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Gentleman's Magazine 1829 part 2 p.503
two others ten each, the fourth eleven, and the fifth
twenty-four. A succeeding Prior in the same century set up a
bell in the clock house, which required thirty-two men to
ring it.
'In the Abbey of St. Edmondsbury,' says John Major, the
Scots historian, 'is reported to be the greatest bell of all
England, though in England is a vast number of bells of the
finest tone.'
'In the priory church of Christ Church, Aldgate, London,'
says Stowe, 'were nine bells well toned.'
The glory of Oxford was the peal of Oseney Abbey, consisting
of five. Their names were Douce, Clement, Hautileve,
Gabriel, and John.
Stowe gives the following account of the celebrated bells of
St. Paul's Cathedral:
'Near unto the schoole in St. Paul's Church yarde belonging
to the Cathedral church was a great and high clochier or
bell house, four square, builded of stone, and in the same a
most stronge frame of timber, with foure bells, the greatest
that I have heard. These bells were called Jesus bells, and
belonged to Jesus Chappel of the Cathedral. The same had a
great spire of timber covered with lead, with the image of
St. Paul at the top, but was pulled down by Sir Miles
Partridge, knight, in the raigne of Kinge Henry VIII. The
common speech then was, that he did set 100l. upon a
cast of dice against it, and so won the said clochier and
bells of the King, and then causing the bells to be broken
as they hunge; the rest was pulled downe.'
Of the great size and weight of conventual bells, we may
form some notion, from the accounts of the Commissioners, at
the Dissolution, of the various sales of bell-metal. In that
of Christ Church Cathedral, Canterbury, in 1540, is the
following memorandum:
'Parcel of five bells late in the great belfraye, containing
24,600 lb.'
The greatest bell of York Minster, before the Reformation,
weighed 6600lbs. The heaviest bells now in England are the
following:
Clock bells not rung in Peal.
Christ Church, Oxford ... 17000lb.
Exeter ... 12500
Lincoln (the best in England) ... 9894
St. Paul's Cathedral ... 8400
Gloucester ... 6500
Canterbury ... 7500
Beverley ...
Of these, four belonged to great conventual Churches, viz.
Christ Church, which came from Oseney Abbey; St. Paul's,
which originally, it is said, belonged to Westminster;
Gloucester, and Canterbury.
There are some other clock bells remaining, but of inferior
weights and size. There is a bell of this sort at Tonge
Church in Shropshire, which was a collegiate church. It
weighs about 4000lbs.
Some of the heaviest bells now rung in Peal.
Exeter Cathedral, in the south tower, a peal of ten; tenor
... 7552lbs.
St. Mary le Bow, London, peal of ten; tenor ... 5300
York Minster, peal of ten; tenor ... 5300
St. Saviour's, Southwark, peal of twelve; tenor ... 5100
St. Mary Radcliff, Bristol, peal of eight; tenor ... 5100
Wells Cathedral, peal of ten; tenor ... 4400
St. Peter's, Mancroft, Norwich, peal of twelve; tenor ...
4100
Christ Church, Spitalfields, London, peal of twelve; tenor
... 4400
Sheffield, peal of ten; tenor ... 4100
St. Michael, Cornhill, London, peal of twelve; tenor ...
4000
St. Martin's, Birmingham, peal of twelve; tenor ... 3600
St. Giles, Cripplegate, London, peal of twelve; tenor ...
3600
Shrewsbury, St. Chad, peal of twelve; tenor ... 3400
St. Martin's in the Fields, London, peal of twelve; tenor
... 3400
St. Michael, Coventry, peal of ten; tenor ... 3100
St. Maragaret, Lynn, peal of 8; tenor ... 3000
St. Leonard, Shoreditch, London, peal of twelve; tenor ...
3000
Cambridge, St. Mary's, peal of twelve; tenor ... 3000
There are in the kingdom some very heavy ancient peals of
six and five bells. Amongst the most remarkable are those of
Sherbourne, Abbey, Dorset, the tenor of which weighs about
3600lbs; Bampton, Oxfordshire, tenor 3000; St. Mary's,
Oxford, &c.
Weights of some foreign Clock Bells.
The famous bell of Moscow ... 43200lbs.
St. Peter's, Rome (recast in 1785) ... 18667
Florence Cathedral ... 17000
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