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© Mr John H. Sparkes
IoE Number:
483287
Location:
CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF ST ANDREW AND CHAPTER HOUSE AND CLOISTERS, CATHEDRAL GREEN (east side)
WELLS, MENDIP, SOMERSET
Photographer:
Mr John H. Sparkes
Date Photographed:
11 August 2007
Date listed:
12 November 1953
Date of last amendment:
12 November 1953
Grade
I
The Images of England website consists of images of listed buildings based on the statutory list as it was in 2001 and does not incorporate subsequent amendments to the list. For the statutory list and information on the current listed status of individual buildings please go to The National Heritage List for England.
WELLS
ST5445 CATHEDRAL GREEN
662-1/7/32 (East side)
12/11/53 Cathedral Church of St Andrew,
Chapter House and Cloisters
GV I
Cathedral Bishopric established in 909. Saxon cathedral built,
nothing now visible (excavations 1978/79).
See transferred to Bath in 1090.
Church extended and altered in 1140, in Norman style, under
Bishop Robert Lewes; part of this lies under south transept of
the present church.
Present church begun, at east end, in 1176 and continued to
consecration in 1239, but with substantial interruption from
1190-1206. Designer ADAM LOCK, west front probably by THOMAS
NORREYS.
Nave, west front (but not towers), north porch, transepts, and
part of choir date from this phase.
Bishopric becomes Bath and Wells in 1218.
Central tower begun 1315, completed 1322. Designer THOMAS
WITNEY
Lady Chapel begun 1323, completed c1326. Probably by THOMAS
WITNEY. At this stage the Chapel a free-standing structure to
the east of the original (1176) east end.
Extension of choir and presbytery in 1330 to connect with the
new Lady Chapel. Designer THOMAS WITNEY, but presbytery vaults
by WILLIAM JOY.
Following signs of dangerous settlement and cracking under the
new tower, the great arches and other work inserted to prevent
collapse in 1337; designer WILLIAM JOY. (The St Andrew's
arches known as strainer arches).
South-west tower begun in 1385 to design of WILLIAM WYNFORD,
completed c1395.
North-west tower built 1410. Tracery added to nave windows in
1410.
Central tower damaged by fire in 1439; repair and substantial
design modification (designer not known) completed c1450.
Stillington's chapel built 1477, (off east cloister) designer
WILLIAM SMYTH, who also designed the fan vault to the main
crossing. The chapel was demolished in 1552.
MATERIALS: Doulting ashlar with blue Lias dressings, partly
replaced by Kilkenny marble, some Purbeck marble internal
dressings, and pink rubble outer cloister walls. PLAN:
Cruciform plan with aisled nave and transepts, N porch,
cruciform aisled chancel with transeptal chapels and
retrocuire. E Lady Chapel, NE Chapter House (see item 33) NE
Chapter House and S cloister (see item 34).
EXTERIOR: Early English Gothic style, Decorated Gothic style
Chapter House, Retroquire and Lady Chapel, Perpendicular
Gothic style W and crossing towers and cloister. Early English
windows throughout, mainly filled with 2-light tracery c1415,
with a parapet of cusped triangles added c1320 to all but the
Chapter House and W front. 5-sided Lady Chapel has angle
buttresses, drip and a parapet of cusped triangles, with wide
5-light windows with reticulated tracery of cusped spheroid
triangles; a late C14 flying buttress with a square pinnacle
to the SE. N chancel aisles: the E bay has a shallow 2-centre
arched 5-light window with Decorated tracery, steeper 3-light
windows to the W bays, the transept chapel window of 4-lights
with reticulated tracery. The early C14 E end of the chancel
has flying buttresses to the gable and 3 E bays; the E end has
a 5-light window with Decorated tracery, including 2 mullions
up to the soffit, and a raised surround beneath a shallow
canted parapet, with the coped gable set back and lit by 4
lozenge windows divided by a wide Y-shaped mullion; the N
clerestory windows of 3-lights, the 3 to the E have ogee
hoods, the 3 late C12 W and 2 N transept windows linked by a
continuous hood mould. For Chapter House-see below. N transept
and nave aisles have a plinth, sill band, corbel table and
parapet, with wide buttresses separating aisle lancet windows
with inserted early C15 2-light Perpendicular tracery, and a
clerestory with similar moulding and fenestration. Transept
gable in 3 stages, with clasping buttress turrets and sill
bands: 3 lower-stage windows and one to the end of W aisle,
middle stage has a blind arcade of 6 lancets, the middle 4
truncated beneath 3 tall stepped lancets to upper stage, with
similar blind panels paired to the turrets, and medallions to
the spandrels; a weathered band beneath an arcade of stepped
blind lancets, and panelled turret pinnacles with octagonal
caps, a third to the flanking aisle; the right-hand turret has
a good c1475 clock with paired soldiers above striking 2
bells, and a crenellated canopy. 9-bay nave aisle, 10-bay
clerestory, of which the 2 windows flanking the transept
re-entrant cut off above a mid C14 relieving arch.
