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E-raamat: Dean and Canons' Houses of St George's Chapel, Windsor: An Architectural History

  • Formaat: 240 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Dec-2022
  • Kirjastus: Oxbow Books
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781789258677
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
  • Hind: 31,59 €*
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The College of St George at Windsor Castle was founded by Edward III in 1348 to support the newly created Order of the Garter, and to this day fulfills the same primary purpose. The domestic buildings provided for the Warden, Canons and Priest-Vicars – now the Deanery and Canons Cloister – are an astonishing survival: despite enlargement and alteration over the centuries, a significant amount of the mid-fourteenth-century fabric survives, though often hidden from view. A recent program of refurbishment and conservation revealed much hitherto unknown evidence for the way the buildings were constructed, their fittings and decoration and their subsequent evolution. The author maintained a continuous ‘watching brief’ throughout the refurbishment works, the results of which are published here for the first time.

The archaeological evidence is supplemented by the excellent survival of documentation, both for the initial construction of the buildings and their subsequent development: we know the precise date of each stage of construction, the cost and even the names of the workmen involved. The post-medieval history of the buildings is also highly significant, and for this period we have the benefit of knowing more about the deans and canons who influenced the ways their dwellings developed, and of a continued wealth of documentary evidence.

Detailed archaeological and historical description of well-preserved medieval (14th century) and post-medieval timber-framed clerical houses and their fittings within the Lower Court of Windsor Castle.
Introduction vii
Acknowledgements ix
The numbering of the houses of Canons' Cloister xi
List of abbreviations
xv
1 The castle down to the reign of Henry III
1(18)
The site
1(1)
The development of the Lower Ward
2(2)
No. 25 The Cloisters and Denton's Commons
4(5)
The towers of the north curtain wall
9(1)
Henry Ill's new royal lodgings in the Lower Ward
10(5)
Drainage and water supply in the thirteenth century
15(4)
2 The foundation of the College of St George
19(14)
Work begins on the College of St George
21(1)
Construction of the chapter house range
22(1)
The vestry
22(2)
The chapter house
24(2)
The chapter house and vestry: function and later development
26(1)
The entrance lobby to the warden's chambers
27(1)
The warden's chambers
27(1)
The warden's hall
28(1)
Service rooms of the 1350s
28(1)
The Dean's Cloister
29(4)
3 The construction of Canons' Cloister
33(30)
Preparation of the site and the common latrine
33(2)
The timber framing of Canons' Cloister
35(3)
Cellarage
38(2)
External walls, doors, and windows
40(2)
Roofing the cloister
42(1)
Internal floors
42(5)
Internal staircases
47(3)
Heating
50(3)
Treatment of internal walls
53(1)
Ceilings
53(1)
Decoration
53(6)
Finials: the 15 decorative `images'
59(1)
The cloister completed
59(4)
4 The Deanery from the 1350s to the Civil War
63(22)
The warden's house develops into the Deanery
63(1)
The new chapter house of 1477-8
63(2)
The fourteenth-century chapter house added to the dean's accommodation
65(1)
The replacement of the warden's hall
66(1)
The pentice of 1495
67(1)
The building works of Dean Urswick
67(3)
The cross-wing rebuilt: `Building B'
70(2)
The fire of 1587 and its consequences
72(2)
The first floor at the north end of the chapter house range
74(1)
The new roof of 1587 over the chapter house range
75(1)
The Deanery garderobe
76(1)
Development of the kitchen wing
77(2)
The Deanery in the first decades of the seventeenth century
79(6)
5 The evolution of Canons' Cloister down to the Civil War
85(26)
The priest-vicars move out of Canons' Cloister
85(1)
Changes to the canons' houses
86(1)
New doorways and minor adjustments
87(1)
The enlargement of House VI, Canons' Cloister in 1480
88(6)
New building to the north-east of the cloister
94(1)
Expansion of the east range
95(4)
Canon Magnus, the Catherine Room, and the extension over Dean's Cloister
99(3)
Other early polychromy
102(1)
Minor modifications in Canons' Cloister
103(1)
Water supply
103(2)
Fire precautions
105(1)
The collapse of the curtain wall in 1603
106(2)
Genesis of the Income Book
108(3)
6 The Civil War to c. 1830
111(26)
The death of Charles I and the expulsion of the Dean and Canons
111(3)
The Restoration of the Monarchy
114(1)
Wainscot
114(1)
Development of the Deanery from the Restoration to 1800
115(2)
Further entries in the Income Book
117(1)
The building works of Dean John Robinson
117(2)
Canons' Cloister at the Restoration of 1660
119(1)
Difficulties of interpretation: the numbering systems
120(1)
Structural changes in the late seventeenth century
121(2)
Further enlargement of the north-east comer of Canons' Cloister
123(1)
Mezzanine floors
123(3)
Changes in floor level
126(1)
The parlour floor in House VI
127(1)
Doors, windows, and staircases
128(2)
The houses of the south cloister walk
130(3)
Water supply
133(2)
Sanitary fittings
135(2)
7 From 1830 to the present day
137
Dean Hobart's alterations to the Deanery
137(2)
Consequence of the reduction in the number of canons
139(3)
A. Y. Nutt, Surveyor to the Dean and Canons
142(1)
Canon Anson's house: Houses III and IV combined
142(2)
Demolition of House X
144(1)
The houses of the south cloister walk from 1830
145(2)
Further enlargement of the houses
147(1)
Enlargement of House V
148(4)
Enlargement of `No. 6'
152(1)
Realignment of the cloister cross-passage
152(4)
Dean Baillie and the refurbishment of the Deanery
156(1)
Canons' Cloister since the 1940s
156
John Crook FSA is a widely published independent architectural historian, archaeologist and architectural photographer. He has worked on the history of St Georges College for more than two decades and is archaeological consultant to the Dean and Canons.