| Sinner turned cathedral builder is
behind name of street |
|
Act of mercy led to a thriving
area
July
23, 2004
MAGDALEN STREET, ROAD AND CLOSE
WE HAVE the sinner turned cathedral builder to thank
for this name, which in other places is pronounced Maudlin
but in Norwich is Mag-da-len.
 |
| A police officer stands
on duty outside the old Barclays Bank at the junction
of Magdalen Street and Botolph Street in 1959. |
It was the great Norman Bishop of Norwich, Herbert
de Losinga, who founded Norwich Cathedral some
say as a penance. In the first register of the cathedral
it is chronicled that:
Herbert the Bishop, sedulously persisting in deeds
of mercy, found a certain house in honour of St Mary
Magdalen on the land of his church outside the city
of Norwich for the relief of lepers.
This was in the early 12th century and St Mary Magdalen
Hospital was the first of a dozen leper hospitals set
up in England. Lepers were called lazars, after Lazarus,
the man full of sores who lay at the rich mans
gates, and Magdalen Chapel became known as the Lazar
House.
During the Middle Ages the dread and fear of leprosy
was very real and in Norwich this was one of five places
set up outside the city walls to give shelter to lepers.
The roads that sprang up around this historic building
recently at the centre of a storm of protest
when it was closed as a library were named after
this pioneering hospital.
Hundreds of years ago, on All Saints Day, the
mayor, the sheriffs, aldermen and common council, preceded
by the City Watch in their armour, rode along this historic
route. And it was there, by Magdalen Chapel, that huge
crowds turned up for the rough and tumble Rush Fair,
where they bought poultry and rushes from the Broads.
There was bear-baiting, cock-fighting, wrestling and
archery. And if anyone overstepped the mark, they knew
what they could expect a few hundred yards beyond
where Magdalen Road joins Sprowston Road, was Gallows
Hill, or Maudly Gallows.
It was in 1549 that the rag-tag army of Robert Kett
broke into the city via the Magdalen and Pockthorpe
Gates.
Over the centuries more and more people moved into Magdalen
Street and the surrounding area that became a maze of
courts and yards. It was home to thousands of people
who were proud of their roots . . . down Magdalen
Street.
After the Second World War this historical part of Norwich
changed completely. The demolition men moved in as Stump
Cross was destroyed and the flyover and Anglia Square
appeared. It was sliced in half.
Magdalen Street and the whole area is still waiting
to be restored to its former glory. Its been a
long wait, but at last there are signs this is finally
happening.
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