Friday, March 6

NORWICH CATHEDRAL


I found my way into my first really old Cathedral while visiting Norwich this fall.

A beautiful example of the Norman style, my favourite part were the Cloisters.
I can just imagine the black and white wing headed Nuns, walking through them peeking in and out of the long corridors.



Inside the cathedral, I found it to be a bit heady and full of old smells.
I experienced a strange discombobulating energy, and saw holograms of its prize possessions...that was weird...holgrams in a church.
I did see a small...teeny...tiny piece of what is supposed to be " The Shroud"

Makes me scractch my head a bit, thinking on how much money is focussed on houses of worship, knowing humanity is in need...but I do enjoy the architecture.
It is really something to think on how these amazing constructs were built without modern technolgy.


I took this photo inside the entrance gates.



description from the WIKI

"The structure of the cathedral is primarily in the Norman style, having been constructed at the behest of Bishop Herbert de Losinga between the late 11th century and about 1145. The total length of the building is 461 feet (140 m). Significant alterations from later periods include a 315 foot (96 m) spire completed in 1465, and a two-storey cloister, the only such in England, which was built between 1300 and 1430, as well as the vaults of nave and chancel.

The cathedral is built of flint and mortar faced with limestone brought in from Caen. Standing at 315 feet, the cathedral's spire is the second tallest in England, and dominates the city skyline; only the spire of Salisbury Cathedral is higher. Like Salisbury and Ely, the cathedral lacks a ring of bells - the only three English cathedrals to do so. One of the best views of the cathedral spire is from St. James's Hill on Mousehold Heath.

The bosses of the vault number over 1,000. Each is decorated with a theological image and have been described as without parallel in the Christian world. The nave vault shows the history of the world from the creation; the cloister includes series showing the life of Christ, and the Apocalypse.

The precinct of the cathedral, the limit of the former monastery, is between Tombland (the Anglo-Saxon market place) and the River Wensum - building materials were taken up the Wensum and unloaded at Pulls Ferry, Norwich. The Cathedral Close, which runs from Tombland into the cathedral grounds, contains a number of interesting buildings from the 15th through to the 19th century, including the remains of the Infirmary."

2 comments:

  1. Norwich Cathedral, as you so rightly say is a wonderful building, with an history and atmosphere that are almost palpable. It is full of carvings and other artefacts that prove the love that the masons and carvers had for their work, not least of which are the misericords which date from the late 15th and early 16th centuries, with a few additions from the Victorian era. These 61 misericords reside where most people would never see them - underneath the seats in the choir stalls, but if you can get access to them, they are well worth the effort.

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  2. Amazingly beautiful.
    I still puzzle over the huge, expansive, and overly fancy churches built now (at least here in the U.S.) when so many of the very congregation who sits there is in desperate need...

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