Cathedrals · South West England
Wells Cathedral
First all-Gothic English cathedral, with the famous scissor arches and a 1390 clock.

Colin Smith — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence
Plan your visit
- Typical visit
- 1 h–2 h
- Best time of year
- Year-round
About
Wells Cathedral in Somerset, begun in 1175, is the first English cathedral built entirely in the Gothic style. Its scissor arches in the crossing (added 1338 to support the central tower) are an unmistakable engineering signature, the West Front holds 300 medieval statues, and the cathedral clock from 1390 is the second-oldest mechanical clock in Britain still telling time. The cloisters and the swans of the moat at the Bishop's Palace next door are part of the same complex.
Photo gallery
From the Wikipedia article
Wells Cathedral, formally the Cathedral Church of St Andrew, is a Church of England cathedral in Wells, Somerset, England. It is the seat of the bishop of Bath and Wells and the mother church of the diocese of Bath and Wells. There are daily Church of England services in the building, and in 2023 it was reported to receive over 300,000 visitors per year. The cathedral is a Grade I listed building. The cathedral precincts contain the Bishop's Palace and several buildings linked to its medieval chapter of secular canons, including the fifteenth-century Vicars' Close. The earliest record of a church on the present site is a charter of 766. A bishopric was established in 909; however in 1090 the cathedral of the diocese was moved to Bath Abbey and remained there until Wells became co-cathedral in 1218. The remains of the tenth-century cathedral lie to the south of the present building, beneath the cloister. The present cathedral has a cruciform plan with a chapter house attached to the north and a cloister to the south, and is largely the result of two building campaigns which took place between c. 1180 to c. 1260 and c. 1285 to c. 1345. The western half of the cathedral, including the nave and western transepts, belongs primarily to the first building phase and is constructed in the Early English style of Gothic architecture. The east end, including the lady chapel, eastern transepts, chapter house, and central tower, belongs to the second phase and uses the Decorated Gothic style and retains much medieval stained glass. Two towers were added to the west front between 1385 and 1410 in the Perpendicular Gothic style, and the cloisters were remodelled in the same style between 1420 and 1508. The cathedral was restored over the course of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Wells has been called "unquestionably one of the most beautiful" and "most poetic" of English cathedrals. The architectural historian John Harvey sees it as Europe's first truly Gothic…
Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.
- Coordinates
- 51.2104, -2.6433
- Address
- Wells, Somerset
- Official site
- wellscathedral.org.uk
Sources
- manual: wells-cathedral (manual)
- wikipedia: Wells Cathedral (CC BY-SA 4.0)
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Nearby
Historic houses · South West England
Chain Gate, Wells
Chain Gate, Wells — a Grade I-listed historic house in england-south-west, United Kingdom.
Museums · South West England
Wells and Mendip Museum
Wells and Mendip Museum — a museum in england-south-west, United Kingdom.
Historic houses · South West England
Tower House
Tower House — house in Wells, Mendip, England, UK.
Museums · South West England
Wells Museum
Wells Museum — a museum in england-south-west, United Kingdom.
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The Bishop's Palace and Gardens
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Frequently asked questions
- Where is Wells Cathedral?
- Wells Cathedral is in South-West England, United Kingdom.
- When was Wells Cathedral built?
- Dates from the medieval period.
- Is Wells Cathedral a listed building?
- Wells Cathedral is officially recognised as Grade I listed.