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  2. Chapter house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapter_house

    A chapter house or chapterhouse is a building or room that is part of a cathedral, monastery or collegiate church in which meetings are held. When attached to a cathedral, the cathedral chapter meets there. In monasteries, the whole community often met there daily for readings and to hear the abbot or senior monks talk.

  3. Cathedral chapter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cathedral_chapter

    The chancellor of the cathedral church is charged with the oversight of its schools, ought to read theology lectures and superintend the lections in the choir and correct slovenly readers. Chancellors are often the secretary and librarian of the chapter. In the absence of the dean and precentor the chancellor is president of the chapter.

  4. Chapter (religion) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapter_(religion)

    The chapter house of the Cathedral of Toledo. The chapter room of the Cathedral of Pamplona. Dean William Dimmick and other canons of St Mary's Cathedral in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1960. A chapter (Latin: capitulum [1] or capitellum) [2] is one of several bodies of clergy in Catholic, Old Catholic, Anglican, and Nordic Lutheran churches or their ...

  5. Wells Cathedral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wells_Cathedral

    Wells Cathedral has a square east end to the choir, as is usual, and like several other cathedrals including Salisbury and Lichfield, has a lower Lady Chapel projecting at the eastern end, begun by Thomas Witney in about 1310, possibly before the chapter house was completed.

  6. Chester Cathedral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chester_Cathedral

    The chapter house has grouped windows of simple untraceried form. Alec Clifton-Taylor describes the exterior of this building as a "modest but rather elegant example of composition in lancets" [ 28 ] while Nikolaus Pevsner says of the interior "It is a wonderfully noble room" which is the "aesthetic climax of the cathedral".

  7. Dean and Chapter of St Paul's - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dean_and_Chapter_of_St_Paul's

    Model of the Old St. Paul's Cathedral in the Museum of London showing the chapter house. The Dean and Chapter of St Paul's Cathedral was the titular corporate body of St Paul's Cathedral in London up to the end of the twentieth century. It consisted of the dean and the canons, priests attached to the cathedral who were known as "prebendaries ...

  8. St Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Andrew's_Cathedral,_Sydney

    It is important to note that the cathedral and chapter house hold a collection of furniture, fixtures, artefacts and memorials that reflect the history of the building and the personalities and some items from churches throughout the world. [2] [7] The Reverend Boak Jobbins (1947–2012) played a prominent role in St Andrew's Cathedral ...

  9. Architecture of the medieval cathedrals of England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Architecture_of_the...

    Lincoln Cathedral had a chapter of secular canons, for whom the earliest polygonal chapter house was built.. The 26 cathedrals described in this article are those of Bristol, Canterbury, Carlisle, Chester, Chichester, Durham, Ely, Exeter, Gloucester, Hereford, Lichfield, Lincoln, Manchester, Norwich, Oxford, Peterborough, Ripon, Rochester, St. Alban's, Salisbury, Southwark, Southwell, Wells ...