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{{Short description|Catholic cathedral in London, England}}
{{Distinguish|Westminster Abbey|Westminster Chapel}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2017}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2017}}
{{Use British English|date=July 2024}}
{{Distinguish|Westminster Abbey}}
{{Infobox church
{{Infobox church
| name = Westminster Cathedral
| name = Westminster Cathedral
| fullname = Metropolitan Cathedral of the Precious Blood {{nowrap|of Our Lord Jesus Christ}}
| fullname = Metropolitan Cathedral of the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ
| image = WestminsterCathedralFull.jpg
| image = WestminsterCathedralFull.jpg
| imagesize = 300px
| imagesize = 300px
| imagealt =
| imagealt =
| landscape =
| landscape =
| caption = Cathedral from Victoria Street
| caption = Cathedral from Victoria Street
| pushpin map = Central London
| pushpin map = Central London
| pushpin label position =
| pushpin label position =
| pushpin map alt =
| pushpin map alt =
| pushpin mapsize =
| pushpin mapsize =
| map caption = Shown within Central London
| map caption = Shown within Central London
| coordinates = {{coord|51.4961|-0.1397|region:GB_type:landmark|display=title}}
| latd =
| osgraw = TQ 29248 79074
| longd =
| location = Francis Street, [[City of Westminster|Westminster]]<br />London, [[SW postcode area|SW1]]
| coordinates = {{coord|51.4961|-0.1397|region:GB_type:landmark|display=title}}
| country = England
| osgraw = TQ2924879074
| denomination = [[Catholic Church|Roman Catholic]]
| location = Francis Street, [[City of Westminster|Westminster]]<br />London, [[SW postcode area|SW1]]
| tradition =
| country = England
| membership =
| denomination = [[Catholic Church|Roman Catholic]]
| website = {{URL|https://westminstercathedral.org.uk/}}
| tradition =
| former name =
| membership =
| dedication = [[Blood of Christ|Most Precious Blood]]
| website = [http://westminstercathedral.org.uk/ westminstercathedral.org.uk]
| consecrated date = 1910
| former name =
| people =
| bull date =
| status = [[Cathedral]]
| consecrated date = 1910
| functional status =
| people =
| heritage designation =
| status = [[Cathedral]]
| designated date =
| functional status = Active
| previous cathedrals =
| heritage designation =
| architect = [[John Francis Bentley]]
| designated date =
| architectural type =
| previous cathedrals =
| style = [[Neo-Byzantine architecture|Neo-Byzantine]]
| architect = [[John Francis Bentley]]
| years built = 1895–1903
| architectural type =
| groundbreaking =
| style = [[Neo-Byzantine architecture|Neo-Byzantine]]
| completed date =
| years built = 1895–1903
| construction cost =
| groundbreaking =
| completed date =
| closed date =
| demolished date =
| construction cost =
| capacity =
| closed date =
| length = 110m (360ft)
| demolished date =
| length nave =
| capacity =
| length = 110m (360ft)
| length choir =
| width = 47m (156ft)
| length nave =
| width nave =
| length choir =
| width = 47m (156ft)
| width transepts =
| height =
| width nave =
| height nave =
| width transepts =
| height =
| height choir =
| dome quantity =
| height nave =
| height choir =
| dome height outer =
| dome quantity =
| dome height inner =
| dome height outer =
| dome dia outer =
| dome height inner =
| dome dia inner =
| tower quantity = 1
| dome dia outer =
| tower height = 87m (284ft), including the cross
| dome dia inner =
| tower quantity = 1
| spire quantity =
| tower height = 87m (284ft, including the cross)
| spire height =
| metropolis =
| spire quantity =
| diocese = [[Roman Catholic Diocese of Westminster|Westminster]]
| spire height =
| diocese start = 1884
| metropolis =
| diocese = [[Roman Catholic Diocese of Westminster|Westminster]]
| province = [[Province of Westminster|Westminster]]
| archbishop = [[Vincent Nichols]]
| diocese start = 1884
| bishop =
| province = [[Province of Westminster|Westminster]]
| dean = Slawomir Witon
| archbishop = [[Vincent Nichols]]
| provost =
| bishop =
| canon =
| dean =
| precentor =
| provost =
| archdeacon =
| canon = Christopher Tuckwell
| reader =
| precentor =
| organist = Simon Johnson, Peter Stevens
| archdeacon =
| logo =
| reader =
| logosize =
| director = [[Martin Baker (organist)|Martin Baker]]
| logolink =
| organist = Peter Stevens
| logoalt =
| logo =
| embedded = {{Infobox historic site
| logosize =
| logolink =
| logoalt =
| embedded =
{{Infobox historic site
| embed = yes
| embed = yes
| designation1 = UK Grade I
| designation1 = UK Grade I
| designation1_offname =
| designation1_offname =
| designation1_date = 1 December 1987<br>Amended 15 February 1994
| designation1_date = 1 December 1987<br />Amended 15 February 1994
| designation1_number = 1066500<ref>{{National Heritage List for England |num=1066500|access-date=10 November 2016}}</ref>
| designation1_number = 1066500<ref>{{National Heritage List for England |num=1066500|desc=Wesminster Cathedral|access-date=10 November 2016}}</ref>
}}
}}
}}
}}
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[[File:Westminster Cathedral from the south-west.jpg|thumb|South-western elevation]]
[[File:Westminster Cathedral from the south-west.jpg|thumb|South-western elevation]]
[[File:Westminster.cathedral.mosaic.london.arp.jpg|thumb|Neo-Byzantine mosaics]]
[[File:Westminster.cathedral.mosaic.london.arp.jpg|thumb|Neo-Byzantine mosaics]]
[[File:Westminster Cathedral IMG 4612.JPG|thumb|Reliquary of [[Saint]] [[John Southworth (martyr)|John Southworth]]]]
[[File:Westminster Cathedral IMG 4612.JPG|thumb|Reliquary of Saint [[John Southworth (martyr)|John Southworth]]]]
[[File:Westminster Cathedral from the west.jpg|thumb|North-western elevation]]
[[File:Westminster Cathedral from the west.jpg|thumb|North-western elevation]]
[[File:Westminster Cathedral 4227r.jpg|thumb|Blessed Sacrament Chapel]]
[[File:Catedral de Westminster, Londres, Inglaterra, 2022-11-23, DD 49-51 HDR.jpg|thumb|Blessed Sacrament Chapel]]
[[File:Westminster Cathedral, London - 02.jpg|thumb|Ceiling of the Lady Chapel]]
[[File:Westminster Cathedral, London - 02.jpg|thumb|Ceiling of the Lady Chapel]]
[[File:North-west entrance of Westminster Cathedral.jpg|thumb|North-western portal]]
[[File:North-west entrance of Westminster Cathedral.jpg|thumb|North-western portal]]
'''Westminster Cathedral''', formally the {{Em|Metropolitan Cathedral of the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ}}, is the largest [[Catholic Church in England and Wales|Roman Catholic church in England and Wales]] and the seat of the Cardinal [[Archbishop of Westminster]].


The site on which the cathedral stands in the [[City of Westminster]] was purchased by the [[Roman Catholic Diocese of Westminster|Diocese of Westminster]] in 1885, and construction was completed in 1903.<ref name="sacred-destinations">{{cite web|url=http://www.sacred-destinations.com/england/london-westminster-cathedral|title=Westminster Cathedral – London, England|website=www.sacred-destinations.com|access-date=2019-11-12}}</ref> Designed by [[John Francis Bentley]] in a 9th-century Christian [[Neo-Byzantine architecture|neo-Byzantine style]], and accordingly made almost entirely of [[brick]], without [[steel]] reinforcements,<ref name="Daly2018">{{cite book|author=Mark Daly|title=London Uncovered (New Edition): More than Sixty Unusual Places to Explore|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iKF5DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA134|date=16 October 2018|publisher=White Lion Publishing|isbn=978-0-7112-3998-2|page=134}}</ref><ref name="DayMcNeil2002">{{cite book|author1=Lance Day|author2=Ian McNeil|title=Biographical Dictionary of the History of Technology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FmoTeX3aGl4C&pg=PT111|date=11 September 2002|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-134-65019-4|page=111}}</ref> Sir [[John Betjeman]] called it "a masterpiece in striped brick and stone" that shows "the good craftsman has no need of steel or concrete."<ref>{{cite book| title=A Pictorial History of English Architecture| last=Betjeman| first=John| publisher=Penguin Books Ltd.| date=25 July 1974| page=95| isbn=978-0140038248| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=68YjAAAAMAAJ&q=westminster+cathedral|url-access=subscription }}</ref>
'''Westminster Cathedral''' is the [[mother church]] of the [[Catholic Church in England and Wales]].


==History==
The site on which the cathedral stands in the [[City of Westminster]] was purchased by the [[Roman_Catholic_Diocese_of_Westminster|Diocese of Westminster]] in 1885, and construction completed in 1903.<ref name="sacred-destinations">[http://www.sacred-destinations.com/england/london-westminster-cathedral Sacred Destinations: Westminster Cathedral]</ref> It is the largest Catholic church in England and Wales and the seat of the [[Archbishop of Westminster]].
{{more citations needed section|date=May 2022}}


In the late 19th century, the [[Roman Catholic Church]]'s hierarchy had only recently been [[Catholic emancipation|restored]] in England and Wales, and it was in memory of [[Cardinal Wiseman]] (who died in 1865, and was the first Archbishop of Westminster from 1850) that the first substantial sum of money was raised for the new cathedral. The land was acquired in 1884 by Wiseman's successor, [[Henry Edward Manning|Cardinal Manning]], having previously been occupied by the second [[Tothill Fields Bridewell]] prison.
Designed by [[John Francis Bentley]] in [[Neo-Byzantine architecture|neo-Byzantine style]], and accordingly made almost entirely of [[brick]], without [[steel]] reinforcements,<ref name="Daly2018">{{cite book|author=Mark Daly|title=London Uncovered (New Edition): More than Sixty Unusual Places to Explore|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iKF5DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA134|date=16 October 2018|publisher=White Lion Publishing|isbn=978-0-7112-3998-2|page=134}}</ref><ref name="DayMcNeil2002">{{cite book|author1=Lance Day|author2=Ian McNeil|title=Biographical Dictionary of the History of Technology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FmoTeX3aGl4C&pg=PT111|date=11 September 2002|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-134-65019-4|page=111}}</ref> [[John Betjeman]] called it "a masterpiece in striped brick and stone" and said that it shows that "the good craftsman has no need of steel or concrete".<ref>{{cite book| title=A Pictorial History of English Architecture| last=Betjeman| first=John| publisher=Penguin Books Ltd.| date=25 July 1974| page=95| isbn=978-0140038248| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=68YjAAAAMAAJ&focus=searchwithinvolume&q=westminster+cathedral|url-access=subscription }}</ref>


After two false starts, in 1867 (under architect [[Henry Clutton]]) and 1892 (architect [[Baron von Herstel]]), construction started in 1895 under Manning's successor, the third [[archbishop]], [[Herbert Vaughan|Cardinal Vaughan]], with [[John Francis Bentley]] as architect, in a style heavily influenced by [[Byzantine architecture]].<ref>[http://www.londongardensonline.org.uk/gardens-online-record.asp?ID=WST146 Westminster Cathedral Piazza] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140819090616/http://www.londongardensonline.org.uk/gardens-online-record.asp?ID=WST146 |date=19 August 2014 }} from ''London Gardens Online'' retrieved 16 May 2013</ref> The cost of the building was anticipated at £150,000 and its area 54,000&nbsp;sq ft, the cathedral to be 350&nbsp;ft long by 156&nbsp;ft wide by 90&nbsp;ft high.<ref>{{Cite journal |date=20 July 1895 |title=The New Roman Catholic Cathedral, Westminster |journal=The Illustrated London News |pages=3 |via=Archive.Org}}</ref>
==History==


The foundation stone blessing by Cardinal Vaughan took place on a Saturday morning, 29 June 1895, before a "distinguished" gathering. After the "recitation of the Litanies, [[Michael Logue|Cardinal Logue]] celebrated Low Mass ''coram episcopo''. A procession composed of [[Benedictines]], [[Franciscans]], [[Society of Jesus|Jesuits]], [[Passionists]], [[Dominican Order|Dominicans]], [[Redemptorists]], and secular clergy made the circuit of the grounds. The choir, directed by the Rev. Charles Cox, rendered, among other pieces, [[Samuel Webbe|Webbe's]] 'O Roma Felix' and 'O Salutaris'. At the luncheon which followed, the speakers included Cardinal Vaughan, Cardinal Logue, the [[Henry Fitzalan-Howard, 15th Duke of Norfolk|Duke of Norfolk]], [[John Dalberg-Acton, 1st Baron Acton|Lord Acton]], [[Henry Matthews, 1st Viscount Llandaff|Henry Matthews MP]], [[Edmund FitzAlan-Howard, 1st Viscount FitzAlan of Derwent|Lord Edmund Talbot]], and Sir Donald Macfarlane."<ref>{{Cite journal |date=20 July 1895 |title=The New Roman Catholic Cathedral, Westminster |journal=The Illustrated London News |pages=3 |via=Archive.org}}</ref>
In the late 19th century, the [[Catholic Church]]'s hierarchy had only recently been [[Catholic emancipation|restored]] in England and Wales, and it was in memory of [[Cardinal Wiseman]] (who died in 1865, and was the first Archbishop of Westminster from 1850) that the first substantial sum of money was raised for the new cathedral. The land was acquired in 1884 by Wiseman's successor, [[Henry Edward Manning|Cardinal Manning]], having previously been occupied by the second [[Tothill Fields Bridewell]] prison.