Fine N porch 2 bays deep with blue Lias shafts and C18 outer
doors: entrance archway of 5 orders with alternate paired
banded columns with stiff leaf capitals to the W, carved
showing the martyrdom of King Edmund to the E, and a
roll-moulded arch, including 2 orders of undercut chevron
mouldings with filigree decoration over fine doors of c1200;
clasping buttresses with octagonal pinnacles as the transept,
and a gable with 6 stepped lancets beneath 3 stepped parvise
lancets with sunken panels in the spandrels. Inside of 2 bays,
articulated by banded vault shafts with stiff leaf capitals to
a sexpartite vault; side benches are backed by arcades of 4
bayed seats with stiff leaf spandrels, beneath a string bitten
off at the ends by serpents; a deeply recessed upper arcade of
3 arches to a bay, with complex openwork roll mouldings
intersecting above the capitals, on coupled shafts free
standing in front of attached shafts, enriched spandrels, and
openwork Y-tracery in the tympanum beneath the vault. The S
end decorated after the front entrance, including a moulded
arch with a chevron order, and containing a pair of arched
doorways with a deeply-moulded trumeau and good panelled early
C13 doors with C15 Perpendicular tracery panels.
S elevation is similar: the chancel wall of the 1340 extension
is recessed for the 3 E bays with flying buttresses, the
windows to the W have uncusped intersecting tracery. Crossing
tower has a c1200 blind arcade to a string level with the roof
ridge; upper section 1313, remodelled c1440, has ribbed
clasping buttresses to gabled niches with figures and
pinnacles with sub-pinnacles; each side of 3 bays separated by
narrow buttresses with pinnacles, a recessed transom with
openwork tracery beneath and louvred trefoil-headed windows
above, gabled hoods and finials. Corbels within for a spire,
destroyed 1439.
W front screen is a double square in width, divided into 5
bays by very deep buttresses, with the wider nave bay set
forward. The towers stand outside the aisles, the design of
the front continued round both ends and returned at the rear.
Statues of c1230-1250, to an uncertain iconographic scheme.
Divided vertically into 3 bands, beneath a central nave gable
and Perpendicular towers; arches with originally blue Lias
shafts, now mostly Kilkenny marble, and stiff leaf capitals. A
tall, weathered plinth, with a central nave entrance of 4
orders with paired doorways and quatrefoil in the tympanum
containing the seated Virgin with flanking angels, and smaller
aisle entrances of 2 orders. Above is an arcade of gabled
hoods over arches, containing paired trefoil-headed statue
niches with bases and 15 surviving figures; 2-light
Perpendicular tracery windows between the buttresses outside
the nave; sunken quatrefoils in the spandrels, which cut
across the corners of the buttresses. The third and principal
band contains 3 tall, slightly stepped nave lancets, paired
blind lancets between the outer buttresses, with narrower
arches flanking them and to the faces and sides of the
buttresses, all with banded Lias shafts and roll-moulded
heads; the 3 arches to the sides and angled faces on the SW
and NW corners have intersecting mouldings as in the N porch.
All except the window arches contain 2 tiers of gabled statue
niches with figures, taller ones in the upper tier, and across
the top is an arcade of trefoil-headed statue niches with
seated figures and carved spandrels. The nave buttresses have
gabled tops containing cinquefoil-arched niches, and tall
pinnacles with arched faces and conical tops; above the nave
is a 3-tier stepped gable with a lower arcade of 10
cinquefoil-arched niches containing seated figures, a taller
arcade of 12 niches with c1400 figures of the Apostles, and a
central top section with outer trefoil arches, corner sunken
quatrefoils; the central oval recess with cusped sides and top
contains a 1985 figure of Christ in Judgement beneath a
pinnacle, with crosses and finials on the weathered coping.
The Perpendicular towers continue the buttresses up with
canopied statue niches to their faces and blank panelling to
the sides, before raking them back into deep angle buttresses;
between are a pair of 2-light W windows, louvred above a
transom and blind below, with a blind arcade above the
windows, and a low crenellated coping.
