Sunday, June 14, 2026

Chester Cathedral Misericords

In the olden days, monks, et al., were expected to stand in the choir throughout the various services, etc. This was hard on the older guys (ask me...) and so someone came up with the idea of the misericord, literally, mercy seat. It could be folded down, out of sight, but, when extended up, provided a little something to lean onto, while maintaining the appearance of standing. Like other things in the choir, they were carved, that is, decorated. But since the misericord was something on which you placed your bottom, or bum, as the British say, the carvings were not of sacred things. Rather, they were of the other, profane world, mythology, beasts, mere humans, and such, often amusing, sometimes raunchy, even lewd. I don't think we've ever been in a church of any size or sort in which all the misericords were exposed for examination. Until we got to Chester. Below are some of the better choir carvings at Chester, not even all of the misericords. Interpretation is sometimes obvious, more often problematic, especially as a 21st century mind looks at 14th century sculpture. But as with anything else, there is a whole literature to help you find your way, e.g., Church Misericords and Bench Ends, by Richard Hayman.

North choir stall, bench ends





Misericords...


Wild men?










Unicorn
















The Chester Elephant and Castle, very famous (as choir stall carvings go)



Chester Cathedral, 2

Ever more fun at Chester Cathedral...

12th century HVAC

Now in the chapter house; so-called because, in addition to
doing ecclesiastical and abbatial business, they also read,
at every meeting, a chapter of the Benedictine Rule; just FYI

Post-Medieval window






































































With Henry VIII stablishing the See of Chester

Note internal buttressing



Copy of Tyndale Bible; the Church really really really did not want the masses
reading the hocus-pocus of the Bible, and so violently opposed any translation of 
said book into the vernacular; Tyndale did English, and paid for it with his
life; he also argued that monarchs should be the heads of their national churches,
which idea eventually got to Henry VIII...

An ancient shrine, reconstructed, of St. Werburgh

In the Lady Hall...

Ceiling bosses...Becket? Aren't there supposed to be
four of the bad guys?

Sorry, turn your phone/tablet around to see the Virgin and Bambino

Great floor in one of the chapels

Occasional grotesque, inside the cathedral

Chester has a very large and beautifully-carved quire, done around
1380 by William and Hugh Herland; and, most unusually, all of the
misericords were exposed...which, for us, will require a separate post

More of the quire

Ceiling above

Pay no attention to whatever is behind the gold curtain

North transept; and more of the quilt display 

More organ bits

Crossing

Altar

Another grotesque; most unusual in a cathedral interior

The great west window, post-Medieval; 1961, by W. T.
Carter Shapland; Holy Family plus the "northern saints";
the earlier Victorian window was damaged in WWII

In the west end, the Consistory Court...read on...

Click to enlarge

Chester Cathedral and Abbey in LEGO, not quite as large as Durham's,
but especially nice for its interiors, details


Cloisters; with garth...did you look it up?

A last look at some of the excellent contemporary windows