Old St Paul's Cathedral

Old St Paul's Cathedral
The central tower of a large gothic cathedral. The central tower is buttressed and with an imposing wooden spire. An octagonal chapter house is in the foreground.
Digital reconstruction giving an impression of Old St Paul's during the Middle Ages. The image is based on a model of the Cathedral in the Museum of London, composited with a modern city background.
Old St Paul's Cathedral is located in City of London in 1300
Old St Paul's Cathedral
Old St Paul's Cathedral
Old St Paul's on a 1300 map of the City of London
51°30′49″N 0°5′54″W / 51.51361°N 0.09833°W / 51.51361; -0.09833
DenominationChurch of England
History
DedicationSaint Paul
EventsCathedral and canonry destroyed by fire – 1087, 1666
Architecture
Previous cathedrals3
StyleEnglish Gothic
Years built
  • c. 604–675
  • c. 685–961
  • c. 962–1087
  • 1087–1666
Administration
DioceseLondon
Deanery
Clergy
Bishop(s)Bishop of London
DeanDean of St Paul's
Building details
Map
Record height
Tallest in the world from the mid-13th century to 1311[I]
Preceded byGreat Pyramid of Giza
Surpassed byLincoln Cathedral

Old St Paul's Cathedral was the cathedral of the City of London that, until the Great Fire of 1666, stood on the site of the present St Paul's Cathedral. Built from 1087 to 1314 and dedicated to Saint Paul, this building was perhaps the fourth such church at this site on Ludgate Hill, going back to the 7th century.[1]

St Erkenwald, foundational figure in the history of St Paul's Cathedral

Work on the cathedral began after a fire in 1087, which destroyed the previous church. Work took more than 200 years, and over that time the architecture of the church changed from Norman Romanesque to early English Gothic. The church was consecrated in 1240, enlarged in 1256 and again in the early 14th century. At its completion in the mid-14th century, the cathedral was one of the longest churches in the world, had one of the tallest spires and some of the finest stained glass.

Shrine of St Erkenwald, relics removed 1550, lost as a monument in the Great Fire of London

The continuing presence of the shrine of the 7th century bishop Saint Erkenwald made the cathedral a site of pilgrimage in the Middle Ages.[2] In addition to serving as the seat of the Diocese of London, the building developed a reputation as a social hub, with the nave aisle, "Paul's walk", known as a business centre and a place to hear the news and gossip on the London grapevine. During the Reformation, the open-air pulpit in the churchyard, St Paul's Cross, became the place for radical evangelical preaching and Protestant bookselling.

The cathedral was in structural decline by the early 17th century. Restoration work begun by Inigo Jones in the 1620s was temporarily halted during the English Civil War (1642–1651). In 1666, further restoration was in progress under Sir Christopher Wren when the cathedral was devastated in the Great Fire of London. At that point, it was demolished, and the present cathedral was built on the site.[3]

Construction

[edit]

Old St Paul's Cathedral was perhaps the fourth church at Ludgate Hill dedicated to St Paul.[2] A devastating fire in 1087,[4] detailed in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, destroyed much of the cathedral.[5] King William I (William the Conqueror) donated the stone from the destroyed Palatine Tower on the River Fleet towards the construction of a Romanesque Norman cathedral, an act sometimes said to be his last before death.[6][7]

Bishop Maurice oversaw preparations, although it was primarily under his successor, Richard de Beaumis, that construction work fully commenced. Beaumis was assisted by King Henry I, who gave the bishop stone and asked that all material brought up the River Fleet for the cathedral should be free from toll. To fund the cathedral, Henry I gave Beaumis rights to all fish caught within the cathedral neighbourhood and tithes on venison taken in the County of Essex. Beaumis also gave a site for the original foundation of St Paul's School.[8]

Henry I's death was followed by a period of unrest and civil war known as "The Anarchy". Henry of Blois, Bishop of Winchester, was appointed to administer the affairs of St Paul's. Almost immediately, he had to deal with the aftermath of a fire at London Bridge in 1135. It spread over much of the city, damaging the cathedral and delaying its construction.[8] During this period, the architectural style was changed from heavy Romanesque to Early English Gothic. Although the base Norman columns were left alone, lancet pointed arches were placed over them in the triforium and some heavy columns were substituted with clustered pillars. The steeple was erected in 1221 and the cathedral was rededicated by Bishop Roger Niger in 1240.[9]

