List_of_former_cathedrals_in_Great_Britain

List of former cathedrals in Great Britain

List of former cathedrals in Great Britain

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This is a list of former or once proposed cathedrals in Great Britain.

Introduction

The term former cathedral in this list includes any Christian[1] church (building) in Great Britain which has been the seat of a bishop,[2] but is not so any longer. The status of a cathedral, for the purpose of this list, does not depend on whether the church concerned is known to have had a formal "throne" (or cathedra) nor whether a formal territory or diocese was attached to the church or bishop concerned. Before the development of dioceses, which began earlier in England than in Scotland and Wales, "such bishops as there were either lived in monasteries or were 'wandering bishops'".[3] This list, therefore, includes early "bishop's churches" (a "proto-cathedral" is similar).

A former cathedral may be the building that lost its cathedral status or its site, whether now vacant or not. The loss of status may be because that bishopric is extinct, or was relocated. Sometimes a new cathedral was built near an older one, with the older building then used for other purposes, or demolished. Such a building or site counts as a former cathedral. Where a cathedral is modified or rebuilt on substantially the same site in a series of developments over time, the earlier versions are not counted here as former cathedrals (except for cases where the original cathedral was totally rebuilt on broadly the same site but on a visibly different alignment, such as London's "Old St Paul's" and Winchester's "Old Minster" which are listed here).

A former pro-cathedral is a church or former church (or site of a former church) which was once a temporary cathedral officially performing that role until its expected replacement by an intended permanent cathedral took place, usually by completion of a new cathedral built for that purpose.

A once proposed cathedral is a church that was proposed (usually by a church or civil authority) as a future cathedral but, for some reason, did not become one. Known examples will be included in this list. Sometimes a second such proposal for the same church succeeded: as long as that church retains its cathedral status it will not feature in this List.

For information on current cathedrals in Great Britain please refer to:
List of cathedrals in England, or List of cathedrals in Scotland, or List of cathedrals in Wales, as appropriate.

England

References are to the English church's current use or its use prior to deconsecration.

Former cathedrals founded before 1066

survivors becoming Church of England at the Reformation (1540)

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Former cathedrals founded (or proposed) between 1066 and 1539

survivors becoming Church of England at the Reformation (1540)

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Former Church of England cathedrals founded (or proposed) from 1540 to the present

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Former Post-Reformation Roman Catholic cathedrals

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Scotland

For various reasons,[131] formal dioceses were formed later in Scotland than in the rest of Great Britain. Bishops certainly existed in areas from the earliest Christian times (often from Irish monastic missionary activity), but the territory over which an early (often monastic) bishop operated was ill-defined. Hence the term "bishop's church" is sometimes used for a seat used by an early bishop rather than the word "cathedral" which some expect to be attached to a formal diocese. Traditionally, the medieval Scottish diocesan system was held to have been largely created by the Norman-influenced King David I (reigned 1124–1153), though this is an oversimplification.

Nevertheless, in this List, the large number of pre-Reformation cathedrals in Scotland has been split into two sections in an attempt to make the information more manageable. The first section comprises cathedrals founded before 1100; the second, those cathedrals founded (or proposed) between 1100 and 1560. The choice of the year 1100, though arbitrary, approximates to the beginning of the reign of King David I (1124) (see above) and is also close to the date of the Norman Conquest (1066) which has been used to separate the two sections of pre-Reformation cathedrals in the portion of this List covering England.

In order to assist users of this List to trace the development of the dioceses, the text of most entries is preceded by the name (in parentheses) of the late medieval Scottish diocese[132] into which each early cathedral merged, usually by a process of translation of the see to a new location.

As the Scottish Reformation of 1560 developed, bishops and cathedrals became progressively marginalised and neglected. By Act of the Scottish Parliament in 1690 (confirming the Church's own final decision of 1689), the Church of Scotland finally became wholly Presbyterian, with no dioceses, no bishops, so no functioning cathedrals. At that date, all cathedrals of the Church of Scotland became former cathedrals. However, some still use the title, but for honorific purposes only.

The Scottish Episcopal Church (part of the Anglican Communion) and the Roman Catholic Church in Scotland maintain their own diocesan structures with their own cathedrals and bishops.

