Title: England Glouchester Cathedral2
1Gloucester Cathedral
2
2Gloucester Cathedral
Gloucester Cathedral, or the Cathedral Church of
St Peter and the Holy and Indivisible Trinity, in
Gloucester, England, stands in the north of the
city near the river. It originated in 678 or 679
with the foundation of an abbey dedicated to
Saint Peter (dissolved by King Henry VIII). The
foundations of the present church were laid by
Abbot Serlo (10721104). The cathedral, built as
the abbey church, consists of a Norman nucleus
(Walter de Lacy is buried there), with additions
in every style of Gothic architecture. It is 420
feet (130 m) long, and 144 feet (44 m) wide, with
a fine central tower of the 15th century rising
to the height of 225 ft (69 m) and topped by four
delicate pinnacles, a famous landmark. The nave
is massive Norman with an Early English roof the
crypt, under the choir, aisles and chapels, is
Norman, as is the chapter house. The crypt is one
of the four apsidal cathedral crypts in England,
the others being at Worcester, Winchester and
Canterbury.
3The beautiful tower over the central crossing and
north transept loom over the cloister garth
4The cloister garden
5The cloister garth looking north-west toward the
lavatorium The cloisters at Gloucester are the
earliest surviving fan vaults, having been
designed between 1351 and 1377 by Thomas de
Cambridge. Gloucesters historic cathedral
cloisters were transformed into the corridors of
Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry in
the films of JK Rowlings first two books Harry
Potter and the Philosophers Stone and Harry
Potter and the Chamber of Secrets.
6The Cloister Fan vaults
7The magnificent fan vaulting in the cloister
8Fan vaulting, Gloucester cathedral Cloister
9The south walk of the fan-vaulted cloister
looking east
The west walk of the cloister with fan vaulting,
looking north
10The Cloister Fan vaults
11The Cloister Fan vaults
12The carrels in the south walk of the cloister,
looking west
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14 Carrels in the cloister
Detail of the fan vaulting in the cloister
15Stained-glass in the cloister
16Stained-glass details from the cloister
17Female saints on a stained-glass window at the
north end of the west walk of the cloister
18The carved fan vaulting in the cloister
19The cloister lavatorium in the north walk
Victorian Hardman Stained-glass in the cloister
lavatorium
20The lavatorium in the cloister looking west
Christ with angels stained-glass at the north end
of the west walk of the cloister
21Fan and decorative tracery in the north walk of
the cloister
The stunning cloister, looking east in the north
walk
22Corbel portrait of a recent dean on a buttress in
the cloister garth
Perpendicular tracery on a window in the cloister
23The central crossing seen from the south transept
The lierne vaulting of the Quire seen from the
south transept
24Looking northwest to the central crossing from
the south transept
The ogee arch entrance to the north ambulatory
chapel.
25Alderman Abraham Blackleech (1639) Gertrude.
Black marble tomb chest with alabaster recumbent
effigies. By Epiphanius Evesham or Edward Marshall
26Angels playing and singing, stained glass in the
south transept
27Abbot Seabroke with S Barbara, S Luke, and Fra
Angelico, stained-glass in the south transept
28The original Norman groined vault of the south
ambulatory
The Quire looking west from the presbytery
29The stunning Great East 'Crecy' Window from the
14th century
30The Crecy Window with apostles, saints and
martyrs, abbots and bishops, and shields The
great east window is the second largest area of
medieval glass in any British church window,
measuring 72ft high by 38ft wide, it was put
together in the mid 14th century and shows the
monks view of the divine order, the structure of
their society in this life and beyond.
31The elaborate lierne vault of the presbytery and
quire
32Gloucester cathedral, The quire vaults
33Lierne vault of the presbytery profusely
decorated with bosses
34Lierne presbytery vault with Christ in glory
surrounded by bosses with angels
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36View from the Sebrok pavement of the presbytery
looking west toward the quire
Abbot Sebrok's pavement in the presbytery - the
sacrifice of Abraham
37The quadruple sedilia with lavish canopies on the
south wall of the presbytery
The perpendicular presbytery with the great east
window and the lierne vaulting
38The north ambulatory
The parapet of the sedilia in the presbytery with
angels playing musical instruments
39The high altar and the reredos by George Gilbert
Scott beneath the Crecy window in the presbytery
40The reredos with Nativity, Ascension, and
Deposition, designed by George Gilbert Scott,
behind the high altar
41Deposition detail from the reredos behind the
high altar in the presbytery
Stained-glass in the South Ambulatory Chapel by
Tom Denny with Doubting Thomas
42The Norman lead font from the 12th century at the
entrance of the Lady Chapel
43Carved and painted entrance ceiling in the Lady
Chapel
44The altar and stunning modern altarpiece with
paintings by Ian McKillop in the Lady Chapel
45Detail from the altarpiece painting by Ian
McKillop in the Lady Chapel
46Stained-glass commemorating organists of the
cathedral in the Lady Chapel
47Celebratory window by Caroline Swash in honor of
Herbert Howells in the south chantry of the Lady
Chapel
48The fan vaulting of the south chantry in the Lady
Chapel
Looking south-east in the Lady Chapel, note the
1617 wooden rails in front of the altar
49High perpendicular style of the Lady Chapel,
looking south-east
50The east window in the Lady Chapel assembled from
medieval fragments from elsewhere in the cathedral
51The high altar and reredos seen from the north
ambulatory
52Window in the north ambulatory
53Window depicting St Michael in the north
ambulatory
Entrance to the west slype from the cloister
54The south walk of the cloister with carrels below
the transom
The famous fan-vaulted cloister of Gloucester
Cathedral
55(No Transcript)
56Altar and reredos in St Paul's Chapel in the
north transept
57Figure of St Peter on the reredos in St Paul's
Chapel
Detailed carving on the reredos in St Paul's
Chapel
58Reredos in St Paul's Chapel in the north transept
with Ss Peter, Paul, and Luke carved by Redfern
59The entrance to St Andrew's chapel in the south
transept
60Buttressing flying through the fabric of the
south transept
61High Victorian neo-Gothic decoration of St
Andrew's Chapel in the south transept
62Interior of St Andrew's Chapel - high Victorian
job restored in 1996 St Alban painted in high
Victorian style at St Andrew's Chapel
63The pained ceiling of St Andrew's chapel
decorated by Gambier Perry in 1868
64The magnificent 1996 restoration of St Andrew's
Chapel from 1868
65The neo-Gothic reredos in St Andrew's Chapel
66Text Internet and photographs Pictures
Branislav L. Slantchev and Antonio Mª
Cabrera All copyrights belong to their
respective owners Presentation Sanda
Foisoreanu
2013
Sound Jan Garbarek - O Salutaris Hostia
67 O SAVING Victim opening wide The gate of heaven
to all below. Our foes press on from every
side Thine aid supply, Thy strength bestow. To
Thy great name be endless praise Immortal
Godhead, One in Three Oh, grant us endless
length of days, In our true native land with
Thee. Amen (tr. E Caswall)
O Salutaris Hostia is from the last two verses of
Verbum Supernum, one of the five Eucharistic
Hymns written by St. Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274)
at the request of Pope Urban IV (1261-1264) when
the Pope first instituted the Feast of Corpus
Christi in 1264. The prayer is still used today,
often at exposition of the Blessed Sacrament.
O SALUTARIS Hostia Quae caeli pandis
ostium. Bella premunt hostilia Da robur, fer
auxilium. Uni trinoque Domino Sit sempiterna
gloria Qui vitam sine termino, Nobis donet in
patria. Amen