New work (1255–1314)

[edit]

After a succession of storms, in 1255 Bishop Fulk Basset appealed for money to repair the roof. The roof was rebuilt in wood, which ultimately ruined the building. At this time, the east end of the cathedral church was lengthened, enclosing the parish church of St Faith, which was now brought within the cathedral.[9] The eastward addition was referred to as "The New Work".[10]

An engraving of Old St Paul's cathedral seen from above. The building is in a cross shape, architecturally rectangular and very long west to east, with flying buttresses along the quire. In the centre is a square central tower, which in this picture has a tall spire. The building looms over the old City of London before the Great Fire.
A 1916 engraving of Old St Paul's as it appeared before the fire of 1561 in which the spire was destroyed

After complaints from the dispossessed parishioners of St Faith's, the east end of the west crypt was allotted to them as their parish church. The congregation were also allowed to keep a detached tower with a peal of bells east of the church which had historically been used to peal the summons to the Cheapside Folkmote. The parish later moved to the Jesus chapel during the reign of Edward VI and was merged with St Augustine Watling Street after the 1666 fire.[11]

This "New Work" was completed in 1314, although the additions had been consecrated in 1300.[12] Excavations in 1878 by Francis Penrose showed the enlarged cathedral was 586 feet (179 m) long (excluding the porch later added by Inigo Jones) and 100 feet (30 m) wide (290 feet (88 m) across the transepts and crossing).[13]

A 15th-century monastic funeral procession entering Old St Paul's. The coffin is covered by a blue and gold pall, and the grave is being dug in the foreground.

The cathedral had one of Europe's tallest church spires, the height of which is traditionally given as 489 feet (149 m), surpassing all but Lincoln Cathedral. The King's Surveyor, Christopher Wren (1632–1723), judged that an overestimate and gave 460 feet (140 m).[14] In 1664, Robert Hooke used a plumb-line to calculate the height of the tower as "two hundred and four feet very near, which is about sixty feet higher than it was usually reported to be."[15] William Benham noted that the cathedral probably "resembled in general outline that of Salisbury, but it was a hundred feet longer, and the spire was sixty or eighty feet higher. The tower was open internally as far as the base of the spire, and was probably more beautiful both inside and out than that of any other English cathedral."[14]

Chapter house

[edit]

According to the architectural historian John Harvey, the octagonal chapter house, built about 1332 by William de Ramsey, was the earliest example of Perpendicular Gothic.[16] This is confirmed by Alec Clifton-Taylor, who notes that the chapter house and St Stephen's Chapel at the medieval Westminster Palace predate the early Perpendicular work at Gloucester Cathedral by several years.[17] The foundations of the chapter house were recently made visible in the redeveloped south churchyard of the new cathedral.[18]

Interior

[edit]
Old St Paul's, still with its spire, as shown on the "Copperplate" map of the 1550s

The finished cathedral of the Middle Ages was renowned for the beauty of its interior. Canon William Benham wrote in 1902: "It had not a rival in England, perhaps one might say in Europe."[14]

The nave's length was particularly notable, with a Norman triforium and vaulted ceiling. The length earned it the nickname "Paul's walk". The cathedral's stained glass was reputed to be the best in the country, and the east-end rose window was particularly exquisite. The poet Geoffrey Chaucer used the windows as a metaphor in "The Miller's Tale" from The Canterbury Tales,[19] knowing that other Londoners at that time would understand the comparison:

His rode was red, his eyen grey as goose,
With Paule's windows carven on his shoes
In hosen red he went full fetisly.