INTERIOR: Lady Chapel: An elongated octagon in plan, with
triple vault shafts with spherical foliate capitals to a
tierceron vault forming a pattern of concentric stars, with
spherical bosses and a paint scheme of 1845; the 3 W arches
with Purbeck marble shafts onto the Retroquire have blind
arched panels above; beneath the windows is a sill mould with
fleurons, and a bench round the walls. Stone reredos has 6
statue niches with crocketed canopies and smaller niches in
between, with 4 C19 sedilia with ogee-arched and crocketed
canopies and a C14 cusped ogee trefoil-arched S doorway; C19
encaustic tiles. The Retroquire extends laterally into E
chapels each side and transeptal chapels: all with ogee-arched
piscinae with crockets and finials, with a complex
asymmetrical lierne vault on Purbeck marble shafts and
capitals. The 3 E bays of the choir added early C14, and the
high lierne vault of squares extended back over the 3 late C12
W bays, on triple vault shafts, Purbeck marble with
roll-moulded capitals for the c14 and limestone with stiff
leaf capitals for the C12; above the 2-centre aisle arches and
below the clerestory walk is a richly-carved openwork grille
of statue niches with canopies, containing 8 early C20 figures
across the E end; clerestory walk has ogee-arched doorways.
Rich canopies over choir stalls on Purbeck marble shafts, and
5 sedilia with enriched canopies. Ogee-arched doorways with
crockets and pinnacles each side of the choir give onto the
aisles, which have lierne vaults forming hexagons.
Transepts: 3 bays deep and 3 wide, with cluster columns and
stiff leaf capitals, including some fine figure carving in the
SW aisle, paired triforium arches between the vault shafts;
the chancel aisles entered by C14 ogee-arched doorways with
cinquefoil cusps and openwork panels each side; the N transept
has a doorway from the E aisle with a depressed arch and
moulded sides with a panelled Perpendicular ridge door, and
Perpendicular panelled stone screens across the arcade; the S
transept has an early C14 reredos with cusped ogee arches. The
openings to the crossing contain inserted cross ogee strainer
arches with triple chamfered moulding, on the W one an early
C20 raised crucifix and flanking figures on shafted bases, and
the roof has late C15 fan vaulting with mouchettes to the
springers.
Nave: 10-bay nave has compound columns of eight shafts with
stiff leaf capitals enriched with figures, a continuous hood
mould, with carved stops until the 4 W bays, which also have
more richly-carved stiff leaf; a continuous triforium arcade
of roll-moulded lancets with moulded rere arches, 3 to each
bay, with enriched tympana and paterae in the spandrels above,
carved corbels and springers to vault shafts above to a
quadripartite vault without ridges; vault painted to a scheme
of 1844. A panelled c1450 gallery in the S clerestory window 6
from the W; aisles vaulted as nave, with enriched stiff leaf
corbels. The W end has a trefoil-headed blank arcade on blue
Lias shafts and a central stilted depressed-arch doorway,
beneath the 3 W windows; the aisles end with a lateral rib
from the vault to the W arcade. Chapels beneath the towers
have sexpartite vaults with an enriched hole for the bell
ropes; the SW chapel has a shallow arch to the cloister
beneath 3 cusped arched panels. The parvise over the N chapel
contains a rare drawing floor. 2 chantry chapels set between
the E nave piers have fine openwork Perpendicular tracery and
cresting, the S chapel of St Edmund c1490 has a fan-vaulted
canopy over the altar and 2 statue niches with canopies, and
an ogee-arched doorway, the N Holy Cross chapel c1420 has
quatrefoil panelling to the E canopy, distressed statue
niches, and 4-centre arched doorways.
FITTINGS: Lady Chapel: Brass lectern 1661 has a moulded stand
and foliate crest. Retroquire, NE chapel: fine oak C13 Cope
Chest with a 2-leaf top doors; panelled C17/C18 chest; N
transept chapel: C17 oak screen with columns, formerly part of
cow stalls, with artisan Ionic capitals and cornice, set
forward over chest tomb of John Godilee; C14 floor tiles; SE
chapel: Bound oak C14 chest for Chapter Seal.
N transept: Very fine c1390 clock, considered the second
oldest in the world after Salisbury Cathedral (qv), the face
with heavenly bodies represented and 4 knights riding round
above, and a quarter jack in the corner striking bells with a
hammer and his heels; pine chest with bowed top.
Choir: Very fine stalls with misericords, c1335; Bishop's
Throne, c1340, restored by Salvin c1850, wide with panelled,
canted front and stone doorway, deep nodding cusped ogee
canopy over, with 3 stepped statue niches and pinnacles; C19
pulpit opposite, octagonal on a coved base with panelled
sides, and steps up from the N aisle; organ within the chancel
arch rebuilt and new case 1974.
