Chester Cathedral is a Church of England cathedral, mother church for the Diocese of Chester, north-west England. It is built on Anglo-Saxon foundations dating back to 907. From this it was gradually extended and rebuilt three times, the most lasting design from 1250 being what we see today.
For the first 530 years of its existence it was Saint Werburgh's Abbey after the remains of the Saint it housed. The Dissolution of the Monasteries saw it become a cathedral. It was thanks to the admiration of the King Henry VIII that it was left unmolested.
The Cathedral is unusual in having a modern stand-alone bell tower designed by George Pace and built in the Cathedral grounds in 1974 to house its thirteen bells, which had not been rung for many years and had been removed from their original tower to lighten the weight on that structure.
Chester Cathedral is home to two choirs; The Chester Cathedral Choir made up of six professional singers, three choral scholars and separate boys and girls choirs which sing in rotation, and The Nave Choir, the oldest Cathedral voluntary choir in the country.
Church of England
Province of Canterbury: Birmingham | Bristol | Bury St Edmunds | Canterbury | Chelmsford | Chichester | Coventry | Derby | Ely | Exeter | Gloucester | Guildford | Hereford | Leicester | Lichfield | Lincoln | St Paul's | Norwich | Oxford | Peterborough | Portsmouth | Rochester | St Albans | Salisbury | Southwark | Truro | Wells | Winchester | Worcester
Province of York: Blackburn | Bradford | Carlisle | Chester | Durham | Liverpool | Manchester | Newcastle-upon-Tyne | Peel | Ripon | Sheffield | Southwell | Wakefield | York
Church in Wales
Bangor | Brecon | Llandaff | Newport | St Asaph | St David's
Most of Wikipedia's text and many of its images are licensed under the
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License (CC BY-SA)