With contributions by Marion M. Archibald, Elisabeth Crowfoot, Paul Drury, Brian Gittos, Moira Gittos, Jill Kerr, Juliet Rogers, Vince Russett, Jerry Sampson, Alan Saville and Jeffrey West, and a Foreword by Patrick Mitchell.
Ebook (PDF) published 2013.
Archaeological excavation, architectural survey and historical research carried out between 1978 and 1993 have elucidated the origins and early development, of Wells Cathedral. Study concentrated primarily on the cloister and its adjuncts, and excavation took place in the adjoining 'Camery' garden. Here lay an ancient cemetery and the foundations of a succession of demolished buildings, ranging in date from Roman to post-medieval. Collectively, these enshrined a continuous development of religious and sepulchral activity, probably from the fourth to the mid-sixteenth century; secular uses followed. Adjacent to the Camery are the springs from which Wells takes its name. The first mention of the 'holy well' and minster church of St Andrew is in A.D. 766. Excavation yielded a complex stratigraphic sequence, demonstrating how an anonymous late Roman mausoleum burial probably provided the 'raison d'ĂȘtre' for the development of a Middle Saxon cemetery and chapel, and hence for the origins of Wells Cathedral itself in 909. The establishment of this sequence is uniquely important in the history of English cathedral archaeology and sets Wells alongside developments in continental Europe.
Author(s): Warwick Rodwell
Series: English Heritage Archaeological Reports, 21
Publisher: English Heritage
Year: 2001
Language: English
Pages: XLIV+618
City: Swindon
Plates viii
Figures ix
Tables xv
Foreword xvi
Preface xvii
Acknowledgements xix
Summaries xxi
Vol. 1, Part 1. Historical and Structural Sequence
1. Introduction 1
2. Topography and Early Settlement 27
3. The Anglo-Saxon Minster of Saint Andrew 55
4. The Late Saxon Cathedral and Norman Collegiate Church, c. 909-1200 87
5. Reginald de Bohun's Church c. 1175-1239 127
6. The Lady Chapel-by-the-Cloister, c. 1196-1477 161
7. Bishop Stillington's Lady Chapel and Chantry, 1477-1522 199
8. The Cloister Complex, I: General Development, and the South East Ranges 245
9. The Cloister Complex, II: Ancillary Structures, Garth, and West Range 309
10. The Camery 349
11. Medieval Water Supply and Distribution Systems 375
Vol. 2, Part 2. Specialist Studies: Artefacts and Burials
Introductory note 413
12. Structural Materials and Decoration 415
13. Funerary Monuments and Devotional Sculpture 488
14: Loose Artefacts 512
15: Burials 537
Appendices 569
Notes to chapters 573
Abbreviations and Bibliography 589
Index 599