S transept: Round font from the former Saxon cathedral, wit an
arcade of round-headed arches, on a round plinth, with a c1635
cover with heads of putti round sides.
Nave: Pulpit and tomb of William Knight, mid C16, built out
from the Sugar chantry, with panelled buttresses, curved sides
and a cornice. Library: Good shelves and desks with panelled
ends, cornices and scroll crests, and benches with ogee ends
with ball finials of 1686.
MONUMENTS: Quire Corpus Christi N transept chapel: marble
chest tomb of Robert Creyghton d.1672, an alabaster effigy on
a sarcophagus with bowed sides; chest tomb of John Middleton,
d c1350, effigy set beneath the window; chest tomb of John
Middleton, d c1350, effigy set beneath the window; chest tomb
of John Godelee, d.1333, effigy on a chest with open ogee
arcade.
N Quire aisle: chest tombs of Bishop Giso, d.1088, Ralph of
Salisby, d.1463, alabaster, and 2 further c1230 effigies of
Saxon Bishops, on mid C20 plinths; panelled chest tomb with 3
heraldic panels and moulded top; SE Chapel of St John the
Baptist: chest tomb encloses N side, with arcaded sides, thin
mullions to a good openwork top with cusped gables and a
canopy to E end.
St Katherine's transept chapel: Chest tomb of John
Drokensford, d.1329, a painted effigy on a chest with open
ogee arcade, as that for John Godelee; chest tomb of John
Gunthorpe, d.1498 with 5 heraldic panels and moulded top. S
chancel aisle: effigy of John Bernard, d.1459 on a mid C20
plinth; fine chest tomb of Bishop Bekynton, d.1464 but made
c1450, a cadaver within the open lower section with enriched
shafts and angel capitals, with a painted marble figure on
top, surrounded by a fine C15 wrought-iron screen with
buttress stanchions; raised, incised coffin slab of Bishop
Bytton d.1274, blue Lias; large chest tomb of Bishop Harvey
d.1894 with 5 trefoil panels and an effigy with putti to the
head; 3 c1230 effigies of Saxon Bishops on mid C20 plinths;
chest tomb of Bishop Harewell d.1386, a marble effigy on a C20
plinth.
N transept, E aisle: Enriched marble chest tomb of John Still
d.1607 with black Corinthian columns to entablature,
sarcophagus with alabaster effigy; chest tomb to Bishop
Kidder, d.1703 marble with an enriched naturalistic reclining
figure of his daughter in front of 2 urns of her parents. S
transept: Chapel of St Calixtus, fine un-named chest tomb of
c1450, with carved alabaster panels and effigy; Chapel of St
Martin, chest tomb of William Bykonyll c1448 with an arcaded
front, cusped shallow arch over the effigy, panelled ceiling
and a rich crested top; C15 wrought-iron gates to both
chapels; in the S wall, good monument to Bishop William de
Marchia, d.1302, 3 cusped cinquefoil-headed arches on moulded
shafts, ogee hoods and pinnacles to a crenellated top, with an
effigy within, with a 3-bay segmental vaulted canopy, and
decorated with 6 carved heads beneath.
STAINED GLASS: Original early glass is mainly in the choir and
Lady Chapel; the Parliamentarians caused extensive damage
generally in August 1642 and May 1643. Earliest fragments are
in 2 windows on the west side of the Chapter House staircase
(c1280-90), and in two windows in the S choir aisle
(c1310-20), but of principal interest is the Lady Chapel
range, c1325-30, the east window including extensive repairs
by Willement, 1845, and the others with substantial complete
canopy-work, otherwise much in fragments. The choir E window
is a fine Jesse Tree, including much silver stain, flanked by
2 windows each side in the clerestory, with large figures of
saints, all these of c1340-45; a further window each side is
late C19. The chapel of St Katherine has interesting panels of
c1520, attributed to Arnold of Nijmegen; these, in the S and E
windows were acquired from the destroyed church of St John,
Rouen, the last panel was bought in 1953. The large triple
lancet to the nave W end was glazed at the expense of Dean
Creyghton at a cost of »140 in c1664: repaired in 1813, but
the central light largely replaced to a design by A K
Nicholson between 1925-31. The main N and S transept end
windows are by Powell, 1903-05, and the nave S aisle has four
paired lights of 1881-1904, with a similar window at the W end
of each aisle. (Full details, to a numbered window sequence,
in Colchester L S: Stained Glass in Wells Cathedral: 1952
etc).