The cathedral opened in 1903, a year after Bentley's death. One of the first public liturgies to be celebrated in the cathedral was Cardinal Vaughan's Requiem Mass; the Cardinal died on 19 June 1903.<ref>{{cite news| title=Sacred Mysteries| first=Christopher| last=Howse| work=[[The Daily Telegraph]]| date=30 April 2005| url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/personal-view/3616563/Sacred-mysteries.html| access-date=20 February 2016}}</ref> When the debt on the building fund was liquidated, consecration ceremony took place on 28 June 1910<ref>{{cite news |last1=Alba |first1=M.J. |date=14 May 2013 |title=10 Most Famous Unfinished Buildings |url=http://listverse.com/2013/05/14/10-most-famous-unfinished-buildings/ |access-date=12 July 2016}}</ref> Under the laws of the Catholic Church, no place of worship could be [[consecration|consecrated]] unless free from debt.
After two false starts in 1867 (under architect [[Henry Clutton]]) and 1892 (architect [[Baron von Herstel]]), construction started in 1895 under Manning's successor, the third [[archbishop]], [[Herbert Vaughan|Cardinal Vaughan]], with [[John Francis Bentley]] as architect, and built in a style heavily influenced by [[Byzantine architecture]].<ref>[http://www.londongardensonline.org.uk/gardens-online-record.asp?ID=WST146 Westminster Cathedral Piazza] from ''London Gardens Online'' retrieved 16 May 2013</ref>


The decoration of the interior had hardly been started at the time of consecration, as the decoration in Byzantine churches is applied, rather than integral to the architecture. Therefore finishing the decoration of the cathedral was left to the subsequent generations. It is an architectural gem with its interior notable for rich marble decorations and the beautiful, but still incomplete, mosaics.
The cathedral opened in 1903, a year after Bentley's death. One of the first public services in the cathedral was Cardinal Vaughan's requiem; the cardinal died on 19 June 1903.<ref>{{cite news| title=Sacred Mysteries| first=Christopher| last=Howse| work=[[The Daily Telegraph]]| date=30 April 2005| url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/personal-view/3616563/Sacred-mysteries.html| accessdate=20 February 2016}}</ref> For reasons of economy, the decoration of the interior had hardly been started and still much remained to be completed. Under the laws of the Catholic Church at the time, no place of worship could be [[consecration|consecrated]] unless free from debt and having its fabric completed. The consecration ceremony took place on 28 June 1910, although the interior was never finished.<ref>{{cite news|last1=Alba|first1=M.J.|title=10 Most Famous Unfinished Buildings|url=http://listverse.com/2013/05/14/10-most-famous-unfinished-buildings/|accessdate=12 July 2016|date=14 May 2013}}</ref>


In 1895, the Cathedral was dedicated to [[Blood of Christ|The Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ]]. This is indicated by the Latin dedication above the portal arch: "Domine Jesus Rex et Redemptor per Sanguinem tuum salva nos" (English translation: Lord Jesus, King and Redeemer, heal us through your blood.). The additional patrons are [[Mary, mother of Jesus|St Mary]], the mother of Jesus, [[Saint Joseph|St Joseph]], his Foster Father, and [[Saint Peter|St Peter]], his Vicar. The Cathedral also has numerous secondary patrons: [[Augustine of Canterbury|St Augustine]] and all British saints, [[Saint Patrick|St Patrick]] and [[List of saints of Ireland|all saints of Ireland]].<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/history_dedication.php|title=Dedication of the Cathedral - Westminster Cathedral|website=www.westminstercathedral.org.uk|access-date=2018-07-12}}</ref> The Feast of the Dedication of the Cathedral is celebrated each year on 1 July,<ref name=":0" /> which from 1849 until 1969 was the [[Feast of the Most Precious Blood|feast of the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ]].
In 1895, the cathedral was dedicated to the [[Blood of Christ|Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ]]. This is indicated by the Latin dedication above the portal arch: ''Domine Jesus Rex et Redemptor per Sanguinem tuum salva nos'' (English translation: "Lord Jesus, King and Redeemer, heal us through your blood"). The additional patrons are St Mary, the mother of Jesus, [[Saint Joseph|St Joseph]], his foster father, and [[Saint Peter|St Peter]], his vicar. The cathedral also has numerous secondary patrons: [[Augustine of Canterbury|St Augustine]] and all British saints, [[Saint Patrick|St Patrick]] and [[List of saints of Ireland|all saints of Ireland]].<ref name=":0">{{cite web|url=http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/history_dedication.php|title=Dedication of the Cathedral Westminster Cathedral|website=www.westminstercathedral.org.uk|access-date=2018-07-12}}</ref> The Feast of the Dedication of the Cathedral is celebrated each year on 1 July,<ref name=":0" /> which from 1849 until 1969 was the [[Feast of the Most Precious Blood|feast of the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ]].


In 1977, as part of her [[Silver Jubilee of Elizabeth II|Silver Jubilee celebrations]], Queen [[Elizabeth II]] visited the cathedral to view a flower show.
In 1977, as part of her [[Silver Jubilee of Elizabeth II|Silver Jubilee Celebrations]], [[Queen Elizabeth II]] visited the cathedral to view a flower show.


On 28 May 1982, the first day of his six-day pastoral visit to the United Kingdom, [[Pope John Paul II]] celebrated [[Mass (liturgy)|Mass]] in the cathedral.
On 28 May 1982, the first day of his six-day pastoral visit to the United Kingdom, [[Pope John Paul II]] celebrated [[Mass (liturgy)|Mass]] in the cathedral.


On St Andrew's Day (30 November) 1995, at the invitation of Cardinal [[Basil Hume]], Queen Elizabeth again visited the cathedral but this time she attended Choral [[Vespers]], the first participation of the Queen in a Catholic church [[liturgy#Christianity|liturgy]] in Great Britain.
On [[St Andrew's Day]] (30 November) 1995, at the invitation of [[Basil Cardinal Hume]], Queen Elizabeth again visited the cathedral but this time she attended Choral [[Vespers]], the first participation of the Queen in a Roman Catholic church [[liturgy#Christianity|liturgy]] in Great Britain.


On 18 September 2010, on the third day of his four-day [[state visit]] to the United Kingdom, [[Pope Benedict XVI]] celebrated Mass in the cathedral.
On 18 September 2010, on the third day of his four-day [[state visit]] to the United Kingdom, [[Pope Benedict XVI]] celebrated Mass in the cathedral.


In January 2011 the cathedral was the venue for the reception and ordination of three former Anglican bishops<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-12197985| title=Ex-Anglican bishops ordained as Catholics| work=[[BBC News]]| date=15 January 2011| accessdate=20 February 2016}}</ref> into the newly formed [[Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham]].
In January 2011 the cathedral was the venue for the reception and later ordination of three former Anglican bishops<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-12197985| title=Ex-Anglican bishops ordained as Catholics| work=[[BBC News]]| date=15 January 2011| access-date=20 February 2016}}</ref> into the newly formed [[Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham]].

In 2012, the cathedral was the host of two episodes of the [[BBC Four]] three-part documentary series named ''Catholics'': the first episode looked at women who attend and/or work at the cathedral and their faith, and the third episode looked at the men training to become priests at [[Allen Hall seminary]], and in the episode was a brief scene of their ordination at the cathedral.

In May 2021, during the Covid Pandemic and the banning of public mass, Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Carrie Symonds were wed at the Cathedral.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2023/01/catholic-church-changes-roe-v-wade-pope-francis/672235/ | title=The Reinvention of the Catholic Church | website=[[The Atlantic]] | date=11 December 2022 }}</ref>


==Architecture==
==Architecture==
{{Unreferenced section|date=April 2015}}
{{more citations needed section|date=April 2015}}

Westminster Cathedral is the [[List of largest church buildings|50th largest church in the world]] in terms of interior area (5,017m²), seating up to 2,000 people. It is the 38th largest Catholic church globally in terms of interior area.

The whole building, in the [[Neo-Byzantine architecture|neo-Byzantine]] style, covers a floor area of about {{convert|5017|m2|sqft}}; the dominating factor of the scheme, apart from the [[campanile]], being a spacious and uninterrupted [[nave]], {{convert|18|m|ft}} wide and {{convert|70|m|ft}} long from the narthex to the sanctuary steps,<ref>Winefride de L'Hôpital, ''Westminster Cathedral and its Architect'', vol. 1, p. 47.</ref> covered with [[domical vault]]ing.
The whole building, in the [[Neo-Byzantine architecture|neo-Byzantine]] style, covers a floor area of about {{convert|5017|m2|sqft}}; the dominating factor of the scheme, apart from the [[campanile]], being a spacious and uninterrupted [[nave]], {{convert|18|m|ft}} wide and {{convert|70|m|ft}} long from the narthex to the sanctuary steps,<ref>Winefride de L'Hôpital, ''Westminster Cathedral and its Architect'', vol. 1, p. 47.</ref> covered with [[domical vault]]ing.


In planning the nave, a system of supports was adopted not unlike that to be seen in most Gothic cathedrals, where huge, yet narrow, [[buttresses]] are projected at intervals, and stiffened by transverse walls, arcading and vaulting. Unlike in a [[Gothic cathedral]], at Westminster they are limited to the interior. The main piers and transverse arches that support the domes divide the nave into three bays, each about {{convert|395|m2|sqft}}. The domes rest on the arches at a height of {{convert|27|m|ft}} from the floor, the total internal height being {{convert|34|m|ft}}.
In planning the nave, a system of supports was adopted not unlike that to be seen in most Gothic cathedrals, where huge, yet narrow, [[buttresses]] are projected at intervals, and stiffened by transverse walls, arcading and vaulting. Unlike in a [[Gothic cathedral]], at Westminster they are limited to the interior. The main piers and [[transverse arch]]es that support the domes divide the nave into three bays, each about {{convert|395|m2|sqft}}. The domes rest on the arches at a height of {{convert|27|m|ft}} from the floor, the total internal height being {{convert|34|m|ft}}.


In selecting the [[pendentive]] type of dome, of shallow concavity, for the main roofing, weight and pressure have been reduced to a minimum. The domes and pendentures are formed of concrete, and as extraneous roofs of timber were dispensed with, it was necessary to provide a thin independent outer shell of impervious stone. The concrete flat roofing around the domes is covered with asphalt. The [[sanctuary]] is essentially Byzantine in its system of construction. The extensions that open out on all sides make the corona of the dome seem independent of support.
In selecting the [[pendentive]] type of dome, of shallow concavity, for the main roofing, weight and pressure have been reduced to a minimum. The domes and pendentures are formed of concrete, and as extraneous roofs of timber were dispensed with, it was necessary to provide a thin independent outer shell of impervious stone. The concrete flat roofing around the domes is covered with asphalt. The [[sanctuary]] is essentially Byzantine in its system of construction. The extensions that open out on all sides make the corona of the dome seem independent of support.
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The eastern termination of the cathedral suggests the [[Romanesque architecture|Romanesque]], or [[Lombardic architecture|Lombardic]] style of Northern Italy. The [[crypt]] with openings into the sanctuary, thus closely following the [[Basilica of Sant'Ambrogio]], Milan, the open colonnade under the eaves, the timber roof following the curve of the apex, are all familiar features. The large buttresses resist the pressure of a vault {{convert|14.5|m|ft|adj=on}} in span. Although the cruciform plan is not very noticeable inside the building, it is emphasised outside by the boldly projecting transepts. These with their twin gables, slated roofs, and square turrets with pyramidal stone cappings suggest a [[Norman architecture|Norman]] prototype in striking contrast to the rest of the design.
The eastern termination of the cathedral suggests the [[Romanesque architecture|Romanesque]], or [[Lombardic architecture|Lombardic]] style of Northern Italy. The [[crypt]] with openings into the sanctuary, thus closely following the [[Basilica of Sant'Ambrogio]], Milan, the open colonnade under the eaves, the timber roof following the curve of the apex, are all familiar features. The large buttresses resist the pressure of a vault {{convert|14.5|m|ft|adj=on}} in span. Although the cruciform plan is not very noticeable inside the building, it is emphasised outside by the boldly projecting transepts. These with their twin gables, slated roofs, and square turrets with pyramidal stone cappings suggest a [[Norman architecture|Norman]] prototype in striking contrast to the rest of the design.


The main structural parts of the building are of brick and concrete, the latter material being used for the vaulting and domes of graduated thickness and complicated curve. Following Byzantine tradition, the interior was designed with a view to the application of marble and [[mosaic]]. Throughout the exterior, the lavish introduction of white stone bands in connection with the red brickwork (itself quite common in the immediate area) produces an impression quite foreign to the British eye. The bricks were hand-moulded and delivered by Thomas Lawrence Brickworks in [[Bracknell]].<ref name=BBS>http://britishbricksoc.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/BBS_110_2009_Jul_.pdf</ref> The main entrance façade owes its composition, in a measure, to accident rather than design. The most prominent feature of the façade is the deeply recessed arch over the central entrance, flanked by tribunes, and stairway turrets. The elevation on the north, with a length of nearly {{convert|91.5|m|ft}} contrasted with the vertical lines of the campanile and the transepts, is most impressive. It rests on a continuous and plain basement of granite, and only above the flat roofing of the chapels does the structure assume a varied outline.
The main structural parts of the building are of brick and concrete, the latter material being used for the vaulting and domes of graduated thickness and complicated curve. Following Byzantine tradition, the interior was designed with a view to the application of marble and [[mosaic]]. Throughout the exterior, the lavish introduction of white stone bands in connection with the red brickwork (itself quite common in the immediate area) produces an impression quite foreign to the British eye. The bricks were hand-moulded and delivered by Faversham Brickfields at Faversham in Kent and Thomas Lawrence Brickworks in [[Bracknell]].<ref name=BBS>{{cite web|url=http://britishbricksoc.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/BBS_110_2009_Jul_.pdf |title=Data |publisher=britishbricksoc.co.uk |date=2013 |accessdate=2021-11-02}}</ref> The main entrance façade owes its composition, in a measure, to accident rather than design. The most prominent feature of the façade is the deeply recessed arch over the central entrance, flanked by tribunes, and stairway turrets. The elevation on the north, with a length of nearly {{convert|91.5|m|ft}} contrasted with the vertical lines of the campanile and the transepts, is most impressive. It rests on a continuous and plain basement of granite, and only above the flat roofing of the chapels does the structure assume a varied outline.


