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Home » Stained glass » Stained Glass in England » Pre-C19 Stained glass in England

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Gloucester Cathedral - East Window

1350 to 1360

 

 

The east window at Gloucester Cathedral was created as part of the rebuilding of the abbey church of St Peter. Built in the Perpendicular style it was the largest window in Europe. The decorative scheme portrays the Coronation of the Virgin, surrounded by saints and angel. The glass mostly dates from the 1350s.

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‹ Glass panels from Sainte-Chapelle up Great Malvern Priory ›
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  • Stained Glass in England
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    • Pre-C19 Stained glass in England
      • C14 stained glass fragments - Old Arley, Warwickshire
      • C14th English stained glass fragments - Pattishall Northamptonshire
      • Chancel Windows - Tewkesbury Abbey
      • East window Twycross Leicestershire
      • Gloucester Cathedral - East Window
      • Great Malvern Priory
      • Henry Tudor and Elizabeth of York - Stanford on Avon
      • Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon - Coughton, Warwickshire
      • Medieval Stained glass at Stanford on Avon
      • Sibylla - Coughton, Warwickshire
      • St Peter and St Simeon with the Christ Child - Lichfield Cathedral
      • The Fawsley Panels - Northamptonshire
  • Stained Glass in France

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