28 April 1220 A.D. First stones laid for Salisbury Cathedral
28
April 1220 A.D. First
stones laid for Salisbury Cathedral
Graves, Dan. “Salisbury
Cathedral.” Christianity.com. Apr
2007. http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1201-1500/salisbury-cathedral-11629823.html .
Accessed 27 Apr 2015.
Christianity has
spawned many works of architecture. One of the most beautiful is this at Old
Sarum, England, just ten miles from Stonehenge. Unlike most Medieval
cathedrals, Salisbury was built in a single campaign. Bishop Poore laid the
first five stones on this day, April 28, 1220, one each for himself, Archbishop
Stephen Langton, Pope Honorius III, Earl William and Countess Ela of Salisbury.
By 1237 the choir and east transepts were built and by 1258 the nave and main
transepts. The plans and their implementation experienced few alterations.
Consequently, Salisbury has more unity of design than most English cathedrals
of the period.
Just who did design Salisbury is not known.
Historian Paul Johnson suggests that Elias of Dereham and Nicholas of Ely
combined their talents. At any rate, Bishop Poore was the motivating force
behind the project. He obtained the papal authority to build the cathedral and
to locate it on a broad, flat piece of ground rather than on an earlier site.
Had he built on the old site, the new would have had to accommodate itself to
old foundations and the structure could not have had the charm of the present
building.
Salisbury Cathedral is in the Early English Gothic
style. Gothic employs pointed arches, slender vertical piers, buttresses and
diagonals for an austere effect. Salisbury is shaped as a cross, ever the
symbol of Christian faith. Its interior is well-lighted. The flying
buttresses (outside arches) are later additions. They became needful because of
the one major change made to the original conception by a later age.
The original plan called for a low tower. 110 years
after the first stone was laid, the tower was doubled and Richard of Farleigh
designed the octagonal spire which now completes the whole, making it the
second tallest in Europe. The addition of the spire added so much weight the
crossing piers bent. They support almost 6,500 tons. Consequently new supports
had to be added.
The cathedrals of Europe are symbols of intense
faith. It took faith to start building one. Most were not completed in one
generation or even in two. Their spires, straining toward heaven, are standing
prayers to God. In their windows we read the gospel story. Not a few ornaments
remind us of the lurking powers of hell. Salisbury is little encumbered with
such detail, and the simplicity of its decor has been described as peculiarly
English in its understatement. Salisbury Cathedral remains a testimony to an
age of faith.
Bibliography:
Johnson, Paul. British Cathedrals. London:
Weidenfeld & Nicolson, c1980.
"Poor, Poore, Poure, or Le Poor,
Richard." Dictionary of National Biography. Edited by Leslie Stephen and
Sidney Lee. London: Oxford University Press, 1921 - 1996.
Smethurst, Canon A. F. The Pictorial History of
Salisbury Cathedral; one of Christendom's loveliest landmarks. London: Pitkin
Pictorials, ca. 1957.
Last updated April, 2007.
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