Next tours: Tue 10 Apr (10.30am) - with the Royal Exchange; Wed 9 May (10.30am) – with St Ann’s Church; Mon 2 July (11am) - with the Royal Exchange; Thu 9 Aug (11am) – with St Ann’s Church; Tue 18 Sep (11am) - with the Royal Exchange.
Guide: Ed Glinert, author of The Manchester Compendium and Martyrs & Mystics.
The John Rylands Library is often described as “the Taj Mahal of the North-West”, for it is a palace built out of love; a widow’s love for her late husband, a family’s love of religious literature; a city’s love of Gothic architecture.
The building looks like a mini-cathedral, a religious icon, a divine presence on Deansgate, and it is one of the world’s greatest libraries, for out of the bequest of John Rylands, Manchester’s richest 19th century cotton magnate, his widow Enriqueta created an unrivalled collection: Dickens’s novels in their original wrappers; a first edition of Shakespeare’s Sonnets; the second largest collection of works by the pioneering printer William Caxton; the personal papers of John Wesley, John Dalton and Elizabeth Gaskell; later complemented, most remarkably of all, by the 2nd Century St John Fragment – the oldest existing remnant of the New Testament.
The library was built throughout the 1890s and deliberately placed on Deansgate next to what was then a violent slum (but is now entirely commercialised) to show Manchester’s underclass that there was an alternative. For them and for all users it was and remains free, a haven of man’s pursuit of intellectual brilliance in a harsh industrial climate.
The architect was Basil Champneys whose ecclesiastical touches were toned down by Enriqueta Rylands, a non-conformist. Nevertheless it remains powerfully Gothic – the last Gothic revival building erected in Manchester, which opened on 1 Jan 1900 and was the first Manchester building to be lit by electricity. It was recently restored at great cost with a new grand entrance constructed on the south side.
Highlights of the tour include the St John Fragment and the reading room, a grand galleried Gothic extravaganza filled with stained glass and statuary. The St John Fragment is just that – a fragment – found in Egypt at Oxyrhynchus (Behnesa), the ruined city where some of the most startling and successful excavations in the history of archaeology were carried out. It was donated to the library in 1920 but not identified until 1935 when the papyrus collections were catalogued.
The Reading Room is awesome and overpowering, but the statues come alive when their significance is explained, for here are representations of some of the most formidable figures in British history – Newton, Dalton, Bacon – the links between religion and science, unfashionable at the moment, crucial to the development of civilisation. But this is primarily a religious building, a building devoted to religion rather than for worshipping God, and pride of place goes to those figures found here who have made Britain the centre of Christian tolerance: John Wycliffe, William Tyndale, Miles Coverdale and John Rainolds, the latter particularly apt in 2011 which marks the 400th anniversary of the publication of the greatest of all English bibles – The King James’s, which Rainolds edited – as guide Ed Glinert, author of The Manchester Compendium and Martyrs & Mystics, will explain.
* We start the tour outside St Ann’s Church and explore either that building or the Royal Exchange before heading off to the library. For more information on St Ann’s or the Royal Exchange, see elsewhere in this site.
