Lincoln Cathedral West Front
Has been described as a Possible Masonry Castle, and also as a Possible Palace (Bishop), and also as a Possible Fortified Ecclesiastical site
There are major building remains
Name | Lincoln Cathedral West Front |
Alternative Names | Remigius' Tower |
Historic Country | Lincolnshire |
Modern Authority | Lincolnshire |
1974 Authority | Lincolnshire |
Civil Parish | Lincoln |
When first built Remigius' great tower dominated, not just the enclosure containing the attached Anglo-Saxon church of St Mary, but the whole of the upper city. In this respect it occupied the same symbolically charged site as did the mottes and towers of major castles in several shire towns in the first generation after the Conquest, which were also founded on the sites of major churches. Regardless of whether it was completed in the 1070s or c 1090, the tower adjacent to the W. end of St Mary of Lincoln must have been planned to be by far the most dominant – and the most strongly fortified structure (minimal though its fortifications are) – of which we know within the first Lincoln Castle. It must have seemed, indeed, to be the 'keep' of Lincoln Castle. And this is also, perhaps, to be expected. Remigius was not just a new Bishop in his cathedral, he was also the principal secular lord of Lincoln (Stocker and Vince, 1997)
Research set out to examine the controversial theory that the west front of Lincoln Cathedral was planned by Remigius, the first Bishop of Lincoln, as a secular, fortified, free standing tower not originally as part of the church. With help from Nottingham University Archaeology students, a stone by stone survey is being made and it is hoped that an analysis of the structure will show the archaeological and social relationships between the rooms and internal spaces of the west front. Research to date suggests that in fact little remains of what was previously accepted as Remigius' work, necessitating a reappraisal of the structural history of the west front. (David Taylor)
Not scheduled
This is a Grade 1 listed building protected by law
Historic England Scheduled Monument Number
Historic England Listed Building number(s)
Images Of England
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SK977718 |
Latitude | 53.2343482971191 |
Longitude | -0.537360012531281 |
Eastings | 497796 |
Northings | 371808 |