William the Conqueror, following the invasion of…
1080 CE
William the Conqueror, following the invasion of 1066, had given the cathedral of Rochester and its estates to his brother, Odo of Bayeux, who had misappropriated the resources and reduced the cathedral to near-destitution.
The building itself was ancient and decayed.
The diocese is one of the smallest English dioceses and, sandwiched between London and Canterbury, has always been financially challenged.
During the episcopate of Siward, it had been served by four or five canons "living in squalour and poverty".
One of the canons had became priest of Chatham and acquired sufficient money to make a gift to the cathedral for the soul and burial of his wife, Godgifu.
The situation could not last.
Archbishop Lanfranc of Canterbury, among others, had brought Odo to account at the trial of Penenden Heath, and following Odo's final deposition, Gundulf had in 1077 been appointed as the first Norman bishop of Rochester.
The cathedral and its lands had been restored to the bishop.
Gundulf's first undertaking in the construction of the new cathedral seems to have been the construction of the tower which today bears his name.
He begins construction in about 1080 of a new cathedral to replace Justus' church.
He is a talented architect who probably plays a major part in the design or the works he commissions.
The original cathedral had a presbytery of six bays with aisles of the same length.
The four easternmost bays stood over an undercroft which forms part of the present crypt.
To the east is a small projection, probably for the silver shrine of St. Paulinus, which is translated there from the old cathedral.
The transepts are one hundred and twenty feet long, but only fourteen feet wide.
With such narrow transepts, it is thought that the eastern arches of the nave abutted the quire arch.
To the south, another tower (of which nothing visible remains) is built.
There is no crossing tower.
The nave is not completed at first.
Apparently designed to be nine bays long, most of the south side but only five bays to the north will be completed by Gundulf.
The quire is required by the priory, and the south wall forms part of the monastery buildings.
It has been speculated that Gundulf simply left the townsfolk to complete the parochial part of the building.
Gundulf does not stop with the fabric, he also replaces the secular chaplains by Benedictine monks, obtains several royal grants of land and proves a great benefactor to his cathedral city.