From the cathedral's construction until its destruction, the shrine of Erkenwald was a popular pilgrimage site.[20] Under Bishop Maurice, reports of miracles attributed to the shrine increased, with the shrine attracting thousands of pilgrims.[20] The alliterative Middle English poem St Erkenwald (sometimes attributed to the 14th-century "Pearl Poet") begins with a description of the construction of the cathedral, referring to the building as the "New Werke".[21][22]

The shrine was adorned with gold, silver and precious stones. In 1339, three London goldsmiths were employed for a whole year to rebuild the shrine to a higher standard.[23] William Dugdale records that the shrine was pyramidal in shape with an altar table placed in front for offerings.[24]

Engraving of the nave, a vast, long space with Norman arches stretching into the distance and a vaulted ceiling. The rose window is just visible in the distance.
Wenceslas Hollar's engraving of the cathedral nave, "Paul's walk"

Monarchs and other notables were often in attendance at the cathedral, and the court occasionally held sessions there.[25] The building was also the place of several incidents. In 1191, whilst King Richard I was in Palestine, his brother John summoned a council of bishops to St Paul's to denounce William de Longchamp, Bishop of Ely – to whom Richard had entrusted government affairs – for treason.[26]

Later that year, William Fitz Osbern gave a speech against the oppression of the poor at Paul's Cross and incited a riot which saw the cathedral invaded, halted by a plea from Hubert Walter, Archbishop of Canterbury. Osbern barricaded himself in St Mary-le-Bow and was executed, after which Paul's Cross was silent for many years.[27]

Arthur, Prince of Wales, son of Henry VII, married Catherine of Aragon in St Paul's on 14 November 1501. Chroniclers are profuse in their descriptions of the decorations of the cathedral and city on that occasion. Arthur died five months later, at the age of 15, and the marriage was later proved contentious during the reign of his brother, Henry VIII.[25]

Several kings of the Middle Ages lay in state in St Paul's before their funerals at Westminster Abbey, including Richard II, Henry VI and Henry VII.[25] In the case of Richard II, the display of his body in such a public place was to dispel rumours that he was not dead.[28] The walls were lined with the tombs of bishops and nobility. In addition to the shrine of Erkenwald, two Anglo-Saxon kings were buried inside: Sebbi, King of the East Saxons, and Æthelred the Unready.[29]

A number of figures such as John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster and John de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Beauchamp de Warwick had particularly large monuments constructed within the cathedral, and the building later contained the tombs of the Crown minister Nicholas Bacon, Sir Philip Sidney, and John Donne.[30] Donne's monument survived the 1666 fire, and is on display in the present building.[31]

Paul's Walk

[edit]
A lofty Norman cathedral interior is full of people treating the building like a marketplace.
John Franklin's illustration of Paul's Walk for William Harrison Ainsworth's 1841 novel Old Saint Paul's

The first historical reference to the nave, "Paul's walk", being used as a marketplace and general meeting area is recorded during the 1381–1404 tenure of Bishop Braybrooke.[32] The bishop issued an open letter decrying the use of the building for selling "wares, as if it were a public market" and "others ... by the instigation of the Devil [using] stones and arrows to bring down the birds, jackdaws and pigeons which nestle in the walls and crevices of the building. Others play at ball ... breaking the beautiful and costly painted windows to the amazement of spectators."[33] His decree goes on to threaten perpetrators with excommunication.[34]

By the 15th century, the cathedral had become the centre of the London grapevine.[35] "News mongers", as they were called, gathered there to pass on the latest news and gossip.[36] Those who visited the cathedral to keep up with the news were known as "Paul's walkers".

According to Francis Osborne (1593–1659):

It was the fashion of those times ... for the principal gentry, lords, courtiers, and men of all professions not merely mechanic, to meet in Paul's Church by eleven and walk in the middle aisle till twelve, and after dinner from three to six, during which times some discoursed on business, others of news. Now in regard of the universal there happened little that did not first or last arrive here ... And those news-mongers, as they called them, did not only take the boldness to weigh the public but most intrinsic actions of the state, which some courtier or other did betray to this society.[37]

St Paul's became the place to go to hear the latest news of current affairs, war, religion, parliament and the court. In his play Englishmen for my Money, William Haughton (d. 1605) described Paul's walk as a kind of "open house" filled with a "great store of company that do nothing but go up and down, and go up and down, and make a grumbling together".[38]

