
is said to have overheard the Bishop's fervent prayers for the success of his
object, and to have used her influence with the King; but he probably required
very little persuasion to undertake what was so much to his taste. It may be
mentioned that if we accept the date 972 for the completion of the re-building
(the Chronicle gives 970 for its commencement), the very same year witnessed
that well-known scene on the River Dee, when King Edgar held the helm of a
royal barge as it was being rowed by eight vassal kings.
The King
came to visit the monastery thus rebuilt under his direction. The Archbishops,
Dunstan and Oswald, with a large company of the nobility and clergy attended at
the same time. The King is said to have inspected some old deeds which had been
saved from the general destruction a century before, and to have wept for joy
at reading the privileges belonging to the place. He therefore granted a new
charter, confirming all the old privileges and possessions. Since in this
charter no allusion is made to the triple dedication of the church, but S.
Peter alone seems named as the Patron Saint, it is not unreasonable to conclude
that the first church of Burgh monastery was dedicated to S. Peter only, and
that the dedication of the original minster to SS. Peter, Paul, and Andrew, was
not repeated. Edgar says that he renews the ancient privileges "pro
gratia Sancti Petri"; and that certain immunities shall continue as
long as the Abbot and the inmates of the house remain in the peace of God, and
the Patron Saint continues his protection, "ipso Abbate cum subjecta
Christi familia in pace Dei, et superni Janitoris Petro patrocinio illud (sc.
coenobium) regente." This charter is noteworthy for the title the King
gives himself, "Ego Edgar totius Albionis Basileus."
For some time this
establishment continued to flourish. But the troublous times that followed the
Norman conquest did not leave Burgh undamaged. It plays a considerable part in
the story of Hereward, the Saxon patriot. Situated
on the direct line between Bourne, his paternal inheritance, and the Camp of
Refuge near Ely, it was exposed to the attacks of both the contending parties.
Brando (1066-1069) had made Hereward, who was his nephew, a knight; and the
patriot might be credited with a regard for the holy place where he had been
girt at a solemn service with the sword and belt of knighthood; but upon
Brando's death the abbacy had been granted to a Norman, doubtless with the
intention of making the place available as a military centre. Hereward joined
the Danes, who had again begun to infest the district, in an attack upon the
abbey. The accounts vary as to the time at which this attack was made. One says
that it was before Turold, the Norman Abbot, had entered upon possession:
another says that Turold had in person joined Ivo Taillebois in an attempt to
surprise Hereward and his men in the woods near Bourne, but had been taken
prisoner and only released after paying a large ransom. When dismissed there
seems to have been something in the nature of an undertaking that the Abbot
would not again fight against Hereward; but as soon as he was free he organised
fresh attacks, obliging all the tenants of the abbey to supply assistance. In
revenge for this Hereward went with his men to Burgh, and laid waste the whole
town with fire, plundered all the treasure of the church, and destroyed all the
buildings of the abbey except the church itself.
Though Hereward spared the
church and went away, yet very soon afterwards the monks, possibly sympathising
more with Hereward than with their Norman Abbot (who had left them for a time),
allowed themselves to indulge in a drunken revel; and while carousing, a fire
seized upon the church and other remaining buildings, from which Gunton says
they rescued only a few relics, and little else. But, as Mr Poole has well
observed[7], "we must receive
such accounts with some allowance; and, in fact, neither was the abbey so
despoiled, nor the church so destroyed, but that there was wealth enough to
tempt robbers in the next abbacy, and fuel enough for another
conflagration." The robbers in question were foreigners who got into the
church by a ladder over the altar of SS. Philip and James, one of them standing
with a drawn sword over the sleeping sacrist. The plunder they carried off was
valuable, but it was recovered when the thieves were
overtaken. The King, though he may have punished the robbers, retained the
goods so that they were never restored to the abbey.
That Ernulf (1107-1114) should
not have done anything towards improving the church is a fact that speaks as
plainly as possible of its being already in good condition. Had there been
anything like the desolation that some accounts pretend, Ernulf would have
spared no exertions in his endeavours to put things right. He came from
Canterbury, where he was Prior, and where he had already distinguished himself
as a zealous builder; but all that is recorded as due to him at Burgh is the
completion of some unfinished buildings, the dormitory, the refectory, and the
chapter-house. We may feel confident therefore that the Saxon Church built by
Ethelwold remained substantially as first erected until the time of Ernulf's
successor; and that the remains to be seen to this day were in their present
position when Edgar and Dunstan visited the place.
These newly erected buildings
were all that escaped a terrible conflagration that occurred in the time of
John of Sais (1114-1125). Hugo Candidus, the chronicler, was an eye-witness of
this fire, and has left us an account of it. On the second day of the nones of
August, being the vigil of Saint Oswald, King and Martyr (4th Aug. 1116),
through neglect, the whole monastery was burnt down, except the chapter-house,
dormitory, refectory, and a few outside offices. The refectory had only been in
use for three days, having been apparently opened (as we should say in these
days) by an entertainment given to the poor. The whole town shared the fate of
the monastery. The Abbot was a very passionate man, and being in a great rage,
when he was disturbed at a meal by some of the brethren who had come into the
refectory to clear the tables, cursed the house, incautiously commended it to
the enemy of mankind, and went off immediately to attend to some law-business
at Castor. Then one of the servants, who had tried unsuccessfully to light a
fire, lost his temper, and (following the evil example of his superior) cried
out, "Veni, Diabole, et insuffla ignem." Forthwith the flames
rose, and reached to the roof, and spread through all the offices to the town.
The whole church was consumed, and the town as well, all the statues (or perhaps signa may
mean the bells) were broken, and the fire continued burning in the tower for
nine days. On the ninth night a mighty wind arose
and scattered the fire and burning fragments(carbones vivos) from
the tower over the Abbot's house, so that there was a fear that nothing would
escape the devouring element.
The very next year John of
Sais commenced the building of a new minster. He laid the foundation on the 8th
of March 1118. Much work was probably necessary before a foundation stone could
be laid; and Abbot John's Chronicle, wherein it is said that the foundation of
the new church at Burgh was laid, on the 12th of March, 1117, may be speaking
of the actual commencement of the operations; and Candidus, who gives the later
date, and who was present, may refer to a ceremonial laying of a stone, after
the ground had been cleared and new designs prepared. The church then begun is
the minster we now see. The works commenced, as we find almost universally the
case, at the east end. The choir is here terminated by an apse; and before the
eastern addition was built in the fifteenth century, this apse, with the two
lesser ones at the ends of the choir aisles, must have presented an appearance
of much grandeur.
The Abbot who began the church
did not live to see much progress made, as he died in 1125. He is said to have
worked hard at it, but how much was finished we do not know. The next Abbot,
after an interval of two years, was Henry of Anjou, a kinsman of King Henry I.
He appears to have been a scandalous pluralist, restless and greedy,
continually seeking and obtaining additional preferment, and as often being
forced to resign. He was not the man to prosecute such a work as was to be done
at Burgh; "he lived even as a drone in a hive; as the drone eateth and
draggeth forward to himself all that is brought near, even so did he."[8] It is
likely that for eight years after the death of John de Sais nothing was done to
advance the building. But the Prior of S. Neots, Martin de Bee, who was
appointed to succeed Henry, was continually employed in building about the
monastery; and in particular he completed the presbytery of the church, and
brought back the sacred relics, and the monks, on Saint Peter's day into the
new church, with great joy. Alexander, Bishop of Lincoln, was present; but
there was no service of consecration. According to the Saxon Chronicle this
took place in 1140; Abbot John says in 1143.
Before proceeding further with the architectural history of the
cathedral (as distinguished from the description of it, which will be given in
due course), it may be well to say a few words upon the principles which have
guided the writer in his treatment of the subject. These cannot be better
expressed than in a very pithy sentence uttered by Professor Willis at the
meeting of the Archaeological Institute at this very place in 1861. "In
all investigations of this nature, I am of opinion that it is requisite to
ascertain first whether there exist any contemporary documents which may throw
light upon the history of the fabric, and then to let the stones tell their own
tale." Now there is an abundance of documentary evidence for our purpose;
but recent criticism has shewn that not all is to be relied upon as authentic.
And the Latin expressions for different portions of the building can, in many
instances, not be interpreted with certainty; while the absence of all
reference to some works of importance (the West Front, for example), is very
mysterious. Most of these documents had been studied in manuscript by Gunton
and Patrick, and the result of their studies was published in 1686. The work is
entitled "The History of the church of Peterburgh ... By Symon Gunton,
late Prebendary of that church.... And set forth by Symon Patrick, D.D., now
Dean of the same." Gunton was Prebendary from 1646 to his death in 1676;
Patrick was Dean from 1679 till his consecration as Bishop of Chichester in
1689. Most of the documents in question have since been printed. Two writers in
the last half century have published monographs on the cathedral, both of great
value, both treating the subject after Professor Willis's method. These are
G.A. Poole, formerly Vicar of Welford, whose paper on the Abbey Church of
Peterborough was published among the Transactions of the Architectural Society
of the Archdeaconry of Northampton in 1855, and the late Professor F.A. Paley,
a second edition of whose pamphlet, "Remarks on the Architecture of
Peterborough Cathedral," was issued in 1859. It by no means detracts from
the value of the method employed that the results of the investigations of
these two careful students of the fabric do not accord with one another. Much
must always be left to inference or conjecture. Since they wrote many
discoveries have been made which have shewn some of
their conclusions to have been inaccurate. But the rule is a sound one, and
indeed it is only by studying the documents and the fabric together that one
can hope to learn the history of any great building.
Thus, when the chronicle
records that Abbot Martin completed the presbytery, and that then the monks
entered into the new church, we should naturally understand that he built no
more than the existing choir and its aisles. But there can be little doubt that
his work included the eastern bays and aisles of both transepts. The style of
the architecture speaks for itself, "the stones tell their own tale,"
and the most careful study, and the most painstaking investigations, have failed
to detect the slightest break in the continuity or character of the work. This
applies to the whole of the eastern part of the transepts, excepting of course
the alterations that were made in later times. As Martin remained abbot till
1155, it is probable that he went on with his building after the choir had been
opened, and that this work in the transepts was done in the latter part of his
abbacy, but there is no record of it.
Of Abbot William of Waterville
(1155-1175) we are told that in his time were erected the transepts (ambæ
cruces) and three stages of the central tower (tres ystoriæ magistræ
turris). This does not contradict what has been said above as to the
eastern part of the transepts being built in Abbot Martin's time. For the walls
and aisles to the east only would be in position; and his successor might well
be credited with the erection of the transepts, if he built the ends and
western walls, and roofed in the whole. It is tolerably clear also that this
same abbot must have built the two bays of the nave adjoining the central
tower. A tower of three stages, presumably of the massive character that marks
all large Norman towers, must have had some western supports. Two bays of the
nave would act as buttresses; and it is easy to see the difference between
these two bays and the rest of the nave. Apart from many minute points of
difference which only an expert architectural student could fully appreciate,
there is one conspicuous variation which all can see. This is in the tympanum
of the triforium arches; in all four instances we notice rugged ornamentation
here which occurs nowhere else in the nave.
Exclusive of the western
transept we may assign eighty years as the period during which the Norman
Minster was being erected. And it is one of the most
noteworthy points in connection with its architectural history, and one that
has produced the happiest result in the grandeur of the whole effect of the
building upon the spectator, that each successive architect carried on
faithfully the ideas of his predecessors. The whole work has been continued, as
it were, in the spirit of one design; and the differences in details, while
quite observable when once pointed out, are yet so unobtrusive that they seldom
attract notice. To mention one such instance, Mr Paley calls attention to the
different ornamentation on the windows of the south transept when compared with
those in the north transept, as well as to the fact that on the south those
windows have straight sides to the inner surface of the wall, while those on the
north have the sides splayed. He justly argues, from these and other
considerations, that the south transept was built first.
To Abbot William of Waterville
succeeded Benedict (1177-1193). Of him we are told that he built the whole nave
in stone and wood-work, from the tower of the choir to the front, and also
erected a rood-loft. He built also the great gate-way at the west of the
precincts, with the chapel of S. Nicolas above it, the chapel of S. Thomas of
Canterbury and the hospital attached to it, the great hall with the buildings
connected; and he also commenced that wonderful work (illud mirificum opus)
near the brewery, but his death occurred before it could be completed. What
this last named great work was we do not know. It is at least possible that the
reference is to the western transept.
Considerable controversy has
arisen as to the work in the church thus attributed to Benedict. Both
chronicles give him credit for building the whole nave from the tower of the
choir to the front. The wording, however, of the two is so similar as to cause
some doubt as to their being independent authorities. Granting that some small
portion of the nave to the east, as before described, must have been built as a
support to Waterville's tower, the question remains, what is the front to which
this record alludes? There is of course no doubt that the words speak of the
nave only, exclusive of the front. But was this the present west front, as now
remaining, or was there previously a Norman front to the church? There is much
to be said on both sides. Mr Paley believes the latter; Mr Poole, the former.
And possibly the true solution may be found in a
combination of both theories, though at first sight that seems impossible. That
a west front in Norman times was designed, and in part built, Mr Paley has
shewn most conclusively. He indeed thinks it was finished, but that is open to
considerable doubt. The evidence on which he proves that two western towers
were at least designed is quite conclusive; and the whole passage in which he
discusses the matter may be quoted.[9] "Proceeding
towards the west end of the nave, we observe a very singular feature. The third
pillar from the west end on each side is considerably larger and wider than the
others; and it also projects further into the aisles. The arch also, springing
from it westward, is of a much greater span. The opposite vaulting shafts, in
the aisle walls, are brought forward, beyond the line of the rest, to meet the
pillars in question; so that the arch across the aisles is, in this part, very
much contracted, and, instead of being a mere groin rib, like the rest, is a
strong moulded arch of considerable depth in the soffit. What appears at first
sight, still more strange, the wall of the aisles opposite to the wider
nave-arch just mentioned, is brought forward at least a foot internally, but
again retires to the old level at the last bay; so that in this particular part
the whole thickness of the aisle-wall is considerably greater. Not less
remarkable is the circumstance, that the half-pillars on each side of this
wider arch resume the complex[10] form
already described at the eastern end of the nave, though they do not accurately
agree either in plan or details.... Now it seems highly probable that it was at
this very spot that it [i.e., a Norman west front] stood, with two
flanking Norman towers at the end of the aisles. The wider nave-arch, with its
massive and complex pillars, was the entrance into the tower from each side of
the nave. The thicker aisle-wall opposite to it was, in fact, the tower
wall. The larger and heavier group of vaulting-shafts against the
aisle-wall, and the strong arch spanning the aisle across this point in place
of the groin-rib, were all parts of the tower.... The transformation of the
base of these two immense towers into a compartment of the aisle, so similar to all the rest that its real nature has never been
hitherto suspected, is highly ingenious. It is only when once detected that the
anomalies above mentioned are at all intelligible."
These arguments prove to
demonstration that the intention was to make the Norman church end at the spot
where now stand the third pillars of the nave; and that the two western towers
had begun to be built. As an after thought another bay was added to the nave,
with western transept, and last of all the grand west front was another after
thought. But they do not establish the fact that the towers were ever finished,
or the Norman west front actually erected. The considerations adduced are
perfectly consistent with the theory that the additional length of the nave was
decided upon while the towers were still unfinished, and the lower part of the
towers transformed as Mr Paley has described. Thus we combine the rival
theories. For Mr Poole[11] maintains
that the point, up to which Benedict's work was carried, must mean the front we
now see. One argument he advances appears unanswerable.[12] Of the two
chroniclers, Swapham takes his history down to 1246; Abbot John ruled from 1249
to 1262. Both these writers therefore, beyond all question, were alive when the
present front was finished. "Here are two people writing after the present
west front was erected, and for persons before whose eyes the present west
front appeared every day, and speaking of the tower and of the west front as
well-known limits to a certain work. Surely they not only meant, butmust
have meant, the front that then was, in other words, the
west front as it is now."
The conclusion of the
controversy may perhaps not yet have been reached. But all the difficulties
appear to be explained by understanding that Benedict's work extended to the
west end of the present nave, and that he carried the whole building further
west than was originally intended, and managed to do this without destroying
the lower part of the towers which had actually been raised.
When, therefore, the Norman nave, as originally designed, was
approaching completion, the designers determined upon an extension of the nave,
and a much grander western finish to the church than had before been
contemplated. This idea included a dignified western transept, the dimensions
of which, from north to south, should exceed the entire width of the nave and
aisles. This would of necessity involve the lengthening of the nave, because
the monastic buildings came close to the south aisle of the nave, at the point
where the original termination of the church was to have been, as may be seen by
the old western wall of the cloister, which is still standing.
The two next abbots were
Andrew (1193-1200), and Acharius (1200-1210). To one or both of these may be
assigned the western transept. By their time the Norman style was giving place
to the lighter and more elegant architecture of the Early English period, the
round arch was beginning to be superseded by the pointed arch, and the massive
ornamentation which marks the earlier style was displaced by the conventional
foliage that soon came to be very generally employed. Most wisely, however, the
Peterborough builders made their work at the west end of the nave intentionally
uniform with what was already built. Very numerous indications of this can be
seen by careful observers. The bases of the western pillars, the change in the
depth of the mouldings, characteristic changes in the capitals in the triforium
range, and especially the grand arches below the transept towers, which are
pointed, but enriched with ornamentation of pronounced Norman character, all
point to the later date of this western transept.
At the west wall of the church
all trace of Norman work disappears. The arcade near the ground, the large
round arch above the door, the great west window and its adjacent arches (not,
of course, including the late tracery), are all of distinct Early English
character. The whole of this wall may be held to be an integral part of the
west front, and not of the transept which it bounds.
When we come to the most
distinctive feature of the cathedral, the glorious west front, we find we have
no help whatever from the chronicles. Nowhere is there the smallest reference
to its building. Other works raised by the Abbots of the period are named, but
the noble western portico is never once mentioned. Perhaps the rapid succession
of abbots after Acharius may account for this. The
building must have taken some years, and the credit of the whole cannot be
given to one. There were four Abbots after Acharius before the church was
dedicated. They were Robert of Lindsey (1214-1222), Alexander (1222-1226),
Martin of Ramsey (1226-1233), and Walter of S. Edmunds (1233-1245). During the
abbacy of this last the church was dedicated on the 4th of October 1237,
(according to the Chronicon Angliæ Petriburgense), or on the 28th
of September 1238, according to Matthew Paris. The Bishop of Lincoln, Robert
Grostête, took the chief part in the ceremony, assisted by William Brewer,
Bishop of Exeter. The other chronicle calls the second bishop suffragan of the
Bishop of Lincoln, which may mean no more than that he assisted on the
occasion. The dedication took place in accordance with the provisions of
certain constitutions which had been drawn up at a council held in London. No
doubt the building had before this been completed. This date agrees well with
the period which all architectural experts accept as the probable date of the
erection of the west front. It may have been, and probably was, finished some
few years before the dedication. The very fine gables at the north and south
ends of the western transept are of the same date as the west front.
Considerable changes in the
fabric, as well as additional buildings, belong to the latter part of the
thirteenth century. The documents mention two of these. In the time of Richard
of London (1274-1295), but before his election to the abbacy, while he was
still sacrist, the bell-tower was erected, in which were hung the great bells
which were called Les Londreis, because he was himself a Londoner, and had
caused them to be brought from London. A previous abbot, John of Calais
(1249-1262), had contributed a great bell to the monastery, which he had
dedicated to S. Oswald. On it was inscribed the rhyming hexameter Jon
de Caux abbas Oswaldo consecrat hoc vas. The other great work of this
period was a magnificent Lady Chapel, since destroyed, begun in 1272 by William
Parys, then Prior, who laid the first stone with his own hand, and placed
beneath it some writings from the gospels. He lived to see it completed, and at
last his body was interred within it. Its altar was consecrated in 1290, as is
recorded in the register of Bishop Oliver Sutton. It
is described as having been built of stone and wood, with a leaden roof, and
with glass windows. There was a statue of the Virgin, and round the walls, or
perhaps in the stained glass in the windows, there were figures of those named
in the genealogy, with a compendium of their lives beneath each. The Prior
contributed five pounds of silver and upwards of his annual revenues towards
the decoration of this chapel. From an engraving in Gunton's History, which may
be taken as fairly representing its appearance, for it was standing in his
time, although the drawing is manifestly inaccurate and must have been sketched
from memory, we gather that the windows were of the same character as four
which are still to be seen, three of them in the eastern chapels of the south
transept, and the fourth on the north side, near the site of the Lady Chapel.
These are all of excellent geometric work, and precisely of the date given.
This chapel was built, as at Ely, to the east of the north transept. The
position of the roof can be traced on the east wall of the transept; and it can
be there seen how the Norman triforium windows were originally arranged. These
being covered by the Lady Chapel, had not been altered like those in other
parts of the church.
Other works of this century,
not mentioned in the annals, are the entire removal of the lower stage of
Norman windows in the aisles, these were replaced by wide windows of five lights
each; the addition of a parapet to the apse; the erection of piscinas and other
accompaniments to side altars, at the east ends of the choir aisles.
For the rest of the
architectural history we have no chronicles to guide us, and are left to the
stones themselves. But there is very little difficulty in fixing at least
approximate dates for all the later work. The most important alteration in the
fourteenth century was the removal of the stages above the four great arches of
the central tower, and the substitution of a lighter lantern. When this was
done, the great round arches east and west of the tower were changed into
pointed arches, but those north and south were left unaltered. There is every
probability that some signs of insecurity had made themselves evident. We have
seen that three stages of the Norman tower were erected by Abbot William of
Waterville. Though not so stated we infer from this that at least one more stage was afterwards added. In any case the tower must
have been a very massive structure, considerably higher than the present one.
