Leeds Cross

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The Leeds Cross is a collection of fragments of probably tenth-century stone sculpture that has been reassembled into a cross, now on display in Leeds Minster.

History

The fragments were found in the fabric of Leeds Minster when the tower of the old church was demolished in 1838. The architect,

Beaduhild, the mother of his child, from tenth-century Yorkshire.[2][3][4]

References

  1. ^ a b Linstrum, Derek (1969). Historic Architecture of Leeds. Oriel Press. p. 6.
  2. ^ Entry in the online Corpus of Anglo-Saxon Stone Sculpture.
  3. ^ Robert Halstead, 'The Stone Sculpture of Anglo-Scandinavian Yorkshire in its Landscape Context' (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Leeds, 2016), pp. 203-28.
  4. ^ James T. Lang, ‘Sigurd and Weland in Pre-Conquest Carving from Northern England’, The Yorkshire Archaeological Journal, 48 (1976), 83–94.

External links