Infested with beggars and thieves, Paul's walk was also a place to pick up gossip, topical jokes, and even prostitutes.[39][40] In his Microcosmographie (1628), a series of satirical portraits of contemporary England, John Earle (1601–1665), described it thus:

[Paul's walk] is the land's epitome, or you may call it the lesser isle of Great Britain. It is more than this, the whole world's map, which you may here discern in its perfectest motion, justling and turning. It is a heap of stones and men, with a vast confusion of languages; and were the steeple not sanctified, nothing liker Babel. The noise in it is like that of bees, a strange humming or buzz mixed of walking tongues and feet: it is a kind of still roar or loud whisper ... It is the great exchange of all discourse, and no business whatsoever but is here stirring and a-foot ... It is the general mint of all famous lies, which are here like the legends of popery, first coined and stamped in the church.[41][42]

Decline (16th century)

[edit]
A colourful painting of a sermon being preached to hundreds of people from a wooden pulpit in the grounds of the old cathedral. The perspective of the image is wrong, making the people look huge by comparison to the building.
A sermon preached from St Paul's Cross (bottom left) in 1614

By the 16th century the building was deteriorating. Under Henry VIII and Edward VI, the Dissolution of the Monasteries and Chantries Acts led to the destruction of interior ornamentation and the cloisters, charnels, crypts, chapels, shrines, chantries and other buildings in the churchyard.[43]

Many of these former religious sites in St Paul's Churchyard, having been seized by the crown, were sold as shops and rental properties, especially to printers and booksellers, such as Thomas Adams, who were often Protestants.[43][44] Buildings that were razed often supplied ready-dressed building material for construction projects, such as the Lord Protector's city palace, Somerset House.[12]

Engraving of St Paul's at a later date showing the rose window. The spire has been lost.
Rose window of Old St Paul's Cathedral (spire no longer in place after the fire of 1561)

Crowds were drawn to the northeast corner of the Churchyard, St Paul's Cross, where open-air preaching took place. It was there in the Cross Yard in 1549 that radical Protestant preachers incited a mob to destroy many of the cathedral's interior decorations. In 1554, in an attempt to end inappropriate practices taking place in the nave, the Lord Mayor decreed that the church should return to its original purpose as a religious building, issuing a writ stating that the selling of horses, beer and "other gross wares" was "to the great dishonour and displeasure of Almighty God, and the great grief also and offence of all good and well-disposed persons".[45]

Spire collapse (1561)

[edit]
A graffito executed on a wall of St Mary's Church, Ashwell in Hertfordshire is believed to show Old St Paul's Cathedral.[46]

On 4 June 1561, the spire caught fire and crashed through the nave roof. According to a newsheet published days after the fire, the cause was a lightning strike.[47] In 1753, David Henry, a writer for The Gentleman's Magazine, revived a rumour in his Historical description of St Paul's Cathedral, writing that a plumber had "confessed on his death bed" that he had "left a pan of coals and other fuel in the tower when he went to dinner."[48] However, the number of contemporary eyewitnesses to the storm and a subsequent investigation appears to contradict this.[47]

Whatever the cause, the subsequent conflagration was hot enough to melt the cathedral's bells and the lead covering the wooden spire "poured down like lava upon the roof", destroying it.[11][49] This event was taken by both Protestants and Catholics as a sign of God's displeasure at the other faction's actions.[49] Queen Elizabeth I contributed £1,000 in gold towards the cost of repairs as well as timber from the royal estate[50] and the Bishop of London Edmund Grindal gave £1200, although the spire was never rebuilt.[49] The repair work on the nave roof was sub-standard, and only fifty years after the rebuilding was in a dangerous condition.[51]

An engraving showing the cross-shaped plan of the cathedral.
Wenceslaus Hollar's 1658 plan of the cathedral
An image of the west front of the cathedral, showing a somewhat incongruous classical-style porch added to the cathedral, with eight tall columns, looking a little like the Parthenon.
Classical-style West Front by Inigo Jones, added between 1630 and 1666

Restoration work (1621–1666)

[edit]