In the early part of this century, in 1321, the great tower of Ely had fallen;
and its fate may have warned the monks of Peterborough to see that the disaster
was not repeated here. This alteration must have been made, judging by the
details of the architecture, in the second quarter of the century. Above the
lantern was a wooden octagon. The views that are given of this hardly warrant
the admiration that has been sometimes expressed, or the regrets that have been
uttered at its removal. It may have been designed to carry a wooden spire, such
as was afterwards erected on the bell-tower. But most will agree with the
criticism that it was "a low and unsightly structure." It hardly rose
more than eight or ten feet above the top of the lantern, and the whole height
of the central tower, including the octagon, was less than the height of the
south-western spire of the front.
To this century belongs the
transformation of the triforium windows all through the nave and choir.
Parapets were at the same time added above the Norman corbel tables. The change
effected in the apse was the most noticeable; not only were the two upper tiers
of Norman windows replaced by Decorated ones of larger size, but the three
lowest ones in the centre were altogether removed, and their place taken by
lofty archways, when the new building was built. But we can judge of their
appearance from the two side windows which still remain; these, being not now
external, have had all the glass removed; but the mullions and tracery are
perfect, and even the iron-bars across are still there. At the inner surface of
the wall the five lower windows have very good hanging tracery, of different
designs.
The south-western spire of the
west front is also of this period, probably a little earlier in date than the
lantern. This is of very remarkable beauty, and very much more elegant than the
corresponding spire to the north. The triangular section of the pinnacles at
the base of the spire, the crockets with which they are enriched, and the open
canopies around, combine to produce a most graceful feature. To the latter
years of this century may be assigned the central porch, with room above,
inserted between the two middle piers of the west front. Some
regard this as a blemish; others as a distinct improvement. One party maintains[13] that it is
"an unsightly encumbrance, in its present position, seeing that it
violates the uniformity of design displayed in the west front"; the other
party contends[14] that it is
"an extremely judicious insertion, and that it really does, just as if it
was intended for that purpose only, restore its proper dignity to the central
arch of the facade." It was most likely built as a matter of structural
necessity, to secure the stability of the front. From a settlement of the
foundations, or from a failure of the two central piers, or from the great
weight of masonry above, for there are no western buttresses, the whole must
have been in danger of falling. Mr Paley points out that the "construction
of this elegant little edifice is extremely scientific, especially
in the manner in which the thrust is distributed through the medium of the side
turrets so as to fall upon the buttresses in front. These turrets being erected
against one side of the triangular columns, on the right and the left hand,
support them in two directions at once, viz., from collapsing towards each
other, and from falling forward. The latter pressure is thrown wholly upon the
buttresses in front, which project seven feet beyond the base of the great
pillars." The room above is called by Browne Willis the Consistory Court.
It is now used for the Minster Library.
The
alterations and additions during the Perpendicular period can be detected at a
glance. All the Norman windows which had remained unaltered were now filled
with tracery, not of particularly good design; the great west window and the
others in the west wall were similarly treated; the conical tops to the
transeptal corner turrets were altered into battlements; the screens in the
transepts were made, and, probably, the groined wooden ceiling in the choir.
The most important addition was the New Building at the east end of the choir.
This is often erroneously called the Lady Chapel; but when this edifice was
erected the Lady Chapel to the east of the north transept, and for more than
150 years afterwards, was still standing. The new building was begun by Abbot
Ashton (1438-1471), and finished by Abbot Kirton (1496-1528). The rebus of each
of these abbots can be seen in its decorations: an ash growing out of a tun or
barrel, and a church or kirk with a tun.
In 1540 the
reign of the abbots came to an end, and in 1541 the church became a cathedral.
For a hundred years the church itself, as well as all the buildings attached to
it, appear to have remained in their full glory. There is no reason to
discredit the account given of the preservation of this church, when so many
others were dismantled or sold at the suppression of the monasteries. It was
suggested to King Henry VIII, after the interment here of Queen Katharine of
Aragon, that it would become his greatness to erect a suitable monument of her
in the place where she was buried; and in reply the King said he would leave
her one of the goodliest monuments in Christendom, meaning that he would spare
the church for her sake. We conclude, however, from what we know of the state
of the fabric in the reign of Charles I, that although no buildings may have been demolished, yet the church itself
was falling into disrepair. No doubt the diminished resources of the
establishment, as well as the numerous demands upon the stipends (never large)
of the members of the chapter, most of whom had duties and claims elsewhere
besides having families to support, materially reduced the amount that could be
annually devoted to the sustentation of the fabric. In the time of the civil
war much wanton destruction took place. Nearly everything in the nature of
ornamentation or embellishment was destroyed. A full account of the mischief
wrought has been preserved. Without particularly naming such things as books, documents,
vestments, and the movable ornaments, we find the damage done to the fabric
itself was terrible indeed. The organs, "of which there were two
pair," were broken down. All the stalls of the choir, the altar rails, and
the great brass chandelier, were knocked to pieces. The altar of course did not
escape. Of the reredos, or altar-piece, and its destruction, Patrick writes as
follows: "Now behind the Communion Table, there stood a curious piece of
stone-work, admired much by strangers and travellers; a stately skreen it was,
well wrought, painted and gilt, which rose up as high almost as the roof of the
church in a row of three lofty spires, with other lesser spires, growing out of
each of them, as it is represented in the annexed draught.[15] This had
now no Imagery-work upon it, or anything else that might justly give offence,
and yet because it bore the name of the High Altar, was pulled all down with
ropes, lay'd low and level with the ground." All the tombs were mutilated
or hacked down. The hearse over the tomb of Queen Katherine was demolished, as
well as the arms and escutcheons which still remained above the spot where Mary
Queen of Scots had been buried. All the other chief monuments were defaced in
like manner. One in particular is worth mentioning. It was a monument in the
new building erected to himself by Sir Humfrey Orme in his lifetime. Two words
on the inscription, "Altar" and "Sacrifice," are said to
have excited the fury of the rabble, and it was broken down with axes,
pole-axes, and hammers. So this good old knight "outlived his own monument, and lived to see himself carried in effigie on a
Souldiers back, to the publick market-place, there to be sported withall, a
Crew of Souldiers going before in procession, some with surplices, some with
organ pipes, to make up the solemnity." This monument, as it was left
after this profanity, is still to be seen exactly as it remained when the
soldiers had done their work. The brasses in the floor, the bells in the
steeple, were regarded as lawful plunder. The same would not be said of the
stained glass, of which there was a great quantity. This was especially the
case with the windows in the cloisters, which were "most famed of all, for
their great art and pleasing variety." All the glass was broken to pieces.
Much that escaped the violence of these irresponsible zealots fell before the
more regular proceedings of commissioners. By their
orders many of the buildings belonging to the cathedral were pulled down and
the materials sold. This was the case with the cloisters, the chapter-house,
the Bishop's hall and chapel. The merchant that bought the lead from the palace
roofs did not make a very prosperous bargain, for he lost it all (as Dean
Patrick says, within his own knowledge) and the ship which carried it, on the
voyage to Holland.
For some
time nothing was done to repair the damage. At length the Chief Justice of the
Common Pleas, Oliver St. John, obtained a grant of the ruined Minster, which he
gave to the town for use as a parish church, their own parish church having
also gone to decay. This gentleman was doubly allied to the Cromwell family,
his first wife being great-grand-daughter of Sir Henry Cromwell, of
Hinchinbrooke, and his second wife daughter of Henry Cromwell, of Upwood. He
had been sent upon a distasteful embassy to Holland, where he experienced many
indignities; and on his return, according to Mark Noble,[16] "he
protested, that all the favour which he received in reward for this embassy,
was, that he obtained the cathedral of Peterborough, which was propounded to be
sold and demolished, to be granted to the citizens of that place." The
interest that he took in Peterborough arose from the fact that he resided at
Longthorpe Hall, about two miles off.
The burden of restoring the
church to a decent condition being too great for the inhabitants, they agreed
to pull down the Lady Chapel, and sell the materials. This was done, except
that some portion of the woodwork was utilised in repairs. The painted boards
from the roof were made into backs for the seats in the choir. An engraving of
the choir as it appeared in the eighteenth century shews these boards. They are
mostly adorned with the letter M surmounted by a crown, and the three lions of
England, in alternate lozenges. Until the Restoration the church was served by
a school-master of the Charterhouse, Samuel Wilson, appointed by the London
Committee. When the cathedral body was restored, further repairs were gradually
effected, and when Dean Patrick wrote, he says that the church was
"recovering her ancient beauty and lustre again."
But the same causes which
operated to prevent very much being done for years
after the dissolution of monasteries, the absence of any special fabric fund,
and the inadequacy of the revenues, again produced the same results. Browne
Willis published his survey of this cathedral in 1742. He says that considering
the pillaging of the church by King Henry VIII., and the subsequent despoiling
by King Edward VI., and Queen Elizabeth, "we may less wonder that so large
a fabrick has not had more care taken of it as it ought; for I cannot but say,
that it is ill kept in repair, and lies very slovenly in the inside, and
several of the windows are stopped up with bricks, and the glazing in others
sadly broken; and the boards in the roof of the middle Isle or Nave, which with
the Cross Isle is not archt with stone (but wainscotted with painted boards, as
at S. Albans) are several of them damaged and broken, as is also the pavement;
insomuch that scarce any cathedral in England is more neglected." He
proceeds to say that the Dean and Chapter had recently set apart £700 for
repairs, and intended to apply more money to the same purpose when certain
leases were expired.
While Willis was collecting
information for his book, Francis Lockier was Dean. In his time new seats were
erected in the choir which were "very plain and tasteless." They
remained until 1827. A new organ was also obtained. £1500 was spent on these
alterations.
The record of other changes,
until the time of Dean Monk, is meagre. Dean Tarrant (1764-1791) collected the
fragments of stained glass and had them all inserted in the windows of the
apse. He also repaved the church, but most unfortunately without carefully
preserving the ancient inscribed monumental stones. An altar screen and organ
screen, from designs by Carter, were erected; but neither seems to have
possessed much merit.
Dean Kipling (1798-1822) is
chiefly remembered from his alterations to the lantern tower. He erected
unsightly turrets at the four corners and removed the octagon. These turrets,
commonly spoken of with derision as "Dean Kipling's chimneys" were of
unsuitable height, and poor detail; they were terminated with battlements. They
were happily removed when the tower was rebuilt.
Dean Monk (1822-1830)
inaugurated and carried out an extensive scheme of reparation. The appeal to
the public for subscriptions is dated 31st July 1827. It states that the altar
screen, choir screen, and all the woodwork in the
choir are unworthy of the structure to which they belong: that the Dean and
Chapter had substantially repaired the exterior of the church at their own
expense; that they had procured plans from Mr Blore, and an estimate of upwards
of £5000 for the projected work. The members of the chapter in their corporate
capacity had given £1000, and had further individually subscribed £1050. The
result of this appeal was that by June 1828 a sum of £5021 11s. had been
collected.
The improvements effected
before this appeal to the public was made are enumerated by Britton. As has
been intimated, the cost was defrayed by Dean Monk and the Chapter from their
own resources. The chief repairs and restorations were these:—new roofs were
put to the transepts and bell-tower; columns, mouldings, and ornaments in
various parts of the church were renewed; several windows, till then blocked up
with rubble, were opened and glazed, and in some cases the stonework made good;
the pinnacles, spires, and shafts of the west front were carefully restored;
two Norman doorways, which had been obscured for ages, were exposed to view.
The work in the choir included new stalls and seats, pulpit, and throne; an
altar screen of clunch, filling up the lower part of the apse; and an organ
screen, also of clunch, with an open parapet, and enriched with much
diaper-work and many canopies, and adorned on the west face with large shields
of arms,[17] very
brightly coloured, charged with the heraldic bearings of the principal
subscribers. At first there were only four stalls on each side of the entrance
to the choir; others were added, in front of the ladies' pews, when Honorary
Canons were created in 1844. This organ-loft did not occupy the place of the
former screen, which was where the monastic choir had always terminated, at the
second bay west of the tower, but was placed under the eastern arch of the
lantern tower. The former screen was called by Rickman "a barbarous piece
of painted wood-work." It was either sold, or taken by the contractors as
a perquisite; it ultimately found its way into a little garden at Woodston,
just across the river, where it was transformed into a summer-house, or arbour.[18]
Great admiration was universally expressed at the conclusion of
this work. It was esteemed a marvel of beauty. Harriet Martineau, in her
"History of England during the Thirty Years' Peace," thought the
re-opening of the choir a matter of sufficient national importance to be
recorded in her book. She writes thus: "A new choir of great beauty, was
erected in Peterborough Cathedral during this period, and the church was made
once more what it was before it was devastated by the Puritans." All must
admire the enthusiasm and devotion which brought this restoration to a
successful issue, although to the taste of the present day it would all appear
cumbrous and heavy.
In the time of Dean Saunders
(1853-1878) the choir roof was painted anew, and much valuable and important
work was done towards securing the stability of the fabric, by underpinning
some of the walls, and in other ways; but all the expense was defrayed out of
the resources of the Dean and Chapter, and no public appeal was made for
assistance. Indications of the insecurity of the lantern tower had begun to
appear, one or more fragments of the masonry having fallen from a great height;
and for some years before the tower was condemned as unsafe, a wooden stage had
been erected, above the four great arches, as a protection in case more stones
should fall. The great pier to the south cast had been, time out of memory,
bound all round with strong iron bands. As far back as 1593, there is an entry
among the cathedral accounts, which mentions that £47 4s. 9d. had been spent on
"the great column near the choir repaired with iron and timber." In
1882 the evidences of failure in the lantern stage were found to be increasing,
and its condition was pronounced dangerous. Large gaps made their appearance
towards the end of the year, and in January 1883, the greater part of the tower
was said to be in a "state of movement."
It was very soon realised that
nothing short of rebuilding the tower from the foundation would meet the case.
The first stone was taken down on April 5th, and the tower and two eastern
piers were removed by August. The western piers were soon afterwards condemned,
and taken down the following year. The chief corner stone of the new tower at
the north-eastern pier, was laid with full masonic ceremonial on May 7th 1884,
by the Earl of Carnarvon, acting for the Prince of Wales. All the stones, as
taken down, were numbered, and every one that could be used again was replaced in its original position. During this
year there commenced a controversy as to the correct way of finishing the building
of the tower. When the Decorated lantern was first built, the great arches,
east and west, to the choir and nave, were altered from the round to the
pointed shape. A few of the stones of the original Norman arches having been
brought to light during the work, some persons wished round arches to be built
as at first. Some stones of the Norman tower were also found; and it was
proposed to heighten the central tower by one stage of work in the Norman
style, using original stones where possible, and placing the Decorated stage
above it. Others again, wanted a lofty central spire to be added. The matter
was referred to Archbishop Benson for his decision. In the result the whole was
rebuilt exactly as before, with the exception that the four corner turrets,
erected by Dean Kipling, were not replaced.
In 1886 the tower was
finished. The transept ceilings were repaired in this and the next year. All
unsound wood was removed and replaced by good oak. The diamond shapes are still
to be seen, but the black, white, and brown patterns have been improved away.
The discovery of the site of the Saxon church, which will be described
hereafter, was made in 1883. Steady progress continued to be made in securing
the safety of various parts of the church; and on July 11th, 1889, a temporary
choir having been fitted up, divine service was again held in the ancient
ritual choir, which extended two bays into the nave.
During the next two years many
contributors to the general fund for the restoration, and some others, made gifts
of special objects for the embellishment of the choir. By the end of May, 1892,
the mosaic pavement was almost completed, and the bishop's throne, the pulpit,
the litany desk, and eighteen stalls had been erected. These gifts were
solemnly dedicated at a stately service held on June 2nd, when, after the
litany and an anthem, the special service was taken by the Archbishop of
Canterbury at the altar, and after that Te Deum was sung. A
sermon was preached by the Bishop of Durham, formerly Canon. The Archbishop and
Bishops wore their convocation robes.
Two years later the fitting up
of the choir was very nearly complete, four stalls only remaining to be
supplied. At a second dedication of gifts on May 10th, 1894, these additional
gifts were in position; new organ and case, canopied reredos, retable, iron
screens inclosing thefour eastern bays of the choir,
pillars and choir gates (part of a design for an elaborate screen), eight
stalls, extension of mosaic pavement, fourteen sub-stalls and seats for
lay-clerks and choristers, altar-rails, and credence table. Up to this date,
since the commencement of the restoration in 1883, upwards of £32,400 had been
expended upon the fabric, besides more than £17,800 upon the internal fittings
of the choir. All the woodwork of the choir is now quite complete.
In speaking of the repairs
carried out on the west front at the end of the nineteenth century we touch on
a matter which gave rise to no little controversy. The insecure state of the
west front had been known for years. In the early part of 1896, a scaffold was
raised in order to enable Mr Pearson, the architect of the cathedral, to make a
complete examination of the front, special causes for alarm having lately been
detected. At first it was believed that underpinning the central piers would
secure the stability of the whole. This was done, as well as the shoring and
strutting to the gables of the two outer arches. The clearing away of the dirt
and rubbish, and the cleaning of the groining, disclosed greater danger than had
been expected, and the architect recommended the rebuilding of parts of the
gables. Before acting on this advice the Restoration Committee took the opinion
of Sir A.W. Blomfield, and his report not only confirmed the opinion expressed
by Mr Pearson, but said further that much of the superstructure was so
disintegrated, that it was impossible to render substantial and lasting repair
as it stood, "and that the inner parts of the walls were such as would not
permit of the superstructure being preserved or successfully dealt with by any
of the well-known expedients frequently recommended and sometimes employed with
success." When it became generally known that the Dean and Chapter
intended to act upon the advice given in these two reports, the knowledge created
the greatest possible excitement. Other plans were suggested; the mere removal
of a single stone to make it more secure was declared quite unnecessary; the
taking down a gable to rebuild it was denounced as Vandalism. Much strong
language and many hard words were used which had better be forgotten. It
certainly seems difficult to explain how the objectors to the course that had
been decided upon could write of the west front that it was
"superficially, in a fair state of preservation,"
or that it was "literally without a patch or blemish." The present
writer was for twenty years a member of the cathedral foundation, and lived
just opposite the west front. He made a special study of the history and fabric
of the cathedral. Hardly a year passed without something falling down;
sometimes a piece of a pinnacle, sometimes a crocket or other ornament,
sometimes a shaft. Old engravings of the spires show the pinnacles broken. Many
of the shafts are wanting. Some have been replaced in wood. Many wholly new
ones were put up by Dean Monk. And concerning the north arch, which was
notoriously the most dangerous, Dean Patrick has recorded that Bishop Laney
gave £100 toward the repairing one of the great
arches of the church porch "which was faln down in the late times."
Dean Monk also, in a memoir of his predecessor Dean Duport,[19] speaks of
the efforts of the cathedral body to repair the devastation caused by the civil
war, and says "in particular one of the three large arches of the West
Front, the beauty of which is acknowledged to be without rival, having fallen
down, it was restored in all its original magnificence." In an account of
the cathedral published by the writer thirty years ago, he says of this arch:
"Its present state looks dangerous from below. The stones in the arch have
some sad gaps. It is tied up by iron bands, and further protected within by a
great number of wooden pegs, not of recent construction. When last observed it
leant forward 14½ inches." In 1893 he wrote: "there is no doubt that
the security of the whole front is a most serious question that before long
must demand energetic action."
A very
great preponderance of local opinion was in favour of the action of the Dean
and Chapter. When it came to moving the stones, after all the rubbish was
removed, it was found that the mortar had crumbled into mere dust, and could be
swept away; and that the stones themselves could be lifted from their
positions, without the use of any tool. What has actually been done is this:
the north gable has been taken down with the outer orders of the archivolt for
a depth of some feet, and rebuilt; the innermost order has not been moved.
Relieving arches have been put in at the back. The gable is now believed to be
perfectly secure. The cross on the summit was replaced in its position on July
2nd, 1897. The south gable was afterwards taken down and rebuilt, a very few
new stones being used to bond the masonry where a fracture had been found on
the left side of the great arch below. This is what has been called "the
destruction" of the west front.
CHAPTER II.
THE CATHEDRAL—EXTERIOR.
Nearly every cathedral and
large abbey church has some one conspicuous feature by which it is remembered,
and with which it is specially associated in the minds of most persons. Nearly
every one also claims for itself to have the best example of some one
architectural feature, or the largest, or the oldest, or in some other way the
most remarkable. Occasionally the claim is indisputable, because the boasted
object is unique in the country; as is the case with the octagon at Ely, the
three spires at Lichfield, the situation and western Galilee of Durham, and the
almost perfect unity of design at Salisbury. Sometimes, if not unique, there is
no question as to the justice of the claim for superiority; whether it be for a
thing of beauty, like the cloisters at Gloucester, or the Norman tower at
Norwich, or the east window of Carlisle, or the angel-choir at Lincoln; or for
size or extent, when the question narrows itself to a mere matter of
measurement.
But it is not always by any
means the fact that this prominent feature, though it is the pride of the
inhabitants and a source of admiration to visitors, is really the most
noteworthy thing belonging to the church. This seems specially the case at
Peterborough. Probably nobody speaks or thinks of Peterborough cathedral
without immediately associating it with its glorious west front. Many believe
that there is little else in the building that is worthy of any particular
attention. And yet nowhere in the kingdom is there to be found a finer and more
complete Norman church. Arches, windows, mouldings, more elaborate and more
grand may no doubt be found elsewhere; but where else can we find, as here,
choir, transepts, and nave, with all the original Norman, from ground to
roof, with
two insignificant exceptions, remaining unaltered? It is natural to compare the
three great East Anglian Cathedrals, as all have superb work of the Norman
period. But at Norwich the lower arches in the choir have been rebuilt in the
Perpendicular style, while the vaulted roof of the nave, raised in the
fifteenth century, is less in keeping with the sturdy architecture beneath it
than the wooden ceiling at Peterborough. At Ely, beautiful as is the work in
the octagon and choir, there is no Norman work east of the transepts. Of course
we are referring to the main arches and pillars of the building, and not to the
tracery of the windows, or to alterations to the walls. The two exceptions
mentioned above are the pointed arches, east and west of the central tower, and
the removal of the three lowest windows in the apse.
