#Antony Sparrow# (1676-85); translated from Exeter. He was the author of a "Rationale upon the Book of Common Prayer," 1657.
#William Lloyd #(1685-91); translated from Llandaff to Peterborough, and from thence to Norwich. He was deposed in 1690 for refusing to take the oath of allegiance to William III.
#John Moore# (1691-1707); translated to Ely in 1707.
#Charles Trimmell# (1708-1721); translated to Winchester in 1721.
#Thomas Green# (1721-23); translated to Ely 1723.
#John Lang# (1723-27).
#William Baker# (1727-32); translated from Bangor.
#Robert b.u.t.ts# (1733-38); translated to Ely 1738.
#Sir Thomas Gooch, Bart.# (1738-48); translated from Bristol.
#Samuel Lisle# (1748-49); translated from St. Asaph.
#Thomas Hayter# (1749-61); translated to London in 1761.
#Philip Yonge# (1761-83); translated from Bristol.
#Lewis Bagot# (1783-90); translated from Bristol.
#George Horne# (1791-92).
#Charles Manners Sutton# (1792-1805); translated to Canterbury in 1805.
#Henry Bathurst# (1805-37).
#Edward Stanley# (1837-49), father of the late Dean of Westminster.
#Samuel Hinds# (1849-57).
#John Thomas Pelham# (1857-93).
#J. Sheepshanks# (1893).
[Ill.u.s.tration: The Pelican Lectern in the Choir.]
CHAPTER V
THE CITY
The visitor to this ancient city will by no means wish to confine his attention to the Cathedral and its precincts; but the s.p.a.ce at our disposal will not permit more than a list of other monuments which are worthy of attention. Among these the #Castle# naturally comes first.
Occupying the site of a very ancient--probably British--stronghold, the first building was erected in early Norman times. For many years it was the princ.i.p.al fortress of the BiG.o.ds, Earls of Norfolk, and under them experienced many vicissitudes of fortune at the hands of both Flemings and French. The last event of importance connected with it was the hanging of Kett in 1549. The keep is in dimensions 96 x 92 feet, its height being 72 feet (see p. 99).
The #Guildhall# contains many interesting relics of the civil life of Norwich during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, including those of the famous Guild of S. George, established in 1385 and dissolved in 1731 (see p. 103).
#St. Andrew"s Hall#, a fifteenth-century building, was formerly the nave of the Church of the Blackfriars. It contains some good pictures of the English School.
Among the Churches, that of St. Peter, Mancroft (fifteenth century), is well worth a visit. Its tower, 98 feet in height, contains one of the most famous peals of bells in England, and has always been the headquarters of a notable band of change-ringers. Of the others, St.
Gregory, Pottergate, has some interesting antiquities; St. Giles", St.
Helen"s, and St. John the Baptist are all of importance: the latter has some good mural painting and monumental bra.s.ses, which should also be examined. St. Michael"s, Coslaney, is a well-known type of the Norfolk flint construction.
At #Pull"s Ferry# the water-gate to the precincts is still standing. It is an interesting piece of flint work. The ferry itself, of which a view is given here, is a favourite sketching place.
[Ill.u.s.tration: Pull"s Ferry.]
THE END
[Ill.u.s.tration: PLAN OF THE CATHEDRAL.]
REFERENCES TO PLAN.
A. Dean"s Vestry.
B. The Chapel of St. Mary-the-Less.
C. The Chapel of St. Luke.
D. The Jesus Chapel.
E. Bishop Nykke"s Chapel.
F. The Ante-Reliquary Chapel.
G. The High Altar.
H. Site of destroyed Chapter-House.
J. The Locutory, now used as the Choir School.
Y. A Main Pier in Nave.
Z. A Subsidiary Pier in Nave.
1. Altar Tomb of Sir Thomas Wyndham.
2. " " Sir John Hobart.
3. Tomb of Chancellor Spencer.
4. Altar Tomb of Bishop Parkhurst (1560-74).
5. Door in the East Walk of Cloisters.
6. Door once leading to Refectory.
7. The Monks" Lavatories.
8. Door once leading to the Guest Hall.
9. The Easter Sepulchre and Burial-place of Sir Thomas Erpingham.