Last weekend I visited a friend in Southampton for the weekend. On Saturday we visited Chichester, a beautiful small town in South England. Luckily the weather was very good so we walked a lot around the town.
The card in the back reads: "At the heart of the city, where the four main shopping streets converge, stands the elaborate Market Cross, which was given to the city in 1501 by Bishop Edward Story."
Chichester is a cathedral city in West Sussex, in South-East England. It is the only city in West Sussex, and is its county town. It has a long history as a settlement from Roman times and was important in Anglo-Saxon times. It is the seat of a bishopric, with a 12th-century cathedral, and is home to some of the oldest churches and buildings in Great Britain.
The Chichester Cross is an elaborate Perpendicular market cross in the centre of the city, standing at the intersection of the four principal streets. According to the inscription upon it, this cross was built by Edward Story, Bishop of Chichester
from 1477 to 1503; but little is known for certain and the style and
ornaments of the building suggest that it may date from the reign of Edward IV.
It was built so that the poor people should have somewhere to sell
their wares, and as a meeting point. An earlier wooden cross had been
erected on the same site by Bishop Rede (1369-1385). The stone cross was
repaired during the reign of Charles II, and at the expense of the Duke of Richmond, in 1746 and stands to this day.
The Market Cross is constructed of Caen stone,
one of the most favoured building materials of the age. The cross' form
is octangular, having a strong butment at each angle, surmounted with
pinnacles. On each of its faces is an entrance through a pointed arch,
ornamented with crockets and a finial.
Above this, on four of its sides, is a tablet, to commemorate its
reparation in the reign of Charles II. Above each tablet is a dial,
exhibiting the hour to each of the three principal streets; the fourth
being excluded from this advantage by standing at an angle. In the
centre is a large circular column, the basement of which forms a seat:
into this column is inserted a number of groinings, which, spreading
from the centre, form the roof beautifully moulded. The central column
appears to continue through the roof, and is supported without by eight
flying buttresses, which rest on the several corners of the building. Malmesbury Market Cross in Wiltshire is the other surviving late medieval covered English market cross with a similar form, but rather smaller and more simple.
Until the start of the nineteenth century the Cross was used as a
market-place; but the increased population of the city requiring a more
extensive area for that purpose, a large and convenient market-house
was, about the year 1807, erected in the North-street; on the completion
of which, it was proposed to take down this Cross, then considered as a
nuisance. This was prevented from taking place when some of the members
of the corporation purchased several houses on the north side of the
Cross in order to widen that part of the street by their demolition. [wikipedia]
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