Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The bells of St Bees Priory shown in the "up" position. When being rung they swing through a full circle from mouth upwards round to mouth upwards, and then back again. A mini ring is a portable ring of bells which demonstrates the English full-circle style of ringing. The public can easily see how it works.
The bells of St Bees Priory shown in the "up" position. When being rung they swing through a full circle from mouth upwards round to mouth upwards, and then back again. A mini ring is a portable ring of bells which demonstrates the English full-circle style of ringing. In this portable ring, the public can easily see how it works.
By convention, the weights of the tenor bells are shown in the imperial units: Hundredweights-quarters-pounds. Ringers practising at St James' Church, Sydney The tower of Christ Church St Laurence, "the oldest ringing peal in Australia". [4] The Bell Tower, or "Swan Bells", Perth. The largest set of change ringing bells in Australia.
Heaviest ring of bells hung for full circle ringing in the world not in a Cathedral. [47] St Mary's Church, Southampton: Southampton, Hampshire, UK 10 change ringing bells 1,096 1945 Replaced a peal of ten also cast by Taylor's in 1912, destroyed in Southampton Blitz. First ring of church bells in the UK to be restored post war. [48]
The bells are usually tuned to a diatonic scale without chromatic notes; they are traditionally numbered from the top downwards so that the highest bell (called the treble) is numbered 1 and the lowest bell (the tenor) has the highest number; it is usually the tonic note of the bells' scale. To swing the heavy bells requires a ringer for each bell.
The guide was first published in 1950 by Ronald Hammerton Dove (1 June 1906 – 19 March 2001) under the title A Bellringer's Guide to the Church Bells of Britain and Ringing Peals of the World. Previously the location of rings of bells was a matter only of local knowledge and hearsay.
The majority of bell towers have the ring of bells (or ropes) going clockwise from the treble. For convenience, the bells are referred to by number, with the treble being number 1 and the other bells numbered by their pitch (2, 3, 4, etc.) sequentially down the scale.
Some bells are used as musical instruments, such as carillons, (clock) chimes, agogô, or ensembles of bell-players, called bell choirs, using hand-held bells of varying tones. [c] A "ring of bells" is a set of four to twelve or more bells used in change ringing, a particular method of ringing bells in