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St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate

St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate is a Church of England church in the Bishopsgate Without area of the City of London, and also, by virtue of lying outside the city's (now demolished) eastern walls, part of London's East End.

St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate
Exterior from Bishopsgate
St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate
51°31′0.15″N 0°4′53.96″W / 51.5167083°N 0.0816556°W / 51.5167083; -0.0816556
CountryUnited Kingdom
DenominationChurch of England and Antiochian Orthodox Church
Previous denominationRoman Catholicism
Architecture
Heritage designationGrade II*
Administration
DioceseLondon
Clergy
RectorDavid Armstrong

Adjoining the buildings is a substantial churchyard – running along the back of Wormwood Street, the former course of London Wall – and a former school.[1] The church is linked with the Worshipful Company of Coopers and the Worshipful Company of Bowyers.

Position and dedication edit

The church lies on the west side of the road named Bishopsgate (Roman Ermine Street), near Liverpool Street station. The church and street both take their name from the 'Bishop's Gate' in London's defensive wall which stood approximately 30 metres to the south.

 
View of the church from the southwest

Stow, writing in 1598 describes the church of his time as standing "in a fair churchyard, adjoining to the town ditch, upon the very bank thereof".[2] The City Ditch was a defensive feature, that lay immediately outside the walls and was intended to make attack on the walls by mining or by escalade more difficult.

The church was one of four in medieval London dedicated to Saint Botolph or Botwulf, a 7th-century East Anglian saint, each of which stood by one of the gates to the city. The other three were near neighbour St Botolph's Aldgate, St Botolph's Aldersgate near the Barbican Centre and St Botolph's, Billingsgate by the riverside (this church was destroyed by the Great Fire and not rebuilt).[3]

By the end of the 11th century Botolph was regarded as the patron saint of boundaries, and by extension of trade and travel.[4] The veneration of Botolph was most pronounced before the legend of St Christopher became popular amongst travellers.[5]

It is believed[6] the church just outside Aldgate, 450 metres to the south-east, was the first in London to have been dedicated to Botolph, with the other dedications following soon after.

The Priory just inside Aldgate was founded by clergy from St Botolph's Priory in Colchester, just under fifty miles along the Roman Road from Aldgate. The Priory at Colchester, like the church at Aldgate (though not the Priory at Aldgate), lay just outside the South Gate (also known as St Botolph's Gate) in the Colchester's Wall. The Priors held the land of the Portsoken, outside the wall, and are thought to have built and dedicated the church, St Botolph without Aldgate, that served it.

The church of St Botolph's Church, Cambridge just outside the south gate of that city, may[original research?] in turn, have taken its dedication from St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate to which it was linked by Ermine Street.

History edit

The first known written record of the church is from 1212.[7] However, it is thought that Christian worship on this site may have Roman origins, though this is not fully proven.[8]

The church survived the Great Fire of London in 1666, and was rebuilt in 1724–29.

Middle ages edit

In around 1307, the Knights Templar were examined here by an inquisition on charges of corruption,[7] and in 1413 a female hermit was recorded as living here, supported by a pension of forty shillings a year paid by the Sheriff.[7]

It narrowly escaped the Great Fire of London, the sexton's house having been partly demolished to stop the spread of the flames.[9] Writing in 1708, Hatton described it as "an old church built of brick and stone, and rendered over". By this time the Gothic church had been altered with the addition of Tuscan columns supporting the roof, and Ionic ones the galleries.[2]

Present church edit

 
Interior of the church

In 1710, the parishioners petitioned Parliament for permission to rebuild the church on another site, but nothing was done.[10] In 1723 the church was found to be irreparable[9] and the parishioners petitioned again. Having obtained an act of Parliament, they set up a temporary building in the churchyard, and began to rebuild the church. The first stone was laid in 1725,[11] and the new building was consecrated in 1728, though not completed until the next year. The designer was James Gold[12] or Gould.[13] During construction, the foundations of the original Anglo-Saxon church were discovered.

To provide a striking frontage towards Bishopsgate, the architect placed the tower at the east end, its ground floor, with a pediment on the exterior, forming the chancel. The east end and tower are faced with stone, while the rest of the church is brick, with stone dressings.[12]

The interior is divided into nave and aisles by Composite columns, the nave being barrel vaulted. The church was soon found to be too dark, so a large west window was created, but this was largely obscured by the organ[12] installed in front of it in 1764.[9] In 1820 a lantern was added to the centre of the roof.[12]

The church was designated a Grade II* listed building on 4 January 1950[14] and contains memorials to the war dead of 5th and 8th Battalions London Regiment.