Marble columns, with capitals of Byzantine type, support the galleries and other subsidiary parts of the building. The marble selected for the columns was, in some instances, obtained from formations quarried by the ancient Romans, chiefly in [[Greece]].
Marble columns, with capitals of Byzantine type, support the galleries and other subsidiary parts of the building. The marble selected for the columns was, in some instances, obtained from formations quarried by the ancient Romans, chiefly in [[Greece]].
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===Chapels===
===Chapels===
The chapel of the [[Blessed Sacrament]], on the north side of the sanctuary, and the [[Lady Chapel]] on the south, are entered from the transepts; they are 6.7&nbsp;m (22&nbsp;ft) wide, lofty, with open arcades, barrel vaulting, and apsidal ends. Over the altar of the Blessed Sacrament chapel a small baldacchino is suspended from the vault, and the chapel is enclosed with bronze grilles and gates through which people may enter. In the Lady Chapel the walls are clad in marble and the altar [[reredos]] is a mosaic of the [[Virgin and Child]], surrounded by a white marble frame. The conches of the chapel contain predominantly blue mosaics of the [[Old Testament]] prophets [[Daniel (biblical figure)|Daniel]], [[Isaiah]], [[Jeremiah]] and [[Ezekiel]]. Unlike the Blessed Sacrament chapel, the chapel dedicated to the [[Mary (mother of Jesus)|Blessed Mother]] is completely open.
The chapel of the [[Blessed Sacrament]], on the north side of the sanctuary, and the [[Lady Chapel]] on the south, are entered from the transepts; they are 6.7&nbsp;m (22&nbsp;ft) wide, lofty, with open arcades, barrel vaulting, and apsidal ends. Over the altar of the Blessed Sacrament chapel a small baldacchino is suspended from the vault, and the chapel is enclosed with bronze grilles and gates through which people may enter. In the Lady Chapel the walls are clad in marble and the altar [[reredos]] is a mosaic of the [[Virgin and Child]], surrounded by a white marble frame. The conches of the chapel contain predominantly blue mosaics of the [[Old Testament]] prophets [[Daniel (biblical figure)|Daniel]], [[Isaiah]], [[Jeremiah]] and [[Ezekiel]]. Unlike the Blessed Sacrament chapel, the chapel dedicated to the [[Mary (mother of Jesus)|Blessed Mother]] is completely open. The building of the Lady Chapel was funded by [[Jane Weld|Baroness Weld]] in memory of her second husband.<ref>{{Cite ODNB |last=Cooksey |first=Pamela |title=Weld, Jane Charlotte [known as Baroness Weld] (1806–1871), convert to Roman Catholicism and benefactor |date=2007-10-04 |url=http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-95696 |access-date=2023-05-14 |language=en |doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/95696 |isbn=978-0-19-861412-8}}</ref>


Those chapels which may be entered from the aisles of the nave are also {{convert|6.7|m|ft}} wide, and roofed with simple [[barrel vault]]ing. The chapel of Saints [[Pope Gregory I|Gregory]] and [[Augustine of Canterbury|Augustine]], next to the [[baptistery]], from which it is separated by an open screen of marble, was the first to have its decoration completed. The marble lining of the piers rises to the springing level of the vaulting and this level has determined the height of the altar reredos, and of the screen opposite. On the side wall, under the windows, the marble [[Dado (architecture)|dado]] rises to but little more than half this height. From the [[cornice]]s the mosaic decoration begins on the walls and vault. This general arrangement applies to all the chapels yet each has its own distinct artistic character. Thus, in sharp contrast to the chapel dedicated to [[St. Gregory]] and [[Augustine of Canterbury|St. Augustine]] which contains vibrant mosaics, the chapel of the [[Soul|Holy Souls]] employs a more subdued, almost funereal style, decoration with late Victorian on a background of silver.<ref name=trial>{{cite web| url=http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/tour_mosaics.php| publisher=Westminster Cathedral| title=Cathedral Mosaics: Part I – Trial and Error| first=Patrick| last=Rogers| date=July 2004| work=Oremus}}</ref>
Those chapels which may be entered from the aisles of the nave are also {{convert|6.7|m|ft}} wide, and roofed with simple [[barrel vault]]ing. The chapel of Saints [[Pope Gregory I|Gregory]] and [[Augustine of Canterbury|Augustine]], next to the [[baptistery]], from which it is separated by an open screen of marble, was the first to have its decoration completed. The marble lining of the piers rises to the [[springing level]] of the vaulting and this level has determined the height of the altar reredos, and of the screen opposite. On the side wall, under the windows, the marble [[Dado (architecture)|dado]] rises to but little more than half this height. From the [[cornice]]s the mosaic decoration begins on the walls and vault. This general arrangement applies to all the chapels yet each has its own distinct artistic character. Thus, in sharp contrast to the chapel dedicated to [[St. Gregory]] and [[Augustine of Canterbury|St. Augustine]] which contains vibrant mosaics, the chapel of the [[Soul|Holy Souls]] employs a more subdued, almost funereal style, decoration with late Victorian on a background of silver.<ref name=trial>{{cite web| url=http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/tour_mosaics.php| publisher=Westminster Cathedral| title=Cathedral Mosaics: Part I – Trial and Error| first=Patrick| last=Rogers| date=July 2004| work=Oremus| access-date=16 July 2011| archive-date=30 May 2017| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170530235721/http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/tour_mosaics.php| url-status=dead}}</ref>


As in all Catholic churches, there are the [[Stations of the Cross]] to be found along the outer aisles. The ones at Westminster Cathedral are by the sculptor, [[Eric Gill]], and are considered to be amongst the finest examples of his work.<ref name="sacred-destinations" />
As in many Catholic churches, there are the [[Stations of the Cross]] to be found along the outer aisles. The ones at Westminster Cathedral are by the sculptor [[Eric Gill]], and are considered to be amongst the finest examples of his work.<ref name="sacred-destinations" />


==Mosaics==
==Mosaics==
When the cathedral's architect John Bentley died, there were no completed mosaics in the cathedral and Bentley left behind precious little in terms of sketches and designs. Consequently, the subject and styles of the mosaics were influenced by donors as well as designers, overseen by a cathedral committee established for this purpose. Indeed, Bentley's influence is, in reality, only seen in the chapel dedicated to the Holy Souls.<ref name=trial/> Due to the prevailing absence of any real designs by Bentley, there was no real agreement as to how the mosaics should look, and in one instance, works already installed (in the [[Sacred Heart]] shrine) were removed after the death of the artist, George Bridge.<ref name=trial/>
When the cathedral's architect John Bentley died, there were no completed mosaics in the cathedral and Bentley left behind precious little in terms of sketches and designs. Consequently, the subject and styles of the mosaics were influenced by donors as well as designers, overseen by a cathedral committee established for this purpose. Indeed, Bentley's influence is, in reality, only seen in the chapel dedicated to the Holy Souls.<ref name=trial/> Due to the prevailing absence of any real designs by Bentley, there was no real agreement as to how the mosaics should look, and in one instance, works already installed (in the [[Sacred Heart]] shrine) were removed after the death of the artist, George Bridge.<ref name=trial/>


Mosaics installed during the period 1912–1916 were mostly done by devotees of the [[Arts and Crafts Movement]]. Those in the Lady Chapel were installed by the experienced mosaicist [[Gertrude Martin]] (who had worked with George Bridge), in 1912–1913. The worked was supervised by Anning Bell and Marshall, who later designed the mosaic of [[Christ enthroned]] which is above the entrance to the cathedral. The [[Tympanum (architecture)|Tympanum]] of the portal shows in a byzantine mosaic technique from left to right the kneeling [[Saint Peter|St Peter]] with the [[Keys of Heaven]], the [[Mary, mother of Jesus|Virgin Mary]], [[Jesus Christ]] as [[Christ Pantocrator|Pantocrator]] on the throne, [[Saint Joseph|St Joseph]], the Nursing Father of Jesus with a [[Lilium|lily]] in his right hand, and in a kneeling position the canonized English King [[Edward the Confessor]] in royal regalia. As Jesus Christ blesses the viewer with his right hand, he holds in his left hand the [[Book of Life]]. The Latin inscription of the opened book pages reads: "Ego sum ostium per me si quis introierit salvabitur." (English translation: I am the gate; whoever enters through me will be saved; [[Gospel of John]] 10,9).
Mosaics installed during the period 1912–1916 were mostly done by devotees of the [[Arts and Crafts Movement]]. Those in the Lady Chapel were installed by the experienced mosaicist [[Gertrude Martin]] (who had worked with George Bridge), in 1912–1913. The work was supervised by Anning Bell and Marshall, who later designed the mosaic of [[Christ enthroned]] which is above the entrance to the cathedral. The [[Tympanum (architecture)|Tympanum]] of the portal shows in a Byzantine mosaic technique from left to right the kneeling [[Saint Peter|St Peter]] with the [[Keys of Heaven]], the [[Mary, mother of Jesus|Virgin Mary]], [[Jesus Christ]] as [[Christ Pantocrator|Pantocrator]] on the throne, [[Saint Joseph|St Joseph]], the Nursing Father of Jesus with a [[Lilium|lily]] in his right hand, and in a kneeling position the canonized English King [[Edward the Confessor]] in royal regalia. As Jesus Christ blesses the viewer with his right hand, he holds in his left hand the [[Book of Life]]. The Latin inscription of the opened book pages reads: ''Ego sum ostium per me si quis introierit salvabitur'' (I am the gate; whoever enters through me will be saved; [[Gospel of John]] 10,9).


The mosaics (paid for by the [[John Crichton-Stuart, 4th Marquis of Bute|4th Marquis of Bute]] in the chapel dedicated to [[Saint Andrew]] also belong to work of the Arts and Craft Movement.<ref>{{cite journal| url=http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/tour_mosaics.php| publisher=Westminster Cathedral| title=Cathedral Mosaics: Part III – The Arts and Crafts Men| first=Patrick| last=Rogers| date=July 2004| work=Oremus}}</ref>
The mosaics in the chapel dedicated to [[Saint Andrew]], paid for by [[John Crichton-Stuart, 4th Marquis of Bute|The 4th Marquess of Bute]], also belong to work of the Arts and Craft Movement.<ref>{{cite journal| url=http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/tour_mosaics.php| publisher=Westminster Cathedral| title=Cathedral Mosaics: Part III – The Arts and Crafts Men| first=Patrick| last=Rogers| date=July 2004| journal=Oremus| access-date=16 July 2011| archive-date=30 May 2017| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170530235721/http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/tour_mosaics.php| url-status=dead}}</ref>


The 5-year period (1930–1935) saw a tremendous amount of work done and saw mosaics placed in the Lady Chapel, in the alcoves above the confessionals, in the crypt dedicated to [[Saint Peter]] as well as on the sanctuary arch.
The five-year period 1930 to 1935 saw a tremendous amount of work done, with mosaics placed in the Lady Chapel, in the alcoves above the confessionals, in the crypt dedicated to [[Saint Peter]], and on the sanctuary arch.


No new mosaics were installed until 1950 when one depicting [[St Thérèse of Lisieux]] (later replaced by a bronze) was placed in the south transept and another (in memory of those in the Royal Army Medical Corps who died in [[World War II]]) in the chapel of [[Saint George]] in 1952. From 1960 to 1962 the Blessed Sacrament Chapel was decorated in a traditional, early Christian, style with the mosaics being predominantly pale pink in order to afford a sense of light and space. The designer, [[Boris Anrep]], chose various [[Eucharist]]ic themes such as the sacrifice of [[Cain and Abel|Abel]], the hospitality of [[Abraham]] and the gathering of the [[manna]] in the wilderness as well as the [[Feeding the multitude]] and the [[Marriage at Cana|Wedding Feast at Cana]]. In his old age, Anrep also acted as adviser and principal sketch artist for the mosaics installed in the chapel of [[Paul the Apostle|Saint Paul]] (1964–1965)<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/tour_mosaics.php| publisher=Westminster Cathedral| title=Cathedral Mosaics: Part V – A Russian Perspective| first=Patrick| last=Rogers| date=July 2004| work=Oremus}}</ref> These mosaics depict various moments in the life of Paul; his occupation as a tent-maker, his [[Conversion of Paul the Apostle|conversion]] to Christ, the shipwreck on [[Malta]] and his eventual execution in [[Ancient Rome|Rome]].
No new mosaics were installed until 1950 when one depicting [[St Thérèse of Lisieux]] (later replaced by a bronze) was placed in the south transept and another, in 1952, in memory of those in the Royal Army Medical Corps who died in [[World War II]], in the chapel of [[Saint George]]. From 1960 to 1962, the Blessed Sacrament Chapel was decorated in a traditional, early Christian style, with the mosaics being predominantly pale pink in order to afford a sense of light and space. The designer, [[Boris Anrep]], chose various [[Eucharist]]ic themes such as the sacrifice of [[Cain and Abel|Abel]], the hospitality of [[Abraham]] and the gathering of the [[manna]] in the wilderness, as well as the [[Feeding the multitude]] and the [[Marriage at Cana|Wedding Feast at Cana]]. In his old age, Anrep also acted as adviser and principal sketch artist for the mosaics installed in the chapel of [[Paul the Apostle|Saint Paul]] (1964–1965).<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/tour_mosaics.php| publisher=Westminster Cathedral| title=Cathedral Mosaics: Part V – A Russian Perspective| first=Patrick| last=Rogers| date=July 2004| work=Oremus| access-date=16 July 2011| archive-date=30 May 2017| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170530235721/http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/tour_mosaics.php| url-status=dead}}</ref> These mosaics depict various moments in the life of Paul; his occupation as a tent-maker, his [[Conversion of Paul the Apostle|conversion]] to Christ, the shipwreck on [[Malta]] and his eventual execution in [[Ancient Rome|Rome]].


