St Catherine’s Chapel Garden is available for
receptions between 12 noon and 2.00pm, and 6.00pm to
9.15pm on Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and
Thursdays in the summer months of June, July and
August for up to 100 people.
From the Dark Cloister visitors reach Little Cloister
and in its east walk there remains the fine
fourteenth-century doorway, which led into the
ancient Chapel of Saint Catherine. The original chapel
was built in the twelfth century and consisted of a nave
and two aisles.
The north arcade partly survives
in the form of the lower parts of
the columns alternately round and
octagonal. On the south side all the
columns stand to the height of the
capitals; the three eastern arches
have been filled in, but each round arch still contains
some of its original twelfth-century voussoirs. To the
south of this blocked arcade the outer wall of the aisles
has been demolished and the ground is taken up by the
courtyard of numbers 4 and 5 Little Cloister. At the west
end, however, the outer wall of the south aisle stands an
original twelfth-century window opening. The roof of the
chapel was removed in 1578 and a house built over part
of it. Bombs destroyed the successor to this house in
1941, and in subsequent rebuilding much of the original
chapel was left exposed.
The chapel was used for many important assemblies,
both secular and clerical, including the consecration of
various prelates. It was here that in 1176 the precedence
between the Archbishops of Canterbury and York was
decided in Canterbury’s favour. It is also where Henry III
solemnly swore on the Holy Gospels to maintain the
Magna Carta.
Receptions: up to 100 people
Summer months only