Former cathedrals founded before 1100

survivors becoming Church of Scotland at the Scottish Reformation (1560)

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Former cathedrals founded (or proposed) between 1100 and 1560

survivors becoming Church of Scotland at the Scottish Reformation (1560)

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Former Post-Reformation cathedrals

During and after the Scottish Reformation (1560) cathedrals were increasingly neglected and abandoned, but episcopacy continued to be supported by Stuart Kings. By Act of the Scottish Parliament in 1690 (confirming the Church's own final decision of 1689) the Church of Scotland became wholly Presbyterian, with no dioceses, no bishops, so no cathedrals as such. At that date, all Church of Scotland cathedrals became former cathedrals. Some still use the title, but for honorific purposes only.

The Scottish Episcopal Church and the Roman Catholic Church in Scotland maintain their own diocesan structures with their own cathedrals and bishops, as do the Orthodox churches.

Church of Scotland

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Scottish Episcopal Church

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Former Post-Reformation Roman Catholic cathedrals

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Wales

The end of Roman rule in Britain in the early 5th century left a Romano-British (later sometimes called "Celtic") church which became increasingly confined to the western parts of the island (principally modern Wales) as Angles, Saxons, and other invaders attacked and settled from the east. This church grew in size and influence in the west during the 6th and 7th centuries (a period sometimes characterised in Wales as "The Age of the Saints")[225][226] with the conversion of ruling families (and consequently their peoples). Among the clergy, the title of "bishop" was more frequently used[227] than later when large dioceses developed. The surviving evidence for most of these early bishoprics is now fragmentary and secondary at best, if not legendary. This list contains some better-evidenced examples.

The dioceses of the Welsh church, certainly from Norman times, were, sometimes reluctantly,[228] part of the English church in the Province of Canterbury. This situation continued after the establishment of the Church of England at the Reformation until 1920, when the Church of England was disestablished in Wales, becoming the Church in Wales, a separate self-governing member of the Anglican Communion.

Former cathedrals (or proposed cathedrals)

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The Seven Bishop-Houses of the Kingdom of Dyfed

Collections of medieval Welsh Law[246] record that the (early medieval) Kingdom of Dyfed had seven so-called "bishop-houses" (in Welsh, esgopty), following a general pattern of one bishop-house in each cantref.[246][247][248][249][250][251] Their role is not clear, but they must have been relatively important ecclesiastical sites (with St Davids having a higher status than any of the others). Apart from the Bishop of St Davids, their heads were described as abbots, not bishops.

Whether the other six were also bishoprics, former bishoprics, burial places of saint-bishops,[251] or staging posts in the travels of (say) the bishop of St Davids[252] is debated. They are included here on the basis that any and all of them may well have been the seat of a bishop at some time. Details of all seven bishop-houses are given below for the sake of completeness, although St Davids has never ceased to be the seat of a bishop. The status of a bishop-house, as distinct from that of a cathedral (St Davids), seems not to have survived the ending of the Kingdom of Dyfed (in 920), even less the arrival of the Normans.

The sites identified below may not be exactly the original sites of the bishop-houses (with the probable exception of Llandeilo Llwydarth): some minor relocation over the course of centuries cannot be ruled out.

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Isle of Man

While the Isle of Man is not politically part of Great Britain,[262] but ecclesiastically it forms the Diocese of Sodor and Man in the Province of York of the Church of England,[263] and part of the Archdiocese of Liverpool for the Roman Catholic church, so it is included on this List.

The Diocese of Sodor and Man is the English successor to the (first Norwegian, later Scottish) Diocese of Sodor or Diocese of the Isles. The English Crown seized control of the Isle of Man from Scotland during the 14th century, and the island was no longer a component of the ‘’Sudreys’’ (the Hebrides plus the Isle of Man). From that point the Diocese of Sodor and Man was limited to the Isle of Man alone, while the Hebrides formed the Diocese of the Isles in the Scottish Church, with its cathedral no longer at Peel, Isle of Man.

