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© Mr Jack Farley FRPS
IoE Number:
472131
Location:
KINGS SCHOOL AND REMAINS OF ABBOTS LODGING, CATHEDRAL PRECINCTS
GLOUCESTER, GLOUCESTER, GLOUCESTERSHIRE
Photographer:
Mr Jack Farley FRPS
Date Photographed:
24 January 2001
Date listed:
12 March 1973
Date of last amendment:
15 December 1998
Grade
II*
NOTE - The Images of England website consists of images of listed buildings based on the statutory list as it was in 2001 and does not incoporate subsequent amendments to the list. For an updated version of the statutory list you should visit our LBOnline database http://lbonline.english-heritage.org.uk/Login.aspx
GLOUCESTER
SO8318NW CATHEDRAL PRECINCTS
844-1/8/50 King's School and remains of Abbot's
12/03/73 Lodging
(Formerly Listed as:
CATHEDRAL PRECINCTS
Bishop's Palace (King's School))
GV II*
Remains of Abbot's Lodging on OS Map
The Bishops of Gloucester's palace, now independent school
building. 1861. By Ewan Christian, on the site of, and
incorporating, some minor remains of the house built c1316 for
the Abbots of the Benedictine Abbey of St Peter; from 1541
used as the Bishop's Palace; in 1955 the palace converted for
use as the main building of the King's School housing
principally administrative offices and classrooms. Ashlar,
tiled roofs with moulded copings to gables and parapets, brick
stacks. An eclectic mixture of C13 and C14 English Gothic and
Jacobean.
PLAN: a long, irregular, block set back from and parallel with
Pitt Street behind the northern flank of the Abbey and
Cathedral Precinct Wall (qv); on the north and south sides
several projecting cross wings or gabled features; the
principal entrance porch approximately in the centre of the
north side under the west end of the former chapel in a
parallel attached range with apsidal east end; the former
great hall, on the foundations of a medieval range, now the
school library, in the central cross range west of the porch
with service rooms in wing further west, and the principal
reception rooms within the eastern end of the block.
EXTERIOR: single storey Great Hall, otherwise two and three
storeys, cellar and attic. Asymmetrical facades enlivened by
changes in level and differences in the scale of projecting
features; the north front comprises the side of the
buttressed, three-bay former chapel range with apsidal east
end to left, with offset buttresses, and at first-floor level
a lancet in each bay; a double, cross-gabled range further
left with, on the first floor and extending into the
right-hand gable, a three-light window with Perpendicular
tracery; cross-gabled range to right with two two-light
windows with Decorated tracery, recessed to right a cross
gable with two two-light Perpendicular windows, and further
right a recessed lateral wing at the west end of the block; in
the right-hand bay of the former chapel range an entrance
porch between the buttresses with a moulded arch and lean-to
roof.
On the south side of the block the projecting, cross gabled
end of the Great Hall with two three-light windows with
Decorated tracery; to right the front has a moulded string
courses at second floor and attic-floor levels and, projecting
from the lateral range of the block, two short cross-gabled
wings, and gabled dormers above the main range; on the east
front to left, a large, two-storey compass window. All the
windows at the east end of the south front and on the east
front have stone mullions and upper transoms in late C16 or
early C17 style.
INTERIOR: rooms linked by long passage between Great Hall to
principal staircase on north side at east end, the open well
stair with newels with spiked knops and wrought-iron
balustrades with twisted balusters; in the windows to the
stair well a collection of stained glass of various dates; in
east end several large reception rooms with cross-beamed
ceilings, the intersections of the beams with carved foliage
and paterae; in one room a stone chimney-piece with
quatrefoils in the arch spandrels may be late C14, restored
and reused; a ground floor room with carved bosses to coffered
ceiling, rich ornamentation to bay window area and
medieval-style carved spandrels with ornamental shields to
stone fireplace.
In the former chapel arched trusses supported on moulded
corbels with richly carved foliage; in the Great hall trusses
with semicircular arched braces to the collar tie and scissor
braces above; in the windows panels of medieval and C16
stained and painted glass, possibly from the former palace.
The library is positioned at right angles above the remains of
the C14 domestic accommodation, which has rectanglular plan
bounded by very thick walls, chamfered jambs of north door and
chamfered pointed-arched south door; the south wall has 3
piers, probably springers for C14 undercroft vaulting. Graded
for the medieval fabric and for the external architectual
quality of the work by Christain.
(Welander D: The History, Art and Architecture of Gloucester
Cathedral: Stroud, Gloucestershire: 1991-: 409, 411; BOE:
Verey D: Gloucestershire: The Vale and the Forest of Dean:
London: 1976-: 223; VCH: The City of Gloucester: Oxford:
1988-: 282).