| A Brief History |
900 years ago the Normans began to build the original church. It was rebuilt and enlarged
between the 13th and 15th centuries and became the 'Civic Church' with strong links with the
merchants and guilds (Guildhall).
Just over 100 years ago the Victorian Architect, Raphael Brandon magnificantly restored
and, in places, rebuilt the church, including the addition of a 220ft spire.
Some Important Dates
AD
316 to 397 St.Martin lived.
680 Cuthwine, first Anglo-Saxon Bishop of Leicester.
870 The Midlands invaded by Danes. Leicester ceased to be a separate diocese.
1072 Normans put Leicester under the jurisdiction of the Lincoln diocese.
1086 First recorded mention of St.Martin's. Norman church replaces the Saxon one.
13th cent. Leicester Abbey built. For a time, the Abbey appointed the St. Martin's vicars.
13th cent. Aisles were added to the church.
1225 First record of the name of the priest of St. Martin's.
1343 Corpus Christi Guild formed.
15th cent. Nave and Chancel extended.
1535 The nearby Grey Friars Monastery was closed.
1548 During the Reformation, St.Martin's was stripped bare of statues, vestments, screens and stained glass.
1634 & 1642 Visits by King Charles I.
1656 Sir John Whatton dies. Memorial to him put on the north wall.
1757 Spire added to the Norman tower.
1837 Leicester now in the care of the Bishop of Peterborough.
1859 David Vaughan appointed vicar of St. Martin's.
1860 Victorian restoration begins. (Tower and roof rebuilt. New spire added.)
1888 Suffragan Bishop of Leicester appointed by Peterborough.
1922 St.Martins raised to status of Collegiate Church.
1927 Leicester has its own Bishop again. St.Martin's hallowed as Leicester Cathedral.
1939 Song school and Vestry built.
1946 King George VI and Queen Elizabeth visit the Cathedral.
1980 Richard III memorial slab placed in Chancel floor.
1986/87 Interior decoration and rearrangement of the churchyard.
1997/98 Festival Year - 70 years a Cathedral.
2000-2001 Millennium Appeal to raise £1.5 million
September 2002 Provost becomes Dean under Cathedrals Measure
The Bishops of Leicester
During Saxon times in 680AD Leicester had its first Bishop, Cuthwine. Two hundred years later
the last Saxon Bishop fled south from the invading Danes. For a very
long time there was no Bishop and the people of Leicestershire were looked after
by the Bishops of Lincoln and then later by the Bishops of Peterborough. |
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Leicester Cathedral Centre
21 St Martin's, Leicester. LE1 5DE
Telephone: 0116 248 7400 Fax: 0116 248 7470
Email: leicestercathedral@leccofe.org
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