Former cathedrals

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See also


Notes

  1. here defined as a member church of the World Council of Churches or the (Roman) Catholic Church
  2. but not one designated as an area bishop, an assistant bishop, or a suffragan bishop
  3. Cook, David (2004). St Boniface 675/754 – the first European. Crediton: Crediton Church Corporation, p. 15
  4. Jeffery (2012), p. 23
  5. Dale (2023), Ch. 2
  6. Smith (2011), p. 117
  7. built across the edge of the Roman foundations, it has been suggested by Fernie (1983) that Cedd's church may instead have been in the SE corner of the fort, where rubble fragments were still visible in the 19th century
  8. Brabbs (1985), p. 23
  9. Dale (2023), Chs. 1, 8
  10. St Thomas, Bradwell
  11. Tatton-Brown (1989), pp. 21–22
  12. Taylor, M. I. The Cradle of English Christianity (St Martin's and St Paul's PCC, Canterbury, 1997)
  13. then called Cunecaster or Cuncacestre
  14. Orme (1996), p. 151
  15. not a "Bishop of Cornwall"; the extent of his influence is unknown
  16. Olson (1989), pp. 51-52
  17. Olson (1989), pp. 51–56; Jankulak (2000), pp. 57–60
  18. Olson (1989), p. 54
  19. Cutts (1887), p. 425
  20. Haslam, Jeremy (1992) "Dommoc and Dunwich: A Reappraisal" in Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 5, 1992, pp. 41 - 46
  21. Pestell (2004), pp.225-226
  22. visible at exceptionally low Spring tides
  23. Kirby, D.P. (1965–66). "The Saxon Bishops of Leicester, Lindsey (Syddensis), and Dorchester" (PDF). Trans. Leics. Arch. & Hist. Soc. 41: 2. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  24. Tiller (2005), pp. 41–42
  25. Jenkins (1999), p. 542
  26. Jefferey (2012), p. 18
  27. Cannon (2011), p. 313
  28. Cannon (2011), p. 314
  29. Crook, J. (2000) The Architectural Setting of the Cult of Saints in the Early Christian West c. 300 – 1200 Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 167–169
  30. Jeffery (2012), p. 103
  31. not to be confused with South Elmham, Suffolk, which had a minster
  32. Orme (2014), pp. 7–9, 81–82
  33. Orme (2014), pp. 7–9, 133–134
  34. Rippon & Holbrook (2021), p. 232
  35. otherwise Great St Mary or St Mary the Great
  36. certainly since 1101, see Pestell (2004), p. 94
  37. the last dedication added 2019
  38. Young (2018), p. 79
  39. Foot, Sarah (2014) "Households of St Edmund" in Studies in Church History, Vol. 50, pp. 47, 50
  40. Pestell (2004), p. 94
  41. That church was linked to a community at the supposed site of the martyrdom of St Edmund (d. 869) which benefited from Theodred's later Will.
  42. The site was later used by Hoxne Priory
  43. Fryde (1986), p. 216
  44. with the appointment of Bishop Aethelweald (946-949)
  45. Evans (1987), p. 183
  46. Pestell (2004), p.94 n. 155
  47. current dedication dates from c. 1220
  48. McKinley, R A, ed. (1958). A History of the County of Leicester. Vol. 4. pp. 383–387. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  49. Midmer (1979), p. 201
  50. Tatton-Brown (1979), pp. 24, 26, 48
  51. Olson (1989), pp. 66–67
  52. Godfrey (1962), p. 53
  53. British History Online retrieved 18 May 2013
  54. Hill (1900), p. 82
  55. Fryde (1986), p. 220
  56. Jeffery (2012), p. 20
  57. Midmer (1979), p. 262
  58. though Conan was probably an assistant/suffragan to the bishop of Crediton: see Finberg, H. P. R., "Sherborne, Glastonbury, and the expansion of Wessex" in Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th series, 3 (1953), pp. 118–19
  59. Godfrey (1962), p. 140.
  60. Jeffery (2012), pp. 42–43.
  61. Julian Munby. Saxon Chichester and its Predecessors in Haslam. Anglo-Saxon Towns in Southern England. pp. 317–320
  62. Tatton-Brown. The Medieval Fabric in Hobbs. Chichester Cathedral: An Historic Survey. p. 25
