User:Vexald/Sandbox/Exeter Cathedral: Difference between revisions

Created page with "There has been a church on the site of Exeter Cathedral since the reign of King Athelstan (r. - ). In 1050, at the request of Bishop Leofric, King Edward the Confessor approved the transfer of the seat of Devon's diocese from Crediton to Exeter. Exeter was a more significant town and more defendable (unlike Crediton, it had town walls). The Normans built a new cathedral on the site in ???, but, apart from its two towers which still stand, this was replaced by a new Goth..."
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There has been a church on the site of Exeter Cathedral since the reign of King Athelstan (r. - ). In 1050, at the request of Bishop Leofric, King Edward the Confessor approved the transfer of the seat of Devon's diocese from Crediton to Exeter. Exeter was a more significant town and more defendable (unlike Crediton, it had town walls).
There has been a church on the site of Exeter Cathedral since the reign of King Athelstan (r. - ). In 1050, at the request of Bishop Leofric, King Edward the Confessor approved the transfer of the seat of Devon's diocese from Crediton to Exeter. Exeter was a more significant town and more defendable (unlike Crediton, it had town walls).


The Normans built a new cathedral on the site in ???, but, apart from its two towers which still stand, this was replaced by a new Gothic-style structure in the 13th-14th centuries.
The Normans built a new cathedral on the site in ???, but, apart from its two towers which still stand, this was replaced by a new Gothic-style structure in the 13th-14th centuries. It is this building which still stands today, with some modifications and repairs.
 
The public areas of the cathedral contain over 250 coats of arms, mostly in stained glass windows and tom

Revision as of 15:04, 12 April 2026

There has been a church on the site of Exeter Cathedral since the reign of King Athelstan (r. - ). In 1050, at the request of Bishop Leofric, King Edward the Confessor approved the transfer of the seat of Devon's diocese from Crediton to Exeter. Exeter was a more significant town and more defendable (unlike Crediton, it had town walls).

The Normans built a new cathedral on the site in ???, but, apart from its two towers which still stand, this was replaced by a new Gothic-style structure in the 13th-14th centuries. It is this building which still stands today, with some modifications and repairs.

The public areas of the cathedral contain over 250 coats of arms, mostly in stained glass windows and tom