It was not until the visit of [[Pope John Paul II]] in 1982 that the next mosaic was installed above the northwest entrance. Rather than a scene, this mosaic is an inscription: ''Porta sis ostium pacificum par eum qui se ostium appellavit, Jesus Christum'' (May this door be the gate of peace through Him who called Himself the gate, Jesus Christ). In 1999 the mosaic of [[Saint Patrick]], holding a [[shamrock]] and a [[crosier|pastoral staff]] as well as trampling on a snake, was installed at the entrance to the chapel in his honour. In 2001 a striking mosaic of [[Saint Alban]], strongly influenced by the style of early Byzantine iconography, was installed by the designer, Christopher Hobbs. Due to the very favourable reception of this work, Hobbs was commissioned for further mosaics: the chapel to [[Saint Joseph]] which contains mosaics of the [[Holy Family]] (2003) and men working on Westminster Cathedral (2006). Hobbs also did the chapel in honour of [[Saint]] [[Thomas Becket]] illustrating the saint standing in front of the old [[Canterbury Cathedral]] on the chapel's east wall and the murder of Thomas on the west wall. The vault is decorated with a design of flowers, [[tendril]]s and [[roundel]]s. (2006). As of 2011, there were plans for further mosaics, for example [[Saint Francis of Assisi]] and [[Anthony of Padua|Saint Anthony]] in the [[narthex]]<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/tour_mosaics.php| publisher=Westminster Cathedral| title=Cathedral Mosaics: Part VI – The Journey proceeds| first=Patrick| last=Rogers| date=July 2004| work=Oremus}}</ref>
It was not until the visit of [[Pope John Paul II]] in 1982 that the next mosaic was installed above the north-west entrance. Rather than a scene, this mosaic is an inscription: ''Porta sis ostium pacificum per eum qui se ostium appellavit, Jesus Christum'' (May this door be the gate of peace through Him who called Himself the gate, Jesus Christ). In 1999, the mosaic of [[Saint Patrick]], holding a [[shamrock]] and a [[crosier|pastoral staff]] as well as trampling on a snake, was installed at the entrance to the chapel in his honour. In 2001, a striking mosaic of [[Saint Alban]], strongly influenced by the style of early Byzantine iconography, was installed by the designer, Christopher Hobbs. Due to the very favourable reception of the work, Hobbs was commissioned for further mosaics: the chapel to [[Saint Joseph]] which contains mosaics of the [[Holy Family]] (2003) and men working on Westminster Cathedral (2006). Hobbs also did the chapel in honour of [[Saint]] [[Thomas Becket]] illustrating the saint standing in front of the old [[Canterbury Cathedral]] on the chapel's east wall and the murder of Thomas on the west wall. The vault is decorated with a design of flowers, [[tendril]]s and [[roundel]]s (2006). {{As of|2011}}, there were plans for further mosaics, including depictions of [[Saint Francis of Assisi]] and [[Anthony of Padua|Saint Anthony]] in the [[narthex]].<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/tour_mosaics.php| publisher=Westminster Cathedral| title=Cathedral Mosaics: Part VI – The Journey proceeds| first=Patrick| last=Rogers| date=July 2004| work=Oremus| access-date=16 July 2011| archive-date=30 May 2017| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170530235721/http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/tour_mosaics.php| url-status=dead}}</ref>


==Music==
==Music==
Despite its relatively short history compared to other English cathedrals, Westminster has a distinguished choral tradition. It has its origin in the shared vision of [[Cardinal Vaughan]], the cathedral's founder, and Sir [[Richard Runciman Terry]], its inaugural Master of Music. Terry prepared his choristers for a year before their first sung service in public. For the remainder of his tenure (until 1924) he pursued a celebrated revival of great quantities of [[Latin]] repertoire from the [[English Renaissance]], most of which had lain unsung ever since the Reformation. Students at the [[Royal College of Music]] who would become household names were introduced to their heritage when [[Charles Villiers Stanford]] sent them to the cathedral to hear "[[polyphony]] for a penny" (the bus fare). This programme also required honing the boys' sight-reading ability to a then-unprecedented standard.
Despite its relatively short history compared to other English cathedrals, Westminster has a distinguished choral tradition. It has its origin in the shared vision of [[Cardinal Vaughan]], the cathedral's founder, and Sir [[Richard Runciman Terry]], its inaugural Master of Music. Terry prepared his choristers for a year before their first sung service in public. For the remainder of his tenure (until 1924) he pursued a celebrated revival of great quantities of [[Latin]] repertoire from the [[English Renaissance]], most of which had lain unsung ever since the Reformation. Students at the [[Royal College of Music]] who would become household names were introduced to their heritage when [[Charles Villiers Stanford]] sent them to the cathedral to hear "[[polyphony]] for a penny" (the bus fare). This programme also required honing the boys' sight-reading ability to a then-unprecedented standard.


The choir has commissioned many works from distinguished composers, many of whom are better known for their contribution to [[Anglican church music|Anglican music]], such as [[Benjamin Britten]] and [[Ralph Vaughan Williams]]. However, the choir is particularly renowned for its performance of [[Gregorian chant]] and polyphony of the [[Renaissance]].
The choir has commissioned many works from distinguished composers, many of whom are better known for their contribution to [[Anglican church music|Anglican music]], such as [[Benjamin Britten]] and [[Ralph Vaughan Williams]]. However, the choir is particularly renowned for its performance of [[Gregorian chant]] and polyphony of the [[Renaissance]].

The choir consists of eight men (two countertenors, three tenors and three basses) occasionally augmented with boys, who must be practising Roman Catholics, from the former [[Westminster Cathedral Choir School]].


Unlike most other English cathedrals, Westminster does not have a separate [[Choir (architecture)|quire]]; instead, the choir are hidden from view in the [[apse]] behind the [[high altar]]. This, with the excellent acoustic of the cathedral building, contributes to its distinctive sound.
Unlike most other English cathedrals, Westminster does not have a separate [[Choir (architecture)|quire]]; instead, the choir are hidden from view in the [[apse]] behind the [[high altar]]. This, with the excellent acoustic of the cathedral building, contributes to its distinctive sound.


Located in the west gallery, the Grand Organ of four manuals and 81 stops occupies a more commanding position than many British cathedral organs enjoy. Built by Henry Willis III from 1922 to 1932, it remains one of the most successful and admired. One of [[Louis Vierne]]'s best-known organ pieces, "Carillon de Westminster," the final movement from Suite no. 3 (op. 54) of Pièces de Fantaisie, was composed for it and dedicated to the builder. The apse organ of fifteen stops was built in 1910 by [[Lewis & Co]].<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.organrecitals.com/westcath.php| title=Westminster Cathedral| publisher=Organrecitals.com| accessdate=20 February 2016}}</ref> Although the Grand Organ has its own attached console, a console in the apse can play both instruments.
Located in the west gallery, the Grand Organ of four manuals and 81 stops occupies a more commanding position than many British cathedral organs enjoy. Built by Henry Willis III from 1922 to 1932, it remains one of the most successful and admired. One of [[Louis Vierne]]'s best-known organ pieces, "[[Carillon de Westminster]]", the final movement from Suite no. 3 (op. 54) of Pièces de Fantaisie, was originally improvised on it in 1924,<ref>{{cite web| url=https://westminstercathedral.org.uk/music/the-grand-organ/| title=Westminster Cathedral - The Grand Organ | publisher=westminstercathedral.org.uk| access-date=11 September 2023}}</ref> and the subsequent 1927 published version is dedicated to Willis.
The apse organ of fifteen stops was built in 1910 by [[Lewis & Co]].<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.organrecitals.com/westcath.php| title=Westminster Cathedral| publisher=Organrecitals.com| access-date=20 February 2016| archive-date=22 December 2015| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151222133149/http://www.organrecitals.com/westcath.php| url-status=dead}}</ref> Although the Grand Organ has its own attached console, a console in the apse can play both instruments.


On 3 May 1902, some 3,000 people attended a concert of sacred music in the cathedral, organised to raise money for the Choir School and to test the acoustics in the building. The music was provided by an orchestra of a hundred and a choir of two hundred, including the Cathedral Choir, directed by Richard Terry. The programme included music by [[Richard Wagner|Wagner]], [[Henry Purcell|Purcell]], [[Ludwig van Beethoven|Beethoven]], [[Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina|Palestrina]], [[William Byrd|Byrd]] and [[Thomas Tallis|Tallis]]. The acoustics proved to be excellent.<ref>Patrick Rogers, ''Westminster Cathedral. An Illustrated History'', London, 2012, p. 44.</ref> One year later, on 6 June 1903, the first performance in London of ''[[The Dream of Gerontius]]'', a poem by Cardinal [[John Henry Newman]], set to music by [[Edward Elgar]], took place in the cathedral. The composer himself conducted, with Richard Terry at the organ.<ref>{{cite journal| url=http://archive.thetablet.co.uk/article/13th-june-1903/7/-gerontius-at-the-westminster-cathedral| title="Gerontius" At The Westminster Cathedral}}, article in: ''The Tablet'', 13 June 1903, p. 7.</ref> Once again, the proceeds went to support the Cathedral Choir School.
On 3 May 1902, some 3,000 people attended a concert of sacred music in the cathedral, organised to raise money for the Choir School and to test the acoustics in the building. The music was provided by an orchestra of a hundred and a choir of two hundred, including the Cathedral Choir, directed by Richard Terry. The programme included music by [[Richard Wagner|Wagner]], [[Henry Purcell|Purcell]], [[Ludwig van Beethoven|Beethoven]], [[Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina|Palestrina]], [[William Byrd|Byrd]] and [[Thomas Tallis|Tallis]]. The acoustics proved to be excellent.<ref>Patrick Rogers, ''Westminster Cathedral. An Illustrated History'', London, 2012, p. 44.</ref> One year later, on 6 June 1903, the first performance in London of ''[[The Dream of Gerontius]]'', a poem by Cardinal [[John Henry Newman]], set to music by [[Edward Elgar]], took place in the cathedral. The composer himself conducted, with Richard Terry at the organ.<ref>{{cite journal| url=http://archive.thetablet.co.uk/article/13th-june-1903/7/-gerontius-at-the-westminster-cathedral| title="Gerontius" At The Westminster Cathedral| access-date=17 June 2016| archive-date=22 September 2015| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150922071434/http://archive.thetablet.co.uk/article/13th-june-1903/7/-gerontius-at-the-westminster-cathedral| url-status=dead}}, article in: ''The Tablet'', 13 June 1903, p. 7.</ref> Once again, the proceeds went to support the Cathedral Choir School.


John Tavener's ''The Beautiful Names'', a setting of the 99 names of Allah found in the [[Quran|Qur'an]] premièred in the cathedral on 19 June 2007, in a performance by the [[BBC Symphony Orchestra]] and [[BBC Symphony Chorus|Chorus]] in the presence of [[Charles, Prince of Wales]].<ref>{{cite journal| url=http://catholicactionuk.blogspot.com/2007/05/allah-to-be-glorified-in-westminster.html| publisher=[[Catholic Action]] UK| date=20 June 2007| title=Allah to be glorified in Westminster Cathedral| accessdate=20 February 2016}}</ref>
John Tavener's ''The Beautiful Names'', a setting of the 99 names of Allah found in the [[Quran|Qur'an]], premièred in the cathedral on 19 June 2007, in a performance by the [[BBC Symphony Orchestra]] and [[BBC Symphony Chorus|Chorus]] in the presence of [[Charles, Prince of Wales]].<ref>{{cite journal| url=http://catholicactionuk.blogspot.com/2007/05/allah-to-be-glorified-in-westminster.html| publisher=[[Catholic Action]] UK| date=20 June 2007| title=Allah to be glorified in Westminster Cathedral| access-date=20 February 2016}}</ref>


==Choir==
==Choir==
The founder of Westminster Cathedral, [[Cardinal Herbert Vaughan]] laid great emphasis on the beauty and integrity of the cathedral's liturgy. Initially, he determined there should be a community of Benedictine monks at the new cathedral, performing the liturgies and singing the daily Office. This caused great resentment amongst the secular clergy of the diocese, who felt they were being snubbed. In the end, negotiations with both the English Benedictines and the community of French Benedictines at [[St Michael's Abbey, Farnborough|Farnborough]] failed and a 'traditional' choir of men and boys was set up instead.<ref>''Westminster Cathedral 1895–1995. A souvenir brochure compiled by Mgr George Stack, Cathedral Administrator'', p. 16.</ref> Despite great financial problems, the Choir School opened on 5 October 1901 with eleven boy choristers, in the building originally intended for the Benedictine monks. Cardinal Vaughan received the boys with the words "You are the foundation stones".<ref>Alan Mould, ''The English Chorister. A History'', London, 2007, p. 221.</ref> The Cathedral Choir was officially instituted three months later in January 1902.<ref>Patrick Rogers, ''Westminster Cathedral. An Illustrated History'', London, 2012, p.38.</ref> Sung Masses and Offices were immediately established when the cathedral opened for worship in 1903, and have continued without interruption ever since. Today, Westminster Cathedral Choir is the only professional Catholic choir in the world to sing daily Mass and Vespers.
The founder of Westminster Cathedral, [[Cardinal Herbert Vaughan]] laid great emphasis on the beauty and integrity of the cathedral's liturgy. Initially, he determined there should be a community of Benedictine monks at the new cathedral, performing the liturgies and singing the daily Office. This caused great resentment amongst the secular clergy of the diocese, who felt they were being snubbed. In the end, negotiations with both the English Benedictines and the community of French Benedictines at [[St Michael's Abbey, Farnborough|Farnborough]] failed and a traditional choir of men and boys was set up instead.<ref>''Westminster Cathedral 1895–1995. A souvenir brochure compiled by Mgr George Stack, Cathedral Administrator'', p. 16.</ref> Despite great financial problems, the Choir School opened on 5 October 1901 with eleven boy choristers, in the building originally intended for the monks. Cardinal Vaughan received the boys with the words "You are the foundation stones".<ref>Alan Mould, ''The English Chorister. A History'', London, 2007, p. 221.</ref> The Cathedral Choir was officially instituted three months later in January 1902.<ref>Patrick Rogers, ''Westminster Cathedral. An Illustrated History'', London, 2012, p.38.</ref> Sung Masses and Offices were immediately established when the cathedral opened for worship in 1903, and have continued without interruption ever since.


