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St Peter upon Cornhill

St Peter upon Cornhill is an Anglican church on the corner of Cornhill and Gracechurch Street in the City of London of medieval, or possibly Roman origin. It was destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666 and rebuilt to the designs of Sir Christopher Wren. It lies in the ward of Cornhill.

St Peter upon Cornhill
LocationLondon, EC3
CountryEngland
DenominationChurch of England
Previous denominationRoman Catholicism
Architecture
Heritage designationGrade I listed building
Architect(s)Christopher Wren
StyleBaroque
Years built1667
Administration
DioceseLondon
ParishSt Helen's Bishopsgate

It is now a satellite church in the parish of St Helen's Bishopsgate and home of St Helen's 10am congregation, which meets here for regular services on Sunday mornings and for mid-week Bible studies.

Early history edit

Roman location edit

The church stands on the highest point of the City of London, directly above the foundations of the great London Roman basilica (built c. AD 90–120). The east end of the church, and its high altar, are also positioned above the area where some basilicas of the period had a pagan shrine room (also known as an aedes).[1]

 
St Peter upon Cornhill church and location above London Roman Forum

The possible existence of the shrine room is supported by nineteenth-century excavations under Gracechurch Street, immediately adjacent to the church's eastern end. These unearthed an adjoining room covered in yellow panels with a black border, 'with a tessellated floor, suggesting it may have had a higher status than normal, possibly acting as an antechamber for the aedes or shrine-room'.[2] The alignment of the church is close to the lines of the basilica, being off by just two degrees and it is feasible for the understructure to have utilized the dry solid 2nd-century basilica wall fabric for support.[3]

A tradition grew up that the church was founded by Lucius, the first Christian king in Britain sometime after his conversion in AD179. He dedicated it to St Peter the Apostle and the church became the seat of an archbishop until the coming of the Saxons in the 5th century, after which London was abandoned and Canterbury became the seat for the 6th-century Gregorian mission to the Kingdom of Kent.[4] If St Peter's was built in the Roman era, it would make the church possibly contemporaneous to the Romano-British church at Silchester, similarly built adjacent to the Roman Basilica and most likely pre-Constantine in age.[5][6]

The London Roman basilica, with most of the forum to the south, is thought to have been largely demolished around 300 AD,[7] with building material being removed (possibly for other projects) and the land levelled and eventually covered with a thick layer of dark soil. Whether St Peter's was in existence at this point, and continued to serve as a place of worship, or whether the Lucius story is a fable and the first St Peter's was only established many centuries later may only be determined by future archaeological investigation under the present church.

Two other facts however, may give credence to a Roman past. The first is that it is known that London sent a bishop, Restitutus, to the Council of Arles in 314 AD. Restitutus must have had a church base serving a local christian community. The only other suggested alternative to St Peter's is an enormous aisled building excavated in 1993 near Tower Hill. This however dates to 350-400AD, several decades after Bishop Resitutus. The Tower Hill building was big, and similar in size and lay-out to the 4th-century Cathedral of St Tecla in Milan, the largest church in the Roman Empire at the time. Although the identity of this building is still subject to speculation, the evidence seems to favour it being a church.[8] Interestingly it was built a few decades after the great Roman Basilica in London was demolished, and was constructed from re-used material, so the defunct Basilica seems an obvious source.[9]

Secondly, there are two medieval references to the church having Roman roots in the way that the three other medieval churches also sited on the basilica / forum site did not. A long lost book by Jocelyn of Furness (1175–1214), cited by John Stow, and perhaps written just over 150 years after our first known reference to St Peters (1038), states that St Peter's was built by King Lucius.[10] In 1417, the Mayor of London also determined (during a dispute) that St Peter's was the first church founded in London.[11] Given that St Paul's Cathedral was founded in 604, this clearly implies that Londoners in 1417 considered St Peters to have been founded pre-600.[12]

There is, however, some conflicting evidence to the theory that St Peter's was deliberately cited above a pagan shrine room. Current research suggests it very rare for early English Christian churches to be founded in pagan temples,[13] and that when temples were turned into churches, this occurred later, in the late sixth century and onwards.[14] This was also true elsewhere in the Roman Empire; for example in Rome. By this time the former associations of the sites had probably died down.[15]

Nonetheless there is precedent for early Christian churches and cathedrals to be built over roman imperial structures and also on hills and geographic high points. Shortly after the London Basilica was demolished the Emperor Constantine authorised new major church buildings in Rome including St John's Lateran on the Lateran Hill (AD 313) and Saint Peter's on the Vatican Hill (AD 318).