The church suffered minor bomb damage in the Second World War and subsequently in the 1993 Bishopsgate bombing.

Baptisms, marriages and burials edit

 
The font

The infant son of the playwright Ben Jonson is buried in the churchyard, and baptisms in this church include Edward Alleyn in 1566, Emilia Lanier (née Bassano; widely considered to be the first Englishwoman to become a professional poet) on 27 January 1569, and John Keats (in the present font) in 1795.[15] Emilia Lanier married Alfonso Lanier in the church on 18 October 1592.[16] Mary Wollstonecraft, author of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, was baptised there in 1759.[17]

At one point the satirist and essayist Stephen Gosson was rector. The didactic poet Robert Carliell (fl. 1619), who championed the new Church of England, held property in the parish.[18]

Church hall edit

 
The Church Hall

Within the churchyard, the church hall is the Grade II, former livery hall of the Worshipful Company of Fan Makers. It is a single-storied classical red brick and Portland stone building, with niches containing figures of charity children.[19]

The figures which stood in the niches at the front of the building were previously painted every year by schoolchildren, but have since been restored and stripped of paint and, due to theft attempts, moved inside the hall. Modern replicas now stand in the niches on the front of the building.[20]

Surroundings edit

 
The entrance kiosk to the underground Victorian Turkish bath in the churchyard

Also within the area of the church is the entrance kiosk to a former underground Victorian Turkish bath. It was designed by the architect, Harold Elphick, and opened by City of London Alderman Treloar on 5 February 1895 for Henry and James Forder Neville[a] who owned other Turkish baths[21] in Victorian London.

Rectors of St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate edit

  • —— John of Northampton
  • 1323 Henry of Colne
  • 1354 Richard of Pertenhale
  • 1361 Robert Suardiby
  • 1362 John of Bradeley
  • 1363 Adam Keme
  • 1365 Elias Finch
  • 1368 Robert Fox
  • 1370 Thomas de Boghee
  • 1378 Thomas Ridilyngton
  • 1379 John Grafton
  • 1383 John Rydel
  • —— John Bolton
  • 1390 John Porter
  • 1395 John Campeden
  • 1398 John Gray
  • 1399 Roger Mason
  • 1404 John Philipp
  • —— John Saxton
  • 1433 Robert Coventre
  • —— John Wood (as Archdeacon of Middlesex)[22]
  • 1461 Thomas Knight (as Bishop of Down and Connor)
  • 1468 John Prese
  • 1471 Thomas Boteler
  • 1472 Robert Keyvell
  • 1482 John Pykyng
  • 1490 Richard Sturton
  • 1492 Clement Collins
  • 1492 William London[23]
  • 1503 Robert Ayschum
  • —— Brian Darley[24]
  • 1512–1515† Robert Woodward (or Woodruff)[25]
  • 1515–1523† John Redman
  • 1523–1524 Robert Ridley[26]
  • 1524–1525† John Garth
  • 1525–1534 Richard Sparchforth
  • 1534–1541† Simon Matthew[27]
  • 1541–1544† Robert Hygdon (or Higden)[28]
  • 1544–1558† Hugh Weston (as Dean of Westminster 1553, Dean of Windsor 1556)
  • 1558–1569 Edward Turner
  • 1569–1584† Thomas Simpson
  • 1584–1590 William Hutchinson (as Archdeacon of St Albans)
  • 1590–1600 Arthur Bright[29]
  • 1600–1624† Stephen Gosson
  • 1624–1639† Thomas Worrall[30]
  • 1639–1642 Thomas Wykes
  • 1642–1660† Nehemiah Rogers (sequestered c. 1643)[31]
  • 1660–1662 Robert Pory (as Archdeacon of Middlesex)
  • 1663–1670 John Lake
  • 1670–1677 Henry Bagshaw
  • 1677–1678 Robert Clarke
  • 1678–1687† Thomas Pittis[32]
  • 1688–1701 Zacheus Isham
  • 1701–1730† Roger Altham (as Archdeacon of Middlesex 1717)
  • 1730–1743† William Crowe[33]
  • 1743–1752 William Gibson (as Archdeacon of Essex 1747)
  • 1752–1775† Thomas Ashton
  • 1776–1815† William Conybeare
  • 1815–1820 Richard Mant
  • 1820–1828 Charles James Blomfield (as Archd. of Colchester 1822, Bishop of Chester 1824)
  • 1828–1832 Edward Grey (as Dean of Hereford 1830)
  • 1832–1863† John Russell
  • 1863–1896† William Rogers
  • 1896–1900 Alfred Earle (as Bishop of Marlborough)
  • 1900–1911 Frederick Ridgeway (as Bishop of Kensington 1901)
  • 1912–1935 G. W. Hudson Shaw
  • 1935–1942 Bertram Simpson (as Bishop of Kensington)
  • 1942–1950 Michael Gresford Jones (as Bishop of Willesden)
  • 1950–1954 Gerald Ellison (as Bishop of Willesden)
  • 1954–1961 Hubert H. Treacher
  • 1961–1978 Stanley Moore
  • 1978–1997 Alan Tanner
  • 1997–2006 David Paton
  • 2007–2015 Alan McCormack
  • 2018–present David Armstrong