In September 2020, Cardinal Vincent Nichols responded to a strategic review of sacred music at Westminster Cathedral, asking that "all those who profess to be fervent supporters of this precious inheritance of sacred music to become regular contributors to its financial support. It is, unquestionably, time to look ahead in order to ensure that this tradition of sacred music in Westminster Cathedral...can be put onto a firm footing for years to come."<ref>{{Cite web|title=Cardinal's Response to Strategic Review of Sacred Music|url=https://rcdow.org.uk/cardinal/news/cardinals-response-to-strategic-review-of-sacred-music/|access-date=2021-12-14|website=rcdow.org.uk|date=25 September 2020 |language=en-gb}}</ref>
When the question of a musical director was first considered, the choice fell on the singer Sir [[Charles Santley]], who had conducted the choir of the [[Our Lady of Victories, Kensington|pro-cathedral]] in [[Kensington]] on several occasions. But Santley knew his limitations and refused.<ref>Rev. Lancelot Long, ''A "Song School" Jubilee''. Article in ''The Tablet'', 2 October 1926.</ref> Richard Runciman Terry —Director of Music at [[Downside School|Downside Abbey School]]— then became the first director of music of Westminster Cathedral. It proved to be an inspired choice. Terry was both a brilliant choir trainer and a pioneering scholar, one of the first musicologists to revive the great works of the English and other European Renaissance composers. Terry built Westminster Cathedral Choir's reputation on performances of music —by [[William Byrd|Byrd]], [[Thomas Tallis|Tallis]], [[John Taverner|Taverner]], [[Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina|Palestrina]] and [[Tomás Luis de Victoria|Victoria]], among others- that had not been heard since the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and Mass at the cathedral was soon attended by inquisitive musicians as well as the faithful. The performance of great Renaissance Masses and motets in their proper liturgical context remains the cornerstone of the choir's activity.


When the question of a musical director was first considered, the choice fell on the singer Sir [[Charles Santley]], who had conducted the choir of the [[Our Lady of Victories, Kensington|pro-cathedral]] in [[Kensington]] on several occasions. But Santley knew his limitations and refused.<ref>Rev. Lancelot Long, ''A "Song School" Jubilee''. Article in ''The Tablet'', 2 October 1926.</ref> Richard Runciman Terry—Director of Music at [[Downside School|Downside Abbey School]]—then became the first director of music of Westminster Cathedral. It proved to be an inspired choice. Terry was both a brilliant choir trainer and a pioneering scholar, one of the first musicologists to revive the great works of the English and other European Renaissance composers. Terry built Westminster Cathedral Choir's reputation on performances of music—by [[William Byrd|Byrd]], [[Thomas Tallis|Tallis]], [[John Taverner|Taverner]], [[Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina|Palestrina]] and [[Tomás Luis de Victoria|Victoria]], among others—that had not been heard since the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and Mass at the cathedral was soon attended by inquisitive musicians as well as the faithful. The performance of great Renaissance Masses and motets in their proper liturgical context remains the cornerstone of the choir's activity.
Terry resigned in 1924 and he was succeeded by Canon [[Lancelot Long]] who had been one of the original eleven choristers in 1901.


Terry resigned in 1924, and was succeeded by Canon [[Lancelot Long]] who had been one of the original eleven choristers in 1901.
At the beginning of the [[Second World War]], the boys were at first evacuated to [[Uckfield]] in East Sussex, but eventually, the choir school was closed altogether for the remainder of the war. The music at the Cathedral was performed by a reduced body of professional men singers.<ref>Peter Doyle, ''Westminster Cathedral 1895–1995'', London, 1995, p. 64.</ref> During this period, from 1941 to 1947, the Master of Music was William Hyde, who had been the sub-organist under Richard Terry.<ref>''The Tablet'', 6 February 1954, p. 18.</ref>


At the beginning of the [[Second World War]], the boys were at first evacuated to [[Uckfield]] in East Sussex, but eventually the choir school was closed altogether for the remainder of the war. The music at the cathedral was performed by a reduced body of professional men singers.<ref>Peter Doyle, ''Westminster Cathedral 1895–1995'', London, 1995, p. 64.</ref> During this period, from 1941 to 1947, the Master of Music was William Hyde, who had been the sub-organist under Richard Terry.<ref>''The Tablet'', 6 February 1954, p. 18.</ref>
Hyde was succeeded by [[George Malcolm (musician)|George Malcolm]], who developed the continental sound of the choir and consolidated its musical reputation —in particular through the now legendary recording of Victoria's ''Tenebrae Responsories''. More recent holders of the post have included Francis Cameron, [[Colin Mawby]], [[Stephen Cleobury]], [[David Hill (choral director)|David Hill]] and [[James O'Donnell (organist)|James O'Donnell]]. The choir continues to thrive under the current Master of Music, [[Martin Baker (organist)|Martin Baker]], who has held the post since 2000.

Hyde was succeeded by [[George Malcolm (musician)|George Malcolm]], who developed the continental sound of the choir and consolidated its musical reputation—in particular through the now legendary recording of Victoria's ''[[Tenebrae Responsories (Victoria)|Tenebrae responsories]]''. More recent holders of the post have included Francis Cameron, [[Colin Mawby]], [[Stephen Cleobury]], [[David Hill (choral director)|David Hill]], [[James O'Donnell (organist)|James O'Donnell]] and [[Martin Baker (organist)|Martin Baker]]. In May 2021, Simon Johnson was appointed as the Master of Music.<ref>{{cite web|title=Westminster Cathedral Appoints Simon Johnson as Master of Music -|url=https://www.rhinegold.co.uk/choir_organ/westminster-cathedral-appoint-simon-johnson-as-master-of-music/|access-date=2021-07-18|website=Rhinegold|language=en}}</ref>


In addition to its performances of Renaissance masterpieces, Westminster Cathedral Choir has given many first performances of music written especially for it by contemporary composers. Terry gave the premières of music by [[Ralph Vaughan Williams|Vaughan Williams]] (whose Mass in G minor received its liturgical performance at a Mass in the cathedral), [[Gustav Holst]], [[Herbert Howells]] and [[Charles Wood (composer)|Charles Wood]]; in 1959 [[Benjamin Britten]] wrote his Missa brevis for the choristers; and since 1960 works by [[Lennox Berkeley]], [[William Mathias]], Colin Mawby and [[Francis Grier]] have been added to the repertoire. Most recently four new Masses—by [[Roxanna Panufnik]], [[James MacMillan]], Sir [[Peter Maxwell Davies]] and [[Judith Bingham]]—have received their first performance in the cathedral. In June 2005 the choristers performed the world première of Sir [[John Tavener]]'s Missa Brevis for boys' voices.
In addition to its performances of Renaissance masterpieces, Westminster Cathedral Choir has given many first performances of music written especially for it by contemporary composers. Terry gave the premières of music by [[Ralph Vaughan Williams|Vaughan Williams]] (whose Mass in G minor received its liturgical performance at a Mass in the cathedral), [[Gustav Holst]], [[Herbert Howells]] and [[Charles Wood (composer)|Charles Wood]]; in 1959 [[Benjamin Britten]] wrote his Missa brevis for the choristers; and since 1960 works by [[Lennox Berkeley]], [[William Mathias]], Colin Mawby and [[Francis Grier]] have been added to the repertoire. Most recently four new Masses—by [[Roxanna Panufnik]], [[James MacMillan]], Sir [[Peter Maxwell Davies]] and [[Judith Bingham]]—have received their first performance in the cathedral. In June 2005 the choristers performed the world première of Sir [[John Tavener]]'s Missa Brevis for boys' voices.


Westminster Cathedral Choir made its first recording in 1907. Many more have followed in the [[Westminster Cathedral Choir discography]], most recently the series on the [[Hyperion Records|Hyperion]] label, and many awards have been conferred on the choir's recordings. Of these the most prestigious are the 1998 Gramophone Awards for both Best Choral Recording of the Year and Record of the Year, for the performance of Martin's Mass for Double Choir and [[Ildebrando Pizzetti|Pizzetti's]] Requiem. It is the only cathedral choir to have won in either of these categories.
Westminster Cathedral Choir made its first recording in 1907. Many more have followed in the [[Westminster Cathedral Choir discography]], most recently the series on the [[Hyperion Records|Hyperion]] label, and many awards have been conferred on the choir's recordings. Of these the most prestigious are the 1998 Gramophone Awards for both Best Choral Recording of the Year and Record of the Year, for the performance of [[Frank Martin (composer)|Martin]]'s Mass for Double Choir and [[Ildebrando Pizzetti|Pizzetti's]] Requiem, conducted by O'Donnell. It is the only cathedral choir to have won in either of these categories.


When its duties at the cathedral permit, the choir also gives concert performances both at home and abroad. It has appeared at many important festivals, including [[Aldeburgh]], [[Cheltenham]], Salzburg, [[Copenhagen]], [[Bremen]] and [[Spitalfields]]. It has appeared in many of the major concert halls of Britain, including the [[Royal Festival Hall]], the [[Wigmore Hall]] and the [[Royal Albert Hall]]. The cathedral choir also broadcasts frequently on radio and television.
When its duties at the cathedral permit, the choir also gives concert performances both at home and abroad. It has appeared at many important festivals, including [[Aldeburgh]], [[Cheltenham]], Salzburg, Copenhagen, [[Bremen]] and [[Spitalfields]]. It has appeared in many of the major concert halls of Britain, including the [[Royal Festival Hall]], the [[Wigmore Hall]] and the [[Royal Albert Hall]]. The cathedral choir also broadcasts frequently on radio and television.


Westminster Cathedral Choir has recently undertaken a number of international tours, including visits to [[Hungary]], Germany and the US. The choristers participated in the 2003 and 2006 International [[Gregorian Chant]] Festival in [[Watou]], [[Belgium]] and the full choir performed twice at the [[Oslo]] International Church Music Festival in March 2006. In April 2005, 2007 and 2008 they performed as part of the "Due Organi in Concerto" festival in [[Milan]]. In October 2011, they sang the inaugural concert of the Institute for Sacred Music at [[College of Saint Benedict and Saint John's University|Saint John's]] in [[Minnesota]].
Westminster Cathedral Choir has undertaken a number of international tours, including visits to Hungary, Germany and the US. The choristers participated in the 2003 and 2006 International [[Gregorian chant]] Festival in [[Watou]], Belgium, and the full choir performed twice at the [[Oslo]] International Church Music Festival in March 2006. In April 2005, 2007 and 2008 they performed as part of the "Due Organi in Concerto" festival in [[Milan]]. In October 2011, they sang the inaugural concert of the Institute for Sacred Music at [[College of Saint Benedict and Saint John's University|Saint John's]] in [[Minnesota]].


