Leicester Cathedral | |
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Cathedral Church of St Martin | |
Leicester Cathedral exterior
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Coordinates: 52°38′05″N 1°08′14″W / 52.634644°N 1.137086°W | |
Location | Leicester, Leicestershire |
Country | England |
Denomination | Church of England |
Website | leicestercathedral.org |
Architecture | |
Style | Gothic |
Years built | 1086–1867 |
Specifications | |
Number of spires | 1 |
Spire height | 67.1 metres (220 ft) |
Administration | |
Diocese | Leicester (since 1927) |
Province | Canterbury |
Clergy | |
Bishop(s) | Tim Stevens |
Dean | David Monteith |
Subdean | Alison Adams, Acting Dean and Canon Pastor (SSM) |
Precentor | Johannes Arens |
Chancellor | Rosy Fairhurst |
Canon(s) | Karen Rooms, Canon Missioner |
Laity | |
Director of music | Christopher Johns |
Organist(s) | Simon Headley |
The Cathedral Church of St Martin, Leicester, usually known as Leicester Cathedral, is a Church of England cathedral in the English city of Leicester and the seat of the Bishop of Leicester. The church was elevated to a collegiate church in 1922 and made a cathedral in 1927 following the establishment of a new Diocese of Leicester in 1926.
The remains of King Richard III were buried in the cathedral in 2015 after being discovered nearby.
A church dedicated to St Martin has been on the site for about a thousand years, being first recorded in 1086 when the older Saxon church was replaced by a Norman one. The present building dates to about that age, with the addition of a spire and various restorations throughout the years. Most of what can be seen today is a Victorian restoration by architect Raphael Brandon. The cathedral of the former Anglo-Saxon diocese of Leicester was on a different site.
A cenotaph memorial stone to King Richard III of England was until recently located in the chancel; it was replaced by the tomb of the king himself. The monarch, killed in 1485 at the Leicestershire battlefield of Bosworth Field, had been roughly interred in the Greyfriars, Leicester. His remains were exhumed from the Greyfriars site in 2012 and publicly identified in February 2013. Sir Peter Soulsby, Mayor of Leicester, and David Monteith, the cathedral's canon chancellor, announced the king's body would be reinterred in Leicester Cathedral in 2015. This was carried out on 26 March.