Salisbury Cathedral, Gothic cathedral in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England, that was constructed between 1220 and 1258. It houses one of only four surviving copies of the Magna Carta.
Known as the Cathedral of St. Mary, the building was raised to help found a new city called New Sarum. An earlier cathedral had been constructed nearby on the site of an Iron Age hill fort, known today as Old Sarum. A form of liturgical chant known as Sarum chant originated at this earlier cathedral. The cathedral’s neighbor was a royal castle, but clashes between the castle garrison and the cathedral’s bishop and priests led to the selection of a new site.
Boasting the world’s tallest surviving spire dating before the 15th century, the cathedral is unique among medieval English cathedrals because it was mostly completed within a century—the main part being constructed in only 38 years—with no substantial later additions. Surrounded by cloisters, it is built in the shape of a double cross. The main entrance at the west end is decorated with religious statues, several of which date from the medieval period. Inside, rib-vaulted ceilings are supported by typically Gothic arches, with a second tier of smaller arches supporting the ceiling over the main aisle. Outside the south transept is an elegant octagonal chapter house complete with a vaulted, ribbed ceiling of breathtaking beauty, supported by a single, decorated, central column of Purbeck marble.
The cathedral’s portland stone-clad tower and spire were added about 50 years after the main building. This was because of the advent of revolutionary new building techniques whereby flying buttresses helped to carry the load, which enabled medieval architects to create much taller buildings. However, the unplanned addition of the daring 404-foot (123-meter) cross-tipped spire has caused noticeable deflections in the four stone columns that provide its support, mainly because the cathedral was built on marshy ground.