Concerned at the decaying state of the building, King James I appointed the classical architect Inigo Jones to restore the building. The poet Henry Farley records the king comparing himself to the building at the commencement of the work in 1621: "I have had more sweeping, brushing and cleaning than in forty years before. My workmen looke like him they call Muldsacke after sweeping of a chimney."[52]

In addition to cleaning and rebuilding parts of the Gothic structure, Jones added a classical-style portico to the cathedral's west front in the 1630s, which William Benham notes was "altogether incongruous with the old building ... It was no doubt fortunate that Inigo Jones confined his work at St Paul's to some very poor additions to the transepts, and to a portico, very magnificent in its way, at the west end."[53]

Work stopped during the English Civil War, and there was much defacement and mistreatment of the building by Parliamentarian forces during which old documents and charters were dispersed and destroyed, and the nave used as a stable for cavalry horses.[54] Much of the detailed information historians have of the cathedral is taken from William Dugdale's 1658 History of St Pauls Cathedral, written hastily during The Protectorate for fear that "one of the most eminent Structures of that kinde in the Christian World" might be destroyed.[55]

Indeed, a persistent rumour of the time suggested that Cromwell had considered giving the building to London's returning Jewish community to become a synagogue.[56] Dugdale embarked on his project due to discovering hampers full of decaying 14th and 15th century documents from the cathedral's early archives.[57][58] In his book's dedicatory epistle, he wrote:

... so great was your foresight of what we have since by wofull experience seen and felt, and specially in the Church, (through the Presbyterian contagion, which then began violently to breake out) that you often and earnestly incited me to a speedy view of what Monuments I could, especially in the principall Churches of this Realme; to the end, that by Inke and paper, the Shadows of them, with their Inscriptions might be preserved for posteritie, forasmuch as the things themselves were so neer unto ruine.[55]

Dugdale's book is also the source for many of the surviving engravings of the building, created by Bohemian etcher Wenceslaus Hollar. In July 2010, an original sketch for Hollar's engravings was rediscovered when it was submitted to Sotheby's auction house.[58]

Great Fire of London (1666)

[edit]

After the restoration of the monarchy, King Charles II appointed Sir Christopher Wren to the position of Surveyor to the King's Works. He was given the task of restoring the cathedral in a style matching Inigo Jones' classical additions of 1630.[59] Wren instead recommended that the building be completely demolished; according to his first biographer, James Elmes, Wren “expressed his surprise at the carelessness and want of accuracy in the original builders of the structure”; Wren's son described the new design as "The Gothic rectified to a better manner of architecture".[60]

Both the clergy and citizens of the city opposed such a move.[61] In response, Wren proposed to restore the body of the gothic building, but replace the existing tower with a dome.[61] He wrote in his 1666 Of the Surveyor's Design for repairing the old ruinous structure of St Paul's:

It must be concluded that the Tower from Top to Bottom and the adjacent parts are such a heap of deformaties that no Judicious Architect will think it corrigible by any Expense that can be laid out upon new dressing it.[62]

Wren, whose uncle Matthew Wren was Bishop of Ely, admired the central lantern of Ely Cathedral and proposed that his dome design could be constructed over the top of the existing gothic tower, before the old structure was removed from within.[62] This, he reasoned, would prevent the need for extensive scaffolding and would not upset Londoners ("Unbelievers") by demolishing a familiar landmark without being able to see its "hopeful Successor rise in its stead."[63]

The matter was still under discussion when the restoration work on St Paul's finally began in the 1660s but soon after being sheathed in wooden scaffolding, the building was completely gutted in the Great Fire of London of 1666.[61] The fire, aided by the scaffolding, destroyed the roof and much of the stonework along with masses of stocks and personal belongings that had been placed there for safety.[64] Samuel Pepys recalls the building in flames in his diary:[65]

Up by five o'clock, and blessed be God! find all well, and by water to Paul's Wharf. Walked thence and saw all the town burned, and a miserable sight of Paul's Church, with all the roof fallen, and the body of the choir fallen into St. Faith's; Paul's School also, Ludgate, and Fleet Street.

