Home / Back to: Places to Visit
St Andrews Plain, Norwich NR3 1AU
Tel: 01603 628477 /
Fax: 01603 762182
email: thehalls@norwich.gov.uk
Welcome to the Civic
Halls of Norwich, originally the Friary Church of the Blackfriars of St Dominic.
These civic buildings
are the most complete pre-Reformation Friary complex in
Britain
Forward to: The Halls / A Short History
The Halls are a magnificent and unique conferencing, banqueting, concert and exhibition venue with over 10,000 sq feet of space, right in the heart of Norwich. The two main halls are also licensed for civil weddings.
For organisers seeking a venue with a quiet and peaceful setting, there can be few more unusual and fascinating places to stage virtually any type of activity. This historic complex has the flexibility of four unique areas. They can be used separately or in combinations to meet the most exacting demands
Excellent car parking and hotel accommodation and all the facilities of the City centre are close at hand, making it a wonderful base for both business and pleasure usage.
If you are interested in hiring any part of our Halls please speak to a Hall Keeper or the office staff during your visit. Alternatively you can call The Halls Team on 01603 628477 or email us via the Halls Manager at thehalls@norwich.gov.uk
Please note:
Though every care is taken in compiling this list, changes
can occur and as a result all these events are subject to change. Please
check with us before travelling to confirm the event is still taking place.
Nearer the date of the event, details of performers, ticket prices and where
you can purchase them
will be published in The Halls.
Tickets for concerts are not sold by The Halls, but available locally - usually from The Theatre Royal or Prelude Records.
The Dominican Blackfriars came to Norwich in 1226 and settled
north of this site in the parish of Colgate. They moved here in 1307 taking over the buildings of a minor order of Friars, from Marseilles, called the
Sack Friars.
These early buildings, built of brick and dating from 1270 to
1307 mostly still survive and are now the Crypt Coffee Bar and the covered
remains of the Thomas A' Becket Chapel 'wilfully destroyed' in 1876.
The Friary church, dedicated to St. John the Baptist and the
largest of the four city friaries, was begun in 1326 but not finished until 1470
due to a fire destroying the majority of the building in 1413. Five original
windows in St. Andrews Hall and the great east window in Blackfriars were
incorporated into the new building. The roof-beams for Blackfriars and the
hammer-beams in St. Andrews roof were the gift of the Paston family together
with the superb fifteenth century doors, bearing the Arms of Paston and Mautby,
in the South Porch.
The family of Sir Thomas Erpingham, hero of Agincourt,
donated large sums of money for the re-building of the church; Erpingham's son,
Robert, was a Friar in this church. The Arms of the Erpinghams can be seen
between each of the clerestory windows, viewed from the Preaching Yard at the
front of the building, in the glass of the West window and also the Victorian
doors to Blackfriars Hall.
The great preaching Nave is separated from the Friars'
private Choir by a Walkway that led directly to the Cloisters. The Walkway was
originally surmounted by a tower built in 1462 by Sir Simon de Felbrigge who is
buried in Blackfriars Hall. The tower was destroyed in a gale in 1712.
Outside the North door of Blackfriars Hall are remains
of an Anchorage or cell, where a female was walled up at her own request
to devote her life to God and to give spiritual counselling. The names of two
anchorites have come down to us, Katherine Foster and Katherine Mann.
At the Reformation, the City petitioned King Henry VIII in 1538 to purchase the
friary and to 'make the churche a fayer and large halle, well pathed, for the
mayor and his bretheren... for their common assemblyes...'. The city
Chamberlains paid £81 in June 1540, but they then had to pay a further £152
for the roof lead they had already bought.
The Nave of St. Andrews Hall was repaved and named The New
Hall, and has been used for civic occasions ever since. The first recorded
event was the Mayor's feast for Henry Fuller in 1544. As well as being used for
Guild meetings, as an assize court, corn exchange and corn hall, the Hall has
shared in every aspect of the City's history. The Earl of Warwick stabled his
horses here when he came to crush Kett's rebellion in 1594, Sir Thomas Browne
was knighted here by Charles II in 1671 and The Norfolk and Norwich Festival
started in these halls in 1824 and continues to the present day. More modern
traditions include the largest regional Beer Festival in Great Britain, which started
in 1978.
At the east end is the fine concert Organ situated in the
archway constructed for its predecessor in 1863. The present organ was built and
installed by Bryceson Brothers and Ellis in 1880, and then rebuilt by William
Hill and Norman Beard in 1927. Following the installation of the central heating
in the early 70's the organ timbers dried out completely and necessitated
a complete rebuild which was finished in 1984 by Hill, Norman and Beard. The organ
contains 2,976 pipes has three manuals and a Christie Transmission recording and
playback facility.
The Choir, now Blackfriar's Hall, became the chapel of the
City Council and the Guilds with its own Chaplain. It was also used as a free
school which is now the King Edward VI's Grammar School in the Cathedral Close.
After 1565 it was used by Flemish religious refugees invited to Norwich to
revitalise the ailing cloth trade. By 1579 there were 6000 'Dutch' in a
population of 16,000 and the Choir became known as the Dutch church. They held
their last service here in 1929. Memorials to their pastors John Elison
(1581 - 1639) and his son Theophilus (1609 - 1676) can be seen on the north
wall.
At the Reformation the East and West ranges of the Cloisters
were used as granaries to store corn for poor relief. Later the East Granary
became the first place of worship for the non-conformists in Norwich; the
Presbyterians in 1672 and the Baptists in 1689.
In the great re-coinage of 1695, £259,000 in half-crowns,
shillings and sixpences were minted in a corner of the Cloisters and these bear
the letter N under the bust of William II.
In 1712 the buildings became the City Workhouse until 1859,
when a Commercial School was established here which became the City of Norwich
School. Later the Technical Institute was built next door and this in turn
became Norwich City College. The West range was used by the Norwich Middle Class
School, (part of Edward VI's Grammar), with nine masters and 260 boys, forty
being boarders in the School House at the turn of the twentieth century. The East and West ranges are now part of the Norfolk Institute of Art and
Design.
These Halls are home to part of the biggest collection of
Civic Portraits in the country, 127 in total, with eleven in St. Andrews Hall
and thirty one in Blackfriars Hall. The paintings here range from the late
sixteenth century through to the early nineteenth century.
The South Porch is a Victorian replacement of an earlier one
that stood one bay to the west. This earlier one was built in 1774 and housed on
the first floor of the first public lending library in the country, (founded in
1716). The room beneath the library was used for the Court of Conscience, a
court for the recovery of debts less than 40 shillings and also the Court of
Request, a court for giving relief to the needy.