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Encyclopedia > Chichester Cross
Chichester Cross, in a circa 1831 illustration. The cross stands to this day.

Chichester Cross stands in the centre of the city of Chichester, at the intersection of the four principal streets. According to the inscription upon it, this Cross was built by Edward Story, the bishop of Chichester from 14771503. It was repaired during the reign of Charles II, and at the expense of the Duke of Richmond, in 1746. The cross stands to this day.


The date of the erection of this structure is not mentioned in the inscription; but, from the style and ornaments, it must be referred to the time of Edward IV. The cross' form is octangular, having a strong butment at each angle, surmounted with pinnacles. On each of its faces is an entrance through a pointed arch, ornamented with crockets and a finial. Above this, on four of its sides, is a tablet, to commemorate its reparation in the reign of Charles II. Above each tablet is a dial, exhibiting the hour to each of the three principal streets; the fourth being excluded from this advantage by standing at an angle. In the centre is a large circular column, the basement of which forms a seat: into this column is inserted a number of groinings, which, spreading from the centre, form the roof beautifully moulded. The central column appears to continue through the roof, and is supported without by eight flying buttresses, which rest on the several corners of the building.


Until the start of the nineteenth century the Cross was used as a market-place; but the increased population of the city requiring a more extensive area for that purpose, a large and convenient market-house was, about the year 1807, erected in the North-street; on the completion of which, it was proposed to take down this Cross, then considered as a nuisance. Fortunately, however, the city was exempted from the reproach of such a proceeding by the public spirit of some of the members of the corporation, who purchased several houses on the north side of the Cross, in order to widen that part of the street, by their demolition.


External links

  • Chichester Cross (http://www.gutenberg.net/dirs/1/3/4/9/13495/13495-h/13495-h.htm) in The Mirror of Literature, Amusement and Instruction, Vol. XVII. No. 470. Saturday January 8, 1831, at Project Gutenberg, from which this article is derived.

  Results from FactBites:
 
A Brief History of Chichester (3190 words)
This was a wooden fort on an artificial hill (a motte) surrounded by a ditch and rampart with a wooden palisade (a bailey).
Although Chichester was a small town it grew in size in the 19th century simply because the population of Britain quadrupled.
In 1846 Chichester was connected to Brighton by railway and in 1847 it was connected to Portsmouth.
Chichester - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (841 words)
Chichester home of James Newsam is a small Cathedral city in the south of England, in the county of West Sussex, with a population of about 25,000.
It is the administrative centre of the Chichester district, a largely rural area with a population of over 100,000.
Chichester cathedral is dedicated to the Holy Trinity, and contains a shrine to Saint Richard of Chichester.
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