St Mary's Guildhall Explained

St Mary's Guildhall
Coordinates:52.4077°N -1.5078°W
Location:Coventry, West Midlands
Built:1342
Designation1:Grade I Listed Building
Designation1 Date:5 February 1955
Designation1 Number:1116402

St Mary's Hall is a municipal building in Bayley Lane in Coventry, West Midlands, England. It is a Grade I listed building.

History

The building was built in the medieval style between 1340 and 1342 and much altered and extended in 1460.

The guildhall originally served as the headquarters of the merchant guild of St Mary,[1] and subsequently of the united guilds of the Holy Trinity, St Mary, St John the Baptist and St Katherine,[2] which merged in 1392.[3]

Following the suppression of the chantries and religious guilds under King Edward VI in 1547, for a time it served as the city's armoury and as its treasury (until 1822),[4] as well as the headquarters for administration for the city council (until the Council House opened in 1920).

In November 1569, following the Catholic Rising of the North, Mary, Queen of Scots was rushed south from Tutbury Castle to Coventry.[5] [6] Elizabeth I sent a letter, instructing the people of Coventry to look after Mary.[7] She suggested that Mary be held somewhere secure, such as Coventry Castle. However, by that time the castle was too decayed and Mary was instead first held at the Bull Inn, Smithford Street before being moved to the Mayoress's Parlour in St Mary's Guildhall.[8] Following the defeat of the rebels, Mary was once more sent north to Chatsworth in May 1570.[9]

On 3 April 1604 Princess Elizabeth Stuart and her ladies rode from Coombe Abbey to Coventry. She heard a sermon in St Michael's Church and dined in St Mary's Hall.[10] Prince Henry Stuart rode to Coventry from Leicester on 20 August 1612 and had supper in St Mary's Hall. He stayed at a house in Little Park street.[11] Later in the 1600s, the Guildhall was used as armoury during the English Civil War.

In the 1750s, the medieval flooring was replaced with a sprung wooden floor for dancing.

In January 1847, formerly enslaved person and famous American abolitionist Frederick Douglass gave a lecture at St. Mary's Guildhall during his speaking tour of Great Britain and Ireland.[12] The crowd of a ‘sea of upturned faces' was noted by Douglass, who said that this 'filled him with hope that the day was not far distant when there would be not a slave in all the world’.[13] The Frederick Douglass in Coventry Project was launched in 2020 by staff and students of Coventry University to promote the cities civil rights heritage.[14]

In the 1861 the Guildhall operated as a soup kitchen.[15]

Restoration

George Eld, mayor of Coventry (1834–5) was an antiquarian who encouraged appreciation of Coventry's ancient buildings. He initiated the restoration of the fourteenth-century interior of the Mayoress' parlour.[16]

The stained-glass window in the north of the Great Hall was restored in 1893[17] and a Muniment Room was added in 1894.[18]

Restoration work by the council received the approval of the committee of the Coventry City Guild in 1930. Improvements had included the repair of the door at the north entrance to the crypt and providing glass and grilles in the windows of the fore crypt. Outside the crumbling exterior stonework was stabilized.[19]

Further restoration work began in 2020,[20] with £5.6m from a council Cultural Capital Investment Programme spent on the project.[21] The work was completed in July 2022. It includes a lift to provide wheelchair access to the first floor, 360 degrees panoramic views of all the rooms on digital tour tablets and a medieval kitchen that was revealed to visitors for the first time in over a century.[22]

The building also has a vaulted undercroft[23] which is now used as a tea room called Tales of Tea.[24]

Artworks

The building retains a collection of royal portraits from the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries, arms and armour and fine stained glass. A marble statue of Lady Godiva by William Calder Marshall[25] is housed in an oriel with fragmented stained-glass windows off the Great hall.

Notable paintings include a portrait by John Shackleton of King George I[26] and a portrait by Godfrey Kneller of Queen Caroline of Ansbach.[27] In 1861, the artist David Gee painted The Godiva Procession Leaving St Mary's Hall, which is now on display nearby in the Herbert Art Gallery and Museum, Coventry.[28] The guildhall also houses one of the country's most important and unique medieval tapestries,[29] the Coventry Tapestry, which was created for the Guildhall somewhere between 1505 and 1515.[30] The couple portrayed in the tapestry are thought to be King Henry VI and Queen Margaret of Anjou,[31] alongside other noble figures including Henry Beaufort, Bishop of Winchester, John Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury and Lady Buckingham.[32] The tapestry and the stained glass window above it are considered one of the last shrines to the posthumous cult of Henry VI in England,[33] [34] which rivalled even the cult of the martyr Thomas Becket.[35]

