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Review: Cathedral by Ben Hopkins

Reviewer Alun David is won over by architectural broiges

May 6, 2021 11:07
BEN HOPKINS high quality
2 min read

Cathedral
By Ben Hopkins
Europa Editions, £16.99
Reviewed by Alun David

An American friend of mine has a thing about cathedrals. For six months in 2018, she went on a secular pilgrimage across the length and breadth of England, visiting more than 40 of these magnificent buildings. Ben Hopkins’s hefty historical novel revolves around the construction of a cathedral in Hagenburg, a fictional Alsatian city, during the 13th and 14th centuries CE. And when I picked up the book, I naively expected it to share my friend’s architectural enthusiasms.

In fact, most of the characters show scant regard for the “Cathedral of Our Lady”. To the Canon-Treasurer, it is a financial liability, the Bishop’s vanity project. For the Barons, it means taxation and political wrangling. Incensed at their lack of influence over the project, local merchants build their own church. Hagenburg’s Jews name it “The Abomination” but are coerced into making cash contributions.

A handful of clerics, architects, and craftsmen appreciate the building’s sublimity, though their views sometimes seem touched by heresy. The characters’ negativity partakes of one of the novel’s broader purposes, which is to dispense with romantic cliché and offer a realistic take on medieval society. “No chivalry, but marks, shillings and pence” says one character – to which Hopkins adds stone, glass, cloth, blood, excrement, and other basic materials.

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