Bell's Cathedrals: Chichester (1901) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 125 pages of information about Bell's Cathedrals.

Bell's Cathedrals: Chichester (1901) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 125 pages of information about Bell's Cathedrals.

The #Stained Glass# in the cathedral is all modern, and most of it is of the worst possible kind.  It is bad in design and crude in colour, and much of it is not really stained glass at all, but a painted substitute.  The only really good window in the building is that at the east end of the south choir aisle in S. Mary Magdalen’s chapel.  It was designed by Mr. C.E.  Kempe.  The glass in the lady-chapel windows is better than most of the rest, and it is admitted that the worst glass that was ever placed in any cathedral church by a generous munificence is that which is now in the large window of the south transept.

[Illustration:  THE TOWN CROSS.  Built by Bishop Storey, c. 1500. Photochrom Co., Ltd., photo.]

CHAPTER IV.

THE DIOCESE AND SEE.

To trace the history of the establishment of the city of Chichester we need go back to the time when the Romans had occupied the same site under the ancient name of Regnum.  They had fortified themselves in this position, and evidence of their occupation is to be found to-day in the subdivision of the city into four parts by those streets which meet at the Market Cross.  But as the centre of the Imperial fabric became weaker the dependencies were abandoned, and the Roman legions recalled early in the fifth century.  So when in 477 A.D. “came Aelle to Britain, and his three sons, Cymen, Wlencing, and Cissa, with three ships,” and landed at “the place which is named Cymenesora, and there slew many Welsh, and drove some into the forest which is named Andredslea,” there were no Roman soldiers to oppose them.

In this brief sentence, quoted from the Anglo-Saxon chronicle, there is a reference to several interesting matters which concern the later history of the South Saxons, their acceptance of Christianity, and the foundation of that Church—­first at Selsea, then at Chichester—­which was to be the future local centre to support and foster the faith they for so long rejected.  The Jute leaders, Hengest and Horsa, had established themselves on British soil in 449 A.D.  This was twenty-eight years before Aelle arrived, and with his followers “slew many Welsh”; that is, the British natives, the Wealas, or strangers, whom he found in possession of the land.  The place “named Cymenesora,” at which Aelle had landed, was close to Wittering, at the mouth of Chichester harbour.  And the chronicle, relating what had occurred thirteen years later, records how “in this year (490-1) Aelle and Cissa besieged Andredes ceaster, and slew all that dwelt therein, so that not even one Briton was left.”  This fortress of Anderida, which had been a Roman castrum, occupied the spot now called Pevensey, the landing-place of a later conqueror, the Norman William, in 1066.  It guarded on the east the strip of land between the South Downs and the sea; and when it fell before them, the Saxons became masters of the region to the north known then as Andredeslea, or Andredeswold, the forest or weald of Anderida.  To the west was Regnum, Cissa’s Ceaster, or Chichester, another of those fortresses which the provident and energetic Romans had established along the South Coast.

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Bell's Cathedrals: Chichester (1901) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.