Rector died in post

Notes edit

  1. ^ They dropped the final e of their surname when naming their baths.

References edit

  1. ^ Betjeman, John (1967). The City of London Churches. Andover: Pitkin. ISBN 0-85372-565-9. (rpnt 1992)
  2. ^ a b Pearce, C.W. (1909). Notes on Old City Churches: their organs, organists and musical associations. London: Winthrop Rogers.
  3. ^ Daniell, A.E. (1896). London City Churches. London: Constable. p. 317.
  4. ^ Churches in the Landscape, p217-221, Richard Morris, ISBN 0-460-04509-1
  5. ^ Richardsn, John (2001) The Annals of London: A Year-by-year Record of a Thousand Years of History, W&N, ISBN 978-1841881355 (p. 16)
  6. ^ London 800-126, Brooke and Keir, p146
  7. ^ a b c Hibbert, C; Weinreb, D; Keay, J (1983). The London Encyclopaedia. London: Pan Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-4050-4924-5. (rev 1993, 2008)
  8. ^ "History of the Building". Parish and Ward Church St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  9. ^ a b c Malcolm, James Peller (1803). Londinium Redivivium, or, an Ancient History and Modern Description of London. Vol. 1. London. p. 334.
  10. ^ "The City of London Churches: monuments of another age" Quantrill, E; Quantrill, M p102: London; Quartet; 1975
  11. ^ "The City Churches" Tabor, M. p122:London; The Swarthmore Press Ltd; 1917
  12. ^ a b c d Godwin, George; John Britton (1839). "St Botolph's, Bishopsgate". The Churches of London: A History and Description of the Ecclesiastical Edifices of the Metropolis. London: C. Tilt. Retrieved 19 September 2011.
  13. ^ Bradley, Simon; Pevsner, Nikolaus (1998). London:the City Churches. The Buildings of England. London: Penguin Books. p. 38. ISBN 0-14-071100-7.
  14. ^ Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1064747)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 24 January 2009.
  15. ^ Tucker, T (2006). The Visitors Guide to the City of London Churches. London: Friends of the City Churches. ISBN 0-9553945-0-3.
  16. ^ Page on Emilia Bassano by Peter Bassano, her "first cousin, twelve times removed" Retrieved 7 April 2016.
  17. ^ Gordon, Lyndall (2006). Vindication : a life of Mary Wollstonecraft (1st Harper Perennial ed.). New York: Harper Perennial. p. 7. ISBN 0060957743.
  18. ^ Sidney Lee, "Carleill, Robert (fl. 1619)", rev. Reavley Gair (Oxford, UK: OUP, 2004) Retrieved 27 May 2017. Pay-walled.
  19. ^ Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1359149)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 24 January 2009.
  20. ^ "At St Botolph's Hall". Spitalfields Life. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  21. ^ Turkish baths in Victorian London
  22. ^ "Wood, John (WT459J)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  23. ^ "London, perhaps William (LNDN489-)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  24. ^ "Darley, Brian (DRLY489B)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  25. ^ "Woodruff, Robert (WDRF468R)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  26. ^ "Ridley, Robert (RDLY515R)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  27. ^ "Matthew, Simon (MTW513S)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  28. ^ "Higden, Robert (HGDN514R)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  29. ^ "Bright, Arthur (BRT569A)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  30. ^ "Worrall, Thomas (WRL624T)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  31. ^ Smith, Charlotte Fell (1897). "Rogers, Nehemiah" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 49. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  32. ^ Smith, Charlotte Fell (1896). "Pittis, Thomas" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 45. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  33. ^ Cooper, Thompson (1888). "Crowe, William (d.1743)" . In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 13. London: Smith, Elder & Co.

