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Old Blue Coat School (exterior viewing only)
Old Blue Coat School (exterior viewing only)
0.03 miles away
Free Admission is available
The Priory Visitors Centre
The Priory Visitors Centre
0.03 miles away
Free Admission is available
Priory Gardens
Priory Gardens
0.03 miles away
Free Admission is available
Holy Trinity
Holy Trinity
0.06 miles away
Coventry Public Art
Coventry Public Art
0.09 miles away
Drapers' Hall
Drapers' Hall
0.10 miles away
Free Admission is available
Millennium Place
Millennium Place
0.14 miles away
Free Admission is available
Coventry Transport Museum
Coventry Transport Museum
Visit Britain Visitor Attraction
0.14 miles away
Free Admission is available
The Herbert Art Gallery & Museum
The Herbert Art Gallery & Museum
0.14 miles away
Free Admission is available
St Mary's Guildhall
St Mary's Guildhall
0.14 miles away
Free Admission is available
Cathedral/Minster
1 Hill Top

Coventry, 

West Midlands, 

CV1 5AB,  England  (map)
+44 024 7652 1257,  e-mail website
Coventry Cathedral - St Michael's
Glorious 20th century Cathedral, with stunning 1950's art & architecture, rising above the stark ruins of the medieval Cathedral destroyed by German air raids in 1940. The Visitor Information Centre housed in St Michael's Tower.
Price Details
Adult
Price: £3.00

Coventry has had three Cathedrals in the past 1000 years: the 12th century Priory Church of St Mary, the Medieval Parish Church Cathedral of St Michael and the modern Coventry Cathedral, also named for St Michael. Coventry's fortunes and story are closely associated to the story of its Cathedrals - a story of death and rebirth.
Coventry's earliest cathedral, dedicated to St Mary, was founded as a Benedictine community by Leofric, Earl of Mercia, and his wife Godiva in 1043. Built on the site of a former religious house for nuns, its sheer size is some indication of the wealth which Coventry acquired in the middle ages.
In 1539, with the dissolution of the monasteries, the See of Coventry and Lichfield was transferred to Lichfield and the former cathedral fell into decay. Only in 1918 was the modern diocese of Coventry created in its own right, and the church of St Michael designated as its cathedral.
The majority of the great ruined churches and cathedrals of England are the outcome of the violence of the dissolution in 1539. The ruins of St Michael's are the consequence of violence in our own time. On the night of 14 November 1940, the city of Coventry was devastated by bombs dropped by the Luftwaffe. The Cathedral burned with the city, having been hit by several incendiary devices.
The decision to rebuild the cathedral was taken the morning after its destruction. Rebuilding would not be an act of defiance, but rather a sign of faith, trust and hope for the future of the world. It was the vision of the Provost at the time, Dick Howard, which led the people of Coventry away from feelings of bitterness and hatred. This has led to the cathedral's Ministry of Peace and Reconciliation, which has provided spiritual and practical support, in areas of conflict throughout the world.
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