  63. Kelly. The Bishopric of Selsey in Hobbs. Chichester Cathedral: An Historic Survey. pp. 1–10.
  64. St Andrew's Church from Soham.org retrieved 18 May 2013
  65. Knowles, David & Hadcock, R Neville (1971), p. 482
  66. other candidates have included Caistor and Horncastle
  67. in the West Riding of the Parts of Lindsey
  68. Jeffery (2012), p. 37
  69. Bassett, Steven (1989) "Lincoln and the Anglo-Saxon See of Lindsey" in Anglo-Saxon England, Vol. 18 (1989), pp. 1-32
  70. Kirby, D. P. (1965–66). "The Saxon Bishops of Leicester, Lindsey (Syddensis), and Dorchester" (PDF). Trans. Leics. Arch. & Hist. Soc. 41: 2. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  71. Orme (1996), p. 133
  72. Chanter, J.R. Tawton: The First Saxon Bishopric of Devonshire, Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature and Art, Vol. VII (1875), pp. 179–196.
  73. reported by Pedler (1896), p. 4 n. 1, citing "Camden and Bishop Godwine"
  74. Cutts (1887), p. 278.
  75. Orme, N. The Church in Devon: 400–1560 (Exeter, 2013), p. 34, caption to Fig. 9
  76. Tatton-Brown (1989), p. 43.
  77. Cannon (2007), p. 431
  78. Williams (1962), p. 89
  79. Bowen (1956), pp. 36–37
  80. Davies (1978), p. 75
  81. Davies (1979), pp. 92–93
  82. but Coplestone-Crow (2009), p. 105 locates the original site (no remains) 3 km to the south-west at Hentland, in the adjoining parish of Goodrich on the eastern bank of the River Wye just west of the most southerly western border of Welsh Bicknor parish. On this question, see also Ray (2001), pp. 116, 118
  83. Phillips (1973), p. 67
  84. Yorke (1982), p. 75
  85. Knowles & Hadcock (1971), p. 81
  86. Jeffery (2012), pp. 53–55
  87. Midmer (1979), p. 119
  88. Cannon, J. Cathedral. London: Constable & Robinson. 2007, pp. 301–303.
  89. Demidowicz, George (ed) (1994) Coventry's First Cathedral (Stamford: Paul Watkins Publishing) ISBN 1-871615-49-6
  90. Jeffery (2012), pp. 58–59.
  91. Jeffery (2012), pp. 63–64.
  92. Jeffery (2012), p. 71
  93. Jeffery (2012), p. 80
  94. Jeffery (2012), p. 70
  95. Jeffery (2012), pp. 77–80
  96. replacing a collapsed medieval, possibly Norman, church
  97. Jeffery (2012), pp. 81–82
  98. Jeffery (2012), pp. 83–84
  99. now (2019) at the south-east corner of the choir
  100. Guide Book "The Church of St Mary the Virgin" published 2016? by Jarrold Publishing, Peterborough ISBN 978-0-85101-593-4, p. 15.
  101. Alternatively, some believe the chair to have been made for a suffragan bishop.
  102. 800 seats
  103. Nicholls, Robin (1979) "The Forgotten 'Cathedral' of Southend-on-Sea" in Essex Countryside, September 1979
  104. a new eastern wall to the nave isolated the destroyed east end of the church, with King Harold II's tomb under the former High Altar
  105. Smith (2011), p. 123
  106. Waltham Archived 13 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine from Britannia.com retrieved 20 May 2013
  107. Jeffery (2012), p. 92
  108. Jenkyns (2014), p. 56
  109. Archdiocese of Westminster from NewAdvent.org, retrieved 19 December 2014
  110. Library from CatholicCulture.org retrieved 16 May 2013
  111. Church Gazetteer from St Nicholas Centre retrieved 22 April 2013
  112. Moseley, Brian (11 June 2011). "Church of Saint Mary". The Encyclopaedia of Plymouth History. Archived from the original on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 13 February 2015.
  113. History of the Portsmouth Diocese Archived 16 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine from the Catholic Association retrieved 28 March 2014
  114. "The Full History of St George's Church". St George's Catholic Church, York. Archived from the original on 28 August 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  115. "Church History". St. Wilfrid's Catholic Church in York. Archived from the original on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  116. such as the Celtic origin of early bishoprics, the difficult topography, the social structure