External links edit

  • Worshipful Company of Coopers
  •   Media related to St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate at Wikimedia Commons

botolph, without, bishopsgate, church, england, church, bishopsgate, without, area, city, london, also, virtue, lying, outside, city, demolished, eastern, walls, part, london, east, exterior, from, bishopsgate51, 5167083, 0816556, 5167083, 0816556countryunited. St Botolph without Bishopsgate is a Church of England church in the Bishopsgate Without area of the City of London and also by virtue of lying outside the city s now demolished eastern walls part of London s East End St Botolph without BishopsgateExterior from BishopsgateSt Botolph without Bishopsgate51 31 0 15 N 0 4 53 96 W 51 5167083 N 0 0816556 W 51 5167083 0 0816556CountryUnited KingdomDenominationChurch of England and Antiochian Orthodox ChurchPrevious denominationRoman CatholicismArchitectureHeritage designationGrade II AdministrationDioceseLondonClergyRectorDavid Armstrong Adjoining the buildings is a substantial churchyard running along the back of Wormwood Street the former course of London Wall and a former school 1 The church is linked with the Worshipful Company of Coopers and the Worshipful Company of Bowyers Contents 1 Position and dedication 2 History 2 1 Middle ages 2 2 Present church 3 Baptisms marriages and burials 4 Church hall 5 Surroundings 6 Rectors of St Botolph without Bishopsgate 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksPosition and dedication editThe church lies on the west side of the road named Bishopsgate Roman Ermine Street near Liverpool Street station The church and street both take their name from the Bishop s Gate in London s defensive wall which stood approximately 30 metres to the south nbsp View of the church from the southwest Stow writing in 1598 describes the church of his time as standing in a fair churchyard adjoining to the town ditch upon the very bank thereof 2 The City Ditch was a defensive feature that lay immediately outside the walls and was intended to make attack on the walls by mining or by escalade more difficult The church was one of four in medieval London dedicated to Saint Botolph or Botwulf a 7th century East Anglian saint each of which stood by one of the gates to the city The other three were near neighbour St Botolph s Aldgate St Botolph s Aldersgate near the Barbican Centre and St Botolph s Billingsgate by the riverside this church was destroyed by the Great Fire and not rebuilt 3 By the end of the 11th century Botolph was regarded as the patron saint of boundaries and by extension of trade and travel 4 The veneration of Botolph was most pronounced before the legend of St Christopher became popular amongst travellers 5 It is believed 6 the church just outside Aldgate 450 metres to the south east was the first in London to have been dedicated to Botolph with the other dedications following soon after The Priory just inside Aldgate was founded by clergy from St Botolph s Priory in Colchester just under fifty miles along the Roman Road from Aldgate The Priory at Colchester like the church at Aldgate though not the Priory at Aldgate lay just outside the South Gate also known as St Botolph s Gate in the Colchester s Wall The Priors held the land of the Portsoken outside the wall and are thought to have built and dedicated the church St Botolph without Aldgate that served it The church of St Botolph s Church Cambridge just outside the south gate of that city may original research in turn have taken its dedication from St Botolph without Bishopsgate to which it was linked by Ermine Street History editThe first known written record of the church is from 1212 7 However it is thought that Christian worship on this site may have Roman origins though this is not fully proven 8 The church survived the Great Fire of London in 1666 and was rebuilt in 1724 29 Middle ages edit In around 1307 the Knights Templar were examined here by an inquisition on charges of corruption 7 and in 1413 a female hermit was recorded as living here supported by a pension of forty shillings a year paid by the Sheriff 7 It narrowly escaped the Great Fire of London the sexton s house having been partly demolished to stop the spread of the flames 9 Writing in 1708 Hatton described it as an old church built of brick and stone and rendered over By this time the Gothic church had been altered with the addition of Tuscan columns supporting the roof and Ionic ones the galleries 2 Present church edit nbsp Interior of