King Lucius plaque edit

The London historian John Stow, writing at the end of the 16th century, reported "there remaineth in this church a table whereon is written, I know not by what authority, but of a late hand, that King Lucius founded the same church to be an archbishop's see metropolitan,[16] and chief church of his kingdom, and that it so endured for four hundred years".[17] The "table" (tablet) seen by Stow was destroyed when the medieval church was burnt in the Great Fire of London,[18] but before this time a number of writers had recorded what it said. The text of the original tablet as printed by John Weever in 1631 began:

Be hit known to al men, that the yeerys of our Lord God an clxxix [AD 179]. Lucius the fyrst christen kyng of this lond, then callyd Brytayne, fowndyd the fyrst chyrch in London, that is to sey, the Chyrch of Sent Peter apon Cornhyl, and he fowndyd ther an Archbishoppys See, and made that Chirch the Metropolitant, and cheef Chirch of this kingdom...[19]

A replacement, in the form of an inscribed brass plate, was set up after the Great Fire[18] and still hangs in the church vestry. The text of the brass plate has been printed several times, for example by George Godwin in 1839,[20] and an engraving of it was included in Robert Wilkinson's Londina Illustrata (1819–25).[21]

Medieval church edit

Regardless of the Lucius connection, St Peter's is clearly one of the earliest churches in London. The date of the medieval church is uncertain but the first definitive reference was around 1038, when Ælfric II, bishop of Elmham, left a messuage (a dwelling with adjacent buildings and land) in his will to "St. Peter binnon Lunden" (St Peter in London).[22] In 1156 it is mentioned in a charter of Henry II.

By 1226 it was of sufficient importance to have three chaplains. They were referred to as co-conspirators in the somewhat gruesome murder of a deacon of St Peter's, Amise, who had been stabbed to death by the vicar of St. Paul's, London.[23] A list of vicars in the church records the first known appointment as one John de Cabanicig in 1263, with the patronage being claimed by Pope Urban IV for 'long voidance'.[24] In 1444 a "horsemill" was given to St Peter's. The bells of St Peter are mentioned in 1552, when a bell foundry in Aldgate was asked to cast a new bell.

Medieval school & scriptorium edit

In addition to its early foundation, St Peter's was clearly an important church in London. In 1447 Parliament under Henry VI ordained that it should host one of the four parochial schools in London; the other schools included the cathedral schools of St Paul's and Westminster.[25]

It also possessed a fine and ancient library and scriptorium, in use up to circa 1548. Sir John Crosby (died 1475) left money for the repairing of the library in his will.[26] It also contained a manuscript copy of the St. Jerome Vulgate that was written there in 1290. However, this adjoining library 'is no longer extant and its exact location is not certain'.[27]

Present building edit

 
From Gracechurch Street, with its imposing stylobate or column base
 
Interior looking east

The medieval church was badly damaged in the Great Fire of London in 1666. The parish tried to patch it up, but between 1677 and 1684 it was rebuilt to a design by Christopher Wren at a cost of £5,647.[citation needed] The new church was 10 feet (3.0 m) shorter than its predecessor, the eastern end of the site having been given up to widen Gracechurch Street.[28]

St Peter's was described by Ian Nairn as having "three personalities inextricably sewn into the City".[29] The eastern frontage to Gracechurch Street is a grand stone-faced composition, with five arched windows between Ionic pilasters above a high stylobate (column base). The pilasters support an entablature; above that is a blank attic storey, then a gable with one arched window flanked by two round ones. The north and south sides are stuccoed and much simpler in style. Unusually, shallow 19th-century shops have survived towards Cornhill, squeezed between the church and the pavement. The tower is of brick, its leaded cupola topped with a small spire, which is in turn surmounted by a weather vane in the shape of St Peter's key.[20][30]

