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What is usually called "St Albans Cathedral" is actually The Cathedral and Abbey Church of St. Alban. It has the longest nave of any cathedral in England.
The date of Alban's execution is a matter of some controversy, and is generally given as "circa 250" - scholars generally suggest dates of 209, 254Events Pope Stephen I succeeds Pope Lucius I Wei Gao Gui Xiang Gong succeeds Cao Fang as king of the Chinese Kingdom of Wei Births Deaths Cao Fang, Chinese king of Wei, assassinated 254. or 304Events Major Wu Hu (barbarian) uprising in China; the Hun Liu Yuan establish the Han kingdom, beginning the Sixteen Kingdoms era in China. Fincormachus becomes king of Scotland. Diocletian contracts a fatal illness. Births Deaths Saint Agnes, Christian sa.
The Wallingford Screen - a Victorian reconstruction of the original, destroyed in the Dissolution of the Monasteries. Statues of Saint Alban and Saint Amphibalus stand on either side of the altar.
Matthew Paris, a monk at St Albans from 1217, kept its chronicles; he died in about 1259. Eighteen of his manuscripts survive and are a rich source of contemporary information for historians. Nicholas Breakspeare was born in St Albans and applied to be admitted to the abbey as a novice, but he was turned down. He eventually managed to get accepted into an abbey in France. In 1154 he was elected Pope Adrian IV, the only English pope there has ever been. The head of the abbey was confirmed as the premier abbot in England also in 1154.The Abbey Church was sold to the town of St Albans for £400 in 1553 by King Edward VI.
In 1877 the abbey church was made the cathedral for the diocese of St Albans, which comprises about 300 churches in the counties of Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire. The building was however rather delapidated, and in the 1880s Lord Grimthorpe financed a £130,000 renovation and rebuilding program. This is most apparent in the Victorian rebuild of the west front.
In 1982, the building of the 'Chapter House', an extension to the south side of the cathedral close to the site of the original chapter house of the abbey, was completed.
The current Bishop of St Albans is the Right Reverend Christopher Herbert (since 1995), and the current Archdeacon of St Albans is the Venerable Helen Cunliffe. On July 2, 2004, Canon Jeffrey John became the ninth Dean of the Cathedral .
Among the persons buried at St Albans are Thomas de la Mare , who died at the age of 87 in 1396, having been abbot for 47 years, and Sir Anthony (or Antony) Grey, who died in 1480 and was the brother-in-law of Elizabeth Woodville, the queen consort of Edward IV of England. The brasses are still on their tombs, all the others in the church having been destroyed at the time of the Dissolution of the Monasteries.
The University of Hertfordshire holds graduation ceremonies in the cathedral.
See also: History of St Albans