The
greatest attraction to the world at large is undoubtedly the West Front,
which is seen in its full beauty on entering the close.
The following lines, from
Morris's "Earthly Paradise," may fitly introduce the subject.
"For other tales they told, and one of
theseNot
all the washing of the troublous seas,Nor all the changeful days whereof ye
know,Have swept from out my memory: even soSmall things far off will be
remembered clearWhen matters both more mighty and more near,Are waxing dim to
us. I, who have seenSo many lands, and midst such marvels been,Clearer than
these abodes of outland men,Can see above the green and unburnt fenThe little
houses of an English town,Cross-timbered, thatched with fen-reeds coarse and
brown,And high o'er these, three gables, great and fair,That slender rods of
columns do upbearOver the minster doors, and imageryOf kings, and flowers no
summer field doth see,Wrought in these gables.—Yea I heard withal,In the fresh
morning air, the trowels fallUpon the stone, a thin noise far away;For high up
wrought the masons on that day,Since to the monks that house seemed scarcely
wellTill they had set a spire or pinnacleEach side the great porch. In that
burgh I heardThis tale, and late have set down every wordThat I remembered,
when the thoughts would comeOf what we did in our deserted home,And of the days, long past, when we were young,Nor knew the
cloudy days that o'er us hung.And howsoever I am now grown old,Yet is it still
the tale I then heard toldWithin the guest house of that Minster Close,Whose
walls, like cliffs new made, before us rose."
It is rather a porch, or
piazza, than a front; for it consists of a paved walk of some extent outside
the wall of the cathedral covered at a great height by a vaulted roof which is
supported by the wall and by the three great arches. Mr Fergusson, in his
"Handbook of Architecture,"[20] pronounces
that "as a portico, using the term in its classical sense, the west front
of Peterborough is the grandest and finest in Europe": and there are few
that will not agree with him. Professor Freeman says:[21]—"The
portico of Peterborough is unique; the noblest conception of the old Greek
translated into the speech of Christendom and of England has no fellow before
it or after it." Exclusive of the spires, and the central porch and
parvise, the dates of which have been given previously, the whole is of the
best and purest Early English style. The effect is certainly improved by the
middle arch being narrower than the others. But if the gables above had been of
unequal angles, the result would have been far less satisfactory. Wisely,
therefore, these angles have been made equal, and all of the same height: and the
device of the architect to secure this, by making the central gable rise from
points somewhat higher than the others, is admirable. It is to be observed also
that the turrets, or large pinnacles, that are placed between the gables, are
not placed exactly above the central line of the great piers beneath them, but
are in each case a little further towards the outer arches; and it will be
seen, immediately that this is pointed out, how much the upper part of the
facade is thereby improved. The two great piers may be roughly taken as having
for section an isosceles right-angled triangle, the right angle being towards
the west. The mouldings of the arches are supported by a series of banded
shafts, six on each side of each arch. In the spaces between the shafts of the
middle arch, but not of the others, are crockets for the whole height, and the
innermost cavetto is entirely filled
with dog-tooth ornament. All the shafts have floriated capitals; and the great
arches have similar mouldings. Four sets of ornaments run round each arch; a
continuous chevron, a richly floriated roll, a roll with bands, and a series of
billets. Between the arches there rises a clustered shaft which reaches to the
level of the highest points of the arches: here these shafts combine with an
ornamented stringcourse which runs in a straight line along the entire front.
In each of the six spandrels are a deeply recessed quatrefoil, two trefoiled
arches (like the upper part of a niche), a pair of lancet-shaped niches
containing figures, and a beautifully designed hexagonal ornament, with wavy
edges, the cusps uniting in a central boss. The pinnacles on each side of the
middle gable are at first square, then there are two octagonal stages, the
uppermost pierced, and finally a short spire. The lowest stage has a double
lancet with floriated capitals; the second has a lancet, also with floriated
capitals, filling up each face of the octagon; the last stage has round-headed
lancets, without capitals, entirely surrounded by zigzags.
The gables
are richly ornamented. At the head of each is a massive cross of very fine
workmanship. Along the edges of the gables are two rows of billets and the wavy
ornament. Just below the crosses are three large statues, in niches of which
the gable mouldings form the heads. That in the centre is S. Peter, with a
mitre, the right hand uplifted in blessing, and two keys in the left hand; the
other two are S. John and S. Andrew. Below plain, straight stringcourses, at
the foot of these statues, are three rose windows of exceptional grace and
beauty. The central one has eight spokes radiating from a flat medallion
enriched with conventional foliage; these support trefoil-headed arches which
have their outer mouldings thickly covered with dog-tooth; the whole is bounded
by two circular bands, the inner one ornamented. The two other rose windows
have six spokes instead of eight, the trefoiled arches have foliage, and the
inner moulding of the bounding circles is continuously waving. The spokes in
all three windows have the dog-tooth on each side. On each side of the lower
part of these windows is a trefoil-headed niche containing a figure. Below
these, and resting upon the long stringcourse that runs above the great arches,
are sets of seven trefoil-headed niches, with a half-niche at each end. Four of
these niches are pierced for windows, which have trefoils with pointed heads,though the trefoil heads of the niches
themselves are round at the top. The three intervening niches contain figures.
All these nine figures have a nimbus; and as these, with the three under the
crosses, make up twelve, it is assumed that they represent the Apostles. The
six smaller statues, just above, are said to be kings; the twelve below,
benefactors. There are thus thirty statues in all, and most were no doubt
carved at the time of the erection of the front; but two or three appear to be
of earlier date, and may possibly have formed part of the embellishments of the
Saxon church.
The Towers north and south, up to the height
of the parapets, are of the same date as the portion already described. They
are ornamented with blank arcading in six stages, of different dimensions and
character; all is in perfect harmony with the rest of the composition. The
loftiest of the stages of this arcading has a sub-division
with round arches; and the stage above the great stringcourse has round-headed
trefoils so as to be in keeping with the row of similar arches in the gables;
but with these two exceptions all the arches on the arcades of the tower are
pointed and without cusps. Of the spires which surmount these towers that on
the south is by far the more elegant. It has pinnacles at the corners of square
section, and then another set of triangular pinnacles, resting on open arches
connecting the corner pinnacles with the spire. These triangular pinnacles are
double the height of those at the corners. All the pinnacles and canopies over
the arches have crockets. This spire is some few feet loftier than that to the
north, though most measurements of the cathedral have hitherto given them as
being of the same height.
The inner wall of the portico,
forming the west wall of the cathedral, is covered with elaborate arcading, and
so also are the ends, north and south. The designs are nearly a continuation of
the arcading on the two towers. There are five lofty windows, now filled with
tracery inserted in the Perpendicular period, the great west window having been
enlarged at the same time. The two side doorways are exceedingly good, and
should be carefully examined. The central doorway must have been of still
greater beauty; but the whole of the upper part of it is hidden by the porch
and parvise inserted beneath the central arch. This doorway is divided by a
fine pillar rising from a well-carved base, with a very curious scene depicted
on it. "It represents," writes Canon Davys,[22] "a
Benedictine tortured by demons, and was doubtless intended as a significant
hint to the monks that a sacred calling demands a consistent life." The
portico retains its original Early English vaulting.
The Porch and Parvise beneath
the middle arch was inserted, as has been previously stated, as a support to
the two great piers. It is vaulted in two bays, the first being of the same
dimensions as the inner width of the portico; the western bay (of the same
size) thus reaches beyond the two great piers, and the corner turrets and
buttresses in all project about seven feet. This gives a very substantial support
to the piers. The whole composition is very fine, and quite worthy of the great
portico to which it is an adjunct. It must be left to each spectator todecide for himself if it improves or diminishes the effect
of the whole. It is of late Decorated date, highly enriched with profuse
carving. The staircase turrets, as well as the great window are embattled.
Possibly there may have been pinnacles now lost. The spaces north and south,
and within the portico, have tracery on the walls similar to the window. The
groining is very fine. One of the central bosses has a representation of the
Trinity. The Father is represented as the Ancient of Days, with a Dove for the
Holy Spirit above the shoulder, and the figure of the Saviour on the Cross in
front. Freemasons are recommended to look for a special symbol which they alone
can understand and appreciate.
The floor of the portico is
paved with gravestones, some apparently in their original position. This place
was at one time appropriated as a burial place for the Minor Canons.[23] Some of
the stones, however, are of mediaeval date, and it can be seen where the
brasses have been wrenched from them: some of these have been used again for
later inscriptions. One stone bears an incised cross originally filled with
some coloured composition. Some of the marble wall-shafts had fallen, and their
places had been filled by stone substitutes. Others had been cheaply replaced
by wood. The stone shafts still remain, but the wooden imitations have all been
replaced by new marble which was specially quarried for this reconstruction.
Wood had also been used for
the repair of the battlements on the gable of the porch under the centre arch
of the west front. These have, of course, been reconstructed in stone. All the
criticisms that have been passed by amateur architects upon the front, as a
termination to the building, cannot be discussed here. It is clear, however,
that the existence of the portico does away with any objection that could be
made (as has been done with regard to the west fronts at Lincoln, Wells, and
elsewhere), that the front might be considered to hide rather than to bring out
the construction of the nave and aisles. It is true that the side gables are
not the gables of the aisles, and indeed the roofs that are built against the
gables are built only for them; but they are a legitimate finish to the great
arches, and to the vaulted roof of the portico. Possibly the inequality of the
great arches may be explained when we reflect that the central gable is the
honest termination of the nave roof; the two central
piers were therefore bound to be built so as to give support to the existing
nave roof, and to fit it. The position of these piers being fixed, the outer
ones might be as distant as was desired, for the front must of course extend to
the entire length of the western transept. It has been commonly supposed that
the three great arches of the Lincoln front suggested the idea to the
Peterborough builders. If so, they improved upon
their model. The central arch at Lincoln even before the round arch was
altered, must have been half as high again as the side arches; and as they all
are integral parts of the wall, and therefore not open, they have somewhat the
appearance of magnified doorways that have been blocked up. At Snettisham, in
Norfolk, is a western doorway protected by a porch with three open arches; and
this has sometimes been mentioned when Peterborough west front is a subject of
discussion; not, of course, as a fitting comparison, but as an illustration of
the architectural method employed. At Snettisham, however, the porch is a small
erection even for the church to which it gives entrance, and does not nearly
extend to the entire width of the building.
The
following is the quaint description given in "Magna Britannia,"
published 1724:—"The western Front is very Noble and Majestick of Columel
Work, and supported by three such tall Arches, as England can scarcely shew the
like, which are adorned with a great Variety of curious Imagery. The Form of
Arches is by the modern Architects called, The Bull's Eye, not Semicircular.
The whole is one of the noblest pieces of Gothick Building in England."
The Bell-tower, which rises from the western transept, immediately behind the
north gable of the front (p. 37), is a little later than the front itself. It
is of good workmanship, and quite in keeping with the older part. There are
rows of lancets in the belfry stage, and the four corner pinnacles are very
similar to the large pinnacles that are placed between the gables of the front,
but all the lancets are pointed, and there are little gables above each. This
tower was once surmounted by a wooden spire. When this was erected does not seem
to be known. It was not of particularly graceful design, judging from views of
the cathedral taken when it was standing. It was removed in the early part of
the last century (see page 25).
Passing
round to the north side of the cathedral we are at once struck with the beauty
of the termination of the western transept. The arcading on the north side of
the tower of the front is identical with that on the west side; but to the east
there is only arcading in the three upper stages. Mr. Paley's remarks upon the
great windows of the western transept may be quoted. He says[24] they
"deserve particularexamination,
not only because they are very early and fine specimens of cusped and traceried
windows—indeed, among the best in the kingdom—but for a remarkable peculiarity
in the jambs; whereof one side is Norman, with the square capitals to the
jamb-shafts both within and without, and the other Early English, as are the
arch-mouldings and hoods round the whole arches, which were probably
semicircular at first, for at present the point cuts through a stringcourse
inside. The frames of the entire windows are later work, having no attachment
or bonding to the jambs, as is clearly manifested to the eye." These
windows rise as high as the top of those of the triforium. Above is a
round-headed window with a slightly smaller arch on each side, with cushion
capitals. The gable itself is designedly made to resemble one of the gables of
the west front. It is surmounted by a cross, and bordered by the wavy ornament;
it has a rose window; and beneath is an arcade of five round-headed trefoiled
arches supported by shafts, having at the inner wall three lancet windows. The
circular window is without tracery; it has twelve cusps. At each side of the
gable is a pinnacle, almost a copy of those on the front, except that the
lowest stage is here octagonal instead of square.
On the north side of the nave
is a single door, now called the Dean's door, of good Norman work.
On each side are three shafts with cushion capitals slightly ornamented; and in
the round arches above are different mouldings of the style. The windows to the
aisle, ten in number, are very broad, of five lights each, under depressed
arches. The tracery and mouldings indicate that these were substituted for the
original windows towards the close of the thirteenth century. At the same time
it would seem that the walls above, in the triforium range, were heightened,
because the parapet at the top is of Early English work, although the
three-light windows beneath it are Decorated, and were not inserted until the
next century. At the foot of the triforium range is the original Norman arcade
of round-headed arches: below the existing Decorated windows is now a blank
space of wall, where at first was the Norman window, rising somewhat higher
than the arcade. What the original arrangement was can be seen on the east side
of the north transept. The Norman clerestory range has been altered only by
having Perpendicular tracery put in the windows, and
by the addition of a Decorated parapet. The original corbel-table was allowed
to remain.
The Lantern-tower has on each
face two large windows with transoms, of three lights. The tracery is that
known as net-tracery. Between these windows is a blank window, if the term may
be allowed; the tracery exists, but there never was
a window; it is in four divisions; while between the windows and the corner
turrets are similar traceries of two parts. The whole is surmounted by a
parapet above a plain arcade. The corner turrets are octangular. As at present
finished at the top there is undoubtedly an appearance of their being incomplete.
The west side of the North
Transept is a very excellent specimen of Norman work; and we find less
change here than in any other part of the cathedral that belongs to the same
period. The tracery of the windows is Perpendicular, but the windows themselves
are otherwise unaltered: at the top of all is a Decorated parapet, which is
here composed of a series of quatrefoils; and the parapet to the corner turrets
is not Norman. As there is no aisle on the west side of this transept, there
has been no alteration in the wall, as was the case with the nave aisles.
The north end of the transept
is similar; but the shallow buttresses between the windows rise to a greater
height, and there is another arcade above the upper tier of windows, and a
blank arch in the gable. The gable has crockets, and a cross at the apex. The
lower Norman window in the aisle here is unlike any others on this side of the
church, but there are four others like it on the south. The upper aisle window
here is of three lights, with a large pointed trefoil above them instead of
tracery.
The east wall of this transept
is specially worthy of note. We can trace the lines of the roof of the Lady
Chapel which formerly stood to the east of the wall; and beneath this are two
bays of the original triforium range, showing two of the simple Norman windows.
Between these and the roof are six Early English lancets. Below are the upper
parts of the two great arches which were constructed as an entrance to the Lady
Chapel. When the Lady Chapel was pulled down in the seventeenth century these
were converted into windows filled with late tracery in imitation of
Perpendicular work, and the lower part was walled up, except that a doorway was
constructed. This was afterwards blocked up for many years, and only reopened
during the recent restoration works. The same alteration has been effected in
the western part of the choir aisle, the arches towards the Lady Chapel having
been in like manner made into windows. The lower window nearest the tower is a
very graceful geometric window of three lights, exactly like the three in the
south transept; the window
above is of the same period as all the other Decorated windows of the triforium
range.
Between the Lady Chapel and
the north aisle of the choir was a passage (to which the two great arches were
open), and at the eastern end of it was a small vaulted chapel, the remains of
which are clearly to be seen, including the broken piscina. Above this were
chambers, concerning which Gunton[25] has
preserved a tradition that they were "the habitation of a devout Lady,
called Agnes, or Dame Agnes, out of whose Lodging-Chamber there was a hole made
askew in the window walled up, having its prospect just upon the altar of the
Ladies Chappel, and no more. It seems she was devout in her generation, that
she chose this place for her retirement, and was desirous that her eyes, as
well as ears, might wait upon her publick Devotions." He says also that
little is known of her except that she was a benefactress to the church, and
that a wood she bestowed upon it is still called by her name.
At the extreme east is the New Building. Its side
walls are built in continuation of the walls of the choir aisles, and it has a
square end. It is lit by thirteen large windows, all of the same design, of
which the five at the east end, and the two most western of the sides, are of
four lights each, the remaining four having three lights each. Between each pair
of the latter there is no buttress; there are thus in all twelve buttresses,
six being at the east end. These are massive, having to support the heavy
fan-tracery within. Each buttress has a seated figure at the top, commonly
believed to represent an Apostle; but the outlines are much worn, and it is not
possible to distinguish them by any symbols they may bear. There is a very
handsome open parapet, adorned with ornaments and shields bearing letters or
monograms.
The parapet of quatrefoils,
which runs round the sides of the transepts and choir, is not continued in the
apse; an Early English parapet, with five circular medallions cusped, having
been erected previously. The Decorated windows of the apse are particularly
fine. The arcade beneath the upper tier, unlike the arcade in similar positions
in other parts of the church, is here intersecting.
The three beautiful geometric
windows in the east wall of the South Transept,
which have three circles in the heads with five cusps, are most likely of
exactly the same design as the windows in the demolished Lady Chapel. At the
south end of this transept is a Norman door, and outside are the remains of a
short covered passage which communicated with the cloisters. These will be
described hereafter.
The south side of the nave
differs only from the north side in its having two doorways from the cloisters,
in the superior elegance of the south-west spire, and in the unfinished state
of the south-west tower. The portion of this tower above the roof Mr Paley
pronounces, from the details of the windows on the east side, to be of much
later date than the other tower; and he adds that it is hard to see how the
roof of the transept was terminated before this stage was built to abut it.
Both towers are longer from east to west than from north to south.
Of the two doorways from the
cloister to the cathedral, that at the east end of the north walk, which is
called the Canons' door, is a fine specimen of Norman work. The arch is of four
orders supported by nook-shafts with plain cushion-capitals. The innermost
order has a very uncommon moulding—large chevrons with a fleur-de-lis in the
angles. The outermost order has a double zigzag moulding, and a double-billet
hood moulding surrounds the whole arch. The other archway at the west end,
called the Bishop's door, is an insertion of the thirteenth century, with bold
tooth-ornament on each side.
CHAPTER III.
THE CATHEDRAL—INTERIOR.
The plan of the Monastery given
on page 58 has been taken from one prepared by the late Precentor Walcott of
Chichester, and communicated to "The Building News," in 1878. In this
plan the choir is represented as it was arranged in olden times, and not as it
appeared after it was shortened by the erection of the organ-screen under the
eastern arch of the tower in Dean Monk's time. The position of the ancient
buildings is also indicated, though some of them, as the Lady Chapel,
Dormitory, Chapter-house and Infirmary Chapel, have long been destroyed. The
various portions will be understood by the following references.
(1)
|
New Building.
|
(2)
|
Reredos, or Altar-screen.
|
(3)
|
Screens. Recent discoveries have proved that the choir
aisles originally ended, or at least were designed to end, in apses.
|
(4)
|
High Altar.
|
(5)
|
Entry to passage to Lady Chapel; a small chapel to the
east.
|
(6)
|
Lady Chapel.
|
(7)
|
Door to it from north transept aisle.
|
(8)
|
Chapel of S. John.
|
(9)
|
Chapel of S. James.
|
(10)
|
Chapel of S. Oswald, the Holy Trinity Chapel above it.
|
(11)
|
Chapel of S. Benedict.
|
(12)
|
Chapel of SS. Kyneburga and Kyneswitha, sisters of Peada
and Wulfere, the original founders of the monastery.
|
(13)
|
Choir.
|
(14)
|
Sacristy.
|
(15)
|
Choir-screen.
|
(16)
|
Front of rood-loft.
|
(17)
|
Nave.
|
(18)
|
Gate to grave-yard.
|
(19)
|
Gate to Prior's lodging.
|
(20)
|
Minster close.
|
(21)
|
Gatehouse to Abbot's lodging, with the Knights' chamber
above.
|
(22)
|
Chancel of the chapel of S. Thomas of Canterbury.
|
(23)
|
Great gateway of the close.
|
(24, 25)
|
Doorways from the cloisters.
|
(26)
|
Slype.
|
(27)
|
Parlour.
|
(28)
|
Chapter-house.
|
(29)
|
Porch.
|
(30)
|
Dormitory.
|
(31)
|
Cloisters.
|
(32)
|
Lavatory.
|
(33)
|
Refectory.
|
|
Dark entry.
|
(35)
|
Gong.
|
(36)
|
Kitchen.
|
(37)
|
Abbot's lodging.
|
(38)
|
Prior's lodging.
|
(39)
|
Infirmarer's hall.
|
(40)
|
Chapel to Infirmary, dedicated to S. Laurence.
|
(41)
|
The chancel, and (42) the nave of this chapel.
|
(43)
|
Hall of Infirmary, the inmates occupying the aisles.
|
(44)
|
Door to Infirmary.
|
(45)
|
Precinct wall and stables.
|
The
building close to the south side of the Infirmary, not numbered in this plan,
is an ancient residence now used as a dwelling for one of the canons in
residence. The small building south-west of the
front is an old vaulted room, now used as a clerk's office, originally believed
to have been the Penitentiary. The old abbey gaol has escaped notice, though it
in part remains. Its door is immediately to the right upon entering the close
through the great gateway.
