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List Entry Summary

This building is listed under the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 as amended for its special architectural or historic interest.

Name: CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF CHRIST AND ST MARY THE VIRGIN

List Entry Number: 1161023

Location

CATHEDRAL CHURCH OF CHRIST AND ST MARY THE VIRGIN, PALACE GREEN

The building may lie within the boundary of more than one authority.

County: 
District: County Durham
District Type: Unitary Authority
Parish: City of Durham

National Park: Not applicable to this List entry.

Grade: I

Date first listed: 06-May-1952

Date of most recent amendment: Not applicable to this List entry.


Legacy System Information

The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.

Legacy System: LBS

UID: 110420


Asset Groupings

This List entry does not comprise part of an Asset Grouping. Asset Groupings are not part of the official record but are added later for information.


List Entry Description

Summary of Building

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.

Reasons for Designation

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.

History

Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.

Details

NZ 2742 SW, 14/365

DURHAM AND FRAMWELLGATE, PALACE GREEN (south side)

Cathedral Church of Christ and St Mary the Virgin

06.05.52

GV

I

Cathedral church, originally of Benedictine Priory, refounded 1541 as secular cathedral.

Main body 1093-1130, begun by Bishop William of St. Calais; Galilee 1189 for Bishop le Puiset. West tower tops, east bay and Chapel of nine altars, 1242-c.1280. 1464-88 tower top stage. Restorations of late C18, early C19 and mid C19, notably by Bonomi and Jackson, Pickering and Robson and Fowler. Dressed sandstone; slate roofs. Cruciform with aisles, east transept aisles, transeptal eastern chapel, crossing tower, twin west towers and western Galilee. Galilee: one storey with battlemented parapet and richly-moulded north entrance. Large, restored C14 and C15 windows. West towers have four lower stages aligned with those on nave: all have shafted round-arched openings (those on south side enriched), the ground stage a blank arcade, the clerestory set back under a corbel table. Elaborately moulded opposed entrances in second nave bays have medieval doors, the north now with replica of sanctuary knocker. The two upper stages to towers have pointed-arched openings under bands of blank arcading; corbel table below pierced battlemented parapet with crocketed pinnacles. Transepts have outer west stair turrets, blank arcading and large inserted Perpendicular windows north and south. Crossing tower of two stages with tall openings under crocketed ogee hoods, and high, pierced parapet. Chancel elevations similar to nave except for 2-light windows in triforium and C19 Decorated windows in aisles. Eastern transept nine bays wide, divided into three and then into single bays by large buttresses. Angle towers with short spires, the southern with elaborate restored panelling.

INTERIOR: tall 7-bay nave has alternating compound and incised round piers. Intersecting blank arcading to ground stage with single lights above; paired arches to gallery bays, three stepped arches in clerestory. Rib-vaulted throughout, many ribs enriched. Galilee: five aisles of even width, four bays; quatrefoil piers with waterleaf capitals and rich chevron mouldings to arches and vault ribs. 2-bay transepts with intermediate round arcade piers. South transept aisle now D.L.I. chapel. Stellar vault in crossing tower. 5-bay chancel, the east bay rebuilt in rich C13 style, all rib-vaulted, the aisle vaults being specially early examples. Nine altars chapel two bays by nine bays wide, the central three treated as a unit. Two stages of tall lancets, multi-moulded and shafted with alternate shafts of Frosterley "marble"; trefoiled blank arcading below. Quadripartite vaults, the centre section double-ribbed with a central circle.

Fittings: Choir reredos (The Neville Screen) 1380, much restored and original figures lost. Choir stalls and aisle screens, 1665 for Bishop Cosin, eclectic mixture of Gothic and Renaissance motifs. Font and cover also of this period. Remains of wall paintings of late C12-early C14 in Galilee and nave. Several medieval tomb slabs, chests and figures, badly preserved, notably Bishop Hatfield's monument and throne, 1363. Figures of later bishops, Shute Barrington d. 1826 by Chantrey, the most moving. Much good C19 stained glass and collections of rearranged medieval glass. Prior Castell's clock, early C16 reconstructed 1938 by S. Dykes Bower.

Listing NGR: NZ2736042144


Selected Sources

Books and journals
Page, W, The Victoria History of the County of Durham, (1928)
Pevsner, N, The Buildings of England: County Durham, (1983), 162-201
'Transactions of the British Archaeological Association' in Transactions of the British Archaeological Association, , Vol. 3, (1980)

Map

National Grid Reference: NZ2736042144


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This copy shows the entry on 28-Apr-2024 at 08:12:59.