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St Chad Gospels

Posted on Friday, 28 January 2011 12:34

chadgospelinchapterhouseThe St Chad Gospels (formerly known as the Lichfield Gospels, and sometimes still known as the St Teilo Gospels) is an eighth century Gospel Book housed in Lichfield Cathedral.

There are 236 surviving folios, eight of which are illuminated. Another four contain framed text. The manuscript is also important because it includes, as marginalia, some of the earliest known examples of written Welsh.

 

 

Lichfield Angel

Posted on Friday, 28 January 2011 12:33

The Angel

Discovered in 2003 the Lichfield Angel is a remarkable survival of early medieval sculpture. The carved limestone panel, which is dated to around 800 A.D., comprises three separate fragments which are thought to have formed the corner of a shrine chest, possibly that of St Chad (d.672).

In the summer of 2003, archaeological work in the nave of the Cathedral was undertaken prior to the installation of a retractable platform. Little or nothing was known about the archaeology of the nave although it was generally thought that the Anglo-Saxon Cathedral must have been located west of the Church of St Mary, evidence for which exists under the choir. Dr Warwick Rodwell, the Cathedral Archaeologist, undertook the excavation and the results were extraordinary.

 

Treasure display

Posted on Sunday, 19 June 2011 18:41

stchadgospelsnewcabinet130611

The St Chad Gospels and Lichfield Angel display

In June 2011, the Cathedral's two great Anglo Saxon treasures were installed in new permanent display cabinets in the Chapter House.

The St Chad Gospels, an illuminated Anglo Saxon gospel book which dates from about 730 (which makes it older than the famous Book of Kells), were previously hidden away behind a pillar in a cabinet for over 30 years. The Lichfield Angel previously languished in the transportation crate in which it was returned to the Cathedral by the conservator in 2007. The treasures have now been installed in bespoke frameless glass cabinets, on specially engineered mounts and with tailored lighting.

The redisplay of these treasures is part of a £120,000 upgrade of the Chaper House, including its security, in preparation for the Staffordshire Hoard on Tour in August 2011. Funding for this project has been gratefully received from the Heritage Lottery Fund, the Foyle Foundation, the Staffordshire Hoard Partnership, the Friends of Lichfield Cathedral, Lichfield District Council and members of the Cathedral community.

In October until the end of 2011, the Canterbury Tales and the Codex Juris Canonici will also be on display in the Chapter House. We are able to display them securely thanks to the cctv and alarm upgrade to the Cathedral made earlier this year in preparation for the Staffordshire Hoard on Tour exhibition. The exhibition cases were those purchased for that exhibition, which have now returned permanently to the Cathedral.

The Canterbury Tales display

This manuscript is one of the most stunning treasures in our Cathedral library. It was part of the bequest of 'one thousand volumes' which the Duchess of Somerset gave to the Cathedal after the death of her husband in 1670. the bequest coincided with the restoration of the Cathedral after the ravages of the Civil War and became the core of the new library collection after almost all of the contents of the Cathedral's medieval library had been lost in the seige of 1646.

The manuscript on display in the Chapter House, dates from about 1420 and is therefore a rare and early complete copy of The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer, who wrote the work in the late 1380s. It includes some lavishly decorated pages at the start of each new tale in the cycle.

The Codex Juris Canonici display

This volume is one of the oldest manusripts in the Cathedral library. It dates from about the year 1200. It is a book of commentary and interpretation on 'canon' or church law, with some intruiging decorations on each page which are the manusript equivalent of gargoyles - fantastical creatures.

 

Herkenrode Glass

Posted on Friday, 28 January 2011 12:33

The Herkenrode Treasure view 3 The windows of the Lady Chapel contain some of the finest medieval Flemish Painted Glass in existence.

The seven immense Renaissance Herkenrode glass windows represent the greatest collection of unrestored 16th Century Flemish glass anywhere in the world. They were bought by the Cathedral to replace medieval stained glass lost during the Civil War, and brought to England in 1803.