The Cathedral is frequently referred to as the 'Drome'. This dates from the early 20th century days when the Lay Clerks were represented by Equity - the trade union for actors and variety artists. In the profession, it was jokingly referred to as 'The Westminster Hippodrome' - a nickname which was later shortened to the 'Drome'.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/downloads/November17Website.pdf|title=Oremus, Nov. 2017}}</ref>
The cathedral is frequently referred to as the 'Drome'. This dates from the early 20th century days when the Lay Clerks were represented by Equity—the trade union for actors and variety artists. In the profession, it was jokingly referred to as 'The Westminster Hippodrome'—a nickname which was later shortened to the 'Drome'.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.westminstercathedral.org.uk/downloads/November17Website.pdf|title=Oremus, Nov. 2017}}</ref>


==''Oremus'' magazine==
==''Oremus'' magazine==


Westminster Cathedral has published a monthly magazine since 1896, before the building work was completed. The latest in a series of titles is ''Oremus'', which first appeared in 1996. (The Latin word ''oremus'' translates into English as "Let us pray".) ''Oremus'' is a 32-page colour magazine, which contains features and articles by well-known members of the Catholic community, as well as non-Catholic commentators and leading figures within British society. It is the successor of titles such as the ''Westminster Cathedral Record'', selling at 6d per copy from January 1896, the ''Westminster Cathedral Chronicle'', a monthly, available from January 1907 at 2d a copy or 3/- a year, post paid, and the ''Westminster Cathedral Bulletin'', first published in 1974. Dylan Parry, who edited the magazine between 2012 and August 2016, took the decision to make ''Oremus'' a free publication in 2013. The magazine is also available to download via Westminster Cathedral's website.<ref>{{cite web| title=Oremus – The Cathedral Magazine| url=http://westminstercathedral.org.uk/oremus.php| website=Westminster Cathedral| accessdate=5 August 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| title=Behind the Scenes of Oremus| url=http://westminstercathedral.org.uk/oremus_behind.php| website=Westminster Cathedral| accessdate=5 August 2014}}</ref>
Westminster Cathedral has published a monthly magazine since 1896, before the building work was completed. The latest in a series of titles is ''Oremus'', which first appeared in 1996. (The Latin word ''oremus'' translates into English as "Let us pray".) ''Oremus'' is a 32-page colour magazine, which contains features and articles by well-known members of the Catholic community, as well as non-Catholic commentators and leading figures within British society. It is the successor of titles such as the ''Westminster Cathedral Record'', selling at 6d per copy from January 1896, the ''Westminster Cathedral Chronicle'', a monthly, available from January 1907 at 2d a copy or 3/- a year, post paid, and the ''Westminster Cathedral Bulletin'', first published in 1974. Dylan Parry, who edited the magazine between 2012 and August 2016, took the decision to make ''Oremus'' a free publication in 2013. The magazine is also available to download via Westminster Cathedral's website.<ref>{{cite web| title=Oremus – The Cathedral Magazine| url=http://westminstercathedral.org.uk/oremus.php| website=Westminster Cathedral| access-date=5 August 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| title=Behind the Scenes of Oremus| url=http://westminstercathedral.org.uk/oremus_behind.php| website=Westminster Cathedral| access-date=5 August 2014}}</ref>


==Burials==
==Burials==
In order of years of office:
In order of years of office:
*[[Richard Challoner]] (1691–1781) Vicar Apostolic of the London District (Re-interred in the cathedral 1946)
*[[Richard Challoner]] (1691–1781) Vicar Apostolic of the London District (Re-interred in the cathedral 1946)
*[[Nicholas Wiseman]] (28 September 1850&nbsp;– 15 February 1865) First Archbishop of Westminster upon the re-establishment of the Catholic hierarchy in England and Wales in 1850
*[[Nicholas Wiseman]] (28 September 1850&nbsp;– 15 February 1865) First Archbishop of Westminster upon the re-establishment of the Catholic hierarchy in England and Wales in 1850. (Re-interred in the cathedral 1907)
*[[Henry Edward Manning]] (16 May 1865&nbsp;– 14 January 1892) Archbishop of Westminster
*[[Henry Edward Manning]] (16 May 1865&nbsp;– 14 January 1892) Archbishop of Westminster. (Re-interred in the cathedral 1907)
*[[Herbert Vaughan]] (8 April 1832&nbsp;– 19 June 1903) Archbishop of Westminster
*[[Herbert Vaughan]] (8 April 1832&nbsp;– 19 June 1903) Archbishop of Westminster. (Re-interred in the cathedral 2005)
*[[Arthur Hinsley]] (1 April 1935&nbsp;– 17 March 1943) Archbishop of Westminster
*[[Arthur Hinsley]] (1 April 1935&nbsp;– 17 March 1943) Archbishop of Westminster
*[[Bernard Griffin]] (18 December 1943&nbsp;– 19 August 1956) Archbishop of Westminster
*[[Bernard Griffin]] (18 December 1943&nbsp;– 19 August 1956) Archbishop of Westminster
Line 216: Line 225:
*[[Basil Hume]] (9 February 1976&nbsp;– 17 June 1999) Archbishop of Westminster
*[[Basil Hume]] (9 February 1976&nbsp;– 17 June 1999) Archbishop of Westminster
*[[Cormac Murphy-O'Connor]] (15 February 2000&nbsp;– 3 April 2009) (Died on 1 September 2017) Archbishop of Westminster and first emeritus Archbishop, since the other holders died in office
*[[Cormac Murphy-O'Connor]] (15 February 2000&nbsp;– 3 April 2009) (Died on 1 September 2017) Archbishop of Westminster and first emeritus Archbishop, since the other holders died in office



Also buried in the crypt is Alexander count [[Alexander Konstantinovich Benckendorff|Benckendorff]], the Russian ambassador to the [[Court of St James's]] from 1903 until his death in 1917.
Also buried in the crypt is Alexander count [[Alexander Konstantinovich Benckendorff|Benckendorff]], the Russian ambassador to the [[Court of St James's]] from 1903 until his death in 1917.


== In popular culture==
== In popular culture==
{{in popular culture|section|date=May 2019}}
[[File:Westminster Cathedral by Brian Whelan.jpg|thumb|Westminster Cathedral by [[Brian Whelan]]]]
[[File:Westminster Cathedral by Brian Whelan.jpg|thumb|Westminster Cathedral by [[Brian Whelan]]]]
* In [[Monsignor]] [[Robert Hugh Benson]]'s [[Christian eschatology|apocalyptic]] science fiction novel ''[[Lord of the World]]'', Westminster Cathedral is the only church in London still used for religious purposes. The others have all been confiscated by the State.
* In [[Monsignor]] [[Robert Hugh Benson]]'s [[Christian eschatology|apocalyptic]] science fiction novel ''[[Lord of the World]]'', Westminster Cathedral is the only church in London still used for religious purposes. The others have all been confiscated by the state.
* The Campanile Bell Tower of Westminster Cathedral was featured prominently in the [[Alfred Hitchcock]] film ''[[Foreign Correspondent (film)|Foreign Correspondent]]'', at which the attempted murder of a journalist played by [[Joel McCrea]] took place.
* The Campanile Bell Tower of Westminster Cathedral was featured prominently in the [[Alfred Hitchcock]] film ''[[Foreign Correspondent (film)|Foreign Correspondent]]'', at which the attempted murder of a journalist played by [[Joel McCrea]] took place.
* In [[Shekhar Kapur]]'s ''[[Elizabeth: The Golden Age]]'' scenes taking place at [[El Escorial]] were shot in Westminster Cathedral.
* In [[Shekhar Kapur]]'s ''[[Elizabeth: The Golden Age]]'' scenes taking place at [[El Escorial]] were shot in Westminster Cathedral.
* The Cathedral has been painted by London Irish artist [[Brian Whelan]].
* The cathedral has been painted by London-born Irish artist [[Brian Whelan]].


==See also==
==See also==
{{Portal|Catholicism|London}}
*[[List of churches and cathedrals of London]]
*[[List of churches and cathedrals of London]]

== Notes ==
{{reflist|35em}}


== References ==
== References ==
{{reflist}}

== Sources ==
* This article incorporates text (concerning architecture) from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Westminster Cathedral". ''Catholic Encyclopedia''. Robert Appleton Company.
* This article incorporates text (concerning architecture) from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Westminster Cathedral". ''Catholic Encyclopedia''. Robert Appleton Company.
* Winefride de L'Hôpital. ''Westminster Cathedral and Its Architect'', 2 vols. Dodd, Mead & Co., New York (1919).
* Winefride de L'Hôpital. ''Westminster Cathedral and Its Architect'', 2 vols. Dodd, Mead & Co., New York (1919).
Line 241: Line 247:
* Peter Doyle. ''Westminster Cathedral: 1895–1995''. Geoffrey Chapman Publishers, London (1995). {{ISBN|978-0-225-66684-7}}.
* Peter Doyle. ''Westminster Cathedral: 1895–1995''. Geoffrey Chapman Publishers, London (1995). {{ISBN|978-0-225-66684-7}}.
* John Browne and Timothy Dean. ''Westminster Cathedral: Building of Faith''. Booth-Clibborn Editions, London (1995). {{ISBN|1-873968-45-0}}.
* John Browne and Timothy Dean. ''Westminster Cathedral: Building of Faith''. Booth-Clibborn Editions, London (1995). {{ISBN|1-873968-45-0}}.
* John Jenkins and Alana Harris, 'More English than the English, more Roman than Rome? Historical signifiers and cultural memory at Westminster Cathedral', ''Religion'' 49:1 (2019), pp. 48-73 https://doi.org/10.1080/0048721X.2018.1515328
* John Jenkins and Alana Harris, 'More English than the English, more Roman than Rome? Historical signifiers and cultural memory at Westminster Cathedral', ''Religion'' 49:1 (2019), pp.&nbsp;48–73 https://doi.org/10.1080/0048721X.2018.1515328


==External links==
==External links==
{{Commons category}}
{{Commonscat}}
*{{Official website}}
*{{Official website}}
*[http://newadvent.org/cathen/15599a.htm Catholic Encyclopedia: Westminster Cathedral]
*[http://newadvent.org/cathen/15599a.htm Catholic Encyclopedia: Westminster Cathedral]


{{Diocese of Westminster}}
{{Churches in Westminster}}
{{Churches in Westminster}}
{{Roman Catholic Cathedrals in the United Kingdom}}
{{Roman Catholic Cathedrals in the United Kingdom}}
{{London landmarks}}
{{London landmarks}}
{{Portalbar|Catholicism|London|England|Wales}}
{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Roman Catholic cathedrals in London]]
[[Category:Cathedrals in London]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic cathedrals in England]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic churches in London]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic churches in the City of Westminster|Cat]]
[[Category:Roman Catholic churches in the City of Westminster|Cat]]
[[Category:Holy Blood churches]]
[[Category:Religion in the City of Westminster]]
[[Category:Religion in the City of Westminster]]
[[Category:Grade I listed Roman Catholic churches in England]]
[[Category:Grade I listed Roman Catholic churches in England]]
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[[Category:Grade I listed churches in the City of Westminster]]
[[Category:Grade I listed churches in the City of Westminster]]
[[Category:John Francis Bentley buildings]]
[[Category:John Francis Bentley buildings]]
[[Category:Brick buildings and structures]]
[[Category:Brick buildings and structures in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Brick churches]]
[[Category:Byzantine Revival architecture in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Byzantine Revival architecture in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Churches in the Diocese of Westminster]]
[[Category:Churches in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Westminster]]
[[Category:20th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Victoria, London]]

Latest revision as of 23:27, 4 November 2024

Westminster Cathedral
Metropolitan Cathedral of the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ
Cathedral from Victoria Street
Westminster Cathedral is located in Central London
Westminster Cathedral
Westminster Cathedral
Shown within Central London
51°29′46″N 0°08′23″W / 51.4961°N 0.1397°W / 51.4961; -0.1397
OS grid referenceTQ 29248 79074
LocationFrancis Street, Westminster
London, SW1
CountryEngland
DenominationRoman Catholic
Websitewestminstercathedral.org.uk
History
StatusCathedral
DedicationMost Precious Blood
Consecrated1910
Architecture
Architect(s)John Francis Bentley
StyleNeo-Byzantine
Years built1895–1903
Specifications
Length110m (360ft)
Width47m (156ft)
Number of towers1
Tower height87m (284ft), including the cross
Administration
ProvinceWestminster
DioceseWestminster (since 1884)
Clergy
ArchbishopVincent Nichols
DeanSlawomir Witon
Laity
Organist(s)Simon Johnson, Peter Stevens
Listed Building – Grade I
Designated1 December 1987
Amended 15 February 1994
Reference no.1066500[1]
Interior
Baptistery
South-western elevation
Neo-Byzantine mosaics
Reliquary of Saint John Southworth
North-western elevation
Blessed Sacrament Chapel
Ceiling of the Lady Chapel
North-western portal

Westminster Cathedral, formally the Metropolitan Cathedral of the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ, is the largest Roman Catholic church in England and Wales and the seat of the Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster.

The site on which the cathedral stands in the City of Westminster was purchased by the Diocese of Westminster in 1885, and construction was completed in 1903.[2] Designed by John Francis Bentley in a 9th-century Christian neo-Byzantine style, and accordingly made almost entirely of brick, without steel reinforcements,[3][4] Sir John Betjeman called it "a masterpiece in striped brick and stone" that shows "the good craftsman has no need of steel or concrete."[5]

History

[edit]

In the late 19th century, the Roman Catholic Church's hierarchy had only recently been restored in England and Wales, and it was in memory of Cardinal Wiseman (who died in 1865, and was the first Archbishop of Westminster from 1850) that the first substantial sum of money was raised for the new cathedral. The land was acquired in 1884 by Wiseman's successor, Cardinal Manning, having previously been occupied by the second Tothill Fields Bridewell prison.

After two false starts, in 1867 (under architect Henry Clutton) and 1892 (architect Baron von Herstel), construction started in 1895 under Manning's successor, the third archbishop, Cardinal Vaughan, with John Francis Bentley as architect, in a style heavily influenced by Byzantine architecture.[6] The cost of the building was anticipated at £150,000 and its area 54,000 sq ft, the cathedral to be 350 ft long by 156 ft wide by 90 ft high.[7]

The foundation stone blessing by Cardinal Vaughan took place on a Saturday morning, 29 June 1895, before a "distinguished" gathering. After the "recitation of the Litanies, Cardinal Logue celebrated Low Mass coram episcopo. A procession composed of Benedictines, Franciscans, Jesuits, Passionists, Dominicans, Redemptorists, and secular clergy made the circuit of the grounds. The choir, directed by the Rev. Charles Cox, rendered, among other pieces, Webbe's 'O Roma Felix' and 'O Salutaris'. At the luncheon which followed, the speakers included Cardinal Vaughan, Cardinal Logue, the Duke of Norfolk, Lord Acton, Henry Matthews MP, Lord Edmund Talbot, and Sir Donald Macfarlane."[8]

The cathedral opened in 1903, a year after Bentley's death. One of the first public liturgies to be celebrated in the cathedral was Cardinal Vaughan's Requiem Mass; the Cardinal died on 19 June 1903.[9] When the debt on the building fund was liquidated, consecration ceremony took place on 28 June 1910[10] Under the laws of the Catholic Church, no place of worship could be consecrated unless free from debt.

The decoration of the interior had hardly been started at the time of consecration, as the decoration in Byzantine churches is applied, rather than integral to the architecture. Therefore finishing the decoration of the cathedral was left to the subsequent generations. It is an architectural gem with its interior notable for rich marble decorations and the beautiful, but still incomplete, mosaics.