The interior is aisled, with square arcade piers[31] resting on the medieval pier foundations. The nave is barrel vaulted, while the aisles have transverse barrel vaults.[30] Unusually for a Wren church, there is a screen marking the division between nave and chancel. This was installed at the insistence of the rector at the time of rebuilding, William Beveridge.[32]

St Peter's was formerly the regimental church of the Royal Tank Regiment, having been adopted as such in 1954 at the suggestion of the then rector, Douglas Owen, who had served as a Padre with the regiment. Since 2007 the regimental church has been St Mary Aldermary.[33]

The church was designated a Grade I listed building on 4 January 1950.[34] It is now a satellite church in the parish of St Helen's Bishopsgate and is used for staff training, Bible studies and a youth club. The St Helen's church office controls access to St Peter's.[35]

Charles Dickens mentions the churchyard in Our Mutual Friend. A theatre group called The Players of St Peter were formed at the church in 1946 and performed there until 1987.[36] They are now based at St Clement Eastcheap where its members perform medieval mystery plays each November.

Features and points of interest edit

 
Tank Regiment memorial window by Hugh Easton

Music edit

In June 1834 14-year-old Elizabeth Mounsey became the organist of St Peter's. She remained in the position for 48 years, until her resignation in 1882.[37] The organ in the gallery of St Peter's has an autographed souvenir quote from a J.S. Bach passacaglia on display, which Felix Mendelssohn gave to Mounsey on 30 September 1840 after he gave an impromptu performance on the church's organ.[38]

Jowett edit

In the 1830s, the notable missionary William Jowett was a lecturer at the church.[39]