John Evelyn's account paints a similar picture of destruction:

September 3rd – I went and saw the whole south part of the City burning from Cheapeside to the Thames, and ... was now taking hold of St Paule's Church, to which the scaffolds contributed exceedingly.
September 7th – I went this morning on foote from White-hall as far as London Bridge, thro' the late Fleete-streete, Ludgate Hill, by St Paules ... At my returne I was infinitely concern'd to find that goodly Church St Paules now a sad ruine, and that beautiful portico ... now rent in pieces, flakes of vast stone split asunder, and nothing now remaining intire but the inscription in the architrave, shewing by whom it was built, which had not one letter of it defac'd. It was astonishing to see what immense stones the heate had in a manner calcin'd, so that all the ornaments, columns, freezes, capitals, and projectures of massie Portland-stone flew off, even to the very roofe, where a sheet of lead covering a great space (no less than six akers by measure) was totally mealted; the ruines of the vaulted roofe falling broke into St. Faith's, which being fill'd with the magazines of bookes belonging to the Stationers, and carried thither for safety, they were all consum'd, burning for a weeke following. It is also observable that the lead over the altar at the East end was untouch'd, and among the divers monuments, the body of one Bishop remain'd intire. Thus lay in ashes that most venerable Church, one of the most antient pieces of early piety in the Christian world.[66]

Aftermath

[edit]
An 1871 illustration showing the positions of the old and new St Paul Cathedrals

Temporary repairs were made to the building. While it might have been salvageable, albeit with almost complete reconstruction, a decision was taken to build a new cathedral in a modern style instead, a step which had been contemplated even before the fire. Wren declared that it was impossible to restore the old building.[67]

The following April, the Dean William Sancroft wrote to him that he had been right in his judgement: "Our work at the west end," he wrote, "has fallen about our ears." Two pillars had collapsed, and the rest was so unsafe that men were afraid to go near, even to pull it down. He added, "You are so absolutely necessary to us that we can do nothing, resolve on nothing without you."[67]

Following this declaration by the Dean, demolition of the remains of the old cathedral began in 1668. Demolition of the Old Cathedral proved unexpectedly difficult as the stonework had been bonded together by molten lead.[68] Wren initially used the then-new technique of using gunpowder to bring down the surviving stone walls.[69] Like many experimental techniques, the use of gunpowder was not easy to control; several workers were killed and nearby residents complained about noise and damage. Eventually, Wren resorted to using a battering ram instead. Building work on the new cathedral began in June 1675.[70]

Wren's first proposal, the "Greek cross" design, was considered too radical by members of a committee commissioned to rebuild the church. Members of the clergy decried the design as being too dissimilar from churches that already existed in England at the time to suggest any continuity within the Church of England.[71] Wren's approved "Warrant design" sought to reconcile the Gothic with his "better manner of architecture", featuring a portico influenced by Inigo Jones' addition to the old cathedral.[71] However, Wren received permission from the king to make "ornamental changes" to the submitted design, and over the course of the construction made significant alterations, including the addition of the famous dome.[71]

The topping out of the new cathedral took place in October 1708 and the cathedral was declared officially complete by Parliament in 1710. The consensus on the finished building was mixed; James Wright (1643–1713) wrote "Without, within, below, above the eye/ Is filled with unrestrained delight."[72] Meanwhile, others were less approving, noting its similarity to St Peter's Basilica in Rome: "There was an air of Popery about the gilded capitals, the heavy arches ... They were unfamiliar, un-English."[73]

Notable burials in Old St Paul's

[edit]

Nicholas Stone's 1631 monument to John Donne survived the fire. It depicts the poet, standing upon an urn, dressed in a winding cloth, rising for the moment of judgment. This depiction, Donne's own idea, was sculpted from a painting for which he posed.[74]