In 1895, the cathedral was dedicated to the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ. This is indicated by the Latin dedication above the portal arch: Domine Jesus Rex et Redemptor per Sanguinem tuum salva nos (English translation: "Lord Jesus, King and Redeemer, heal us through your blood"). The additional patrons are St Mary, the mother of Jesus, St Joseph, his foster father, and St Peter, his vicar. The cathedral also has numerous secondary patrons: St Augustine and all British saints, St Patrick and all saints of Ireland.[11] The Feast of the Dedication of the Cathedral is celebrated each year on 1 July,[11] which from 1849 until 1969 was the feast of the Most Precious Blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ.

In 1977, as part of her Silver Jubilee Celebrations, Queen Elizabeth II visited the cathedral to view a flower show.

On 28 May 1982, the first day of his six-day pastoral visit to the United Kingdom, Pope John Paul II celebrated Mass in the cathedral.

On St Andrew's Day (30 November) 1995, at the invitation of Basil Cardinal Hume, Queen Elizabeth again visited the cathedral but this time she attended Choral Vespers, the first participation of the Queen in a Roman Catholic church liturgy in Great Britain.

On 18 September 2010, on the third day of his four-day state visit to the United Kingdom, Pope Benedict XVI celebrated Mass in the cathedral.

In January 2011 the cathedral was the venue for the reception and later ordination of three former Anglican bishops[12] into the newly formed Personal Ordinariate of Our Lady of Walsingham.

In 2012, the cathedral was the host of two episodes of the BBC Four three-part documentary series named Catholics: the first episode looked at women who attend and/or work at the cathedral and their faith, and the third episode looked at the men training to become priests at Allen Hall seminary, and in the episode was a brief scene of their ordination at the cathedral.

In May 2021, during the Covid Pandemic and the banning of public mass, Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Carrie Symonds were wed at the Cathedral.[13]

Architecture

[edit]

Westminster Cathedral is the 50th largest church in the world in terms of interior area (5,017m²), seating up to 2,000 people. It is the 38th largest Catholic church globally in terms of interior area.

The whole building, in the neo-Byzantine style, covers a floor area of about 5,017 square metres (54,000 sq ft); the dominating factor of the scheme, apart from the campanile, being a spacious and uninterrupted nave, 18 metres (59 ft) wide and 70 metres (230 ft) long from the narthex to the sanctuary steps,[14] covered with domical vaulting.

In planning the nave, a system of supports was adopted not unlike that to be seen in most Gothic cathedrals, where huge, yet narrow, buttresses are projected at intervals, and stiffened by transverse walls, arcading and vaulting. Unlike in a Gothic cathedral, at Westminster they are limited to the interior. The main piers and transverse arches that support the domes divide the nave into three bays, each about 395 square metres (4,250 sq ft). The domes rest on the arches at a height of 27 metres (89 ft) from the floor, the total internal height being 34 metres (112 ft).

In selecting the pendentive type of dome, of shallow concavity, for the main roofing, weight and pressure have been reduced to a minimum. The domes and pendentures are formed of concrete, and as extraneous roofs of timber were dispensed with, it was necessary to provide a thin independent outer shell of impervious stone. The concrete flat roofing around the domes is covered with asphalt. The sanctuary is essentially Byzantine in its system of construction. The extensions that open out on all sides make the corona of the dome seem independent of support.

The eastern termination of the cathedral suggests the Romanesque, or Lombardic style of Northern Italy. The crypt with openings into the sanctuary, thus closely following the Basilica of Sant'Ambrogio, Milan, the open colonnade under the eaves, the timber roof following the curve of the apex, are all familiar features. The large buttresses resist the pressure of a vault 14.5-metre (48 ft) in span. Although the cruciform plan is not very noticeable inside the building, it is emphasised outside by the boldly projecting transepts. These with their twin gables, slated roofs, and square turrets with pyramidal stone cappings suggest a Norman prototype in striking contrast to the rest of the design.

The main structural parts of the building are of brick and concrete, the latter material being used for the vaulting and domes of graduated thickness and complicated curve. Following Byzantine tradition, the interior was designed with a view to the application of marble and mosaic. Throughout the exterior, the lavish introduction of white stone bands in connection with the red brickwork (itself quite common in the immediate area) produces an impression quite foreign to the British eye. The bricks were hand-moulded and delivered by Faversham Brickfields at Faversham in Kent and Thomas Lawrence Brickworks in Bracknell.[15] The main entrance façade owes its composition, in a measure, to accident rather than design. The most prominent feature of the façade is the deeply recessed arch over the central entrance, flanked by tribunes, and stairway turrets. The elevation on the north, with a length of nearly 91.5 metres (300 ft) contrasted with the vertical lines of the campanile and the transepts, is most impressive. It rests on a continuous and plain basement of granite, and only above the flat roofing of the chapels does the structure assume a varied outline.

Marble columns, with capitals of Byzantine type, support the galleries and other subsidiary parts of the building. The marble selected for the columns was, in some instances, obtained from formations quarried by the ancient Romans, chiefly in Greece.

High altar

[edit]

The central feature of the decoration in the cathedral is the baldacchino over the high altar. This is one of the largest structures of its kind, the total width being 9.5 metres (31 ft), and the height 11.5 metres (38 ft). The upper part of white marble is richly inlaid with coloured marbles, lapis lazuli, pearl, and gold. Eight columns of yellow marble, from Verona, support the baldacchino over the high altar, and others, white and pink, from Norway, support the organ galleries.

Behind the baldacchino the crypt emerges above the floor of the sanctuary, and the podium thus formed is broken in the middle by the steps that lead up to the retro-choir. The curved wall of the crypt is lined with narrow slabs of green carystran marble. Opening out of this crypt is a smaller chamber, directly under the high altar. Here are laid the remains of the first two Archbishops of Westminster, Cardinal Wiseman and Cardinal Manning. The altar and relics of Saint Edmund of Canterbury occupy a recess on the south side of the chamber. The little chapel of Saint Thomas of Canterbury, entered from the north transept, is used as a chantry for Cardinal Vaughan. A large Byzantine style crucifix, suspended from the sanctuary arch, dominates the nave.

Chapels

[edit]

The chapel of the Blessed Sacrament, on the north side of the sanctuary, and the Lady Chapel on the south, are entered from the transepts; they are 6.7 m (22 ft) wide, lofty, with open arcades, barrel vaulting, and apsidal ends. Over the altar of the Blessed Sacrament chapel a small baldacchino is suspended from the vault, and the chapel is enclosed with bronze grilles and gates through which people may enter. In the Lady Chapel the walls are clad in marble and the altar reredos is a mosaic of the Virgin and Child, surrounded by a white marble frame. The conches of the chapel contain predominantly blue mosaics of the Old Testament prophets Daniel, Isaiah, Jeremiah and Ezekiel. Unlike the Blessed Sacrament chapel, the chapel dedicated to the Blessed Mother is completely open. The building of the Lady Chapel was funded by Baroness Weld in memory of her second husband.[16]

Those chapels which may be entered from the aisles of the nave are also 6.7 metres (22 ft) wide, and roofed with simple barrel vaulting. The chapel of Saints Gregory and Augustine, next to the baptistery, from which it is separated by an open screen of marble, was the first to have its decoration completed. The marble lining of the piers rises to the springing level of the vaulting and this level has determined the height of the altar reredos, and of the screen opposite. On the side wall, under the windows, the marble dado rises to but little more than half this height. From the cornices the mosaic decoration begins on the walls and vault. This general arrangement applies to all the chapels yet each has its own distinct artistic character. Thus, in sharp contrast to the chapel dedicated to St. Gregory and St. Augustine which contains vibrant mosaics, the chapel of the Holy Souls employs a more subdued, almost funereal style, decoration with late Victorian on a background of silver.[17]

As in many Catholic churches, there are the Stations of the Cross to be found along the outer aisles. The ones at Westminster Cathedral are by the sculptor Eric Gill, and are considered to be amongst the finest examples of his work.[2]

Mosaics

[edit]

When the cathedral's architect John Bentley died, there were no completed mosaics in the cathedral and Bentley left behind precious little in terms of sketches and designs. Consequently, the subject and styles of the mosaics were influenced by donors as well as designers, overseen by a cathedral committee established for this purpose. Indeed, Bentley's influence is, in reality, only seen in the chapel dedicated to the Holy Souls.[17] Due to the prevailing absence of any real designs by Bentley, there was no real agreement as to how the mosaics should look, and in one instance, works already installed (in the Sacred Heart shrine) were removed after the death of the artist, George Bridge.[17]

Mosaics installed during the period 1912–1916 were mostly done by devotees of the Arts and Crafts Movement. Those in the Lady Chapel were installed by the experienced mosaicist Gertrude Martin (who had worked with George Bridge), in 1912–1913. The work was supervised by Anning Bell and Marshall, who later designed the mosaic of Christ enthroned which is above the entrance to the cathedral. The Tympanum of the portal shows in a Byzantine mosaic technique from left to right the kneeling St Peter with the Keys of Heaven, the Virgin Mary, Jesus Christ as Pantocrator on the throne, St Joseph, the Nursing Father of Jesus with a lily in his right hand, and in a kneeling position the canonized English King Edward the Confessor in royal regalia. As Jesus Christ blesses the viewer with his right hand, he holds in his left hand the Book of Life. The Latin inscription of the opened book pages reads: Ego sum ostium per me si quis introierit salvabitur (I am the gate; whoever enters through me will be saved; Gospel of John 10,9).

The mosaics in the chapel dedicated to Saint Andrew, paid for by The 4th Marquess of Bute, also belong to work of the Arts and Craft Movement.[18]

The five-year period 1930 to 1935 saw a tremendous amount of work done, with mosaics placed in the Lady Chapel, in the alcoves above the confessionals, in the crypt dedicated to Saint Peter, and on the sanctuary arch.

No new mosaics were installed until 1950 when one depicting St Thérèse of Lisieux (later replaced by a bronze) was placed in the south transept and another, in 1952, in memory of those in the Royal Army Medical Corps who died in World War II, in the chapel of Saint George. From 1960 to 1962, the Blessed Sacrament Chapel was decorated in a traditional, early Christian style, with the mosaics being predominantly pale pink in order to afford a sense of light and space. The designer, Boris Anrep, chose various Eucharistic themes such as the sacrifice of Abel, the hospitality of Abraham and the gathering of the manna in the wilderness, as well as the Feeding the multitude and the Wedding Feast at Cana. In his old age, Anrep also acted as adviser and principal sketch artist for the mosaics installed in the chapel of Saint Paul (1964–1965).[19] These mosaics depict various moments in the life of Paul; his occupation as a tent-maker, his conversion to Christ, the shipwreck on Malta and his eventual execution in Rome.

It was not until the visit of Pope John Paul II in 1982 that the next mosaic was installed above the north-west entrance. Rather than a scene, this mosaic is an inscription: Porta sis ostium pacificum per eum qui se ostium appellavit, Jesus Christum (May this door be the gate of peace through Him who called Himself the gate, Jesus Christ). In 1999, the mosaic of Saint Patrick, holding a shamrock and a pastoral staff as well as trampling on a snake, was installed at the entrance to the chapel in his honour. In 2001, a striking mosaic of Saint Alban, strongly influenced by the style of early Byzantine iconography, was installed by the designer, Christopher Hobbs. Due to the very favourable reception of the work, Hobbs was commissioned for further mosaics: the chapel to Saint Joseph which contains mosaics of the Holy Family (2003) and men working on Westminster Cathedral (2006). Hobbs also did the chapel in honour of Saint Thomas Becket illustrating the saint standing in front of the old Canterbury Cathedral on the chapel's east wall and the murder of Thomas on the west wall. The vault is decorated with a design of flowers, tendrils and roundels (2006). As of 2011, there were plans for further mosaics, including depictions of Saint Francis of Assisi and Saint Anthony in the narthex.[20]

Music

[edit]

Despite its relatively short history compared to other English cathedrals, Westminster has a distinguished choral tradition. It has its origin in the shared vision of Cardinal Vaughan, the cathedral's founder, and Sir Richard Runciman Terry, its inaugural Master of Music. Terry prepared his choristers for a year before their first sung service in public. For the remainder of his tenure (until 1924) he pursued a celebrated revival of great quantities of Latin repertoire from the English Renaissance, most of which had lain unsung ever since the Reformation. Students at the Royal College of Music who would become household names were introduced to their heritage when Charles Villiers Stanford sent them to the cathedral to hear "polyphony for a penny" (the bus fare). This programme also required honing the boys' sight-reading ability to a then-unprecedented standard.

The choir has commissioned many works from distinguished composers, many of whom are better known for their contribution to Anglican music, such as Benjamin Britten and Ralph Vaughan Williams. However, the choir is particularly renowned for its performance of Gregorian chant and polyphony of the Renaissance.

Unlike most other English cathedrals, Westminster does not have a separate quire; instead, the choir are hidden from view in the apse behind the high altar. This, with the excellent acoustic of the cathedral building, contributes to its distinctive sound.

Located in the west gallery, the Grand Organ of four manuals and 81 stops occupies a more commanding position than many British cathedral organs enjoy. Built by Henry Willis III from 1922 to 1932, it remains one of the most successful and admired. One of Louis Vierne's best-known organ pieces, "Carillon de Westminster", the final movement from Suite no. 3 (op. 54) of Pièces de Fantaisie, was originally improvised on it in 1924,[21] and the subsequent 1927 published version is dedicated to Willis.

The apse organ of fifteen stops was built in 1910 by Lewis & Co.[22] Although the Grand Organ has its own attached console, a console in the apse can play both instruments.