Burials edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ R.E.M. Wheeler, The Topography of Saxon London, p296, Antiquity , Volume 8, Issue 31, September 1934.
  2. ^ A Reassessment of the Second Basilica in London, A. D. 100-400: Excavations at Leadenhall Court, 1984-86, T. Brigham, Britannia, Vol. 21 (1990), p92
  3. ^ King Lucius of Britain, David Knight, 2008 p98.
  4. ^ Thomas Allen, Thomas Wright The History and Antiquities of London, Westminster, Southwark and Parts Adjacent Vol 3,1839, publisher George Virtue,London,pp 447–450
  5. ^ King, Anthony (1983). "The Roman Church at Silchester Reconsidered". Oxford Journal of Archaeology. 2 (2): 225–237. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0092.1983.tb00108.x. ISSN 1468-0092.
  6. ^ Petts, David (5 October 2015). Millett, Martin; Revell, Louise; Moore, Alison (eds.). Christianity in Roman Britain. Vol. 1. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199697731.013.036. ISBN 978-0-19-969773-1.
  7. ^ The King Lucius tabula in St Peter Upon Cornhill church, London, John Clark, revised 1 April 2014, page 14, accessed 17 January 2022
  8. ^ London in the Roman World, Dominic Perring, OUP Oxford (27 Jan. 2022), p373 (Kindle version)
  9. ^ Archaeologists unearth capital's first cathedral, David Kays, The Independent Newspaper, 3 April 1995, accessed 12 June 2022
  10. ^ A Survey of London. Reprinted From the Text of 1603. Originally published by Clarendon, Oxford, 1908,pp125-126, accessed 25 October 2022
  11. ^ The King Lucius Tabula, John Clark (2014), p7, accessed 17 January 2022
  12. ^ David Knight, 2008, p 83
  13. ^ Tyler W Bell, The Religious Reuse of Roman Structures in Anglo-Saxon England, 2001, p105 and p109 - only 2 churches have been found that are sited on a roman temple, just 0.7% of the total, accessed 26 Sep 2022
  14. ^ Tyler W Bell, The Religious Reuse of Roman Structures in Anglo-Saxon England, 2001, p108, accessed 26 Sep 2022
  15. ^ The Conversion of Temples in Rome, Feyo L. Schuddeboom, Journal of Late Antiquity, 22 September 2017, p175
  16. ^ "The City of London Churches: monuments of another age" Quantrill, E; Quantrill, M p88: London; Quartet; 1975
  17. ^ Stow, John (1842). A Survey of London, Written in the Year 1598. London: Whittaker & Co. p. 73.
  18. ^ a b Newcourt, Richard (1708). Repertorium Ecclesiasticum Parochiale Londinense: An Ecclesiastical Parochial History of the Diocese of London. Vol. I. London: C. Bateman. p. 522.
  19. ^ Weever, John (1631). Ancient Funerall Monuments. London. p. 413.
  20. ^ a b Godwin, George; John Britton (1839). The Churches of London: A History and Description of the Ecclesiastical Edifices of the Metropolis. London: C. Tilt.
  21. ^ Wilkinson, Robert (1819–25). Londina Illustrata. London: Robert Wilkinson. An illustration of Wilkinson's engraving is accessible at "Reduced facsimile copy of the brass plate in the Church of St. Peter upon Cornhill". Tufts University. hdl:10427/54651.
  22. ^ See The Electronic Sawyer, Online catalogue of Anglo-Saxon charters, University of Cambridge, S1489, accessed 17 January 2022. See original text and translation on Anglo-Saxons.net, accessed 17 January 2022; and also Henry A Harben, 'Peltry (The) - Peter (St.) de Bradestrate, Broadstreet', in A Dictionary of London (London, 1918),British History Online accessed 16 January 2022.
  23. ^ Transactions of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society, Volume 4, 1875, St Peter's Church, Cornhill, by the Rev. Richard Whittington, M.A. Vicar. p302, accessed 12 June 2022
  24. ^ A Manuscript list of 'Rectors of Saint Peter Upon Cornhill', hanging in the church, viewed 7 February 2022. The authority cited for this entry is 'Royal Letters, Vol IV, p 413.
  25. ^ Transactions of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society, Volume 4, 1875, St Peter's Church, Cornhill, by the Rev. Richard Whittington, M.A. Vicar. p302, accessed 12 June 2022
  26. ^ The Tomb, the Palace and a Touch of Shakespeare: The Memory of Sir John Crosby, Christian Steer, 2006, The Riccardian, p5, accessed 6 February 2022
  27. ^ David Knight, King Lucius, 2008,p 101
  28. ^ Jenkinson, Wilberforce (1917). London Churches Before the Great Fire. London: Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge. pp. 120–3.
  29. ^ Nairn, Ian (1966). Nairn's London. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. p. 27.
  30. ^ a b Bradley, Simon and Pevsner, Nikolaus. London: The City Churches. New Haven, Yale, 1998. ISBN 0-300-09655-0 p.123
  31. ^ Malcolm, James Peller (1807). Londinium Redivivium, or, an Ancient History and Modern Description of London. Vol. 4. London.
  32. ^ Hatts, Leigh. London City Churches, 2003, p.84 ISBN 978-0-9545705-0-7
  33. ^ . Royal Tank Regiment. Archived from the original on 20 July 2017. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
  34. ^ Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1192245)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 23 January 2009.
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 April 2007. Retrieved 28 April 2007.
  36. ^ Players of St Peter cast lists Archived 23 December 2012 at archive.today
  37. ^ The Englishwoman's Review of Social and Industrial Questions: 1882 (Reprint ed.). Routledge. 2016. p. 318. ISBN 978-1-315-40352-6.
  38. ^ Musical Times, 1 November 1905, page 719 - In addition to the Passacaglia, he played Bach's Prelude and Fugue in E minor, and his own Prelude and Fugue in C minor, Op. 37, No. 1 and another fugue in F minor.
  39. ^ Goodwin, G., revised by H. C. G. Matthew, 'Jowett, William (1787–1855), missionary', in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004)

External links edit

  • from Friends of the City Churches
  • Set of 60 photographs of St Peter upon Cornhill Church by Rex Harris
  • 1815 Seat plan of St Peter upon Cornhill Church
  • St Helen's Bishopsgate