  117. Bede "A History of the English Church and People" IV.12.
  118. Bede, IV.26.
  119. Fawcett (1997), p. 110
  120. Reported in Sunday Times, 3 March 2024, as being at risk of closure and disposal by Church of Scotland
  121. Abercorn History Archived 8 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 24 May 2013
  122. Fryde (1986) p. 303
  123. Abernethy Village Archived 23 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 24 May 2013
  124. Smith (2011), p. 514.
  125. Lamb, R G "The Cathedral of Christchurch and the Monastery of Birsay" Procs. of Soc. of Antiquaries of Scotland (1972–74), pp. 200–205
  126. Fawcett (1997), p. 113
  127. Fawcett (1997), p. 113.
  128. Fawcett (1997), p.112
  129. Cant, Ronald G (1986) "The Medieval Church in the North: Contrasting Influences in the Dioceses of Ross and Caithness", pp. 52-53 in Baldwin (1986), pp. 47-58
  130. Fawcett (1997), p. 15
  131. Parker, M. (2012) An Eighth-Century Reference to the Monastery at Hoddom in Jnl. of Scottish Name Studies (6), 51–80.
  132. Thomas (2014), pp. 259-260
  133. by Bishop Angus and by the Scottish Crown, respectively: see Thomas (2014), p. 260
  134. Fawcett (1997), p. 117.
  135. Fawcett (1997), p. 116.
  136. since 1817
  137. Woolf (2007), p. 308
  138. Macdonald (1969–70), pp. 142–143
  139. Macdonald (1969–70), p. 137
  140. also known as St Boniface
  141. sometimes called bishopric of Rosemarkie, down to mid-13th C. (Macdonald (1969–70), p. 137)
  142. Reported in Sunday Rimes, 3 March 2024, as being at possible risk of closure and disposal by Church of Scotland
  143. Fawcett (1997), pp. 17–19
  144. of the Cathedral Priory of St Andrew, Hexham, Nothumberland
  145. Godfrey (1962) p. 258
  146. Smith (2011), p. 497.
  147. Fawcett (1997), p. 19
  148. Fryde (1986) p. 320
  149. Deanesly, pp. 33, 36
  150. known as 'the apostle to the southern Picts' - see Chadwick (1961), p. 134
  151. Fryde et al. (1986), pp. 222–223.
  152. Woolf (2007), p.308
  153. Building History from St Machar's retrieved 24 May 2013
  154. Fawcett (1997), p. 112
  155. Macdonald & Laing (1969–70), p. 141
  156. History Archived 24 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine from Birnie.org retrieved 21 May 2013
  157. now (2024) closed, awaiting disposal
  158. Crawford, Barbara, 'The Earldom of Caithness and the Kingdom of Scotland, 1150–1266' in Keith Stringer (ed.), Essays on the Nobility of Medieval Scotland, (Edinburgh, 1985), pp. 25–43
  159. Fawcett (1997), p. 24
  160. Orkneyinga Saga, 48
  161. unique in Orkney
  162. Fawcett (1997), p. 114.
  163. the latter name being one by which St Curetán, founder of the original cathedral at Rosemarkie, was also known
  164. when the main structure was robbed of stone for Cromwell's Inverness citadel
  165. whose tomb is in the crypt
  166. Fryde (1986), p. 311.
  167. Shead, N.F. (1969) The Origins of the Medieval Diocese of Glasgow in Scot. Hist. Rev. (48), pp. 220–225.
  168. Keith, Robert, An Historical Catalogue of the Scottish Bishops: Down to the Year 1688, (London, 1924)
  169. Pennant, T. "A Tour in Scotland 1769" (London, 1790), p. 297
  170. Fawcett (1997), p. 115.
  171. of which only a sandstone arch remains
  172. when St Ronald and Bishop William went to the crusades
  173. Jesch, J. & Molleson, T. "The Death of Magnus Erlendsson and the Relics of St Magnus" in Owen, O. (ed) The World of the Orkneyinga Saga, Orkney Islands Council, 2006, pp. 127–144
  174. Ewart, G. 'Inchaffray Abbey, Perth and Kinross: excavation and research, 1987' in Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scot., 126 (1996) p. 472
