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Extracts from England’s Other Cathedrals along with a feature written by
the author. Due to be published by The History Press in April 2012
www.thehistorypress.co.uk
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Terrington St Clement Church
Byland Abbey, looking west
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Beverley Minster
Bath Abbey, from the south-west
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Tewkesbury Abbey
Fountains Abbey, from the south-east
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Exploring England’s Other Cathedrals by Paul Jeffery
In turning what began as a fascinating idea into the reality of a book I have visited or
revisited almost all of the ‘other cathedrals’. Some seemed like old friends; others were
new to me. Most rewarding in architectural and artistic terms have been those medieval
churches fully of cathedral size and splendour and still in use today – such as Beverley
Minster, Tewkesbury Abbey and Westminster Abbey. But many others are equally
exciting. Some are mutilated but still in use. Chester St. John, though now only a parish
church, began life as a Norman cathedral: the outside is battered and partly in ruins, but
the inside is splendid. At Bridlington Priory only the nave still stands, but this is
convincingly of cathedral scale and quality. Also wonderful are some of the successors to
lost Anglo-Saxon cathedrals, especially the thrilling abbeys of Dorchester (Oxfordshire),
Hexham and Sherborne.
Rewarding in a different way are those that are now in ruin. Some, such as the famous
Fountains Abbey, are superb and inspiring even in their roofless state. Others are much
more ruinous: for example, though enough remains of Bury St. Edmunds Abbey to show
how enormous and magnificent it must have been, one’s main feeling must be regret for
what has been lost.
A very different pleasure has been seeing the cathedrals of the nineteenth century and
later. Many of these have been new to me; indeed, most are little known. Yet they are
often a delight. An example is Portsmouth’s Anglican cathedral. From east to west it has
first beautiful work of about 1180, then of the late 17th century, then the 1930s, and finally
of 1991. Another is the Roman Catholic cathedral at Brentwood, most of which was built
in 1989-91, remarkably not ‘modern’ but in an exquisite baroque style that might have
been designed by Wren.
Some visits have been memorable for other reasons. One took me deep into the bowels
of Welbeck Abbey to see the surviving medieval parts of what might have been made a
cathedral by Henry VIII. The abbey is now a vast mansion mostly of the seventeenth
century and later. For sixty years it was used as an army college, but in 2005 it returned to
being entirely a private home. As a house it is amazing; but equally so are the
underground rooms and tunnels built round it for the eccentric Victorian fifth Duke of
Portland. Some are dark and mysterious, but the ballroom, newly decorated, is a vast and
wonderful room lit by skylights. Extraordinary in an entirely different way was a visit to the
Central Church of the Catholic Apostolic Church. This once-important denomination
now has no priests or services. The huge and splendid church stands near the British
Museum in Bloomsbury; yet it is little known: it is normally inaccessible, and being
unfinished it lacks its intended 300-foot tower and spire.
Equally exciting have been aspects such as the history revealed by these ‘other
cathedrals’...
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England’s Other Cathedrals
Paul Jeffery
To be published April 2012, £25.00 Hardback
978-0-7524-5347-7
An illustrated guide to the great English
churches that are outside the traditional
canon of the cathedrals
The greatest of England’s cathedrals are widely considered the country's finest and most magnificent buildings. Few people realise, however, that in addition to these outstanding buildings there are many others that share, or once shared, some of that greatness. Around half of the cathedrals established between the seventh and the thirteenth centuries subsequently lost that status, though most continued in use and many were rebuilt. Then Henry VIII planned to create many further cathedrals, but most remained unfulfilled. From the nineteenth century onwards, many new cathedrals have been established, sometimes newly built and sometimes adapting or enlarging an earlier building. England’s Other Cathedrals is an illustrated guide to these magnificent and important buildings, many of which have rich architectural and historical pasts.
Including previously unpublished historical details, Paul Jeffery takes the reader on a tour of the country, looking at the history behind over 100 of these ‘other cathedrals’. From Chester St John and Beverley Minster to Salford Cathedral and Dorchester Abbey, this unique volume reveals a wide array of art and architecture comparable to that of the great cathedrals themselves.
England’s cathedral’s are generally considered to number twenty-six; Paul Jeffery discusses over one hundred other cathedrals.
8 groups of other cathedrals are addressed, from Anglo-Saxon ruins to the most modern church buildings.
Includes previously unpublished material on the cathedral schemes of Henry VIII.
An original look into the subject, discussing new aspects that have never been addressed.
Over 120 colour and black & white images.
Paul Jeffery is a retired computer engineer. He has had a life-long interest in ancient history, especially medieval buildings and in particular churches, and he is also the author of The Collegiate Churches of England & Wales. He lives in Winchester.
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