51°30′47.7″N 0°5′4.5″W / 51.513250°N 0.084583°W / 51.513250; -0.084583

peter, upon, cornhill, anglican, church, corner, cornhill, gracechurch, street, city, london, medieval, possibly, roman, origin, destroyed, great, fire, london, 1666, rebuilt, designs, christopher, wren, lies, ward, cornhill, locationlondon, ec3countryenglandd. St Peter upon Cornhill is an Anglican church on the corner of Cornhill and Gracechurch Street in the City of London of medieval or possibly Roman origin It was destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666 and rebuilt to the designs of Sir Christopher Wren It lies in the ward of Cornhill St Peter upon CornhillLocationLondon EC3CountryEnglandDenominationChurch of EnglandPrevious denominationRoman CatholicismArchitectureHeritage designationGrade I listed buildingArchitect s Christopher WrenStyleBaroqueYears built1667AdministrationDioceseLondonParishSt Helen s Bishopsgate It is now a satellite church in the parish of St Helen s Bishopsgate and home of St Helen s 10am congregation which meets here for regular services on Sunday mornings and for mid week Bible studies Contents 1 Early history 1 1 Roman location 1 2 King Lucius plaque 1 3 Medieval church 1 4 Medieval school amp scriptorium 2 Present building 3 Features and points of interest 3 1 Music 3 2 Jowett 4 Burials 5 See also 6 Notes 7 External linksEarly history editRoman location edit The church stands on the highest point of the City of London directly above the foundations of the great London Roman basilica built c AD 90 120 The east end of the church and its high altar are also positioned above the area where some basilicas of the period had a pagan shrine room also known as an aedes 1 nbsp St Peter upon Cornhill church and location above London Roman Forum The possible existence of the shrine room is supported by nineteenth century excavations under Gracechurch Street immediately adjacent to the church s eastern end These unearthed an adjoining room covered in yellow panels with a black border with a tessellated floor suggesting it may have had a higher status than normal possibly acting as an antechamber for the aedes or shrine room 2 The alignment of the church is close to the lines of the basilica being off by just two degrees and it is feasible for the understructure to have utilized the dry solid 2nd century basilica wall fabric for support 3 A tradition grew up that the church was founded by Lucius the first Christian king in Britain sometime after his conversion in AD179 He dedicated it to St Peter the Apostle and the church became the seat of an archbishop until the coming of the Saxons in the 5th century after which London was abandoned and Canterbury became the seat for the 6th century Gregorian mission to the Kingdom of Kent 4 If St Peter s was built in the Roman era it would make the church possibly contemporaneous to the Romano British church at Silchester similarly built adjacent to the Roman Basilica and most likely pre Constantine in age 5 6 The London Roman basilica with most of the forum to the south is thought to have been largely demolished around 300 AD 7 with building material being removed possibly for other projects and the land levelled and eventually covered with a thick layer of dark soil Whether St Peter s was in existence at this point and continued to serve as a place of worship or whether the Lucius story is a fable and the first St Peter s was only established many centuries later may only be determined by future archaeological investigation under the present church Two other facts however may give credence to a Roman past The first is that it is known that London sent a bishop Restitutus to the Council of Arles in 314 AD Restitutus must have had a church base serving a local christian community The only other suggested alternative to St Peter s is an enormous aisled building excavated in 1993 near Tower Hill This however dates to 350 400AD several decades after Bishop Resitutus The Tower Hill building was big and similar in size and lay out to the 4th century Cathedral of St Tecla in Milan the largest church in the Roman Empire at the time Although the identity of this building is still subject to speculation the evidence seems to favour it being a church 8 Interestingly it was built a few decades after the great Roman Basilica in London was demolished and was constructed from re used material so the defunct Basilica seems an obvious source 9 Secondly there are two medieval references to the church having Roman roots in the way that the three other medieval churches also sited on the basilica forum site did not A long lost book by Jocelyn of Furness 1175 1214 cited by John Stow and perhaps written just over 