The Interior.—With few exceptions, to be noticed in due course, the whole of
the interior of the cathedral is in the Norman style, and many judge it to be
the most perfect specimen in England. The plan consists of a nave of ten bays,
with aisles, and a western transept; transepts of four bays with eastern
chapels, the south transept having also a groined chamber to the west,
extending for its whole length; a choir of four bays, terminating in an apse,
nearly semicircular, with aisles; and beyond the apse a large square-ended
addition for more chapels, having a groined stone roof of fan tracery, now
known as the New Building. The ritual choir, as distinguished from the
architectural choir, extends two bays into the nave. This arrangement is a
return to the ancient one used by the Benedictines, the choir in Dean Monk's
alterations having been limited to the portion east of the central tower.
As we enter at the west door
we see at a glance the entire length, and the whole beauty of the admirable
proportion of the several parts. While many may wish that the great arches of
the tower which can be seen from the west end had never been altered from the
round form of the Norman builders, few will regret that the Decorated arches
which took their place were retained when the tower was rebuilt, instead of
having new arches in the Norman style substituted. The want of colour which is
so marked a defect in many English cathedrals is not so conspicuous here,
because of the painted ceiling.
The Norman work being in the
main so complete, it will be best to begin the description where the building
itself was begun, at the apse. At the west door we stand where the work was
finished. We know when the building commenced, in 1117, but we do not know
exactly when the whole was finished to the western wall; but, speaking roughly,
though not very far from the truth, we may say that the minster took eighty
years to complete. This may be slightly more than was actually taken. During
that time the work was not continuous: there were some Abbots who appear to
have done little or nothing towards extending the works, and sometimes
accordingly there was an entire cessation from active operations. Including the west front, we should have to assign nearly
120 years to the completion of the building.
The Choir.—Up to the commencement of the apse the choir is of four bays.
The pillars are alternately round and with eight or twelve sides; all have
cushioned capitals, indented to agree with the mouldings above; all had a shaft
on the inner side rising to the roof, to support the wooden groining, but the
lower parts of some of these shafts were cut away to make room for the woodwork
of Dean Monk's choir. The ornamentation throughout is plentiful, but we see
nothing but the billet, the chevron, and the hatchet moulding, all indicative
of early work. The triforium has two recessed arches, beneath the principal
arch, divided by a plain shaft. It is specially to be noticed that all the
tympana in the triforium range are differently ornamented. In each bay of the
clerestory range are three arches, one large and two small ones; the capitals
to the shafts have the plain cushion (as in the triforium) and from these shafts
a narrower arch connects them with the outer wall. There is a passage here all
round the choir. Below the triforium a stringcourse of chevrons runs all along.
Between the
choir bays and the apse is solid wall, rather longer than the distance between
the central lines of adjoining piers. Here are two massive half-pillars,
reaching to the roof, undoubtedly meant to be crowned with a round arch like
those to the transepts; and this seems to shew that the intention was to vault
the apse with stone. The apse is by far the best large Norman apse remaining in
this country. At Norwich, where is the only possible rival, the lower part only
is semicircular and original, the whole of the upper part being of Decorated
date, and pentagonal. This apse is in five divisions, separated by clustered
shafts which rise to the roof. Originally there were three tiers of
round-headed Norman windows; the nine windows in the centre were enlarged and
filled with very good tracery in the Decorated period, and the lower windows
also on the other two sides. When, in the Perpendicular age, the new building
was added, the three lowest windows were removed altogether and the wall
beneath them, leaving three open arches. The inner wall surface of the five
lowest windows has been filled with elegant hanging tracery of fourteenth
century date, the designs being all different. In some cases this tracery is
placed just below
the Norman stringcourse, but in others the stringcourse has been removed to
make room for it. There was no necessity to convert the two lowest side windows
into arches; and they accordingly remain there to this day; but being no longer
exposed to the outer air all the glass is gone, though the notches that held
it, and the strong bars that protected it, have been suffered to stay. There
was never any ambulatoryround the apse outside; we can
still see, from the new building, portions of a stringcourse which was
external, as well as other evidences that the apse was the end of the church.
It is also known that there was a highway at the east end of the church, almost
touching it. In the stage corresponding to the triforium are to be seen on the
walls the remains of painted coats of arms, the shape of the shield suggesting
that they are as early as the thirteenth century; some also have been cut in
half by the later Decorated alterations.
The choir
roof is vaulted in wood. In the time of Dean Saunders it was repainted with
gold and colours. From the character of the bosses, and the capitals where the
wood is joined to the tall shafts rising from the pillars in the choir, and
from the general ornamentation, it is manifest that this was constructed
towards the end of the fifteenth century. It was at one time painted all over
yellow and white. The carving of the different bosses is well worth attention.
There has not been discovered any mark or initials that might help us to assign
a positive date. We can see, among other designs, the cross keys of the patron
Saint; the Saviour on the Cross accompanied by S. Mary and S. John (this is in
the central line, near the tower); three lilies; three fishes with intersecting
tails. The roof over the apse is flat. It has been decorated from a design by
Sir G.G. Scott, with an emblematical representation of Christ as a Vine, the
Disciples being half-figures in medallions among the foliage. An inscription
bearing upon the subject forms the border. The general effect will be like,
though not identical with, the original painting in this place. This was one of
the decorations of the church that excited the fury of the soldiers and others
who dismantled the minster in the civil war in the seventeenth century.
"This is the Idol they worship and adore" was the cry of some of the
party; upon which muskets were discharged, and the picture wholly defaced. The description
of the design is given in these words:[26] "Over
this place" (that is, the altar-screen) "in the Roof of the Church,
in a large Oval yet to be seen, was the Picture of our Saviour seated on a
Throne, one hand erected, and holding a Globe in the other: attended with the
four Evangelists and Saints on each side, with Crowns in their hands; intended,
I suppose, for a Representation of our Saviour's coming to judgment."
The flat roof of the apse being lower than the
roof of the choir, the space between the levels is
filled with twelve painted figures.
The whole of the internal
fittings of the choir (speaking now of the ritual choir) are new, and are part
of the recent restoration. The new woodwork began to be placed in position in
1890. There is indeed a little old work, which was in the old choir before it
was altered in the early part of this century. When removed, some of the front
desks had been placed in the morning chapel, though much of the projecting
tracery work was taken off. It was realised, when the existing stall-work was
being designed, that these would be very suitable for use in their old
position. Accordingly, all that could be so used have been placed again in the
choir, with their traceried panels restored; and the new work is made of the
same character. The New Stalls are of the finest oak, with
miserere seats; the backs have rich tracery, with raised shields, moulded
groined ceilings, and carved bosses at the intersection of the ribs. They are
surmounted by octagonal canopies, in three stages, the uppermost containing a
niche for a carved figure to each stall, while other figures, of much smaller
size, are to be seen below. A few have at the back the armorial bearings of the
donor, or some other symbol, such as the masonic emblems in those given by the
Freemasons of England. The names of the cathedral officers and others to whom
the different stalls are assigned, have been inscribed on the label at the head
of each; the donor's name is recorded on the seats.
With the exception of the
first figure, the whole of the larger figures at the top of the canopies have
some special connection with the monastery or the cathedral. Beginning at the
Dean's stall, and proceeding eastwards, the statues on the south side represent
the following:—
|
Two at the summit of the Dean's stall, SS. Paul and
Andrew.
|
1.
|
S. Peter, the Patron Saint.
|
2.
|
Saxulf (656), the first Abbot.
|
3.
|
Adulf (971), Abbot, afterwards Archbishop of York.
|
4.
|
Kenulf (992), Abbot, afterwards Bishop of Winchester.
|
5.
|
Leofric (1057), Abbot.
|
6.
|
Turold (1069), Abbot, appointed by William the Conqueror.
|
7.
|
Ernulf (1107), Abbot, afterwards Bishop of Rochester.
|
|
Martin de Bee (1133), Abbot when the choir was dedicated.
|
9.
|
Benedict (1175), Abbot. He built the greater part, if not
all, of the nave.
|
10.
|
Martin of Ramsey (1226), Abbot.
|
11.
|
John of Calais (1249), Abbot. He built the infirmary,
probably the refectory, and part of the cloisters.
|
12.
|
Richard of London (1274), Abbot. He built the
north-western tower.
|
13.
|
Adam of Boothby (1321), Abbot.
|
14.
|
William Genge (1396), first mitred Abbot.
|
15.
|
Richard Ashton (1438), Abbot. He began the new building.
|
16.
|
Robert Kirton (1496), Abbot. He finished the new
building, and built the Deanery gateway.
|
17.
|
John Towers (1638), Bishop. Previously Dean (1630).
|
18.
|
Thomas White (1685), Bishop. Nonjuror.
|
19.
|
William Connor Magee (1868), Bishop, afterwards
Archbishop of York.
|
20.
|
Simon Patrick (1679), Dean, afterwards Bishop of
Chichester, and finally of Ely.
|
21.
|
Augustus Page Saunders (1853), Dean.
|
22.
|
John James Stewart Perowne (1878), Dean, afterwards
Bishop of Worcester.
|
The upper figures on the north
side are these:—
|
Two at the summit of the Vice-Dean's stall, Kings Wolfere
and Ethelred.[27]
|
1.
|
Peada, King of Mercia, founder of the monastery.
|
2.
|
Cuthbald (675), second Abbot.
|
3.
|
Edgar, King of Mercia and Wessex, restorer of the
monastery.
|
4.
|
Ethelfleda, his queen.
|
5.
|
Brando (1066), Abbot.
|
6.
|
Hereward, the Saxon patriot (1070), nephew of Abbot
Brando, and knighted by him.
|
7.
|
John deSais (1114), Abbot. He commenced the building of
the existing choir.
|
|
Hedda (died 870), Abbot, murdered by the Danes.
|
9.
|
Robert of Lindsey (1214), Abbot. He holds a model of the
west front, probably built or begun in his time.
|
10.
|
Godfrey of Crowland (1299), Abbot. He bears a model of
the gateway to the palace grounds.
|
11.
|
William Ramsey (1471), Abbot. He was one of the donors of
the brass eagle lectern still in use.
|
12.
|
William Parys (died 1286), Prior. He built the Lady
Chapel.
|
13.
|
S. Giles, the famous Benedictine Abbot, with his tame
hind beside him.
|
14.
|
Hugo Candidus, the chronicler.
|
15.
|
Henry of Overton (1361), Abbot.
|
16.
|
Queen Katherine of Arragon.
|
17.
|
John Cosin (1640), Dean, afterwards Bishop of Durham.
|
18.
|
Simon Gunton (1646), Prebendary, the historian of the
church.
|
19.
|
Herbert Marsh (1819), Bishop.
|
20.
|
George Davys (1839), Bishop.
|
21.
|
James Henry Monk (1822), Dean, afterwards Bishop of
Gloucester and Bristol.
|
22.
|
Marsham Argles (1891), Dean. Previously Canon (1849).
|
The dates in the above lists,
unless stated otherwise, are the dates of appointment. With the single
exception of Henry of Overton, of whom very little indeed is known except that
he was abbot for nearly thirty years, the selection that has been made appears
to be very good. In some way or other all the persons represented are eminent. The
authorities are to be congratulated upon their including in the series several
dignitaries of the last century.
The smaller figures on the
south side are all characters from the New Testament; those on the north side
are taken from the Old Testament. The carving on the sides of the two
westernmost stalls is of great interest. The panels on the south represent the
miraculous preservation of the arm of S. Oswald. This arm was one of the
greatest treasures of the house, and was reputed to be the cause of many cures.
The legend is given hereafter in the notice of Abbot Elsinus, the great
collector of relics. In the corresponding position on the north side is
represented the story of S. Ethelwold, Bishop of
Winchester. On the back of the stalls in the south aisle are two pieces of
tapestry, picturing the release of S. Peter and the healing of the lame man at
the Gate Beautiful.
The carving on the Pulpit and Throne will
repay careful study. In the niches at the base of the pulpit are four abbots,
chiefly connected with the erection of the building. They are John de Sais, who
holds a model of the apse, Martin de Bec, William of Waterville, and Walter of
S. Edmunds. Round the main body of the pulpit are four saints in niches, SS.
Peter, Paul, John and James, each easily identified by what is held in the
hand. Between these niches are wide panels carved with subjects associated with
preaching. Abbot Saxulf preaching to the Mercians; Christ sending forth the
Apostles; S. Peter preaching after the descent of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost.
The throne is raised on three
steps. Above the canopy is a lofty spire. On the sides of the seat are SS.
Peter and Paul. On the book board are symbolical representations of the virtues
of Temperance, Wisdom, Fortitude, and Justice. In the lower tier on the canopy
are six figures: Saxulf, first Abbot; Cuthwin, first Bishop of Leicester; John
de Sais; Benedict; S. Hugh, Bishop of Lincoln, his hand resting on the head of
his tame swan; and John Chambers, last Abbot and first Bishop of Peterborough.
In the upper tier are four Bishops: Bishop Dove, the theologian; Bishop
Cumberland, the philosopher; Bishop Kennett, the antiquary; and Archbishop
Magee, the orator.
One of the statues over the
stalls, that representing S. Giles, has also a figure of a hind; in the
representation of S. Hugh of Lincoln on the throne we see a swan. The hind was
really a type of solitude and purity of life, and as such is found in many
ancient carvings and paintings accompanying various Saints. There is also a
legend specially connecting this creature with S. Giles. In a retreat in a
forest in the diocese of Nismes, the recluse, with one companion, is said to
have lived on the fruits of the earth and the milk of a hind. Some dogs that
were out hunting pursued this hind, and she took refuge in the dwelling of the
Saint. The sportsman, Flavius Wamba, King of the Goths, treated him with every
mark of respect, and gave him land wherewith to endow a monastery. Of S. Hugh's
swan a long account is given in the "Vita S. Hugonis Lincolniensis"
published in the Rolls Series. A swan never before seen at the place flew to
the Bishop at his manor at Stowe directly after he had been enthroned at
Lincoln. He became passionately attached to the bishop, but exhibited no liking
for anyone else, he considered himself bound to protect his master, driving
other people away from him, "As I myself,"
writes Giraldus Cambrensis, "have often with wonder seen," with his
wings and beak.
The Organ was rebuilt in 1894 by
Hill and Son at a cost, including the case, of £4,400, and at the expense of
the late Mr. W.H. Foster of Witley, Surrey, though his name, at his own wish,
remained undisclosed during his lifetime. The action is now controlled by
electricity.
The Great, Swell, Solo, and
Pedal Organ (except the two stops Bourdon and Bass Flute of the last) are
placed in four bays of the north triforium of the nave; the choir organ and the
two Pedal stops are in the first bay of the north aisle, and the Console in the
second bay behind the stalls. There are 68 speaking stops and 4,453 pipes as
follows:
Portion
|
Stops
|
Pipes
|
Great Organ (Compass CC to C in Alt.)
|
17
|
1,342
|
Choir
|
11
|
671
|
Swell
|
17
|
1,330
|
Solo
|
11
|
720
|
Pedal (Compass CCCC to F)
|
12
|
390
|
The Canopied
Reredos or Baldachino was given
by the eight surviving children of Dean Saunders as a memorial of their
parents. The retable was given by the Old Boys of the King's School. The
reredos is a magnificent erection, and renders the east end of this cathedral
one of the most dignified in the kingdom. The daïs on which it stands is
thirteen feet square, and the summit reaches to the height of thirty-five feet.
Four large marble columns stand at the corners, from the capitals of which
spring cusped arches, the spandrels being enriched with mosaic; while at the angles,
above the columns, are figures of the Evangelists in niches. The large central
panel in front has the figure of Our Lord; at the back is S. Peter. The
material is Derbyshire alabaster; the work was executed by Mr Robert Davison,
of London.
The Mosaic Pavement, also the work of
Mr Davison, was the gift of the late Dean and Miss Argles. The following
description of it is from the pen of Mr Davison.
"Passing into the choir
from the west, the pavement between the stalls is of tesselated Roman mosaic,
in an effective geometrical pattern of squares, and oblongs of red, green and
white marbles. The first bay of the chancel is also
in Roman mosaic, but of more elaborate design, the central portion being a
framework of interlacing cream bands, forming diamond shaped panels alternating
with circles, the centres of these panels being varied reds and greens; the
framework surrounds four large panels of Pavonazzo d'Italie, each in six slabs.
This is a beautiful marble of feathery purple grey veinings on a creamy white
ground. This central part is flanked on each side by a broad band of the same
Pavonazzo, which separates it from the large side panels of a bold design of
squares of red, green and cream placed diagonally, interlaced by white bands;
upon these panels stand the pulpit on the north side, and the bishop's throne
on the south. This bay is approached from the choir by the first marble step
which is in Frosterley, a marble with beautiful madrepores of light colour on a
dark ground. The next bay is of similar design to the first, but is approached
by two steps of Levanto marble of reddish brown tint with small veinings of
white. The third and fourth bays are in a marble mosaic called Opus
Alexandrinum, composed of various rich marbles of brilliant reds, greens,
greys, yellows, and creams, divided into the main
design by bands of Pavonazzo. The design of the third bay is divided into three
equal panels, in the centre of which are four large slabs of Cipolino, a
charming marble of a light green tint in broad wavy lines on a lighter ground,
which are framed in by a combination of small panels of mosaic of varied rich
patterns of triangles and squares, which are again enclosed by a broad border
of mosaic of white squares on a ground of light green Vert de Suède. The step
up to this bay, and also the step to the next and to the altar pace, all of
which stretch the full length of the chancel, as well as the three steps to the
altar daïs, are in carefully selected Pavonazzo. The design of the fourth bay
is a system of interlacing bands, forming alternately large and small octagons,
between which are squares and oblongs. The small octagons are rich plaques of
marble, while the large ones are divided radially into eight panels. All these
parts are filled with mosaic of varying patterns and colours. At each end of
this bay is a long panel of overlapping circles, filled in with rich mosaic.
The panel on the altar pace and the three panels on the altar daïs are in the
same mosaic, each of a different design; the long plaques of marble in the
upper panel are red and green of rich dark marbles. The two panels at the side
of the daïs are in opus sectile, a design of hexagons of Pavonazzo, with
diamonds of Vert des Alpes between them. The broad band of red, the whole
length of the chancel on the outsides of the pavement, is of Levanto marble,
forming a finish to the work."
The Screens, enclosing the four eastern bays of the choir, were given as a
public memorial to Dean Argles. They are of very admirable wrought-iron. The
same may be said of the choir gates. The former are the work of White &
Son, of London; the latter of Singer & Son, of Frome. The short pillars
that support the choir gates, and the unrelieved backs of the returned stalls,
have at present the unsatisfactory appearance of all unfinished work. A drawing
of the complete design is exhibited in a frame on an adjacent pillar.
The single ancient object
among the fittings in the choir is the brass eagle Lectern. This was given to
the monastery by William Ramsey, Abbot, and John Malden, Prior; it is
consequently of late fifteenth century date. An
inscription recording the names of the donors, in two Latin lines, was engraved
round a projection in the middle of the stem. Centuries of hard scouring have
obliterated this; but the upper and lower ends of most of the letters can just
be traced. An expert can satisfy himself that the inscription as preserved by
Gunton is practically correct. It seems to have been this, though it is not
possible to vouch for every letter.
Hæc tibi lectrina dant Petre
metallica binaIohes Malden prior et Wills de Ramiseya.
Besides the donors already
named, the following became contributors for special objects, many of them
having in addition given substantial assistance in money to the restoration
fund. The choir pulpit, Bishop's throne, and the cost of cleaning the whitewash
from the nave were given by Dean Argles. Enlargement of foot-pace, and
extension of mosaic pavement, by Mrs Argles. Decoration of ceiling of lantern
tower, and new frames for the bells, by Mr H.P. Gates, Chapter Clerk. Litany
desk, by Mrs Rigg. Altar ornaments, by Canon Alderson. The 44 stalls were given
by Archbishop Magee, Lady Elizabeth Villiers (7), Lady Louisa Wells, Mr H.P.
Gates, Friends of Canon Clayton, Family of Canon Pratt, Hon. Canon Willes, Hon.
Canon Twells, an ex-chorister of the cathedral, Mr James Bristow, Mr. W.U.
Heygate, Mr S.G. Stopford-Sackville, Mrs Yard, Mr J.D. Goodman, Miss Pears, Mrs
Perry Herrick, Mrs W.L. Collins and Mrs H.L. Hansel, Mr Albert Pell, Mrs Dawson
Rowley, The Mayor and Corporation, Mr F. James, the Freemasons of England (3),
Friends of Lady Isham and Miss Perowne (2), Rev. W.R.P. Waudby, Mr G.L. Watson,
Major-General Sotheby, Mrs Hunt, Rev. A. Redifer, Mr J.G. Dearden, Mrs
Percival, the Misses Broughton, Rev. S.A.T. Yates (in memory of Mr Charles
Davys Argles), Rev. W.H. Cooper, Mr T.A. Argles, Mrs Argles.
The choir aisles are vaulted;
the section of the vaulting ribs is much heavier than in the aisles of the
nave, and shews an earlier date. It has recently been discovered that these
aisles, contrary to what was usually believed, were terminated with apses and
were not square-ended. In the south aisle is traced on the floor the position
of the old semicircular ending. The windows here
were altered at the same time as those in the nave aisles: but in the north
choir aisle the windows were taken out and arches formed leading to the passage
between this aisle and the Lady Chapel, the most western arch being
Perpendicular: in the seventeenth century, when the Lady Chapel was pulled
down, these arches were again filled up with masonry and windows. The third
window in this aisle has escaped alteration in form; but Perpendicular tracery
has been inserted.
The eastern ends of both
aisles were altered in Early English times. They have now a groined roof of one
bay of that period, and very handsome double piscinas. The aumbry on the north
side in the south choir aisle has been glazed, and is utilised as a cupboard to
hold some curiosities. In the north choir aisle there is an approach to the
morning chapel through a screen; but in the south choir aisle the corresponding
space is filled by a Norman monumental arch.
The New Building built beyond the apse is a very noble specimen of late
Perpendicular work. It was begun by Abbot Richard Ashton (1438-1471), and
completed by Abbot Robert Kirton (1496-1528): the works seem to have been
suspended between these periods. The roof has the beautiful fan tracery, very
similar on a smaller scale to that at King's College Chapel at Cambridge. The
building is of the width of the choir and aisles together. It contained three
altars at the date of the suppression of monasteries, "upon each altar a
Table of the Passion of Christ, Gilt."
