You thought I had finished the England trip from last September, didn't you! HA!
Well, I did finish the Cornwall part of the trip and the Bristol walk the weekend before, but I still have two big posts from after Cornwall when Lisl and I went off on our own, while Astrid was off with "big brother" Chris.
This is the big post on Wells, so strap on your seat belt and enjoy the ride.
Wells is only 31 km from Bath, where Lisl and Michael live, so Lisl drove us there.
It is said to be England's smallest city.
So how did it end up with such a huge cathedral????
Entrance into the Wells Cathedral, built between 1176-1490, is from the cloisters.
(That alone already made my day!)
And then you enter the nave with the immediate view of the "scissor arches."
They may look modern but they're "a medieval solution (1338-48) to sinking tower foundations."
Can you imagine "working" there!
I don't even know where to begin!
But since we started paying attention to the details right away, let's start with these carvings.
How is it, I wonder, that these carvings ended up in this cathedral!
Surely someone knows (probably even Lisl).
Did you know that the salamander (top-left) represents Eternal Life?
And did you see the guy with the toothache?
And did you see the guy with the toothache?
I suppose you can memorize, after awhile, where everything is situated.
The tombs, especially, and the chantry (top-left).
The stone pulpit is center-left.
I am always drawn to the side chapels off the nave.
But it's the quire that grabs me every time.
Was that because I sang in my church choir growing up and into my married years?
Can you imagine sitting (let alone singing) in such a "choir loft?!"
The embroideries are so delicate no flash photography is allowed.
From the quire you enter the...I'm not sure what? (Lisl...help!)
But it appears to be where the clergy sit?
You know me by now: impressions, impressions, impressions.
And more impressions.
Oh, and don't forget the clock, installed c. 1390.
It's one of the oldest medieval clock faces in the world.
Every quarter hour you can watch jousting knights go round in tournament.
Not in this order but at one point we went to the Chapter House, completed in 1306.
It's where the clergy met to conduct their cathedral business and is still used on formal occasions.
Man alive! What an entrance.
It's an octagonal chamber "full of nothing" but incredible architecture.
♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥
We purchased tickets for the adjacent Bishop's Palace, so off we went to take in the second part of our tour.
It actually has the feel of a castle, if you want to know the truth!
But it's been the home of the Bishops of the Diocese of Bath and Wells for 800 years.
We had walked around the moat earlier in the morning, to get the lay of the land.
You can see how close the cathedral is.
Once you cross the moat and through the gatehouse, you enter the massive lawn in front of the chapel.
The ruined arches of the Great Hall invite you inside.
Everything is manicured to perfection.
And before you get to the boundary wall, the area feels spacious.
The bishop's palace and house inside the walls did feel like a castle to me,
maybe even a monastery...
especially with views of the cathedral in the background.
We went inside, of course...
where I had the feeling of something akin to the cathedral's quire.
Can't you see all the bishops having a chinwag here! (No singing allowed, I'm sure.)
I'm not sure which was the palace and which the house but you get the idea.
Can't forget the green men, of course.
And one of those other important details...
our lunch and tea at two different spots in the day.
How's that for doing it up right...for such an awe-inspiring place on God's earth!