A 'Lady chapel' is a
chapel inside a
cathedral or large
church dedicated to the
Blessed Virgin Mary.
Traditionally, a Lady chapel is the largest chapel of a cathedral. Generally the chapel was built eastward of the
high altar and formed a projection from the main building, as in
Winchester,
Salisbury,
Exeter,
Wells,
St Albans,
Chichester,
Peterborough and
Norwich cathedrals, in the two latter cases now destroyed.
The earliest Lady chapel built was that in the
Saxon cathedral of
Canterbury; this was transferred in the rebuilding by
Archbishop Lanfranc to the west end of the
nave, and again shifted in
1450 to the chapel on the east side of the north
transept. The Lady chapel at
Ely Cathedral is a distinct building attached to the north transept; at
Rochester the Lady-chapel is west of the south transept.
Probably the largest Lady-chapel was that built by
Henry III in
1220 at
Westminster Abbey, which was 30 feet wide, much in excess of any foreign example, and extended to the end of the site now occupied by
Henry VII's
chapel.
Among other notable English examples of Lady-chapels are those at Ottery-St-Mary, Thetford, Bury St Edmund's, Wimborne, Christ church, Hampshire; in Compton Church, Surrey, and
Compton Martin, Somersetshire, and Darenth, Kent, it was built over the chancel. At
Croyland Abbey there were two Lady-chapels.
Lady-chapels exist in most of the French cathedrals and churches where they form part of the
chevet; in
Belgium they were not introduced before the
14th century; in some cases they are of the same size as the other chapels of the chevet, but in others probably rebuilt at a later period, they became much more important features, and in
Italy and
Spain during the
Renaissance period constitute some of its best examples.
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