The central bay has been
recently fitted up for early celebrations of the Holy Communion. The junction
of this addition with the original Norman apse is admirable, and should be
specially noticed. Parts of the original external stringcourse of the apse can
be seen. The ornamentation on the bosses of the roof, and in the cavetto below
the windows, and round the great arches from the choir aisles, is very varied.
It must be sufficient here to indicate some of the designs. Most need little
explanation, but a few are hard to understand. On the roof may be seen the
three lions of England, a cross between four martlets, three crowns each
pierced by an arrow, and another design. The smaller designs include
four-leaved flowers, Tudor roses, fleurs-de-lys, the portcullis, some
undescribable creatures, crossed keys, crossed swords, crossed
crosiers, crosses, crowns, crowns pierced with arrows, crowned female heads, an
eagle, the head of the Baptist in a charger, an angel, mitres, three feathers
rising from a crown, S. Andrew's cross, and perhaps others. There are also some
rebuses, and some lettering. On the north wall, in six several squares, are the
letters of the name Ashton interwoven with scrolls; the letters AR before a
church, and a bird on a tun occur more than once. This certainly refers to
Abbot Robert Kirton; but what the bird means is not clear. In the moulding over
the large arch to the south choir aisle are four sets of letters. They form the
last verse of the psalter. The words are contracted: they stand for Omnis
spiritus laudet Dominum.
The Transepts, including the arch to the aisles, are of four bays, and, as has
before been pointed out, are of precisely the same character as the work in the
choir. The central piers here are octagonal. All round the Norman portion of
the church, below the windows, is an arcade of round arches with simple round
mouldings and plain cushion capitals: in the transepts these have not
intersecting heads, as in the choir and nave. The western sides of the
transepts have no proper triforium, but a passage runs along in front of the
windows in the triforium range. The chapels to the east have Perpendicular
screens. In the north transept those three chapels were made into one which was
used for early service, and called the morning chapel. We read in the chapter
records of a minor canon being appointed to read the prayers at 6 o'clock, and
once at least the hour is named as 5 o'clock, in the morning. This chapel was
fitted up with some of the desks from the choir; and, judging from a number of
names and initials that had been cut upon the desks, it has been conjectured
that it was at one time used for the chapel of the King's School. At the north
end is a desk for the reader or readers made out of two Early English stalls;
there are three double shafts with admirably carved wooden foliage in the
capitals. A very fine little Norman door leads to the staircase to the
triforium. It should be mentioned that in the triforium is arranged an
excellent series of stones, fragments, mouldings, and various ornaments, found
in different places during the recent restoration.
The series
of basins of Alwalton marble was found, during the recent underpinning of the
west front, in use as foundation stones; they appear to
be of late Norman date. One window in the north transept aisle and all three in
the south have fine geometrical tracery. The three chapels in the south
transept were used as vestries until a few years ago, when the space beneath
the bell-tower and part of the north aisle of the nave was converted into a
large vestry for both clergy and choir. In the chapel
here nearest the choir there remains the lower part of the newel staircase
which led to an upper chapel. On the west side of the south transept has been
erected a building which has in its time served many different purposes. It can
hardly be called an aisle, as there is only access to the transept by a single
ogee-headed doorway, which is a Decorated insertion. This building is of late,
almost transition, Norman date; and is not very many years later than the
transept itself. It can be seen from the cloister court that it had originally
three gables. The roof is vaulted. In an inventory of goods made in 1539,
printed in Gunton, there is one chapel described as the "Ostrie
Chapel," which is believed to refer to this building. In a plan drawn in
Bishop Kennett's time and dedicated to him, the south part is called "The
Hostry Chapel, now the Chapter-House," and the north part is called the
"Chapel of St. Sprite or the Holy Ghost." In some plans it is called
the vestry. It has also been employed as a muniment room, as a Chapter-house,
and (as now) as a practising room for the choir.
Near the south-western pier of the central tower access can be
obtained to what remains of the Saxon Church. It
was when the foundations of this pier were reached, in 1883, that the first
indications of an earlier building were brought to light. First a solid piece
of wall was discovered, and soon after a substantial piece of plaster attached
to the wall, running north and south, which has since proved to be the eastern
wall of the north transept of the Saxon Church. The workmen also came upon a
plaster floor, on which were remains of burnt wood, reddened stone, and other
evidences of a conflagration. As the work of excavation proceeded at intervals,
fresh discoveries were made. The walls of the north transept, choir, and part
of the south transept, can be traced. Just outside the eastern wall can be seen
portions of two Saxon tombs which were originally in the grave-yard.
The width of both choir and
transepts is about 23 feet. The choir was not apsidal. The south wall of the
south transept was just beyond the wall of the existing building; the extreme
east end was almost exactly underneath the pillars in the present transept; the
west wall of the south transept of the Saxon church was under the practising
room; the nave extended into the cloister court.
Near the south end of the excavations was discovered a portion of a Saxon
altar in situ. No remains have been found of the nave (see
plan, p. 9).
The roofs of both transepts
are flat, and, except where rotten boards have been replaced, original. They
are now uncoloured, but formerly were painted in black and white diamond
patterns. All the windows at the north and south ends are Norman, with
Perpendicular tracery.
The lantern
tower has a fine groined roof, carefully restored and well painted. In the
centre is a representation of the Saviour; eight coloured shields have the
emblems of the Passion; four have the evangelistic symbols.
The Nave, notwithstanding the years it took to build, the change of
architecture that was coming into use as it was being finished, and the
alteration in plan that was decided upon towards the end, is a very complete
and almost uniform structure. There are ten bays, all having round arches; in
the triforium each large arch has two smaller ones beneath it; and in each bay
of the clerestory is one high arch and twosmaller ones.
The triforium arches in the two easternmost bays, on both sides, have the
hatchet ornamentation in the tympanum; this may either mark the limits of the
old Benedictine choir, or may simply suggest earlier work. Almost the only
indication of distinct later work, as we proceed towards the west, is in the
different forms of the bases of the piers. The arcading of the aisles curiously
changes towards the west in both aisles, but not at
corresponding points; the change consists in the reversing the interlacing of
the arches. The third pillars from the west end on either side are not really,
strictly speaking, pillars at all. They were built as supports to two western
towers which it was intended certainly to erect at this point, even if they
were not at least in part built. There are many other little details in the
neighbourhood of these piers, all confirming Mr Paley's discovery with respect
to these contemplated towers, one at any rate of which he thinks was actually
erected. The pillars are cylindrical with numerous attached shafts. In addition
to the changed form of the bases, careful observers can detect proofs of later
work in the capitals of the shafts in the triforium. In front of each pier a
shaft rises to the roof; and on these the original ceiling rested. On some of
the piers in the south aisle, near the west end, may be seen several very
curious masons' marks. In the nave is a very massive pulpit given in 1873 by
the family of Dr James, for forty years Canon, bearing an inscription to his
memory. It is from the design of Mr Edward Barry,
and was meant to be in keeping with the Norman architecture of the nave. The
central shaft is of Devonshire marble, the main body of the pulpit of red
Dumfries stone, and some of the smaller pillars are of green Greek marble. At
the angles are four large figures of the Evangelists. There is a wooden eagle
lectern, carved by the late Rev. R.S. Baker, behind the choir-stalls on the
south side.
The Nave Ceiling is very
curious and remarkable. If originally flat, and supported on the tall shafts
last mentioned, it would be just above the great arch of the central tower
before that was altered from the round form. It is supposed that this was the
case; and that when the pointed arch was substituted the central compartment of
the ceiling was raised, and the two outer ones made to slope as we see it now.
But if the Norman roof was flat, its outer compartments would manifestly not be
broad enough to fill the space now occupied by the sloping sides. And yet there
is no alteration in the style of ornamentation: nor are the diamonds, which are
divided by the line where the slope joins the horizontal portion, unduly
elongated, as would seem to be necessary in the part nearest the wall. Some
change was clearly made when the Decorated arches were built; for above the Norman
cornice on which the roof was originally laid, there is now a length of painted
wood containing coats of arms obviously of later date than the ceiling. It is
not possible to pronounce with certainty on the question. But considering (1),
that the whole ceiling was certainly raised in consequence of the superior
height of the tower arch (2), that no difference can be detected between the
centre compartments and those at the side in the patterns, and (3), that
additional height has been secured by the Decorated boarding above mentioned,
the most probable solution seems to be that the whole is the original Norman
work, practically unaltered, and that it was never flat, but had always sloping
sides as at present. All agree that the style of the painting is perfectly
characteristic of the period. The divisions are of the lozenge shape; in each
lozenge of the central line is a figure, and in each alternate one of the
sides. The middle set has more elongated lozenges than the others. The borders
are black and white, with some coloured lines, in odd zigzag patterns. The
figures, which are mostly seated, are very quaint and strange. Some are
sacred, some grotesque. We can see S. Peter with the keys, kings, queens, and
minstrels; we find also a head with two faces, a monkey riding backwards on a
goat, a human figure with head and hoofs of an ass, a donkey playing a harp, a
winged dragon, a dancing lion, an eagle, and other curious devices.
The Font stands between the first and
second piers on the north side of the nave; the basin is of a local marble of
thirteenth century date, but the lower part is modern. For many years it was
used as a flower pot in one of the prebendal gardens, whence it was rescued by
Dean Monk and ultimately restored to its original use in the south end of the
western transept. It was placed where it is in 1920. Another font had been
erected in 1615, as appears by an entry in the cathedral register of that date,
when the son of one of the prebendaries was baptized "in the new font in
the bodye of the Cathedral Church here."
The West Transept extends beyond the aisles. The huge pointed arches covered
with Norman mouldings are very remarkable. The arcading which goes round the
lower part of the aisle walls was continued round the east sides and the ends
of this transept, but it has all been hacked away, and the walls now are flat.
The position of the arcade is very plainly to be seen. The south end in 1921
was again restored to its former use as a chapel by the Dean of Winchester, Dr.
Hutton. The north end of this transept is used as a vestry. It is screened off,
with the adjacent bays of the north aisle, by some of the woodwork that has
been removed from Dean Monk's choir. From these specimens the general character
of the whole can be easily gathered.
The west wall has no trace of
Norman work. The arcade by the ground consists of pointed arches, though the
great doorway has a round arch; all have Early English mouldings. The great
doors themselves are of the same date, as shown by the carved capital at the
top. The west window, with its Perpendicular tracery, is set inside an Early
English arch, which has two lofty lancets by the side; and in looking at it
from the east it can hardly be detected that this arch is not the very
framework of the window. The very lofty lancets on the east of the projecting
parts of this transept, as well as the decoration of the arches in the
triforium above the aisles, should be noticed.
The number of Altars in
the church was considerable. They were of course all
served by members of the foundation. but they had not separate endowments like
chantries in a parish church. Nor does any one appear to have been associated
with any company or guild. There were, besides the High Altar and that in the
Lady Chapel, three in the new building, one in the little chapel between the
choir and Lady Chapel, one in each choir aisle, two (SS. John and James) in the
north transept, four (SS. Oswald, Benedict, and Kyneburga, and the Holy
Trinity) in the south transept, two (the Ostrie Chapel and that of the Holy
Spirit) in the building west of the south transept, one in the rood-loft, most
likely four against pillars in the nave (a bracket on a pillar on the north
side marks the position of one), and apparently one in the south part of the west
transept. If this enumeration is correct there were not less than twenty-two.
There seems also to have been an altar in the hearse over Queen Katherine's
tomb; and, though no mention of them occurs, we should suppose there must have
been one on each side of the entrance beneath the rood-loft.
Two altar-stones only have
been found. One is marked on a plan made about 180 years ago as being laid down
in the choir a little to the east of where the eagle lectern now stands. It was
subsequently taken up, sawn into three pieces, and placed beneath the arch
leading from the western transept to the south aisle. Some twenty-five years
ago it was again removed from the pavement and is preserved elsewhere. The five
crosses are large and deeply cut, and are in the form of cross-crosslets. The
other has been taken up from the pavement in the eastern chapel. It is a very
curious example, and one that might well escape notice. The stone is of the
usual size, and uninscribed. It is much worn by constant treadings, and the five
crosses are nearly obliterated, though quite distinctly to be seen. But instead
of there being, as usual, one in each corner of the stone, or nearly so, all
the five are towards the centre of the stone, within a space of about two
square feet. There is also an extra cross on the front edge. This stone is now
used for the altar in S. Oswald's Chapel, in the south transept, refitted in
1900.
Of Stained Glass the
only ancient examples are some fragments that have been collected from
different parts of the church, mostly as itseems from the
cloister, and put together in two central windows in the apse. These are well
worth observing with care. No scenes of course can be made out, but the faces,
when examined closely, are found to be singularly good. Most of the pieces
formed portions of a window or series of windows representing incidents in the
life of S. Peter. This is apparent from the few words that can still be made
out on the labels,which are all fragments of texts
referring to that Saint. The large west window is in memory of soldiers of
Northamptonshire who fell during the South African War, 1899-1902; the window
has five lights in two tiers; in the upper are representations of King Peada,
S. Paul, S. Peter, S. Andrew, and Bishop Ethelwold; in the lower, S. George,
Joshua, S. Michael, Gideon, and S. Alban. Brass plates below give the roll of
honour.
Five
windows of the eastern chapel have now been refilled with-stained glass, one
facing north to the late Dean Barlow, 1908; another behind the altar was given
by Canon Argles (afterwards Dean) in memory of his father-in-law, Bishop Davys.
In the south-east corner the east window is to the memory of Dean Butler, 1861,
and the south one to Canon Alderson; the churches pictured are S. Mary's,
Lutterworth, All Saints', Holdenby, and a view of the south-east of this
cathedral. The next window is in memory of Canon Twells, author of several
hymns, including "At even ere the sun was set." In S. Oswald's Chapel
is a very beautiful window given in 1900. In the north choir aisle is a
memorial window to Thomas Mills, Hon. Canon, 1856. In the south transept some
in memory of Payne Edwards, LL.B., 1861; Sir Chapman Marshall, Kt., Alderman of
London, whose son was Precentor here; and James Cattel, cathedral librarian, 1877.
In the north transept are several given by Mr G.W. Johnson, two in memory of
his father and mother, one to the Prince Consort, and some unconnected with any
names; there are also two in memory of George John Gates, 1860, and John Hewitt
Paley "juvenis desideratissimi," 1857.
The architecture of The
Parvise, over the western porch, has been already described. It now
contains the library, removed to this place from the new building by Dean
Tarrant. The collection was begun by Dean Duport, who presented books himself,
and obtained more from the Prebendaries and other persons; it was afterwards
enriched with the whole of the valuable library of Bishop Kennett, and part of
Dean Lockier's, and has since had many considerable additions. The manuscripts
are not numerous, the chief being the very important book known as Swapham. The
greater part of this has been printed by Sparkes. His publication includes
Abbot John's Chronicle, The History of Burgh by Hugo Candidus with its
continuation by Swapham, the Chronicle of Walter of
Whittlesey, and two other works. There are also kept here some of the fabric
rolls of the monastery. Bishop Kennett's library contained a most valuable
collection of tracts and pamphlets published in the latter part of the
seventeenth century. There are also some books of much earlier date, a few of
great rarity. A memorandum written in the Book of Swapham above mentioned tells
us that the Precentor, Humphrey Austin, had hidden it in 1642 in anticipation
of coming troubles. But Cromwell's soldiers found it, and would probably have
destroyed it; the Precentor, however, under pretence of enquiring after an old
Latin bible, found out where it was, and redeemed it for the sum of ten
shillings.
Monuments and
Inscriptions.—We proceed to speak of these,
treated as a single subject, instead of describing them at the various parts of
the building where they are to be found.
At first sight it is thought
that this cathedral is singularly deficient in monuments of interest. To a
certain extent this is the case. There are no memorial chantries, such as add
to the beauty of many of our noblest churches; no effigies of warriors or
statesmen; no series of ancient tablets or inscriptions that illustrate the
history of the neighbourhood; not a single brass. With few exceptions all the
monuments and inscriptions that remain commemorate abbots or other members of
the monastery, or, after the Reformation, bishops, and members of the cathedral
foundation and their families. While of famous persons known to have been buried
within the walls, such as Katherine of Arragon, Mary Queen of Scots, the
Archbishops Elfricus and Kinsius of York, Sir Geoffrey de la Mare, Sir Robert
de Thorpe, and others, no memorials worthy of their fame and importance are in
existence. The wanton destruction during the civil war in great part explains
this; but it is sad to remember that numbers of mediaeval inscriptions in the
floor were hidden or destroyed during some well-meaning but ill-judged
alterations in the eighteenth century.
First in interest and
importance is that known as the Monks' Stone, now preserved in the new
building. It is generally thought that this was constructed in commemoration of
the massacre of Abbot Hedda and his monks in 870, by the Danes. It was not till nearly a century later that any attempt was
made to rebuild the monastery. But Mr Bloxam read apaper
at Peterborough in 1861 in which he disputed the authenticity of this monument,
which had been previously regarded as one of the most ancient monumental stones
extant. He pronounced it to be Norman, and not Saxon work, and some centuries
later in date than the massacre of the monks. He considered the figures did not
represent the slain monks and their abbot, but Christ and eleven disciples. It
has been further conjectured by Bishop Westcott that it may have been part of
the shrine erected over the relics of S. Kyneburga, when they were removed from
Castor to Peterborough in the former half of the eleventh century. A fragment
of sculpture in the same style is built into the west wall of the south
transept. Even if the latter years of the ninth century are deemed too early a
date for the stone, at any rate the style of the sculpture and ornamentation
seems much earlier than anything we can now see in position in the building itself.
May it not have been erected when the minster was reconstructed at the end of
the tenth century? It was formerly in the churchyard; sometimes testators (like
Dr Pocklington) desired in their wills that they might be interred near it. It
has been usually stated that the stone was erected by Abbot Godric of Crowland,
who died in 941. Unvarying tradition has associated it with the Danish
massacre; its dimensions almost exactly agree with the earliest records of the
stone said to have been so erected. The cruciform nimbus round the head of one
figure leaves no doubt that it was designed for the Saviour; but this had been
recognised many years before Mr Bloxam wrote.
In the north transept, below
the level of the floor, and protected by wooden doors, are several richly
ornamented slabs or coffin lids, of undoubted Saxon date; and they form a
series which may be considered one of the very best in England. They are in
their original position, the spot on which they lie being outside the Saxon
church and they were then in the grave-yard. They
were discovered in 1888. The interlacing work, and other carvings, are deeply
cut and in excellent preservation.
The six
recumbent effigies of abbots are the very best series of Benedictine memorials
in the country. Attempts have been made to identify them from the character of
the carvings. But as four are certainly of thirteenth century date, and one
late in the twelfth century, and as thirteen abbots ruled during that period,
it may be pronounced impossible to name each one. One only, manifestly the
latest in date, and also in poorest preservation (being carved in clunch), has
the mitre; this is now temporarily placed in the New Building; there is little
doubt that it represents John Chambers, the last Abbot and first Bishop. All
the other five abbots are represented in alb and chasuble, holding a book
(signifying, it is said, the statutes of the Benedictine order), in the left
hand; while in the right hand is a crosier. In one instance this is not very
clear. Four have their feet resting on fanciful creatures, which, in three
cases, hold the lower ends of the crosiers in their mouths. Two of these
crosiers, at least, are turned outwards: this is contrary to the commonly
received opinion that the turning inward symbolised the domestic rule over a
monastic house. The head of one abbot rests on a square cushion. Four of these
effigies are in the south choir aisle; one of them being beneath the Norman
sepulchral arch raised to commemorate three abbots, John de Sais, who died in 1125,
Martin of Bee, in 1155, and Andrew, in 1199. It seems unlikely
that the one placed beneath the arch should represent one of those three,
although usually assigned to the latest, Andrew. The next two in the aisle were
found in the ruins of the old chapter-house, and brought into the church.[28] The date
of the easternmost is known. It is more richly ornamented than the rest, and
the entire coffin is above ground, with handsome quatrefoils and other carving. This
commemorates Alexander of Holderness, 1226. It was found under the woodwork of
the old choir which was removed in 1830, beneath the second arch, on the north
of the choir. The coffin contained the body, in a large coarse garment, with
boots on, and a crosier in the left hand. The boots were what are called
"rights and lefts," and in fair preservation. The head was gone. A
piece of lead was found inscribed "Abbas: Alexandr:" The remains were
gathered together and re-interred beneath the present position of the coffin.
At the same time in all likelihood the effigy that was already on the spot (one
of those that had been found in the ruins of the chapter-house) was removed to
one of the chapels in the south transept; from which place it was afterwards
moved to the New Building immediately behind the apse, where now is the
monument to Bishop Chambers; and now it has been put on a stone plinth on the
spot where the coffin of Abbot Alexander was found, under the mistaken
impression that it was the figure found there in 1830.
The other
prae-Reformation memorials are very few. Two have lately been found concealed
by the paving, Abbot Godfrey, 1321, moved from the choir to the north aisle,
and sub-prior Fraunceys, at the east end of the south nave aisle. In the
morning chapel is an early stone with inscription in capitals, and three stone
coffin lids; other fragmentary inscriptions remain in S. Oswald's chapel, in
the north choir aisle, and under the bell-tower.
In the floor on the north side
of the choir, near the altar rails, is astone with modern
inscription recording the burial places of Elfrieus and Kinsius, both
Archbishops of York: the former died in 1051, the latter in 1060. An old
guide-book says that "on the north side, in two hollow places of wall,
were found two chests about three feet long, in each of which were the bones of
a man: and of whom appeared by a plate of lead in each chest, whereon the name
of the person was engraved," these names being those given above. The
chronicle expressly records of Kinsius, "jacet tumulatus in scrinio
juxta magnum altare in parte boreali."
