Durham Cathedral

Durham CathedralDurham Cathedral, Durham, England, U.K.

Durham Cathedral, Anglican cathedral in the city and county of Durham in northeastern England, U.K., that is the seat of the bishop of Durham. Largely constructed between 1093 and 1133, the cathedral is an outstanding example of Romanesque architecture and a statement of Norman power. The cathedral has a spectacular setting, towering up on its great rock above a wooded horseshoe bend of the River Wear.

The story of Durham Cathedral begins with Lindisfarne Priory, where St. Cuthbert, northern England’s most venerated saint, died in 687. Viking raids forced the residents of Lindisfarne to flee, taking St. Cuthbert’s coffin with him. After his coffin had been moved from one place to another for more than a century, the monks, guided, according to legend, by the saint himself in a vision, arrived in 995 at the bend of the River Wear, after which it was no longer possible to move the coffin. The saint was duly buried there and a simple wooden church was built over him. The Venerable Bede, historian and biographer of St. Cuthbert, is also buried there. In 1018 a stone church replaced the wooden one, and it attracted pilgrims in droves, among them King Canute, and the town of Durham grew up around it.

In 1083 the Benedictine Priory of St. Cuthbert was founded, and the stone Saxon church was soon razed, with construction on the new Norman church beginning in 1093. The nave and choir were completed around 1130; the nave features massive pillars, every other one of which is carved with a geometric design. A lady chapel was started at the east end for the Virgin Mary, near St. Cuthbert’s shrine behind the high altar. However, the walls of the new chapel cracked, and the builders erected the Galilee Chapel at the other end instead. By 1250, the Chapel of the Nine Altars had been built at the east end of the church, and a new vaulted roof replaced the cathedral’s original roof.

The cathedral’s twin western towers date from the 12th and 13th centuries; the central tower was rebuilt in the 15th after the original tower was brought down by lightning. The lion’s head knocker on the north door, once used by people seeking sanctuary, is one of Durham’s most famous objects. Durham Cathedral and the nearby Durham Castle became a World Heritage site in 1986.

Richard Cavendish