  175. Fawcett (1997), p. 47
  176. Butler (1901), p. 47
  177. McKerral, A. (1951–52) "A Chronology of the Abbey and Castle of Saddell, Kintyre" in Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Vol. 86 (1951–52), p. 117
  178. by Somerled (and/or his son Ranald)
  179. Saddell Castle
  180. Cruden, p. 8
  181. Thomas (2014), p. 247
  182. from the Norse-derived term Sudreys for 'Southern Islands'
  183. The diocese was under the Norwegian Archdiocese of Nidaros from 1154 to 1472.
  184. influenced by the Western Schism: see Thomas (2009), p. 163
  185. the diocese for the Isle of Man (only) became, and remains, the (English) Diocese of Sodor and Man
  186. Thomas (2014), pp. 257-259
  187. The site may also have been used earlier by Bishop Wimund: see Thomas (2014), pp. 258-259.
  188. Fawcett 1997), p.117
  189. Thomas (2014), pp. 249-251
  190. Pennant, T. "A Tour in Scotland 1769" (London, 1790) p. 297
  191. Slade & Watson (1989), p. 300
  192. Slade & Watson (1989), p. 310
  193. Slade & Watson (1989), p. 318
  194. dedicated to Saint Ninian
  195. A M Mackenzie, Scottish Pageant 1625–1707, (Oliver & Boyd, 1949), pp. 102–103
  196. "Good Shepherd Cathedral, Ayr" from Open Buildings, retrieved 2 December 2014
  197. "A cathedral transformed" from Ayrshire Housing, retrieved 2 December 2014
  198. "History Archived 2014-03-27 at the Wayback Machine" from St Andrew's Church, Dumfries, retrieved 2 December 2014
  199. Chadwick (1961), esp pp. 3–5
  200. Williams (1962), p. 88
  201. "Probably in these early centuries almost every church had its own bishop" (Edwards (1912), p. 47)
  202. M. Richter (1971). Canterbury's Primacy in Wales and the first stage of Bishop Bernard's Opposition in Jnl of Eccles. Hist., 22, pp. 177–189.
  203. Williams, G. The crisis of the sixteenth century in Evans (2007), pp. 330–338
  204. Davies (2007), "The Archbishopric of St Davids and the bishops of Clas Cynidr" in Evans (2007), pp. 300–301
  205. Wooding (2011), p. 91
  206. interrupted between c. 1116 and 1136 by the creation of a Benedictine priory
  207. Fryde (1985), p. 289
  208. Davies (2003), p. 16
  209. here, before they were taken to Lichfield
  210. Davies 2003, pp. 9–31, 148. The Book of Llandaff (the basis of that claim, and others) uses dubious evidence to lend spurious antiquity to the origins of the 12th-century Diocese of Llandaff and bolster its territorial claims against the ancient Diocese of St Davids (in which Llandeilo lies) and the (English) Diocese of Hereford.
  211. Wooding (2011), p. 178
  212. Bowen (1956), pp. 115–117
  213. Bowen (1956), p. 97
  214. Thomas, D. R. (1874) A History of the Diocese of St. Asaph London: James Parker & Co. Vol 1, p. 436
  215. Taylor, A. J. (1954–55) Rhuddlan Cathedral: 'a might-have-been' of Flintshire history in Flintshire Historical Society Transactions, Vol. 15, pp. 43–51
  216. Deanesly, p.36 fn.1
  217. Davies (1982), p. 159
  218. Charles-Edwards (1971)
  219. Charles-Edwards (2013), pp. 596–598
  220. Davies (1982), pp. 158–160
  221. James (2007), pp. 47–68
  222. Petts (2009), pp. 162–164
  223. Charles-Edwards (2013), p. 597
  224. Charles-Edwards (2013), p. 598
  225. although absent from Turner, Edward ["The Editor"] (1871) "Cells of Battle Abbey" in Sussex Archaeological Collections, Vol. xxi, pp. 123-128
  226. James (2007), p. 57
  227. Smith (2011), p. 450
  228. by a 1542 Act of Parliament
  229. Gelling (1998), p. 2
  230. said to be a disciple of St Patrick
  231. Gelling (1998), p. 41
  232. Coakley, Frances (2007), The Ruined Cathedral of St. German, Peel, Isle of Man, A Manx Note Book: An Electronic Compendium of Matters Past and Present Connected with the Isle of Man, retrieved 16 August 2009.

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