Queen Katherine of Arragon was
buried in the north choir aisle, just outside the most eastern arch, in 1535. A
hearse was placed near, probably between the two piers. Four years later this is described
as "the inclosed place where the Lady Katherine lieth," and there
seems to have been a small altar within it. Some banners that adorned it
remained in the cathedral till 1586. About the same time some persons were
imprisoned for defacing the "monument," and required to "reform
the same." The only monument, strictly so called, of which there is any
record, was a low table monument, raised on two shallow steps, with simple
quatrefoils, carved in squares set diamond-wise. Engravings of this shew it to
have been an insignificant and mean erection. A few slabs of it were lately
found buried beneath the floor, and they are now placed against the wall of the
aisle. One of the prebendaries repaired this monument at his own cost, about
1725, and supplied a tiny brass plate with name and date, part of which remains
in the floor. This monument was removed in 1792. A handsome marble stone has
quite recently been laid down to the Queen's memory above her grave, with
incised inscription and coats of arms.
A tablet
has been erected in the south choir aisle to record the fact that Mary Queen of
Scots had been buried near the spot. Recent explorations
have proved that the exact spot was just within the choir. The funeral took
place on the first of August, 1587. Remains of the hearse between the pillars
were to be seen so lately as 1800. On Oct. 11, 1612, the body was removed to
Westminster Abbey, by order of King James I., the Queen's son. A photograph of
the letter ordering the removal, the original of which is still in possession
of the Dean and Chapter, is framed and hung on an adjacent pillar.
In the south choir aisle is a
fine monument with a life-size effigy of Archbishop Magee in his robes. It is
carved in pure white marble. On the side are impaled coats of arms and an
inscription. The likeness is excellent.
The other tablets and
inscriptions hardly require detailed descriptions. In the New Building is the
mutilated monument to Sir Humfrey Orme: no names or dates remain; at the top
are the words Sanguis Iesu Christi purgat nos ab omnibus Peccatis
nostris. Near this is an elaborate erection to Thomas Deacon, 1721, a great
benefactor to the town. On a stone to John Brimble, organist of S. John's
College, Cambridge, 1670, we read that he was Musis et musicæ
devotissimus, ad coelestem evectus Academiam. Among many inscriptions some
interesting items will be found. John Benson, 1827, was the "oldest
Committee Clerk at the House of Commons." Humfrey Orme, 1670, was A
supremo Ang'iæ senatu ad superiorem sanctorum conventum evocatus. On
the memorial to Bishop Madan, 1813, are the lines:—
In sacred sleep the pious Bishop lies, Say not
in death—A good Man never dies.
On the tablet to Bishop Cumberland, 1718, are four Latin lines
from Dean Duport's epigram upon the Bishop's confutation of Hobbes. In the
south choir aisle, on the tablet to Dean Lockier, 1740, is the only instance of
the arms of the Deanery impaling another shield, on a monument. Near this is a
wooden tablet executed in good taste, recording the fact that the iron screens
are a memorial to Dean Argles, whose munificent
gifts to the cathedral are well known. The Norman arch at the west end of this
aisle has a modern painted inscription, believed to be an exact copy of the
original:—
Hos tres Abbates, Quibus est Prior
Abba JohannesAlter Martinus, Andreas Ultimus, unusHic claudit Tumulus; pro
Clausis ergo rogemus.
Near this is a tablet to Roger
Pemberton, 1695, with a line from Homer in Greek, "The race of men is as
the race of leaves." In the north choir aisle John Workman, Prebendary,
1685, is described as Proto-Canonicus, probably meaning that he
held the first stall. The tablet to Frances Cosin (d. 1642), wife of the Dean,
afterwards Bishop of Durham, was not erected till after the Bishop's death in
1672. He prescribed in his will the words of the inscription. On the large
tablet above the piscina is a punning motto, Temperantia te
Temperatrice, the person commemorated being Richard Tryce, 1767.
Two tablets of interest in
connexion with the Great War are to be seen in the south aisle of the nave, one
in marble to Nurse Cavell, and the other in bronze to the "lonely
Anzac," Thomas Hunter, an Australian who died in Peterborough from wounds
received in France.
Last of all we must speak of
the one memorial which is usually looked at first, the famous picture of Old
Scarlett, on the wall of the western transept. He is represented with a spade,
pickaxe, keys, and a whip in his leathern girdle; at his feet is a skull. At
the top of the picture are the arms of the cathedral. Beneath the portrait are
these lines:—
YOV SEE OLD SCARLEITS PICTVRE STAND ON HIEBVT
AT YOVR FEETE THERE DOTH HIS BODY LYEHIS GRAVESTONE DOTH HIS AGE AND DEATH TIME
SHOWHIS OFFICE BY THEIS TOKENS YOV MAY KNOWSECOND TO NONE FOR STRENGTH AND
STVRDYE LIMMA SCARBABE MIGHTY VOICE WITH VISAGE GRIMHEE HAD INTER'D TWO QVEENES
WITHIN THIS PLACEAND THIS TOWNES HOVSEHOLDERS IN HIS LIVES SPACETWICE OVER: BVT
AT LENGTH HIS ONE TVRNE CAMEWHAT HEE FOR OTHERS DID FOR HIM THE SAMEWAS DONE:
NO DOVBT HIS SOVL DOTH LIVE FOR AYEIN HEAVEN: THOVGH HERE HIS BODY CLAD IN
CLAY.
On the floor is a stone
inscribed: "Ivly 2 1594 R S aetatis 98." This painting is not a
contemporary portrait, but a copy made in 1747. In 1866 it was sent on loan to
the South Kensington Museum.
CHAPTER IV.
THE MINSTER PRECINCTS AND CITY.
There are many objects of
great interest to be seen in the Minster Yard. This name is not unfrequently
given to the whole of the territory belonging to the Dean and Chapter
surrounding the church. The correct title is, however, as given above, the
Minster Precincts; and it is by this name that the parish is described, for the
Abbey Church, like a few others, is a parish church, as well as the Cathedral
of the diocese. Although without churchwardens, this parish still appoints its
own overseers of the poor. Old residents distinguish the Close from the
Precincts, limiting the use of the former expression to the area west of the
Cathedral. Contrary to what all would expect, the great gateway to the west is
not the boundary of the Precincts, for they extend a little further west, and
include one or two houses beyond the gateway.
This ancient entrance to the
monastic grounds naturally first arrests the attention. It was built by Abbot
Benedict in the last quarter of the twelfth century. Though it has been much
altered, a considerable part of the original structure remains. As we see it
from the Marketplace we observe a fifteenth century look about it: on closer
inspection we see that a late Decorated arch has been built in front of the
Norman arch, and that a facing of the same date has been carried above. Here is
an arcade, with the alternate panels pierced for windows. On each side of the
gateway are also good Norman arcades; the doorway in the arcade to the north
opens into a residence, that on the south gives access to the room above. This
was originally the Chapel of S. Nicolas. On the eastern
side of the room is a three-light window, manifestly a late insertion, and
adapted from some other building. It is said to be part of a shrine which
formerly was in the Cathedral, a portion of which still remains in the new
building. This statement has been repeated over and over again; but it is
difficult to see any resemblance between the two.
The chapel over the gateway
has been put to various uses since the dissolution of monasteries. In 1617 it
was assigned to the porter as part of his residence. At a later period it was
let. It has served the purposes of a muniment room, a Masonic lodge room, a
tailor's workshop, a practising room for the choristers, a class-room for the
Grammar School. In the flourishing days of the Gentlemen's Society, when
members met and read papers, and kept up a considerable literary correspondence
with learned men in various parts of the kingdom, its meetings were held here;
and it is now used as a Record Room for the Diocese of Peterborough.
On the left hand, as we pass
through the gate, is all that remains of the Chapel of S. Thomas of
Canterbury. It is the chancel of a much larger building. Originally the
chapel was begun by Waterville and finished by Benedict: it was therefore of
Norman date. The present chancel was built in the latter part of the fourteenth
century. While the east window, with its graceful net tracery and very elegant
cross above, might suggest an earlier date, yet a glance at the side windows,
which are distinctly of transitional character, tells us that 1360 or 1370 may
be assigned as the period of erection. About 1404 the abbey gave the materials
of the nave of this chapel to the town, to assist in rebuilding the parish
church on the present site; but the chancel had been too recently built to be
removed. Since the establishment of the Cathedral the chancel seems always to
have been used as the Cathedral Grammar School, until the year 1885, when the
School was removed to new buildings in the Park Road. It was next used as a
museum by the Natural History and Archaeological Society, until their
collection outgrew the room and they removed to larger premises in Queen Street
(see p. 111). For a
time it was a Needlework School of Art, and now it is a Rovers Den in connexion
with the Scout movement.
All the other ancient
buildings on the west, the Plumber's Office, the Sister
House, the Treasurer's Office, have long disappeared. The Minster Almshouses,
adjoining the wall of the Deanery garden, are the only buildings on the north
side. They have no ancient features.
The door
immediately to the right of the great gateway as we enter the close leads to a
vaulted chamber which was once the gaol. A few steps bring us to a very
magnificent gateway, leading to the Palace grounds, over which is a chamber,
called the Knights' Chamber. This is of Early English date, with a
fine groined roof. The gates and postern are placed at some distance from the
outer archway, adding greatly to the dignity and effect of the whole
composition. The delicate arcading of the sides, and the excellent clustered
shafts, are good examples of the period: unfortunately the bases of the shafts
are now hidden by accumulation of earth. On the north and south faces are long
niches with figures: three on the north are said to be King Edward II., and the
Abbot and Prior of the period; those on the south are Apostles. The chamber
above is used for meetings, etc.
Much of the line of buildings
to the east of this gateway is modern, but it harmonizes excellently with the
ancient work. Near the Cathedral is some mediaeval
work, and the office at the end, on the ground floor, has a good stone groined
roof. This is believed to have been the Penitentiary.
The Deanery Gateway,
at the north-eastern corner of the close is a fine specimen of architecture. In
the spandrels above the great four-centred arch are two coats of arms, one with
the keys and crosslets, the other with swords and crosses. These are now the
arms of the See and the Cathedral respectively: but it is difficult to say what
was their special significance when this gate was erected. Are we to suppose
that the Abbot and Prior used different armorial bearings before the
Reformation? Above the smaller door is a boldly carved rebus of the Abbot in
whose time the gate was erected, a church on a tun, Robert Kirton (Kirkton).
His initials in stone are also carved beneath the parapet. Several of the
details are well worthy of attention. We find the Tudor rose and portcullis:
the arms of S. Edward and of S. Edmund, the Martyr King; an early instance in
stone of the Prince of Wales' feathers; and the triangular symbol of the Holy
Trinity. The date is about 1520.
Through an open archway to the
east we enter the burial ground. Until 1804 this was the only place of burial
for the whole city. On the left is the Deanery, but nothing of antiquity is to
be seen from the exterior. In the hall are some good fragments of old glass,
some of it probably part of the original embellishments of the house, though
some may have been brought from the Cathedral, and some is again quite modern.
Some panels of early date, brought from another room, have also lately been put
up in the hall. The churchyard has been planted with trees and shrubs, and is
well kept. It has, however, become much more publicly used than was the case in
the last century, owing to a thoroughfare for foot-passengers which has been
opened at the north-western end of the close; and the usual results of such
publicity have followed in the treading down of the turf and in the damage
inflicted on the shrubs. One of the most striking views of the Cathedral is
seen from the north-eastern corner of the precincts, near the house known as
"The Vineyard." This was the house occupied by the officers who came
down to superintend the spoliation of the building in 1643. This view takes in
the whole of the great length of the Cathedral, the bell-tower and the
north-western spire forming a very effective group.
Passing round the east end and
proceeding to the south we come to the ruins of
the Infirmary. Here we may see some very excellent Early English
work, most elegant and graceful. It was erected about 1260. The plan was
similar to a large church with aisles. The nave was used as the hall, the
aisles were the quarters of the inmates, and the chancel was the chapel of the
institution. Many of the main arches remain, and the details of the
ornamentation and mouldings will repay careful study. At the west end is a very
perfect piece of arcading. The large arch, seen above a low wall to the east,
was the arch leading to the chapel; in exactly the same position as the chancel
arch in a church. At each side of this arch is a lancet never pierced. The main
arch is now blocked up, forming a wall to one of the prebendal houses. The
dining room of this same house was the Infirmarer's house, and has much very
interesting Early English work. To the south of the Infirmary is another
ancient house, though much modernised.
Before entering the Cloister
court we pass through the old slype, once a simple vaulted passage, but now
open to the sky. It was the means of communication between the Refectory, which
was situated to the west, and the Chapter House, which was on the east side of
the Cloister. Quite recently some of the arches on the west side have been
opened to view, and interesting tracery brought to light.
The Cloister
Court is always called the Laurel Court. The origin of this name is
not known. The northern part of the area covers the site of the nave of the
Saxon church; but though search was made, during the recent works, for remains
of the old foundations, nothing was discovered. On the south and west sides are
to be seen remains of the arches and groining, but the appearance of the south
wall of the cathedral suggests that there could not have been any covered alley
to the north, so completely have all evidences of such an erection been
removed. But it is known that there did exist an alley there, when the
Cloisters were complete; for Gunton, describing it, says "The Cloyster
about four square, in length 168 yards, in breadth 6 yards." The windows,
contrary to the usual practice, were all glazed, and they contained a very fine
series of painted glass, all destroyed in 1643. Gunton gives the
subjects:—"The windows were all compleat and fair, adorned
with glass of excellent painting: In the South Cloyster was the History of the
Old Testament: In the East Cloyster of the New: In the North Cloyster, the
Figures of the successive Kings from King Peada: In the West Cloyster, was the
History from the foundation of the Monastery of King Peada, to the restoring of
it by King Edgar." Each light had two lines of verse at the foot,
explaining the subject matter of the glass above. All the verses in the windows
of the west alley are given; and from this we gather that there were nine
windows there of four lights each. Although Gunton only gives the verses
belonging to the west cloister, yet as he said previously that "every
window had at the bottom the explanation of the history thus in verse," it
is supposed that similar legends appeared in all the other alleys of the
cloister. The verses are very quaint.
The archway at the south-eastern corner is very elegant, the open
quatrefoil above the round arch and below the pointed arch being especially
good. The south wall indicates that there were two sets of cloisters here, as the remains of early English arcading
are to be clearly seen. Towards the west was the lavatory, the remains
indicating work of late fourteenth century date. It is on record that Robert of
Lindsey (1214-1222) erected a lavatory in the south cloister: this would be
contemporary with the Early English work remaining in this wall, and with the
archway to the slype; but it must have been removed when the cloisters were
enlarged, and another lavatory, of which we see the remains under three arches,
built in its stead. The Refectory was immediately to the south of this wall:
some beautiful carving is to be seen in the Bishop's garden. The south-western
doorway gives access to the Bishop's grounds. The depth of the hollows behind
the carved foliage above the door is remarkable.
In the west wall are remains
of a Norman cloister; there are three arches and a door. From the architectural
character it seems almost certain that these are older than any part of the
present Cathedral. William of Waterville (1155-1175) "built the Cloister
and covered it with lead." Canon Davys conjectures that this Abbot in
reality repaired and made sound the old cloisters that had been built by Ernulf
(1107-1115), "whose recent additions to the buildings of the monastery, we
learn, alone escaped the fire, which consumed the other parts of the Abbey in
the time of John de Sais." One of these arches has the cheese moulding;
and on each jamb is a small incised cross, a very few inches long. If these are
consecration crosses they are the only ones that have been noticed in any part
of the Abbey.
On the wall of the building
west of the south transept are some stone brackets. These shew that after the
destruction of the ancient cloister a covered way of some kind was erected
here. Marks can also be seen, in the masonry, which indicate that the building
once had three gables. Two of the Norman buttresses of the south nave aisle
have very curious terminations, which might well puzzle any observer. They are
fireplaces for the use of plumbers. Passing through the Norman doorway at the
north-western corner of the Laurel Court, we come into a narrow passage leading
to the Minster Close.
In
the Bishop's Palace, besides the remains of the Refectory, which,
though so scanty, shew what a beautiful building it once was, there is very
little worthy of note. The hall is a vaulted chamber, of no great height, with piers to support the
roof; most of it is part of the Abbot's dwelling, and of thirteenth century
date. The Heaven's Gate Chamber, previously noticed, built by Abbot Kirton
(1496-1528), lies to the south-east of the hall. The chapel was erected by
Bishop Magee soon after he came to the diocese.
The City.—The mother church of S. John the Baptist is the only parish
church in the city of mediaeval date. Until 1856 it was the only parish church
in the place. Originally the church stood east of the Minster. But, following
what seems to be almost a universal law, the main population spread westward as
the number of inhabitants increased, and the earlier buildings were left to the
occupation of the poorer class. An insignificant little house in the old town
is traditionally said to have been the Vicar's residence. It has some evidence
of antiquity about it. The present church was built early in the fifteenth
century. It was opened in 1407 with much solemnity by Abbot Genge. It is a
spacious and dignified building, having a nave of seven bays; and there are two
bays to the chancel, besides the sanctuary. The west tower is good, but hardly
of sufficient dignity for such a church. The interior was reseated, and new
roofs were added in 1883; they were designed by the late Mr. Pearson.
In 1891 the south porch was
restored in memory of Dr. James, a former vicar. The arches under the tower
which had been bricked up for many years were underpinned and repaired; and in
1909 were again opened to the church. By 1919 the fittings were almost
complete, several rich stained glass windows and beautiful oak screens had been
given as memorials. A carved reredos, oak panelling and seats, and a marble
pavement have been fitted in the Sanctuary. The organ was rebuilt and enlarged
by Messrs. Harrison of Durham.
Towards the west end of the
church in the north aisle is a tablet to William Squire by Flaxman; close by is
a large picture of King Charles I and two curious specimens of early embroidery
are also to be seen; they were once portions of altar-cloths, or of copes. In
each case the work is in the form of a cross, about two feet long. Each has the
figure of the Saviour on the Cross; but the details are not identical.
The Guild Hall, in the Market Place, is an effective little building, dated
1671. The lower part is open, and is used for the butter market. While
sufficient for the transaction of borough business 100 years ago, it is
altogether inadequate now to the requirements of a corporation.
Until a very few years ago
there was a mediaeval building at Peterborough of the greatest interest. This
was the old Tithe Barn of the Abbey, situated in the Manor of
Boroughbury, on the Lincoln Road. It was much the finest in the kingdom.
Unhappily the "enterprising builder" has obtained possession of it,
and it has been pulled down, the materials, all Barnack stone, having been
employed in building houses. It was of good thirteenth century work, and in
perfect condition. On the east side were two large porches, by which a waggon
fully laden could enter the barn. The roof was supported by very massive
timbers rising from the ground, the whole arrangement resembling a wooden
church with aisles.
The Museum in Queen Street is noted for its collection of Roman and
Saxon antiquities from the city and district; amongst the former are the noted
coffin tile stamped LEG IX. HISP.; the vase showing a coursing match with the
hare and hounds in relief, coins, pottery, brooches, and other jewellery. The
Saxon specimens consist of pottery, jewellery, and weapons chiefly exhumed at
Woodston, about one mile south-west of the river bridge.
The interesting collection of
bone, wood, horn, and straw marquetry work made at Norman Cross (5 miles) by
the French prisoners during the years 1797 to 1814, is unique. MSS. of the
Northamptonshire poet, John Clare, are preserved in this institution, together
with a large number of other local works.
CHAPTER V.
HISTORY OF THE MONASTERY.
The inhabitants of the Fen
country, when first distinguished by a special name, were known as the Gyrvii.
Their district included the south part of Lincolnshire, the north part of
Northamptonshire, and the greater part of Cambridgeshire. The southern Gyrvii
were a province of East Anglia; the Gyrvii of the north appear to have been
allied to the East Anglians, and perhaps inclined to become united with them;
but they were ultimately absorbed in the great Midland Kingdom of Mercia. Bishop
Stubbs,[29] speaking
of the early Fasti of Peterborough, says: "Mercia, late in its formation
as a kingdom, sprang at once into a great state under Penda; late in its
adoption of Christianity, it seems from the period of its conversion to have
taken a prominent place at once among the Christian powers. The Chronicle
places the conversion in 655, and a very few years saw it the best governed and
best organised province of the Church. In less than thirty years it was divided
into five dioceses, amongst which the place of the Fen country is more clearly
definable. The bishopric of Lindsey occupied the north of Lincolnshire,
reaching to the Witham: a line drawn from the south point of Nottinghamshire to
the Cam would probably represent the western border of the Gyrvii; the border
of Cambridgeshire was the boundary of the dioceses of Elmham and Dunwich. The
Fen country thus falls into the eastern portion of the great Lichfield diocese,
which for a few years after 680 had its own bishop at Leicester, but was not
finally separated from the mother see until 737."
The date given above for the
conversion of Mercia, 655, is the date of the
laying of the foundation of the monastery of Medeshamstede. Penda had been
succeeded on the throne of Mercia by his eldest son, Peada; and he, in
conjunction with Oswy, brother of King Oswald, determined to "rear a
minster to the glory of Christ and honour of Saint Peter."
Saxulf (656-675), was the first Abbot. In Bede no mention is made
of royal patronage, and the whole credit of founding the abbey is given to
Saxulf. Another account represents him as having been a thane of great wealth
and renown, and that this abbey was dedicated by him "as the first fruits
of the Mercian church." He was made Bishop of Lichfield in 675, but
continued to take an active part in the affairs of the abbey. He died in 691.
Cuthbald (675), is named in the Chronicle as having been second
Abbot. One of this name, possibly the same, was ruling the monastery at Oundle
in 709, when S. Wilfrid died there. Nothing further is known of him; and
nothing at all of Egbald, who appears in the usual lists as his
successor.
The chroniclers give for the
fourth Abbot one Pusa. But Bishop Stubbs has proved that Bothwin was
Abbot from 758 to 789; and concludes that the introduction of Pusa into the
list is a mistake, if not a mere invention.
