Murder in the cathedral is a two part series consisting of dramatic works written by Thomas Stearns Eliot in 1935, whose pen name is TS Eliot. . It joined many similar works in 1170, and Archbishop Thomas Beckett was appointed by King Henry II in the rejection of the four Knights of the King's New Marriage (Trudo 2) in Canterbury Cathedral I was ordered. Elliot's most famous work is a waste land (1922) and Plum Rock's Alf Love Song (1915), old Elliott pondered over the past will write a new style. .
On Tuesday, 29th December 1170, the important moment in the history of the cathedral was the murder of Archbishop Thomas Beckett in the section of the northwestern part of the Order of Henry II. "Is it impossible to drive out the shivering priests?" The four knights were literally understood and killed in their cathedral. Beket Anglo Saxon behind, Beckett was the second murdered archbishop of Canterbury
An important event in the history of the Canterbury cathedral occurred on December 29, 1170, when King Henry II ordered the murder of Archbishop Thomas Beckett in the church. They competed for the rights and privileges of the church. While Pope Alexandre banned the murdered priest and declared him a saint, the king confessed later in the cathedral. Another fire in 1174 destroyed the cathedral 's great Romanesque style choir. However, the pilgrims began to visit the temple of St. Thomas. And it is said that it is built behind the high altar of the cathedral and is a healing place. Their donation was also used to rebuild the cathedral. The famous stained glass window of the cathedral was built from the late 11th century to the beginning of the 12th century.