the church In 1710 the parishioners petitioned Parliament for permission to rebuild the church on another site but nothing was done 10 In 1723 the church was found to be irreparable 9 and the parishioners petitioned again Having obtained an act of Parliament they set up a temporary building in the churchyard and began to rebuild the church The first stone was laid in 1725 11 and the new building was consecrated in 1728 though not completed until the next year The designer was James Gold 12 or Gould 13 During construction the foundations of the original Anglo Saxon church were discovered To provide a striking frontage towards Bishopsgate the architect placed the tower at the east end its ground floor with a pediment on the exterior forming the chancel The east end and tower are faced with stone while the rest of the church is brick with stone dressings 12 The interior is divided into nave and aisles by Composite columns the nave being barrel vaulted The church was soon found to be too dark so a large west window was created but this was largely obscured by the organ 12 installed in front of it in 1764 9 In 1820 a lantern was added to the centre of the roof 12 The church was designated a Grade II listed building on 4 January 1950 14 and contains memorials to the war dead of 5th and 8th Battalions London Regiment The church suffered minor bomb damage in the Second World War and subsequently in the 1993 Bishopsgate bombing Baptisms marriages and burials edit nbsp The font The infant son of the playwright Ben Jonson is buried in the churchyard and baptisms in this church include Edward Alleyn in 1566 Emilia Lanier nee Bassano widely considered to be the first Englishwoman to become a professional poet on 27 January 1569 and John Keats in the present font in 1795 15 Emilia Lanier married Alfonso Lanier in the church on 18 October 1592 16 Mary Wollstonecraft author of A Vindication of the Rights of Woman was baptised there in 1759 17 At one point the satirist and essayist Stephen Gosson was rector The didactic poet Robert Carliell fl 1619 who championed the new Church of England held property in the parish 18 Church hall edit nbsp The Church HallWithin the churchyard the church hall is the Grade II former livery hall of the Worshipful Company of Fan Makers It is a single storied classical red brick and Portland stone building with niches containing figures of charity children 19 The figures which stood in the niches at the front of the building were previously painted every year by schoolchildren but have since been restored and stripped of paint and due to theft attempts moved inside the hall Modern replicas now stand in the niches on the front of the building 20 Surroundings edit nbsp The entrance kiosk to the underground Victorian Turkish bath in the churchyard Also within the area of the church is the entrance kiosk to a former underground Victorian Turkish bath It was designed by the architect Harold Elphick and opened by City of London Alderman Treloar on 5 February 1895 for Henry and James Forder Neville a who owned other Turkish baths 21 in Victorian London Rectors of St Botolph without Bishopsgate edit John of Northampton 1323 Henry of Colne 1354 Richard of Pertenhale 1361 Robert Suardiby 1362 John of Bradeley 1363 Adam Keme 1365 Elias Finch 1368 Robert Fox 1370 Thomas de Boghee 1378 Thomas Ridilyngton 1379 John Grafton 1383 John Rydel John Bolton 1390 John Porter 1395 John Campeden 1398 John Gray 1399 Roger Mason 1404 John Philipp John Saxton 1433 Robert Coventre John Wood as Archdeacon of Middlesex 22 1461 Thomas Knight as Bishop of Down and Connor 1468 John Prese 1471 Thomas Boteler 1472 Robert Keyvell 1482 John Pykyng 1490 Richard Sturton 1492 Clement Collins 1492 William London 23 1503 Robert Ayschum Brian Darley 24 1512 1515 Robert Woodward or Woodruff 25 1515 1523 John Redman 1523 1524 Robert Ridley 26 1524 1525 John Garth 1525 1534 Richard Sparchforth 1534 1541 Simon Matthew 27 1541 1544 Robert Hygdon or Higden 28 1544 1558 Hugh Weston as Dean of Westminster 1553 Dean of Windsor 1556 1558 1569 Edward Turner 1569 1584 Thomas Simpson 1584 1590 William Hutchinson as Archdeacon of St Albans 1590 1600 Arthur Bright 29 1600 1624 Stephen Gosson 1624 1639 Thomas Worrall 30 1639 1642 Thomas Wykes 1642 1660 Nehemiah Rogers sequestered c 1643 31 1660 1662 Robert Pory as Archdeacon of Middlesex 1663 1670 John Lake 1670 1677 Henry Bagshaw 1677 1678 Robert Clarke 1678 1687 Thomas Pittis 32 1688 1701 Zacheus Isham 1701 1730 Roger Altham as Archdeacon of Middlesex 