Abbot Beonna came
next, probably in 789 or very soon afterwards. "Possibly this Beonna is
the same who was made Bishop of Hereford in 823, and died in 830."
Ceolred succeeded, and in the year 852 signs a grant of land as
Abbot. Patrick conjectures that he became a bishop, but does not name his
diocese. There is no certainty about the dates at which these early abbots
entered upon their office; and possibly some names have been altogether lost.
But all accounts agree that the last Abbot of Medeshamstede was Hedda;
and that he perished when the monastery was destroyed and its inmates killed by
the Danes in 870. A graphic account of the circumstances attending this attack
is given by Ingulf; but as authentic historians like Orderic and Malmesbury
have no reference whatever to the occurrences described by Ingulf, Bishop
Stubbs unwillingly is obliged to consider his version to be a pure romance.
But of the fact itself, the utter destruction of
the monastery, there is no question; nor of the fact that all the inmates, or
nearly all, perished. We read that at Crowland some monks escaped the general
slaughter, and met again, after the departure of the Danes, and elected a fresh
abbot. They then came to Medeshamstede, and buried the bodies of those that had
been murdered, in one vast tomb. It has been commonly supposed that the Monks'
Stone, before described, was the stone erected at the time in commemoration of
the disaster. The arguments against this supposition have been already given.
The Fen monasteries remained
desolate for 100 years. During that period the lands were constantly being
seized by different intruders. It was not till the time of Alfred the Great,
who came to the throne in 871, that the invasions of the Danes were finally
checked, and tranquillity restored to the kingdom. Security being assured, the
people began again to improve their public buildings and the religious houses.
Crowland was the first in the neighbourhood to be restored. This restoration
was effected by Thurketyl. Instigated probably by his example, Ethelwold,
Bishop of Winchester, encouraged and supported by King Edgar, rebuilt the monastery
of Medeshamstede after the old model. The rebuilding was completed in 972; and
the name of Burgh was given to the place, and the old name went altogether out
of use.
The first Abbot, after the
re-establishment of the monastery, was Aldulf (971-992),
formerly Chancellor to the King. He is said to have accidentally caused the
death of his only son, and feeling that he could no longer live happily in the
midst of earthly vanities, he endowed this monastery with all his possessions,
and was appointed to govern it. Gunton declares that the prosperous and wealthy
condition of the abbey under the rule of Aldulf caused its name to be improved
into Gildenburgh, the Golden Borough. At this time most of the neighbouring
woods were cut down and the land brought into cultivation. Aldulf became Bishop
of Worcester after remaining twenty years at Burgh; and in 995 was made
Archbishop of York. He died in May 1002, and is buried at Worcester. He held
indeed the See of Worcester with that of York till his death.
He was succeeded at Burgh by Kenulf (992-1005).
He is described as famous for his wisdom and learning, and as having governed
his abbey "most admirably and sweetly." In 1005 he was made Bishop of
Winchester, not without suspicion of a corrupt purchase (episcopatum nummis
nundinatus fuerat), and died the following year.
The next Abbot, Elsinus (1006-1055),
was remarkable chiefly for the number of relics he collected, designing thereby
to increase the fame and wealth of the monastery. Dean Patrick thinks that before
Elsinus there was an abbot named KINSINUS, whose name he found in one record;
but he adds that if he were really abbot it could at most have been for a few
days or months. The list of relics gathered together by Elsinus is extensive.
At least eighty are enumerated. It speaks volumes for the credulity of the age
when we find in this list such things as the following:—A portion of Aaron's
rod that budded; a portion of one of the five loaves that fed the five
thousand; a shoulder-blade of one of the Holy Innocents; two pieces of the
Virgin Mary's veil; part of the stone paten of the Evangelist S. John. The
great relic of the house was the arm of S. Oswald. The date when this was
acquired is not certainly known, some thinking that this period is too early a date
to assign to its acquisition. Bede relates[30] "that
this Oswald, King of Northumberland, was very free and liberal in giving of
alms to the poor; and one day whilst he sate at meat, one of his servants told
him of a great number of poor people come to his gate for relief; whereupon
King Oswald sent them meat from his own table, and there not being enough to
serve them all, he caused one of his silver dishes to be cut in pieces, and to
be distributed amongst the rest; which Aydanus, a Bishop (who came out of
Scotland to convert, and instruct those Northern parts of England), beholding,
took the King by the right hand, saying, nunquam inveterascat haec
manus, let this hand never wax old, or be corrupted; which came to pass.
This arm was first deposited at Bamburgh, a religious place in Yorkshire.[31] Walter of
Whittlesey writing the story thereof, tells that it was brought to the
monastery of Burgh by Winegotus of Bebeberch, but saith not when, therefore I
cannot conjecture better than that it was by the procurement of this Abbot
Elsinus. It is said that this arm wrought many cures upon several diseased folk; and that it was of such fame in the days of
King Stephen, as that he himself came to Peterburgh purposely to see it; and
offered his ring to S. Oswald, and also remitted to the monastery the sum of
forty marks wherein it was indebted unto him." It is specially recorded in
the Chronicle that this abbot took advantage of the poverty of an abbey in
Normandy, the district having been afflicted with a grievous famine, and
purchased from it the body of S. Florentinus, with the exception of the head,
for one hundred pounds of silver.
He was succeeded by Arwinus (1055-1057),
a monk of the house, but he resigned the government in two years. Next
came Leofric(1057-1066), a very eminent man, said to have been of
royal descent. He was nephew to Leofric, Earl of Coventry. In the time of this
abbot, William of Normandy invaded England, and Leofric was for some time with
the English army. But in consequence of ill health he was obliged to leave it
and return to his monastery, where he died the same year. He is highly praised
in the Chronicle as "pulcherrimus Monachorum, flos et decus Abbatum."
Brando (1066-1069), succeeded, and greatly offended King William by
applying to Edgar Atheling for confirmation of his appointment. He was uncle to
Hereward, the Saxon patriot, and created him knight. At his death a Norman was
appointed, Turold, of Fescamp (1069-1098); but "he neither
loved his monastery, nor his convent him." During the interval between
Brando's death and Turold's arrival, a partial destruction of the monastery
took place. This has been already described. Some account for Hereward's share
in the attack and in the carrying off of the treasures by supposing that he
meant to restore them when the rule of the Norman Abbot came to an end. When
Turold arrived at Peterborough he brought with him a force of 160 well-armed
Normans. Joining the forces of Ivo Taillebois he attacked the Camp of Refuge
near Ely. The attacking party was repulsed by Hereward, and Turold taken
prisoner, and only liberated upon paying a heavy ransom. Soon afterwards the
Abbot is said to have received into the monastery two monks from beyond sea,
"who secretly stole away, and carried many of the Church Goods with
them." At length he was made Bishop in France, and the monastery trusted
they had seen the last of him. But he was ignominiously expelled in four
days, and was permitted, upon paying a large sum of
money to the king, to resume his abbacy.
Another
uncle of Hereward's, Godric (1099-1103), brother of Brando,
became the next abbot. The monks had purchased from the king the right to elect
their own abbot; and Godric, being considered by this transaction
to have committed simony, was (with the neighbouring abbots of Ely and Ramsey)
deposed by a council held under the presidency of Archbishop Anselm.
Matthias (1103-1105), was brother of Geoffrey, the Chief Justice, who
was drowned at the foundering of The White Ship, when Prince William, the
King's son, was lost. After the death of Matthias there was a vacancy of three
years, until Ernulf (1107-1114), Prior of Canterbury came. He
became Bishop of Rochester, and died in 1124.
John de Sais (1114-1125), probably came from Seès, in Normandy; though he
is sometimes called John of Salisbury. In 1116 nearly the whole town was consumed
by a fire that lasted nine days. It began in the bakehouse of the monastery and
completely destroyed the church and most of the abbey buildings, the Chapter
House, Refectory and Dormitory alone escaping. In March 1118 (or, as then
written, 1117), the commencement was made of the building that now exists.
Abbot John died in 1125; and again the King kept the abbey in his own hands for
more than two years.
Henry of Anjou (1128-1133), where he was Abbot, was a kinsman of the King.
He had numerous preferments abroad; and after five years here was forced to
resign and to betake himself to Anjou.
Martin de Vecti (1133-1155), had been Prior of S. Neots. Gunton considers he
came originally from the Isle of Wight, Vectis; Dean Patrick thinks he derived
his name from Bec, in Normandy. He was a great builder, and was very
industrious in repairing the abbey, and especially the church.
William of
Waterville (1155-1175), was chaplain to King Henry
II. He devoted himself to the building of the church, and the portion attributed
to him has been indicated in a previous chapter. He was also very attentive to
the management of the estates of the monastery, and to acquiring new ones; but
his business capacity seems to have brought him into some disrepute and to have
raised some enemies, who accused him to the King; and by the King's order he
was deposed in the Chapter-house, as Dean Patrick relates[32] "before
a multitude of abbots and monks; being neither convicted of any crime, nor
confessing any, but privily accused to the Archbishop by some monks." It
is recorded that he appealed to the Pope against
the sentence of deprivation, but without success.
Benedict (1177-1193), was Prior of Canterbury; and, towards the end
of his life, Keeper of the Great Seal. He had a heavy task at the beginning of
his rule in restoring discipline, which had become lax, and in reforming many
evil customs that had crept into the house. He was an author, and produced a
work on the career of S. Thomas of Canterbury, whose murder had taken place
only seven years before Benedict came to Peterborough. He gave many ornaments
and vestments to the church, and brought several relics; and in particular some
of Thomas à Becket (and those we can certainly believe were more authentic than
most relics), among which are mentioned his shirt and surplice, a great
quantity of his blood in two crystal vessels, and two altars of the stone on
which he fell when he was murdered. He was, as might be expected, very zealous
in completing the chapel at the monastery gate which his predecessor had begun
to raise in honour of the martyred Archbishop. Dean Stanley[33] speaks of
Benedict's acquisition of the relics as "one of two memorable acts of
plunder ... curiously illustrative of the prevalent passion for such
objects." He says Benedict was probably the most distinguished monk of
Christ Church, and after his appointment to Peterborough, "finding that
great establishment almost entirely destitute of relics, he returned to his own
cathedral, and carried off with him the flagstones immediately surrounding the
sacred spot, with which he formed two altars in the conventual church of his
new appointment, besides two vases of blood and part of Becket's
clothing." Benedict, though a member of the house and probably within the
precincts, was not actually present at the Archbishop's murder. Besides his building
operations (he built nearly all the nave of the church) he was very attentive
to the landed property of the house, successfully recovering some estates which
had been alienated.
Andrew (1193-1201) had been Prior. He was "very mild and
peaceable, and made it his endeavour to plant and establish peace and
tranquillity in his flock." Several fresh acquisitions of land were made
in his time, and the monastery was very flourishing.
Acharius (1201-1214) came here from S. Albans, where he was Prior.
He devoted himself entirely to
the administration of his office, managing the affairs of the monastery with
the greatest care and judgement. He left behind him a reputation for
"order, honesty, kindness and bounty, that from him posterity might learn
how to behave themselves both in the cloister and in the world."
Robert of Lindsey (1214-1222) succeeded. This was four years after the death
of his predecessor, during which period King John had kept the monastery in his
own hands. This expression, which is of frequent occurrence, must be understood
to mean that the king took possession of all the revenues belonging to the
Abbot, and probably much more from the property of the monastery, the expenses
of which would be materially lessened by the mere fact of there being no Abbot.
Robert had been Sacrist here, and when he was advanced to the highest office he
effected many improvements in the furniture and ornaments of the church, and in
the buildings, not only of the monastery itself, but also of the manors and
farms belonging to it. One alteration he effected is worth special mention;
many of the windows of the church previously stuffed with reeds and straw, were
glazed. The civil wars in this reign brought desolation to many religious
houses: but we do not read that Peterborough suffered. Robert is said to have
written a history of the monastery. He died in 1222. He had attended the fourth
Lateran Council at Rome, in 1215; and had fought in person for King Henry III.
at Rockingham.
Alexander of
Holderness (1222-1226), the Prior, was next
appointed. Dean Patrick gives, from Swapham, an
account of a noteworthy agreement that was made for mutual benefit between this
Abbot and the Abbot of S. Edmunds Bury. The convents "by this league were
tied in a bond of special affection, for mutual counsel and assistance for
ever. They were so linked together, as to account themselves one and the same
convent: so that if one of the abbots died, the survivor being desired was
immediately to go to his convent; and there before him they were to make a
canonical election; or if already made, they were to declare it in his
presence. If the friars of either place were by any necessity driven from their
monastery, the other was to receive them, and afford them a familiar refuge and
aid: with a place in their Quire Chapterhouse and Refectory, secundum
conversionis suae tempus." This abbot is said to have been much
beloved by the monks. He died in 1226.
Martin of Ramsey (1226-1233), one of the monks, was chosen to succeed
Alexander. He remained only six years. After his death another monk, Walter
of S. Edmunds (1233-1245), was elected. He was a great builder. It was
during his time that the minster was solemnly re-dedicated. This abbot made no
less than three visits to Rome. On the third occasion he was summoned in
consequence of some irregularity in an appointment to the living of Castor; but
he seems to have managed his case very adroitly, and to have escaped all
censure by assigning an annuity of £10 a year to the Pope's nephew. Another
account, however, represents the abbot as being so distressed at the
indignities he suffered at the Papal Court, that, being unwell before he went
there and his infirmities being increased by his journey, he died very soon
after his return to England. "He left the abbey abounding in all good
things; stored with horses, oxen, sheep and all cattle in great multitudes, and
corn in some places for three years." He died in 1245.
William de Hotot (1246-1249), another monk of the house, succeeded Walter. He
held the office only three years, when he resigned and was assigned a residence
at the manor of Cottingham, afterwards exchanged for one at Oxney, a few miles
only from Peterborough. It is said that his resignation was caused by
complaints being made of his enriching his own kinsfolk, "whereof he had
great multitudes swarming about him," at the
expense of the monastery. But the injury he did could not have been very
considerable, for his body was brought to Peterborough to be buried, and he had
an honourable commemoration in the Church's calendar.
John de Caleto (1249-1262), that is, of Calais, came here from Winchester,
where he was prior. He was related to the queen. As one of the Chief Justices
he went on circuit. But he seems to have taken the side of the Barons in the
civil war, and is said to have held the office of treasurer to them for the
last two years of his life. He was seldom in residence at Peterborough, but
appointed a very efficient deputy, who afterwards succeeded him as abbot.
Robert of Button (1262-1274) fought in the battle of Northampton against the
king. The king, coming to assault the town, "espied amongst his enemies'
ensigns on the wall the ensign of the Abbey of Peterburgh, whereat he was so
angry that he vowed to destroy the nest of such ill birds. But the town of
Northampton being reduced, Abbot Robert, by mediation of friends to the king,
saved both himself and church, but was forced to pay for his delinquency, to
the king 300 marks, to the queen £20, to Prince Edward £60, to the Lord Souch
£6, 13s. 4d." When the fortune of war changed and the Barons were
victorious at Lewes, "then did the other side fleece the Abbot of
Peterburgh for his contribution to the king." After Evesham again the king
repeated his exactions, and the unfortunate abbot had to pay enormously. The
total amount that he paid on these several occasions is put down at a sum which
seems almost impossible, being upwards of £4320. This abbot attended the
Council of Lyons in 1273, and died abroad as he was returning to England. He was
buried abroad; his heart, being brought to Peterborough, was interred before
the altar in one of the chapels in the south transept.
Richard of London (1274-1295) is said to have been born in the parish of S.
Pancras. He was a monk of the house, and while sacrist had erected the
Bell-tower and given two bells. A great deal of litigation was carried on in
his time, and he and the abbey were fortunate in having in one of the monks,
William of Woodford, a man of great skill and judgement, to conduct the different
cases before the courts. So uniformly successful was he and so wisely did he
act as coadjutor of Richard when he became very old
and infirm, that he was elected to the abbacy on the death of Richard of London
in 1295.
William of
Woodford (1295-1299) only lived four years after
he became abbot. After him came Godfrey of Crowland (1299-1321),
the celerarius of the monastery. He is very highly praised in the chronicles
for the various services he rendered to the abbey. More than once he was at the
heavy charge of entertaining the king and his court, and he contributed largely
to the expenses of the war with Scotland.
Adam of Boothby (1321-1338),
one of the monks, was a man of great "innocence
and simplicity" His revenues were much employed in contributions to the
king's expenses and in royal entertainments; and his energies devoted to divers
legal difficulties connected with manors, wardships, repairs of bridges, rights
of hunting, and the like. Of the last eleven abbots, whose rule extended over a
period of 124 years, all but one had been monks of the place.
Henry of Morcot (1338-1353) in all probability was also one of the monks,
but this is not so recorded. And the same may be said of all the remaining
abbots, but the historians do not say so until the time of William in 1471. At
the same time it is never said that any of them came from elsewhere.
Robert of Ramsey (1353-1361) ruled for eight years, and nothing else is known
about him.
Henry of Overton (1361-1391) was abbot during the commotions in King Richard
II.'s reign. The tenants with others rose up against the abbey, intending to
destroy it. The Bishop of Norwich "coming to the assistance of the
monastery with a strong power, forced the villains to desist from their
enterprise: nay, dispersed them, and took some of them, and killed others; the
rest, taking the church for sanctuary, which they intended to have destroyed,
were there run through with lances and swords; some of them hard by the altar,
others by the walls of the church, both within and without."
Nicholas (1391-1396), William Genge (1396-1408) the
first mitred abbot, John Deeping (1408-1438) in turn
succeeded. Nothing remarkable is told of them. The name of the last and the
names of the next two are really the names of places; but the prefix "de"
seems now to have been discontinued, and the place-name to have become a
surname. Abbot John resigned his office the year before he died.
Richard Ashton (1438-1471) took great pains about the regulation of the
services in the church, and drew up a customary out of the ancient usages of
the place.
William Ramsey (1471-1496) appears to have devoted his time to the
management of the estates and to upholding the territorial privileges of the
house. If the epitaph formerly to be seen on a brass on his tomb is to be
believed, he was a man prudent, just, pious, esteemed by all, chaste, kind, and
adorned with every virtue.
Robert Kirton (1496-1528) has left several proofs of his energy in building, signing, as it were, the stones with his
autograph. His rebus, a kirk on a ton, sometimes accompanied by the initial of
his Christian name, is to be seen in the New Building, which he completed, on
the Deanery gateway, and on the graceful oriel window in the Bishop's Palace.
The chamber to which this window gives light still retains the name originally
given of "Heaven's Gate Chamber." Much other work done by him towards
the beautifying of the church and buildings has perished.
The last abbot was John
Chambers (1528-1540). One incident of considerable interest is related
as having taken place in his first year. "Cardinal Wolsey came to
Peterburgh, where he kept his Easter. Upon Palm Sunday he carried his palm,
going with the monks in procession, and the Thursday following he kept his
Maundy, washing and kissing the feet of fifty-nine poor people, and having
dried them, he gave to every one of them 12d. and three ells of canvas for a
shirt; he gave also to each of them a pair of shoes and a portion of red
herrings. On Easter day he went in procession in his cardinal's vestments, and
sang the High-Mass himself after a solemn manner, which he concluded with his
benediction and remission upon all the hearers." This abbot was a native
of Peterborough, and was sometimes known as John Burgh; and on the brass placed
on his tomb he was called "Johannes Burgh, Burgo natus." A monumental
effigy was also erected to him, "made of white chalkstone"; and this
is almost certainly the figure now placed (temporarily) at the back of the
apse. This abbot was B.D. of Cambridge and one of the king's chaplains. It was
during his time that Queen Katherine of Arragon was interred in the minster.
The well-known story that the building was spared by the king out of regard to
the memory of his first wife is told by Dean Patrick in these words:—[34]"There is
this traditional story goes concerning the preservation of this church at the
dissolution of abbeys: that a little after Queen Katherine's interment here
(which Mr G. mentions), some courtiers suggesting to the king how well it would
become his greatness to erect a fair monument for her, he answered, 'Yes, he
would leave her one of the goodliest monuments in Christendom,' meaning this
church, for he had then in his thoughts the demolishing of abbeys, which
shortly after followed." Abbot Chambers
surrendered the monastery to the king in 1540, and was appointed guardian of
the temporalities, with a pension of £266, 13s. 4d. and 100 loads of wood. The
king divided the whole property of the abbey into three parts, retaining
one-third for himself, and assigning the other parts upon the foundation of the
see to the Bishop and Chapter respectively. If the annual value of the portion
he reserved for his own use may be taken to be exactly one-third of the
possessions of the abbey, the entire property must have been worth as nearly as
possible £2200 per annum. The last abbot became the first bishop.
It is remarkable that of the
two queens buried at Peterborough, the body of one has been removed to
Westminster by the orders of her son, and that a similar removal had been
previously designed for the body of the other. Queen Katherine's daughter,
Queen Mary, left directions in her will that "the body of the virtuous
Lady and my most dere and well-beloved mother of happy memory, Queen Kateryn,
which lyeth now buried at Peterborowh," should be removed and laid near
the place of her own sepulture, and that honourable monuments should be made
for both. It would have been a singular coincidence if this intention had been
carried out.
CHAPTER VI.
HISTORY OF THE DIOCESE.
The Abbey Church was converted
into the Cathedral of the newly-founded diocese of Peterborough by deed bearing
date September 4, 1541. The counties of Northampton and Rutland were the limits
of the new see. The king's original plan for the establishment of bishoprics
out of the confiscated estates of monastic establishments was too generous to
be put into practice. He designed the foundation of no less than twenty-one new
sees. In this scheme Northamptonshire and Huntingdonshire were assigned to the
diocese of Peterborough; and, considering the situation of the new cathedral,
this would have been a more satisfactory arrangement than the one which was
ultimately carried out. The only change that has been made in the limits of the
diocese is that, in the year 1839, the county of Leicester was detached from
the see of Lincoln and joined to Peterborough.