No further memorials or tombs survive of the many famous people buried at Old St Paul's. In 1913 the letter-cutter MacDonald Gill and Mervyn Macartney created a new tablet with the names of lost burials which was installed in Wren's cathedral:[75]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Benham, 3–7.
  2. ^ a b Milman, 22.
  3. ^ Clifton-Taylor, 237–243.
  4. ^ Tabor, Margaret E. (1917). The City Churches. London: The Swarthmore Press Ltd. p. 107.
  5. ^ Milman, 21.
  6. ^ Milman, 23.
  7. ^ Benham, 3.
  8. ^ a b Benham, 4–5.
  9. ^ a b Benham, 5.
  10. ^ Benham, 6.
  11. ^ a b Reynolds, 194.
  12. ^ a b "1087 cathedral". St Paul's official website. Archived from the original on 16 October 2014. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  13. ^ Clifton-Taylor, 275.
  14. ^ a b c Benham, 8.
  15. ^ Jardine, Lisa (2001). "Monuments and Microscopes: Scientific Thinking on a Grand Scale in the Early Royal Society". Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London. 55 (2): 289–308. doi:10.1098/rsnr.2001.0145. S2CID 144311552 – via JSTOR.
  16. ^ Harvey, 105.
  17. ^ Clifton-Taylor, 196.
  18. ^ Peterkin, Tom (4 June 2008). "St Paul's Cathedral opens new South Churchyard". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 18 November 2009.
  19. ^ Chaucer, Geoffrey. “The Miller's Tale”, The Canterbury Tales at Project Gutenberg
  20. ^ a b Webb, 29.
  21. ^ Anon. St. Erkenwald, lines 39–48.
  22. ^ Meyer, 163–164.
  23. ^ Cummings, 56.
  24. ^ Jones, 172.
  25. ^ a b c Benham, 36.
  26. ^ Milman, 38.
  27. ^ Benham, 28.
  28. ^ Milman, 81.
  29. ^ Benham, 17.
  30. ^ Benham, 15–18.
  31. ^ "1087 cathedral". St Paul's official website. Archived from the original on 16 October 2014. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
  32. ^ Benham, 16.
  33. ^ Milman, 83–84.
  34. ^ Milman, 84.
  35. ^ Benham, 14.
  36. ^ Notestein, 31.
  37. ^ Chamberlain, 1. Quotation of Osborne, Francis (1689), 449–451.
  38. ^ Quoted in Ostovich, 61.
  39. ^ Notestein, 30–32.
  40. ^ Ostovich, 108n, 215n.
  41. ^ Earle, 103–104.
  42. ^ Quoted in Notestein, 31n.
  43. ^ a b Chambers, 135–136.
  44. ^ Gollancz. xxvi.
  45. ^ Quoted in Benham, 47.
  46. ^ Kevin De Ornellas (2013). The Horse in Early Modern English Culture: Bridled, Curbed, and Tamed. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 77. ISBN 978-1-61147-659-0.
  47. ^ a b Pollard, A. F., ed., Tudor Tracts, (1903) pp. 401–407, from the contemporary newsheet; The True Report of the Burning of the Steeple and Church of St Pauls, London (1561)
  48. ^ Henry, 13.
  49. ^ a b c Benham, 50.
  50. ^ Simons, Paul. "Lightning strike on St Paul's Cathedral". The Times. Retrieved 20 June 2021.
  51. ^ Benham, 64.
  52. ^ Quoted in Benham, 68. A muld was a tribute or an offering.
  53. ^ Benham, 67–68.
  54. ^ Kelly, 50.
  55. ^ a b Dugdale, William (1658). The History of St Paul's Cathedral in London from its Foundation until these Times. London: T. Warren.
  56. ^ Benham, 68.
  57. ^ Kelly, 56–59.
  58. ^ a b "Detailed Drawing of London's Old St Paul's Cathedral, to Be Sold at Sotheby's". www.artdaily.com. Retrieved 5 September 2010.
  59. ^ Lang, 47–63.
  60. ^ Wightwick, G. (1859). "On the Architecture and Genius of Sir Christopher Wren". The Civil Engineer & Architect's Journal. 22. Kent: 257.
  61. ^ a b c Howitt, 605.
  62. ^ a b Clifton-Taylor, 237.
  63. ^ van Eck, 155–160.
  64. ^ "St Paul's. Chapter II". Chambers's Journal. Vol. 46. London: W. & R. Chambers. 27 February 1869. p. 137. Retrieved 19 July 2024.
  65. ^ Pepys, Samuel (1666). Diary at Project Gutenberg
  66. ^ Quoted in Benham, 74–75.
  67. ^ a b Benham, 74–75.
