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Exeter Cathedral | History | Timeline
Exeter Cathedral | History | Timeline
Foundation Charter of Exeter Cathedral 1050

Foundation Charter of Exeter Cathedral 1050

The cathedral misericords from c1230-1270

The cathedral misericords from c1230-1270

First glazing of the Great East Window started in 1303/04

First glazing of the Great East Window started in 1303/04

The quire was probably completed by 1310.

The quire was probably completed by 1310.

West Front image screen from c1360-1460

West Front image screen from c1360-1460

Mid 14th-century Minstrels Gallery

Mid 14th-century Minstrels Gallery

Upper tier of the West Front image screen

Upper tier of the West Front image screen

The aftermath of the 1942 bombing

The aftermath of the 1942 bombing

Excavations of the Roman bathhouse 1972-75

Excavations of the Roman bathhouse 1972-75

A brief history of Exeter Cathedral

AD 909

Devon's first cathedral established in Crediton, seven miles from Exeter.

1046

Leofric appointed Bishop of Crediton and St Germans.

1050

See moved by Leofric from Crediton to Exeter. From 1050 until 1114, the cathedral occupied the large Saxon minster church that stood a few yards from the present West Front.

1114

Construction of the Romanesque (Norman) cathedral started on the site of the present church (it was two thirds of the length of this).

1133

Consecration of the Norman cathedral (at around this time the cathedral priests were able to evacuate the Saxon minster).

1170/80

Completion of the Norman cathedral.

1225

The first Dean of Exeter, Serlo, was appointed.

C1230-1270

Carving of the cathedral misericords.

1258

Bishop Bronescombe attended the consecration of Salisbury Cathedral, traditionally the stimulus for the decision to rebuild Exeter Cathedral in Gothic style.

C1265/70

Start of the rebuilding of Exeter Cathedral in Decorated Gothic style. The work began in the Lady Chapel and its flanking chapels, 100 feet from the end of the Norman Cathedral. The Cathedral Fabric Rolls (from 1279-1353), kept in the Cathedral Archives, provide an almost complete written history of the rebuilding.

1280

By the time of Bishop Bronescombe's death in this year, the Lady Chapel had reached window-sill level.

1303/4

First glazing of the Great East Window.

By 1310

The quire was probable structurally complete at the death of Master Roger, the first named master mason of Exeter Cathedral.

1310-19

Construction of transeptal crossing

1313-27

Quire furnished, including the installation of the high altar, reredos and sedilia (1316-C1325), the pulpitum (1317-1325) and the quire-stalls.

1326

Assassination of Bishop Stapeldon in London

1328

The High Altar was dedicated and the area west of the pulpitum evacuated to allow the nave to be ‘Gothicised.'

1332

West front reached and great timber roof of nave under construction.

1342

Completion of body of the cathedral and presumed death of Thomas of Witney, Master Mason of the cathedral from 1316 - 1342.

C1342-1360

Erection of lower two tiers of west front image screen. They depict angels (bottom tier) and kings, probably Kings of Judah (middle tier).

1350/1360

Addition of Minstrels Gallery

1391

Re-glazing of Great East Window by Robert Lyen

C1412

Fire destroys upper part of Chapter House.

1450-1470

Addition of upper tier of west front image screen, depicting saints and apostles. When complete, this was coloured.

1465/1478

Wooden roof of Chapter House installed

1530-50

During the English Reformation, secular cathedrals like Exeter tended to suffer less damage than the monastic institutions, but the high and other altars were dismantled, the reredoses stripped of gold, silver and jewels and images and effigies of the Virgin Mary and the saints were despoiled.   

1642-60

During the English Civil War and the Commonwealth period the church and the chapter house were in the hands of an extremely Puritan City Chamber. The medieval cloisters were demolished in 1657.

C1661-65

Building of the cathedral organ by John Loosemore

1748-1784

Light refurbishment and re-glazing

1805-1821

Partial restoration of the west front of the cathedral by John Kendall.   

1870-1877

Major restoration by George Gilbert Scott, who was also responsible for the installation of the Martyrs' Pulpit in the nave.

1939

Cathedral ‘treasures' removed, including the Great East Window, the Bishop's Throne, the misericords and the Bronescombe effigy and distributed for safe-keeping to cellars in Devon and Cornwall.

1942

On 4th May, in the only major air-raid on Exeter, the St James Chapel, the muniment room above it and two flying buttresses were almost completely destroyed. They were rebuilt between 1945 and 1953.

1971-1973

Excavations on the west side of the close revealed the site of the Saxon minster, home of the first Exeter Cathedral in 1050AD, cemeteries from various ages and a Roman bath-house.

1973-1982

Nave and crossing vaults cleaned and restored and quire vault cleaned.

1980s

Major conservation work on the west front, including the replacement of the figure of St Peter in the apex.

1983-1989

Design and creation of the Exeter Rondels

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