As has been said above, the
first bishop was John Chambers (1541-1556). He was consecrated[35] in the
minster on the 23rd of October 1541, by Thomas (Thirlby), Bishop of Ely, Robert
(Blyth), Bishop of Down, last Abbot of Thorney, Suffragan of Ely, and Thomas
(Hallam or Swillington), Bishop of Philadelphia, Suffragan of Lincoln. Strype
has an account of his costly funeral. The two memorials to him in the church
had been erected by himself in his lifetime.
David Pole (1556-1559) is generally held to have been a relative (some
say a nephew) of Cardinal Reginald Pole. He was Dean of the Arches. He was not
consecrated till August 1557, and so held the bishopric less than two years,
being deprived by Queen Elizabeth in June 1559. He lived quietly in London till
his death in 1568.
Edmund Scambler (1560-1584) in the Roman index of books prohibited is called Pseudo-Episcopus, no doubt because there was another
Bishop of Peterborough, Pole, still living. He alienated many of the lands and
manors of his bishopric to the queen and to her courtiers; and as a reward he
was translated to Norwich, where he died ten years later.
Richard Howland (1584-1600) was Master of Magdalene, and afterwards of S.
John's, Cambridge. He was present at the funeral of Mary Queen of Scots. He was
buried at the upper end of the choir, but no stone or monument exists to his
memory.
Thomas Dove (1600-1630) was Dean of Norwich. He was[36] "a
lover of hospitality, keeping a very free house, and having always a numerous
family, yet was so careful of posterity that he left a fair estate to his
heirs." He was buried in the north transept. "Over his body was
erected a very comely monument of long quadrangular form, having four corner
pilasters supporting a fair table of black marble, and, within, the
pourtraiture of the bishop lying in his Episcopal habit." This was
destroyed in 1643. There was a long Latin inscription in prose and verse, and
among the verses these occur:—
"Hoc addam: Hie illa est senio argentata
ColumbaDavidis,
coelos hinc petit ille suos."
This monument was erected by
the bishop's eldest son, Sir William Dove, Kt., of Upton.
William Peirse (1630-1632) was promoted from the Deanery. He only remained
here as bishop two years, when he was translated to Bath and Wells. "A man
of excellent parts, both in divinity and knowledge of the laws: very vigilant
and active he was for the good both of the ecclesiastical and civil state."
He was silenced during the civil war, but restored in 1660. On his tombstone,
at Walthamstow, it is said "Templum Cathedrale Wellense reparavit,
Episcopale Palatium exædificavit, coelis maturus terris valedixit an. æt. 94 salut.
1670."
Augustine Lindsell (1632-1634) was Dean of Lichfield. He was translated to
Hereford after being bishop here two years, but died within a few months.
Francis Dee (1634-1638) was Dean of Chichester. "He was a man of
very pious life and affable behaviour." He
founded scholarships and fellowships at S. John's College, Cambridge, of which
he had been Fellow, for boys from the King's School, Peterborough, of his name
or kindred. In 1637 Archbishop Laud reported to the King that "My Lord of
Peterborough hath taken a great deal of pains and brought his diocese into very
good order." He left by will £100 to the repairs of the Cathedral, and the
same amount to the repairs of S. Paul's. He was buried in the choir, near the
throne.
John Towers (1638-1649) was one of the King's chaplains. He was promoted from the Deanery. He protested, with eleven
other bishops, against the opposition that was made by the Parliamentary party
to their taking their seats in the House of Lords, in which protest it was
declared that all laws, orders, votes, or resolutions, were in themselves null
and of none effect, which in their absence from Dec. 27th 1641, had been
passed, or should afterwards be passed, during the time of their enforced
absence. For this they were committed to the Tower, and kept there four or five
months. Being set free he was allowed to return to Peterborough, but his
revenues were taken away. Living here in a state of continual alarm, he betook
himself to the king's forces at Oxford, where he remained until the surrender
of the place. Coming back here in 1646 his health failed, and he died about
three weeks before the king was beheaded. He was buried in the choir.
No successor was appointed
until the Restoration. Benjamin Laney (1660-1663) was then
made Bishop. He was Dean of Rochester, and had been Master of Pembroke,
Cambridge. He was translated to Lincoln in 1663, and to Ely in 1667. He died in
1675, and is buried at Lambeth.
Joseph Henshaw (1663-1679) was Dean of Chichester. He died suddenly
on March 9, 1679, on his return from attending service
at Westminster Abbey. He was buried at East Lavant in Sussex, where he had been
rector.
William Lloyd (1679-1685) was translated from Llandaff, and was further
translated to Norwich in 1685. He was deprived of his see as a Nonjuror in
1691. He lived at Hammersmith till his death in 1710. He was the last survivor
of the seven deprived bishops. It is singular that his namesake, William Lloyd,
bishop of S. Asaph, should have been one of the seven bishops committed to the
Tower by King James II. in 1688; but he had no scruples about taking the oaths
to the new sovereigns, and became afterwards Bishop of Lichfield, and
ultimately of Worcester.
Thomas White (1685-1691) was one of the seven committed to the Tower, and
also one of the seven deprived in 1691 as Nonjurors. He attended Sir John
Fenwick on the scaffold. This bishop, with his predecessor, Bishop Lloyd, the
deprived Bishop of Norwich, were two of the consecrators of the Nonjuring
Bishops, Hickes and Wagstaffe. There were really ten bishops (including
Archbishop Sancroft) who refused the oaths to William and Mary; but the Bishops
of Worcester, Chichester, and Chester died before the time fixed for the
deprivation. Bishop White lived in retirement after he left his diocese. He
died in 1698, and his funeral is mentioned in Evelyn's Diary, under
date June 5th: "Dr White, late Bishop of Peterborough, who had been
deprived for not complying with Government, was buried in St Gregory's
churchyard or vault, at St Paul's. His hearse was accompanied by two Nonjuror
bishops, Dr. Turner of Ely, and Dr. Lloyd, with forty Nonjuror clergymen, who
could not stay the office of the burial, because the Dean of St Paul's had
appointed a conforming minister to read the office, at which all much wondered,
there being nothing in that office which mentioned the present king."
Lathbury remarks on this retirement from the grave, that it was a singular
circumstance, and contrary to the practice of the Nonjurors in many other
cases.
Richard Cumberland (1691-1718) had a reputation as a philosophical writer. The
only memoir of him is to be found in the preface to Sanchoniathon's History,[37] a
posthumous work, in which his chaplain (and son-in-law)
thus describes his appointment:—"The king was told that Dr Cumberland was
the fittest man he could nominate to the bishopric of Peterborough. Thus a
private country clergyman, without posting to Court—a place he had rarely
seen—without suing to great men, without taking the least step towards
soliciting for it, was pitched upon to fill a great trust, only because he was
fittest for it. He walked after his usual manner on a post-day to the
coffee-house, and read in the newspaper that one Dr Cumberland of Stamford was
named to the bishopric of Peterborough, a greater surprise to himself than to
anybody else." His chaplain speaks of the bishop's character, zeal, and
learning in terms of unqualified praise. One of the bishop's sons, Richard, was
Archdeacon of Northampton, and father of Denison Cumberland, Bishop of Clonfert
and of Kilmore. This last named married a daughter of Dr Bentley, the famous
Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, and one of their sons was Richard
Cumberland, the dramatist. Bishop Richard Cumberland is buried in the
Cathedral, and a tablet to his memory remains in the New Building.
White Kennett (1718-1728) had been Dean. He was a most industrious writer,
many of his works, which are upwards of fifty in number, being most laborious.
His manuscript collections in the British Museum are also of great value. He is
best known from his antiquarian tastes and studies, and for having directed the
attention of his clergy to the value of parish registers. It would seem that
before his time no transcripts of parish registers were ever sent to the
Bishop's Registry at Peterborough. The earliest transcripts now to be found
date only from the beginning of his episcopate, except that, in a few
instances, some incumbents appear to have sent the entries for six or eight
years previously. Notwithstanding the efficiency of his predecessor he
"found the irregularities of the diocese great and many." The
Cathedral service was negligently conducted, many clergy were non-resident,
some small benefices had been left unfilled. Many other abuses were discovered
from time to time. Bishop Kennett was most active and conscientious in
administering his office, and thoroughly re-organised the diocese; but his
strong political partisanship made for him a great number of enemies. The
enmity he raised came to a culminating point while he was still dean. An altar-piece representing the Last Supper had
been painted for Whitechapel Church.[38] In this
Judas was painted turning round to the spectator, and was intended to represent
Kennett. We do not know whether the likeness in itself was sufficiently good to
be recognised, but the intention was sufficiently indicated by a black patch in
the centre of the forehead, just under the wig. Kennett always wore such a
patch, to hide a scar which had remained after being trepanned in early
manhood. Judas is, moreover, represented as clean-shaven, being the only figure
so drawn except the Evangelist S. John. Great scandal and excitement were
caused by this picture, and it was removed. It ultimately found a home at S.
Albans Abbey, where it may still be seen (patch and all), but no longer in the
position it once occupied over the high altar. Bishop Kennett died in 1728, and
is buried in the New Building.
Robert Clavering (1728-1747) was consecrated Bishop of Llandaff in 1725, and
translated to Peterborough in 1728. He is buried here, but no memorial exists.
John Thomas (1747-1757) was Canon of S. Paul's. He was translated to
Sarum in 1757, and to Winchester in 1761. He was preceptor to Prince George,
afterwards King George III., who used to visit him at Farnham Castle. In the
early part of his episcopate he had a namesake on the bench, John Thomas, formerly
Dean of Peterborough, who was made Bishop of Lincoln in 1744, and of Sarum in
1761; and during the latter part another namesake, John Thomas, Bishop of
Rochester from 1775 to 1793. Bishop Thomas of Winchester died in 1781, in his
85th year, and is buried in his cathedral.
Richard Terrick (1757-1764) was Canon of S. Paul's. He was translated to
London in 1764, and died in 1777.
Robert Lamb (1764-1769) had been Dean. He is buried at Hatfield, where
he had been rector.
John Hinchcliffe (1769-1794) is an instance of a man, rising from an inferior
station to positions of the greatest eminence. His father was a stable-master
in London. Proceeding from Westminster School to Trinity College, Cambridge, he
obtained a Fellowship there. He afterwards, through a gentleman of wealth to
whom he was tutor, secured some very influential friends, and became Head
Master of Westminster School, Chaplain to the King,
and Master of Trinity. This last appointment he continued to hold with his
bishopric until 1789, when he was made Dean of Durham. A memoir published at
the time of his death describes him as learned, assiduous in his duties,
obliging in his manners, and honest and sincere in his religious and political
principles. He died in 1794, and is buried in the cathedral.
Spencer Madan (1794-1813) was a prebendary and king's chaplain, and first
cousin to the poet Cowper. He came back to Peterborough from Bristol, to which
see he was consecrated in 1792. He is buried in the New Building.
John Parsons (1813-1819) was Master
of Balliol and Dean of Bristol. He was a man of great mark and influence at
Oxford, where he died and was buried. There is a monument to him in the chapel
of Balliol.
Herbert Marsh (1819-1839) was the author of many controversial works. He
was translated to this see from Llandaff, where he had been bishop since 1816.
He was buried in the New Building—the last bishop interred in the cathedral.
George Davys (1839-1864) was Dean of Chester, and had been preceptor to
Queen Victoria. He was buried in the Cathedral Yard; the Queen sent one of her
carriages with servants in state liveries to attend the funeral as a mark of
her affection and esteem.
Francis Jeune (1864-1868) had been Dean of Jersey, Master of
Pembroke, Oxford, and Dean of Lincoln. His eldest
son was the well-known judge. Bishop Jeune is buried in the Cathedral Yard.
William Connor
Magee (1868-1891) was Dean of Cork. He was
translated to the Archbishopric of York, but died within a very few months, May
5th, 1891. He is buried in the Cathedral Yard, where a massive cross of Irish
marble has been erected over his grave. In the south choir aisle of the
cathedral there is also a recumbent effigy, the likeness to the deceased
prelate being most remarkably good. His career is so recent and his eminence so
well known that it is unnecessary to speak of them.
Mandell Creighton (1891-1897) had been Canon of Windsor, and previously of
Worcester. He was translated to London when Bishop Temple became Archbishop of
Canterbury. He died in 1901, and is buried in the crypt of S. Paul's; an inlaid
marble slab copied from the one over his grave is in the south choir aisle of
the cathedral.
Hon. Edward Carr
Glyn (1897-1916), Vicar of Kensington, Chaplain to the Queen;
resigned 1916.
Frank Theodore
Woods (1916), Vicar of Bradford, Yorks,
1912-1916, is the present bishop.
DEANS OF PETERBOROUGH CATHEDRAL.
1541
Francis Abree, B.D.
1543 Gerard
Carleton, B.D., Canon of Westminster.
1549 James
Curthop, M.A., Canon of Christ Church.
1557 James
Boxall, LL.D., Archdeacon of Ely, Warden of Winchester, Dean of Norwich, Dean
of Windsor.
1560
William Latimer, D.D., Archdeacon of Westminster.
1585
Richard Fletcher, D.D., Bishop of Bristol, of Worcester, and finally of London.
1590 Thomas
Nevill, D.D., Master of Magdalene, and afterwards of Trinity, Cambridge, Canon
of Ely, Dean of Canterbury.
1597 John
Palmer, D.D., Prebendary of Lichfield, Master of Magdalene, Cambridge.
1607
Richard Clayton, D.D., Archdeacon of Ely, Master of Magdalene, and afterwards
of S. John's, Cambridge.
1612 George
Meriton, D.D., Dean of Bucking, Dean of York.
1616 Henry
Beaumont, D.D., Dean of Windsor.
1622
William Peirse, D.D., Prebendary of S. Paul's, Canon of Christ Church, Bishop
of Peterborough, and afterwards of Bath and Wells.
1630 John
Towers, D.D., Bishop of Peterborough.
1638 Thomas
Jackson, D.D., Prebendary of Winchester, President of Corpus, Oxford.
1640 John
Cosin, D.D., Prebendary of Durham, Archdeacon of Cleveland, Master of
Peterhouse, Dean of Durham.
1660 Edward
Rainbow, D.D., Master of Magdalene, Cambridge, Bishop of Carlisle.
1664 James
Duport, D.D., Master of Magdalene, Cambridge, Professor of Greek, Prebendary of
Lincoln.
1679 Simon
Patrick, D.D., Canon of Westminster, Bishop of Chichester, and afterwards of
Ely.
1689
Richard Kidder, D.D., Prebendary of Norwich, Bishop of Bath and Wells.
1601 Samuel
Freeman D.D.
1707 White
Kermett, D.D., Archdeacon of Huntingdon, Prebendary of Lincoln and of Sarum,
Bishop of Peterborough.
1718
Richard Reynolds, LL.D., Prebendary and Chancellor of Peterborough, Bishop of
Bangor, and afterwards of Lincoln.
1721
William Gee, D.D., Canon of Westminster, Prebendary and Dean of Lincoln.
1722 John
Mandeville, D.D., Archdeacon and Chancellor of Lincoln, Canon of Windsor.
1725
Francis Lockier, D.D.
1740 John
Thomas, D.D., Canon of Westminster and of S. Paul's, Bishop of Lincoln, and
afterwards of Salisbury.
1744 Robert
Lamb, D.D., Bishop of Peterborough.
1764
Charles Tarrant, D.D., Canon of Bristol, Dean of Carlisle, Prebendary of
Rochester, Prebendary of Sarum.
1791 Charles
Manners Sutton, D.D., Bishop of Norwich, Dean of Windsor, Archbishop of
Canterbury.
1792 Peter
Peckard, D.D., Prebendary of Southwell, Master of Magdalene, Cambridge.
1798 Thomas
Kipling, D.D.
1822 James
Henry Monk, D.D., Professor of Greek, Cambridge, Canon of Westminster, Bishop
of Gloucester and Bristol.
1830 Thomas
Turton, D.D., Professor of Mathematics, Regius Professor of Divinity,
Cambridge, Prebendary of Lincoln, Dean of Westminster, Bishop of Ely.
1842 George
Butler, D.D., Headmaster of Harrow.
1853
Augustus Page Saunders, D.D., Headmaster of Charterhouse.
1878 John
James Stewart Perowne, D.D., Prebendary of S. David's, Canon of Llandaff,
Margaret Professor of Divinity, Cambridge, Bishop of Worcester.
1891
Marsham Argles, D.D., Canon of Peterborough.
1893
William Clavell Ingram, D.D., Hon. Canon of Peterborough.
1901
William Hagger Barlow, D.D., Prebendary of S. Paul's Cathedral.
1908 Arnold
Henry Page, M.A.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] "English Towns and Districts," 1883, pp. 103,
130.
[2] A few other
cathedrals which were originally churches of monasteries are still called
Minsters, as York (nearly always), Canterbury (occasionally), Ripon, Southwell,
and perhaps more. Lincoln Cathedral though often called a Minster was a
Cathedral from the first, and was never attached to a monastery.
[4] "Ingulf and
the Historia Croylandensis." By W.G. Searle, M.A., Camb. Antiq. Soc., 8vo.
xxvii. p. 65.
[5] Searle: Ingulf,
p. 63.
[6] "On the
Abbey Church of Peterborough." By G.A. Poole, M.A. Arch. Soc. Archdeac.
Northampton, 1855, p. 190.
[8] Anglo-Saxon
Chronicle, anno 1128.
[9] "Remarks on
the Architecture of Peterborough Cathedral." By F.A. Paley, M.A. 2nd Ed.,
1859, p. 21.
[10] The two eastern
pillars of the nave are circular; and the third pillar from the tower, on both
sides, is "composed of nook-shafts set in rectangular recesses against the
body of the pier."
[11] Some of Mr
Poole's reasoning, as to the different parts of the nave to be attributed to
different abbots, depends upon an assumption that the Saxon church was on the
site of the present one, and that some part of the nave was still existing in a
ruinous condition while the present choir and tower were being built. Recent
discoveries have proved that this assumption is groundless, for the nave of the
Saxon church was beyond the south aisle of the existing nave.
[15] The engraving
that accompanies this description represents a dignified altar-piece, but seems
taken from a rough drawing, or possibly from memory. On the altar were two
tapers burning, an alms dish, and two books. The Abbot's chair, of stone, is to
the south, facing west.
[16] "Memoirs
of the Protectoral-House of Cromwell," ii, 18.
[17] These shields,
which were of metal, are now arranged on the walls of the library.
[18] Where the
author has often seen it. It was at last destroyed in a fire.
[19] Museum
Criticum, viii, 672.
[20] "Handbook
of Architecture," 2nd ed., 1859, p. 869.
[21] "English
Towns and Districts," 1883, p. 29.
[23] Sir William
Feeld, Peticanon, in his will dated 1558, desires that his body may be buried
in the Gallery before the church door, where all his fellows are buried.
"Gallery" here is probably a corruption of "Galilee."
[26] Patrick's
Supplement to Gunton, p. 334.
[27] King Ethelred
resigned his crown and became Abbot of Bardney. He is here figured with a
mitre.
[28] As well as one
other, probably the one now under one of the arches on the north of the choir.
[29] Archaeological
Journal, 1861, p. 196.
[31] Properly
Northumberland. See Bede's Eccl. Hist. iii. 6.
[33] Historical
Memorials of Canterbury, p. 184.
[35] Stubbs' Episcopal
Succession, p. 79.
[37] P. 12; quoted
in the account of Bishop Cumberland in the Penny Cyclopeia, viii.
229.
[38] A full account
of this famous picture with an engraving is given in Northamptonshire
Notes and Queries, iv. 209.
INDEX
Abbots, account of, 112-126.
Altars, 87.
Apse, 22.
Bell-tower, 48.
Benedict, Abbot, 16.
Bishops, account of, 127-134.
Canons' door, 56.
Ceiling of nave, 84; of choir, 64.
Chapel of St. Thomas, 100.
Choir, 60-76.
Church of S. John Baptist, 108.
City, 108.
Cloister Court, 103.
Danes, ravages of, 6, 8, 11.
Deanery, 102.
Deans, 136.
Dean's door, 50.
Diocese, history of, 127.
Edgar, King, 8-10.
Ernulf, Abbot, 12.
Ethelwold, Bishop of Winchester, 8.
Fire of 1116, 12.
Gateway of Monastery, 99. of Deanery, 102.
Glass, stained, 88.
Guildhall, 108.
Gunton, Prebendary, historian, 6, 14.
Hereward, 11.
Infirmary, 103.
John of Sais, Abbot, 12-13.
Katharine of Aragon, Queen, 24, 26, 95.
Knights' Chamber, 101.
Lady Chapel (destroyed), 20, 52.
Laurel Court, 103.
Lectern, 74.
Magee, Archbishop, monument, 96.
Martin, Abbot, 15.
Mary Queen of Scots, burial, 95.
Monastery, foundation of, 5.
Monastery, history of, 112.
Monastery, plan of, 51, 52.
Monuments, 91.
Museum, 111.
Nave, 81.
New building, 24, 55, 76.
Norman church built, 13, 15
Organ, 72.
Palace, Bishop's, 106.
Patrick, Dean, 14.
Parvise, 45, 90.
Pavement of choir, 72-74.
Porch, western, 22, 45, 90.
Pulpit, 70.
Puritanical destruction, 26.
Reredos, 72.
Reredos, destroyed, 26.
Restoration, first, 28; recent, 31-35.
Saxon church, 8-10, 18, 80.
Saxulf, Abbot, 5.
Scarlett's monument, 98.
Screens of choir, 74.
Spire of south-west tower, 22.
Stalls, 67-69.
Throne, 70.
Transept, north, 52; south, 55; interior, 77.
Transept, western, 87.
Tower, central, 21, 29-32, 51.
Towers, western, 17, 44.
West front, 19, 33, 39-44.
William of Waterville, Abbot, 15.
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