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Home > Catholic Encyclopedia > C > Chester


CHESTER

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ANCIENT DIOCESE OF CHESTER (CESRENSIS).

Located in England. Though the See of Chester, schismatically created by Henry
VIII in 1541, was recognized by the Holy See only for the short space of Queen
Mary's reign, the city had in earlier times possessed a bishop and a cathedral,
though only intermittently. Even before the Norman conquest the title "Bishop of
Chester" is found in documents applied to prelates who would be more correctly
described as Bishops of Mercia or even of Lichfield. After the Council of London
in 1075 had decreed the transfer of all episcopal chairs to cities, Peter,
Bishop of Lichfield, removed his seat from Lichfield to Chester, and became
known as Bishop of Chester. There he chose the collegiate Church of St. John the
Baptist as his cathedral. The next bishop, however, transferred the see to
Coventry on account of the rich monastery there, though he retained the
episcopal palace at Chester. The Diocese of Coventry and Lichfield was of
enormous extent, and it was probably found convenient to have something
analogous to a cathedral at Chester, even though the cathedra itself were
elsewhere; accordingly we find that the church of St. John ranked as a cathedral
for a considerable time, and had its own dean and chapter of secular canons down
to the time of the Reformation. But the chief ecclesiastical foundation in
Chester was the Benedictine monastery of St. Werburgh, the great church of which
finally became the Cathedral Church of Christ and the Blessed Virgin Mary. The
site had been occupied even during the Christian period of the Roman occupation
by a church dedicated to Sts. Peter and Paul, and rededicated to St. Werburgh
and St. Oswald during the Saxon period. The church was served by a small chapter
of secular canons until 1093, when Hugh Lupus, Earl of Chester, converted it
into a great Benedictine monastery, in which foundation he had the co-operation
of St. Anselm, then Prior of Bec, who sent Richard, one of his monks, to be the
first abbot. A new Norman church was built by him and his successors. The
monastery, though suffering loss of property both by the depredations of the
Welsh and the inroads of the sea, prospered, and in the thirteenth, fourteenth,
and fifteenth centuries the monks transformed their Norman church into a gothic
building which, though not be reckoned among the greatest cathedrals of England,
yet is not unworthy of its rank, and affords a valuable study in the evolution
of Gothic architecture. It has been said of it that "at every turn it is
satisfying in small particulars and disappointing in great features". The last
of the abbots was John, or Thomas, Clark, who resigned his abbey, valued at
£1,003 5s. 11d. per annum, to the king.



In 1541 Henry VIII, having thrown off all obedience to the pope, created six new
bishoprics, one of which was Chester. The archdeaconry of Chester, from the
Diocese of Coventry and Lichfield, and that of Richmond, from York, were
combined to form the new see, and the abbey church, now the cathedral, was to be
served by a dean and six prebends, the complaisant ex-abbot becoming the first
dean. At first the diocese was annexed to the Province of Canterbury, but by
another Act of Parliament it was soon transferred to that of York. The first
bishop was the Provincial of the Carmelites, John Bird, a doctor of divinity who
had attracted the king's attention by his sermons preached against the pope's
supremacy. Having already been reward by the Bishopric of Bangor, he was now
translated to Chester. On the accession of Mary he was deprived as being a
married man, and died Vicar of Dunmow in 1556. The diocese being now canonically
recognized by the pope, George Cotys, Master of Balliol and Fellow of Magdalen
College, Oxford, in which university he had been a distinguished lecturer in
theology, was appointed bishop by the Holy See. In 1556 he was succeeded by
Cuthbert Scott, a very learned theologian and Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge
University. On the accession of Elizabeth he was one of the four Catholic
bishops chosen to defend Catholic doctrine at the conference at Westminster, and
immediately after this he was sent to the Tower. Being released on bail, he
contrived to escape to the Continent. He died at Louvain, 9 Oct., 1564. The arms
of the see were: gules, three mitres and their labels, or.




SOURCES

LYSONS, Cheshire (1810); HEMINGWAY, History of Chester (Chester, 1831); ORMEROD,
History of Cheshire (1882); MORRIS, Chester during the Plantagenet and Tudor
Periods (privately printed, 1893); Chester Architectural and Archæological
Society Journal; HIATT, Chester: The Cathedral and See (London, 1905).


ABOUT THIS PAGE

APA citation. Burton, E. (1908). Chester. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New
York: Robert Appleton Company. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03649a.htm

MLA citation. Burton, Edwin. "Chester." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 3. New
York: Robert Appleton Company, 1908.
<http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03649a.htm>.

Transcription. This article was transcribed for New Advent by Theodore Rego.

Ecclesiastical approbation. Nihil Obstat. November 1, 1908. Remy Lafort, S.T.D.,
Censor. Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York.

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