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How They Built Canterbury Cathedral
The first Cathedral was built by St Augustine in around 597. That Cathedral and later Saxon replacements have all been lost to view - their remains are hidden under the present Cathedral. The Cathedral which you see today dates from 1070 at the earliest, just after the Norman Conquest (1066). The most recent part dates from 1500.
The five diagrams below show you:
1. The first phase of Norman construction (Romanesque architecture)
2. The second phase of Norman construction - a considerable part of this survives in the middle section of the Cathedral: it is 900 years old
3. The first use of Gothic styles - in the rebuilding after a fire in 1174 which destroyed the eastern end
4. Rebuilding the western half of the Cathedral (1377 to 1480) - the Perpendicular (late-Gothic) style
5. The youngest part: Bell Harry Tower, 1500 - and an answer to the question "When was the Cathedral built ?"
Take your choice of our other Canterbury pages:
1 - The Norman Cathedral of Archbishop Lanfranc
2 - The Norman Cathedral of Archbishop Anselm
3 - Rebuilding after fire of 1174 destroyed the eastern end
4 - Rebuilding the Nave & main Transepts: 1377 - 1480
5 - 'Bell Harry' Tower - and an answer to the question "When was the Cathedral built?"