During Coventry's year as European City of Culture in 2019 a conference was held about the legacy and significant of the tapestry. The St Mary’s Hall Coventry Tapestry: Weaving the Threads Together book will be launched in September 2024, featuring proceedings from the conference and new images.[36]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Kemp, David . The Pleasures and Treasures of Britain: A Discerning Traveller's Companion . 1992-01-12 . Dundurn . 978-1-55002-159-2 . 233 . en.
  2. Book: Gloag, John . The Englishman's Chair: Origins, Design, and Social History of Seat Furniture in England . 2022-10-24 . Taylor & Francis . 978-1-000-77605-8 . en.
  3. Web site: Timeline of Coventry Medieval history St Mary's Guildhall . 2024-09-15 . St Marys Guild Hall . en-US.
  4. Fox (1957), pp. 96, 101, 175.
  5. Web site: Marie Stuart Society . Mary, Queen of Scots: England. 15 November 2020.
  6. News: Step inside Coventry's Guildhall. 19 October 2009. BBC Coventry and Warwickshire. BBC. 16 October 2012.
  7. Web site: Mary Queen of Scots. Matt. Pearce. www.stmarysguildhall.co.uk. 27 August 2019.
  8. Leader, John Daniel. (1880) Mary Queen of Scots in Captivity. Sheffield: Leader & Sons. pp. 100–103.
  9. Web site: Shanette . Heather . Mary, Queen of Scots: Residences 1568-1587 . 27 August 2019 . Elizabeth I.
  10. John Nichols, Progresses of James the First, vol. 1 (London, 1828), p. 429.
  11. John Nichols, Progresses of James the First, vol. 2 (London, 1828), p. 459.
  12. Web site: de Souza . Naomi . 2020-11-09 . How Coventry helped buy freedom of runaway slave and civil rights leader . 2024-09-15 . Coventry Live . en.
  13. Web site: Coventry University celebrates city's links with American civil rights hero Frederick Douglass . 2024-09-15 . www.coventry.ac.uk . en-GB.
  14. Web site: Coventry University celebrates city's links with American civil rights hero Frederick Douglass. Coventry University. 16 September 2024.
  15. Web site: St Mary's Guildhall . 2024-09-15 . Coventry City Centre . en-US.
  16. Potier . Joanne . 'Eld, George (1791–1862)' . 23 September 2004 . 10.1093/ref:odnb/8606 .
  17. Web site: Siddles . Rosemary . A Colourful Look into the Past: The Guildhall's Oriel Window . 2024-09-15 . St Marys Guild Hall . en-US.
  18. Web site: Visit the medieval St Marys Guildhall in Coventry . 2024-09-15 . St Marys Guild Hall . en-US.
  19. The Times, News in Brief, 16 April 1930
  20. Web site: St Mary's Guildhall Let's Talk Coventry . 2024-09-15 . letstalk.coventry.gov.uk.
  21. News: 2022-07-22 . Fourteenth Century St Mary's Guildhall in Coventry reopens to public . 2024-09-15 . BBC News . en-GB.
  22. Web site: Brown . Ellie . 2022-07-26 . The ancient Cov building 'like something out of Game of Thrones' . 2024-09-15 . Coventry Live . en.
  23. Book: Monckton, Linda . Coventry: Medieval Art, Architecture and Archaeology in the City and its Vicinity: Volume 33 . 2017-07-05 . Routledge . 978-1-351-57087-9 . en.
  24. Web site: Home. Matt. Pearce. www.stmarysguildhall.co.uk. 27 August 2019.
  25. Web site: Godiva. William Calder. Marshall. Art UK. 24 August 2020.
  26. Web site: George I (1660–1727). John. Shackleton. Art UK. 24 August 2020.
  27. Web site: Queen Caroline of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1683–1737). Godfrey. Kneller. Art UK. 24 August 2020.
  28. Reader offers: Coventry Telegraph 26 November 2001
  29. Book: Sheen, Rosita . Tapestries . 2019-10-31 . Bloomsbury Publishing . 978-1-78442-381-0 . en.
  30. Web site: The Coventry Tapestry. Matt. Pearce. www.stmarysguildhall.co.uk. 27 August 2019.
  31. News: 2022-03-04 . Coventry tapestry: 'Internationally important' work restored . 2024-09-15 . BBC News . en-GB.
  32. Book: McGrory, David . Secret Coventry . 2015-11-15 . Amberley Publishing Limited . 978-1-4456-4710-4 . en.
  33. Book: McGrory, David . A-Z of Coventry: Places-People-History . 2018-04-15 . Amberley Publishing Limited . 978-1-4456-7489-6 . en.
  34. Web site: Keep . Laura . St Mary's Guildhall and Coventry's saintly King Henry VI . 2024-09-15 . St Marys Guild Hall . en-US.
  35. Book: Campbell, Thomas P. . Henry VIII and the Art of Majesty: Tapestries at the Tudor Court . 2007 . Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art . 978-0-300-12234-3 . en.
  36. Web site: The St Mary's Hall Coventry Tapestry: Weaving the Threads Together Book Launch . 2024-09-15 . Visit Coventry . en-GB.