  68. ^ Hart, 18.
  69. ^ Benham, 76.
  70. ^ "1668 – The Demolition". St Paul's official website. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
  71. ^ a b c Downes, 11–34.
  72. ^ Wright, James (1697). The Choire. London. Quoted in Baron, 117–119.
  73. ^ Tinniswood, 31.
  74. ^ White, Adam (7 July 2019). "Nicholas Stone". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/7819. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  75. ^ Weaver, Lawrence (1915). Memorials & Monuments – Old and New: Two hundred subjects chosen from seven centuries. London: Country Life. p. 349.
  76. ^ Dimock, Arthur (1900). The Cathedral Church of St Paul. London: George Bell & Sons. p. 20.
  77. ^ Hutchinson, Robert (2007). Elizabeth's Spy Master: Francis Walsingham and the Secret War that Saved England. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 297. ISBN 978-0-297-84613-0.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Earle, John (1628). Microcosmography or, a Piece of the World Discovered at Project Gutenberg
  • Gollancz, Israel, ed. (1922). Saint Erkenwald: an alliterative poem. London: Oxford University Press.
  • Harbens, H. A. (1918). A Dictionary of London: being notes topographical and historical relating to the streets and principal buildings in the City of London. London: Herbert Jenkins.
  • Hart, Vaughan (1995). St Paul's Cathedral: Sir Christopher Wren. London: Phaidon Press. ISBN 978-0-7148-2998-2.
  • Harvey, John (1978). The Perpendicular Style. London: Batsford. ISBN 978-0-7134-1610-7.
  • Henry, David (1753). An Historical Description of St Paul's Cathedral. London: J. Newbery.
  • Howitt, William (1860). John Cassell's Illustrated History of England. Vol. 4. London: Cassell, Petter & Galpin.
  • Huelin, Gordon (1996). Vanished Churches of the City of London. London: Guildhall Library Publishing. ISBN 0-900422-42-4.
  • Jones, William (2009) [1880]. History and Mystery of Precious Stones. London: Bentley and Son, BiblioBazaar (reprint). ISBN 978-1-103-10942-5. OCLC 84564730.
  • Jonson, Ben (2001). "Introduction". In Ostovich, Helen (ed.). Every Man out of His Humour. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-1558-8.
  • Kelly, Susan (2004). Charters of St Paul's, London. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-726299-3.
  • Kerry, Adrian (1987). Sir Christopher Wren: the Design of St Paul's Cathedral. London: Trefoil Publications. ISBN 978-0-86294-091-1.
  • Lang, Jane (1956). Rebuilding St Paul's after the Great Fire of London. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Meyer, Ann Raftery (2000). Medieval Allegory and the Building of the new Jerusalem. London: DS Brewer. ISBN 978-0-85991-796-4.
  • Milman, Henry Hart (1868). Annals of St Paul's Cathedral. London: Murray.
  • Notestein, Wallace (1956). Four Worthies: John Chamberlain, Lady Anne Clifford, John Taylor, Oliver Heywood. London: Jonathan Cape. OCLC 1562848.
  • Oggins, Robin S. (1996). Cathedrals. New York: Sterling Publishing. ISBN 1-56799-346-X.
  • Reynolds, H. (1922). The Churches of the City of London. London: Bodley Head.
  • Schofield, John, ed. (2011). St Paul's Cathedral before Wren. Swindon: English Heritage. ISBN 978-1-848020-56-6.
  • Thomson, Elizabeth McClure, ed. (1966). The Chamberlain Letters: a selection of the letters of John Chamberlain concerning life in England from 1597 to 1626. New York: Capricorn. OCLC 37697217.
  • Tinniswood, Adrian (2002). His Invention so Fertile: A Life of Christopher Wren. London: Pimlico. ISBN 978-0-7126-7364-8.
  • Webb, Diana (2000). Pilgrimage in Medieval England. London: Continuum. ISBN 978-1-85285-250-4.
[edit]