150 years after our first known reference to St Peters 1038 states that St Peter s was built by King Lucius 10 In 1417 the Mayor of London also determined during a dispute that St Peter s was the first church founded in London 11 Given that St Paul s Cathedral was founded in 604 this clearly implies that Londoners in 1417 considered St Peters to have been founded pre 600 12 There is however some conflicting evidence to the theory that St Peter s was deliberately cited above a pagan shrine room Current research suggests it very rare for early English Christian churches to be founded in pagan temples 13 and that when temples were turned into churches this occurred later in the late sixth century and onwards 14 This was also true elsewhere in the Roman Empire for example in Rome By this time the former associations of the sites had probably died down 15 Nonetheless there is precedent for early Christian churches and cathedrals to be built over roman imperial structures and also on hills and geographic high points Shortly after the London Basilica was demolished the Emperor Constantine authorised new major church buildings in Rome including St John s Lateran on the Lateran Hill AD 313 and Saint Peter s on the Vatican Hill AD 318 King Lucius plaque edit The London historian John Stow writing at the end of the 16th century reported there remaineth in this church a table whereon is written I know not by what authority but of a late hand that King Lucius founded the same church to be an archbishop s see metropolitan 16 and chief church of his kingdom and that it so endured for four hundred years 17 The table tablet seen by Stow was destroyed when the medieval church was burnt in the Great Fire of London 18 but before this time a number of writers had recorded what it said The text of the original tablet as printed by John Weever in 1631 began Be hit known to al men that the yeerys of our Lord God an clxxix AD 179 Lucius the fyrst christen kyng of this lond then callyd Brytayne fowndyd the fyrst chyrch in London that is to sey the Chyrch of Sent Peter apon Cornhyl and he fowndyd ther an Archbishoppys See and made that Chirch the Metropolitant and cheef Chirch of this kingdom 19 A replacement in the form of an inscribed brass plate was set up after the Great Fire 18 and still hangs in the church vestry The text of the brass plate has been printed several times for example by George Godwin in 1839 20 and an engraving of it was included in Robert Wilkinson s Londina Illustrata 1819 25 21 Medieval church edit Regardless of the Lucius connection St Peter s is clearly one of the earliest churches in London The date of the medieval church is uncertain but the first definitive reference was around 1038 when AElfric II bishop of Elmham left a messuage a dwelling with adjacent buildings and land in his will to St Peter binnon Lunden St Peter in London 22 In 1156 it is mentioned in a charter of Henry II By 1226 it was of sufficient importance to have three chaplains They were referred to as co conspirators in the somewhat gruesome murder of a deacon of St Peter s Amise who had been stabbed to death by the vicar of St Paul s London 23 A list of vicars in the church records the first known appointment as one John de Cabanicig in 1263 with the patronage being claimed by Pope Urban IV for long voidance 24 In 1444 a horsemill was given to St Peter s The bells of St Peter are mentioned in 1552 when a bell foundry in Aldgate was asked to cast a new bell Medieval school amp scriptorium edit In addition to its early foundation St Peter s was clearly an important church in London In 1447 Parliament under Henry VI ordained that it should host one of the four parochial schools in London the other schools included the cathedral schools of St Paul s and Westminster 25 It also possessed a fine and ancient library and scriptorium in use up to circa 1548 Sir John Crosby died 1475 left money for the repairing of the library in his will 26 It also contained a manuscript copy of the St Jerome Vulgate that was written there in 1290 However this adjoining library is no longer extant and its exact location is not certain 27 Present building edit nbsp From Gracechurch Street with its imposing stylobate or column base nbsp Interior looking east The medieval church was badly damaged in the Great Fire of London in 1666 The parish tried to patch it up but between 1677 and 1684 it was rebuilt to a design by Christopher Wren at a cost of 5 647 citation needed The new church was 10 feet 3 0 m shorter than its predecessor the eastern end of the site having been given up to widen Gracechurch Street 28 St Peter s was described by Ian Nairn as having three personalities inextricably sewn into