1717 1730 1743 William Crowe 33 1743 1752 William Gibson as Archdeacon of Essex 1747 1752 1775 Thomas Ashton 1776 1815 William Conybeare 1815 1820 Richard Mant 1820 1828 Charles James Blomfield as Archd of Colchester 1822 Bishop of Chester 1824 1828 1832 Edward Grey as Dean of Hereford 1830 1832 1863 John Russell 1863 1896 William Rogers 1896 1900 Alfred Earle as Bishop of Marlborough 1900 1911 Frederick Ridgeway as Bishop of Kensington 1901 1912 1935 G W Hudson Shaw 1935 1942 Bertram Simpson as Bishop of Kensington 1942 1950 Michael Gresford Jones as Bishop of Willesden 1950 1954 Gerald Ellison as Bishop of Willesden 1954 1961 Hubert H Treacher 1961 1978 Stanley Moore 1978 1997 Alan Tanner 1997 2006 David Paton 2007 2015 Alan McCormack 2018 present David Armstrong Rector died in postNotes edit They dropped the final e of their surname when naming their baths References edit Betjeman John 1967 The City of London Churches Andover Pitkin ISBN 0 85372 565 9 rpnt 1992 a b Pearce C W 1909 Notes on Old City Churches their organs organists and musical associations London Winthrop Rogers Daniell A E 1896 London City Churches London Constable p 317 Churches in the Landscape p217 221 Richard Morris ISBN 0 460 04509 1 Richardsn John 2001 The Annals of London A Year by year Record of a Thousand Years of History W amp N ISBN 978 1841881355 p 16 London 800 126 Brooke and Keir p146 a b c Hibbert C Weinreb D Keay J 1983 The London Encyclopaedia London Pan Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4050 4924 5 rev 1993 2008 History of the Building Parish and Ward Church St Botolph without Bishopsgate Retrieved 4 November 2016 a b c Malcolm James Peller 1803 Londinium Redivivium or an Ancient History and Modern Description of London Vol 1 London p 334 The City of London Churches monuments of another age Quantrill E Quantrill M p102 London Quartet 1975 The City Churches Tabor M p122 London The Swarthmore Press Ltd 1917 a b c d Godwin George John Britton 1839 St Botolph s Bishopsgate The Churches of London A History and Description of the Ecclesiastical Edifices of the Metropolis London C Tilt Retrieved 19 September 2011 Bradley Simon Pevsner Nikolaus 1998 London the City Churches The Buildings of England London Penguin Books p 38 ISBN 0 14 071100 7 Historic England Details from listed building database 1064747 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 24 January 2009 Tucker T 2006 The Visitors Guide to the City of London Churches London Friends of the City Churches ISBN 0 9553945 0 3 Page on Emilia Bassano by Peter Bassano her first cousin twelve times removed Retrieved 7 April 2016 Gordon Lyndall 2006 Vindication a life of Mary Wollstonecraft 1st Harper Perennial ed New York Harper Perennial p 7 ISBN 0060957743 Sidney Lee Carleill Robert fl 1619 rev Reavley Gair Oxford UK OUP 2004 Retrieved 27 May 2017 Pay walled Historic England Details from listed building database 1359149 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 24 January 2009 At St Botolph s Hall Spitalfields Life Retrieved 6 October 2018 Turkish baths in Victorian London Wood John WT459J A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge London perhaps William LNDN489 A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Darley Brian DRLY489B A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Woodruff Robert WDRF468R A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Ridley Robert RDLY515R A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Matthew Simon MTW513S A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Higden Robert HGDN514R A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Bright Arthur BRT569A A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Worrall Thomas WRL624T A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Smith Charlotte Fell 1897 Rogers Nehemiah In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 49 London Smith Elder amp Co Smith Charlotte Fell 1896 Pittis Thomas In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 45 London Smith Elder amp Co Cooper Thompson 1888 Crowe William d 1743 In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 13 London Smith Elder amp Co External links editWorshipful Company of Coopers nbsp Media related to St Botolph without Bishopsgate at Wikimedia Commons Portals nbsp Christianity nbsp London Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Botolph without Bishopsgate amp oldid 1221618117, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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