On 3 May 1902, some 3,000 people attended a concert of sacred music in the cathedral, organised to raise money for the Choir School and to test the acoustics in the building. The music was provided by an orchestra of a hundred and a choir of two hundred, including the Cathedral Choir, directed by Richard Terry. The programme included music by Wagner, Purcell, Beethoven, Palestrina, Byrd and Tallis. The acoustics proved to be excellent.[23] One year later, on 6 June 1903, the first performance in London of The Dream of Gerontius, a poem by Cardinal John Henry Newman, set to music by Edward Elgar, took place in the cathedral. The composer himself conducted, with Richard Terry at the organ.[24] Once again, the proceeds went to support the Cathedral Choir School.

John Tavener's The Beautiful Names, a setting of the 99 names of Allah found in the Qur'an, premièred in the cathedral on 19 June 2007, in a performance by the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Chorus in the presence of Charles, Prince of Wales.[25]

Choir

[edit]

The founder of Westminster Cathedral, Cardinal Herbert Vaughan laid great emphasis on the beauty and integrity of the cathedral's liturgy. Initially, he determined there should be a community of Benedictine monks at the new cathedral, performing the liturgies and singing the daily Office. This caused great resentment amongst the secular clergy of the diocese, who felt they were being snubbed. In the end, negotiations with both the English Benedictines and the community of French Benedictines at Farnborough failed and a traditional choir of men and boys was set up instead.[26] Despite great financial problems, the Choir School opened on 5 October 1901 with eleven boy choristers, in the building originally intended for the monks. Cardinal Vaughan received the boys with the words "You are the foundation stones".[27] The Cathedral Choir was officially instituted three months later in January 1902.[28] Sung Masses and Offices were immediately established when the cathedral opened for worship in 1903, and have continued without interruption ever since.

In September 2020, Cardinal Vincent Nichols responded to a strategic review of sacred music at Westminster Cathedral, asking that "all those who profess to be fervent supporters of this precious inheritance of sacred music to become regular contributors to its financial support. It is, unquestionably, time to look ahead in order to ensure that this tradition of sacred music in Westminster Cathedral...can be put onto a firm footing for years to come."[29]

When the question of a musical director was first considered, the choice fell on the singer Sir Charles Santley, who had conducted the choir of the pro-cathedral in Kensington on several occasions. But Santley knew his limitations and refused.[30] Richard Runciman Terry—Director of Music at Downside Abbey School—then became the first director of music of Westminster Cathedral. It proved to be an inspired choice. Terry was both a brilliant choir trainer and a pioneering scholar, one of the first musicologists to revive the great works of the English and other European Renaissance composers. Terry built Westminster Cathedral Choir's reputation on performances of music—by Byrd, Tallis, Taverner, Palestrina and Victoria, among others—that had not been heard since the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and Mass at the cathedral was soon attended by inquisitive musicians as well as the faithful. The performance of great Renaissance Masses and motets in their proper liturgical context remains the cornerstone of the choir's activity.

Terry resigned in 1924, and was succeeded by Canon Lancelot Long who had been one of the original eleven choristers in 1901.

At the beginning of the Second World War, the boys were at first evacuated to Uckfield in East Sussex, but eventually the choir school was closed altogether for the remainder of the war. The music at the cathedral was performed by a reduced body of professional men singers.[31] During this period, from 1941 to 1947, the Master of Music was William Hyde, who had been the sub-organist under Richard Terry.[32]

Hyde was succeeded by George Malcolm, who developed the continental sound of the choir and consolidated its musical reputation—in particular through the now legendary recording of Victoria's Tenebrae responsories. More recent holders of the post have included Francis Cameron, Colin Mawby, Stephen Cleobury, David Hill, James O'Donnell and Martin Baker. In May 2021, Simon Johnson was appointed as the Master of Music.[33]

In addition to its performances of Renaissance masterpieces, Westminster Cathedral Choir has given many first performances of music written especially for it by contemporary composers. Terry gave the premières of music by Vaughan Williams (whose Mass in G minor received its liturgical performance at a Mass in the cathedral), Gustav Holst, Herbert Howells and Charles Wood; in 1959 Benjamin Britten wrote his Missa brevis for the choristers; and since 1960 works by Lennox Berkeley, William Mathias, Colin Mawby and Francis Grier have been added to the repertoire. Most recently four new Masses—by Roxanna Panufnik, James MacMillan, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies and Judith Bingham—have received their first performance in the cathedral. In June 2005 the choristers performed the world première of Sir John Tavener's Missa Brevis for boys' voices.

Westminster Cathedral Choir made its first recording in 1907. Many more have followed in the Westminster Cathedral Choir discography, most recently the series on the Hyperion label, and many awards have been conferred on the choir's recordings. Of these the most prestigious are the 1998 Gramophone Awards for both Best Choral Recording of the Year and Record of the Year, for the performance of Martin's Mass for Double Choir and Pizzetti's Requiem, conducted by O'Donnell. It is the only cathedral choir to have won in either of these categories.

When its duties at the cathedral permit, the choir also gives concert performances both at home and abroad. It has appeared at many important festivals, including Aldeburgh, Cheltenham, Salzburg, Copenhagen, Bremen and Spitalfields. It has appeared in many of the major concert halls of Britain, including the Royal Festival Hall, the Wigmore Hall and the Royal Albert Hall. The cathedral choir also broadcasts frequently on radio and television.

Westminster Cathedral Choir has undertaken a number of international tours, including visits to Hungary, Germany and the US. The choristers participated in the 2003 and 2006 International Gregorian chant Festival in Watou, Belgium, and the full choir performed twice at the Oslo International Church Music Festival in March 2006. In April 2005, 2007 and 2008 they performed as part of the "Due Organi in Concerto" festival in Milan. In October 2011, they sang the inaugural concert of the Institute for Sacred Music at Saint John's in Minnesota.

The cathedral is frequently referred to as the 'Drome'. This dates from the early 20th century days when the Lay Clerks were represented by Equity—the trade union for actors and variety artists. In the profession, it was jokingly referred to as 'The Westminster Hippodrome'—a nickname which was later shortened to the 'Drome'.[34]

Oremus magazine

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Westminster Cathedral has published a monthly magazine since 1896, before the building work was completed. The latest in a series of titles is Oremus, which first appeared in 1996. (The Latin word oremus translates into English as "Let us pray".) Oremus is a 32-page colour magazine, which contains features and articles by well-known members of the Catholic community, as well as non-Catholic commentators and leading figures within British society. It is the successor of titles such as the Westminster Cathedral Record, selling at 6d per copy from January 1896, the Westminster Cathedral Chronicle, a monthly, available from January 1907 at 2d a copy or 3/- a year, post paid, and the Westminster Cathedral Bulletin, first published in 1974. Dylan Parry, who edited the magazine between 2012 and August 2016, took the decision to make Oremus a free publication in 2013. The magazine is also available to download via Westminster Cathedral's website.[35][36]

Burials

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In order of years of office:

  • Richard Challoner (1691–1781) Vicar Apostolic of the London District (Re-interred in the cathedral 1946)
  • Nicholas Wiseman (28 September 1850 – 15 February 1865) First Archbishop of Westminster upon the re-establishment of the Catholic hierarchy in England and Wales in 1850. (Re-interred in the cathedral 1907)
  • Henry Edward Manning (16 May 1865 – 14 January 1892) Archbishop of Westminster. (Re-interred in the cathedral 1907)
  • Herbert Vaughan (8 April 1832 – 19 June 1903) Archbishop of Westminster. (Re-interred in the cathedral 2005)
  • Arthur Hinsley (1 April 1935 – 17 March 1943) Archbishop of Westminster
  • Bernard Griffin (18 December 1943 – 19 August 1956) Archbishop of Westminster
  • William Godfrey (3 December 1956 – 22 January 1963) Archbishop of Westminster
  • John Heenan (22 February 1965 – 7 November 1975) Archbishop of Westminster
  • Basil Hume (9 February 1976 – 17 June 1999) Archbishop of Westminster
  • Cormac Murphy-O'Connor (15 February 2000 – 3 April 2009) (Died on 1 September 2017) Archbishop of Westminster and first emeritus Archbishop, since the other holders died in office

Also buried in the crypt is Alexander count Benckendorff, the Russian ambassador to the Court of St James's from 1903 until his death in 1917.

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Westminster Cathedral by Brian Whelan

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Historic England. "Wesminster Cathedral (1066500)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 10 November 2016.
  2. ^ a b "Westminster Cathedral – London, England". www.sacred-destinations.com. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
  3. ^ Mark Daly (16 October 2018). London Uncovered (New Edition): More than Sixty Unusual Places to Explore. White Lion Publishing. p. 134. ISBN 978-0-7112-3998-2.
  4. ^ Lance Day; Ian McNeil (11 September 2002). Biographical Dictionary of the History of Technology. Routledge. p. 111. ISBN 978-1-134-65019-4.
  5. ^ Betjeman, John (25 July 1974). A Pictorial History of English Architecture. Penguin Books Ltd. p. 95. ISBN 978-0140038248.
  6. ^ Westminster Cathedral Piazza Archived 19 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine from London Gardens Online retrieved 16 May 2013
  7. ^ "The New Roman Catholic Cathedral, Westminster". The Illustrated London News: 3. 20 July 1895 – via Archive.Org.
  8. ^ "The New Roman Catholic Cathedral, Westminster". The Illustrated London News: 3. 20 July 1895 – via Archive.org.
  9. ^ Howse, Christopher (30 April 2005). "Sacred Mysteries". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  10. ^ Alba, M.J. (14 May 2013). "10 Most Famous Unfinished Buildings". Retrieved 12 July 2016.
  11. ^ a b "Dedication of the Cathedral – Westminster Cathedral". www.westminstercathedral.org.uk. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  12. ^ "Ex-Anglican bishops ordained as Catholics". BBC News. 15 January 2011. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  13. ^ "The Reinvention of the Catholic Church". The Atlantic. 11 December 2022.
  14. ^ Winefride de L'Hôpital, Westminster Cathedral and its Architect, vol. 1, p. 47.
  15. ^ "Data" (PDF). britishbricksoc.co.uk. 2013. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  16. ^ Cooksey, Pamela (4 October 2007). "Weld, Jane Charlotte [known as Baroness Weld] (1806–1871), convert to Roman Catholicism and benefactor". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/95696. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. Retrieved 14 May 2023. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  17. ^ a b c Rogers, Patrick (July 2004). "Cathedral Mosaics: Part I – Trial and Error". Oremus. Westminster Cathedral. Archived from the original on 30 May 2017. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  18. ^ Rogers, Patrick (July 2004). "Cathedral Mosaics: Part III – The Arts and Crafts Men". Oremus. Westminster Cathedral. Archived from the original on 30 May 2017. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  19. ^ Rogers, Patrick (July 2004). "Cathedral Mosaics: Part V – A Russian Perspective". Oremus. Westminster Cathedral. Archived from the original on 30 May 2017. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  20. ^ Rogers, Patrick (July 2004). "Cathedral Mosaics: Part VI – The Journey proceeds". Oremus. Westminster Cathedral. Archived from the original on 30 May 2017. Retrieved 16 July 2011.
  21. ^ "Westminster Cathedral - The Grand Organ". westminstercathedral.org.uk. Retrieved 11 September 2023.
  22. ^ "Westminster Cathedral". Organrecitals.com. Archived from the original on 22 December 2015. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  23. ^ Patrick Rogers, Westminster Cathedral. An Illustrated History, London, 2012, p. 44.
  24. ^ ""Gerontius" At The Westminster Cathedral". Archived from the original on 22 September 2015. Retrieved 17 June 2016. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help), article in: The Tablet, 13 June 1903, p. 7.
  25. ^ "Allah to be glorified in Westminster Cathedral". Catholic Action UK. 20 June 2007. Retrieved 20 February 2016. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  26. ^ Westminster Cathedral 1895–1995. A souvenir brochure compiled by Mgr George Stack, Cathedral Administrator, p. 16.
  27. ^ Alan Mould, The English Chorister. A History, London, 2007, p. 221.
  28. ^ Patrick Rogers, Westminster Cathedral. An Illustrated History, London, 2012, p.38.
  29. ^ "Cardinal's Response to Strategic Review of Sacred Music". rcdow.org.uk. 25 September 2020. Retrieved 14 December 2021.
  30. ^ Rev. Lancelot Long, A "Song School" Jubilee. Article in The Tablet, 2 October 1926.
  31. ^ Peter Doyle, Westminster Cathedral 1895–1995, London, 1995, p. 64.
  32. ^ The Tablet, 6 February 1954, p. 18.
  33. ^ "Westminster Cathedral Appoints Simon Johnson as Master of Music -". Rhinegold. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
  34. ^ "Oremus, Nov. 2017" (PDF).
  35. ^ "Oremus – The Cathedral Magazine". Westminster Cathedral. Retrieved 5 August 2014.
  36. ^ "Behind the Scenes of Oremus". Westminster Cathedral. Retrieved 5 August 2014.

Sources

[edit]
  • This article incorporates text (concerning architecture) from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Westminster Cathedral". Catholic Encyclopedia. Robert Appleton Company.
  • Winefride de L'Hôpital. Westminster Cathedral and Its Architect, 2 vols. Dodd, Mead & Co., New York (1919).
  • Patrick Rogers. Westminster Cathedral: from Darkness to Light. Burns & Continuum International Publishing Group, London (2003). ISBN 0-86012-358-8.
  • Peter Doyle. Westminster Cathedral: 1895–1995. Geoffrey Chapman Publishers, London (1995). ISBN 978-0-225-66684-7.
  • John Browne and Timothy Dean. Westminster Cathedral: Building of Faith. Booth-Clibborn Editions, London (1995). ISBN 1-873968-45-0.
  • John Jenkins and Alana Harris, 'More English than the English, more Roman than Rome? Historical signifiers and cultural memory at Westminster Cathedral', Religion 49:1 (2019), pp. 48–73 https://doi.org/10.1080/0048721X.2018.1515328
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