the City 29 The eastern frontage to Gracechurch Street is a grand stone faced composition with five arched windows between Ionic pilasters above a high stylobate column base The pilasters support an entablature above that is a blank attic storey then a gable with one arched window flanked by two round ones The north and south sides are stuccoed and much simpler in style Unusually shallow 19th century shops have survived towards Cornhill squeezed between the church and the pavement The tower is of brick its leaded cupola topped with a small spire which is in turn surmounted by a weather vane in the shape of St Peter s key 20 30 The interior is aisled with square arcade piers 31 resting on the medieval pier foundations The nave is barrel vaulted while the aisles have transverse barrel vaults 30 Unusually for a Wren church there is a screen marking the division between nave and chancel This was installed at the insistence of the rector at the time of rebuilding William Beveridge 32 St Peter s was formerly the regimental church of the Royal Tank Regiment having been adopted as such in 1954 at the suggestion of the then rector Douglas Owen who had served as a Padre with the regiment Since 2007 the regimental church has been St Mary Aldermary 33 The church was designated a Grade I listed building on 4 January 1950 34 It is now a satellite church in the parish of St Helen s Bishopsgate and is used for staff training Bible studies and a youth club The St Helen s church office controls access to St Peter s 35 Charles Dickens mentions the churchyard in Our Mutual Friend A theatre group called The Players of St Peter were formed at the church in 1946 and performed there until 1987 36 They are now based at St Clement Eastcheap where its members perform medieval mystery plays each November Features and points of interest edit nbsp Tank Regiment memorial window by Hugh Easton Music edit In June 1834 14 year old Elizabeth Mounsey became the organist of St Peter s She remained in the position for 48 years until her resignation in 1882 37 The organ in the gallery of St Peter s has an autographed souvenir quote from a J S Bach passacaglia on display which Felix Mendelssohn gave to Mounsey on 30 September 1840 after he gave an impromptu performance on the church s organ 38 Jowett edit In the 1830s the notable missionary William Jowett was a lecturer at the church 39 Burials editJohn Waugh bishop nbsp Churchyard seats nbsp Small garden nbsp From corner of Cornhill and Gracechurch StreetSee also edit nbsp Christianity portal nbsp London portal List of churches and cathedrals of London List of Christopher Wren churches in LondonNotes edit R E M Wheeler The Topography of Saxon London p296 Antiquity Volume 8 Issue 31 September 1934 A Reassessment of the Second Basilica in London A D 100 400 Excavations at Leadenhall Court 1984 86 T Brigham Britannia Vol 21 1990 p92 King Lucius of Britain David Knight 2008 p98 Thomas Allen Thomas Wright The History and Antiquities of London Westminster Southwark and Parts Adjacent Vol 3 1839 publisher George Virtue London pp 447 450 King Anthony 1983 The Roman Church at Silchester Reconsidered Oxford Journal of Archaeology 2 2 225 237 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0092 1983 tb00108 x ISSN 1468 0092 Petts David 5 October 2015 Millett Martin Revell Louise Moore Alison eds Christianity in Roman Britain Vol 1 Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199697731 013 036 ISBN 978 0 19 969773 1 The King Lucius tabula in St Peter Upon Cornhill church London John Clark revised 1 April 2014 page 14 accessed 17 January 2022 London in the Roman World Dominic Perring OUP Oxford 27 Jan 2022 p373 Kindle version Archaeologists unearth capital s first cathedral David Kays The Independent Newspaper 3 April 1995 accessed 12 June 2022 A Survey of London Reprinted From the Text of 1603 Originally published by Clarendon Oxford 1908 pp125 126 accessed 25 October 2022 The King Lucius Tabula John Clark 2014 p7 accessed 17 January 2022 David Knight 2008 p 83 Tyler W Bell The Religious Reuse of Roman Structures in Anglo Saxon England 2001 p105 and p109 only 2 churches have been found that are sited on a roman temple just 0 7 of the total accessed 26 Sep 2022 Tyler W Bell The Religious Reuse of Roman Structures in Anglo Saxon England 2001 p108 accessed 26 Sep 2022 The Conversion of Temples in Rome Feyo L Schuddeboom Journal of Late Antiquity 22 September 2017 p175 The City of London Churches monuments of another age Quantrill E Quantrill M p88 London Quartet 1975 Stow John 1842 A Survey of London Written in the Year 1598 London Whittaker amp Co p 73 a b Newcourt Richard 1708 Repertorium Ecclesiasticum Parochiale Londinense An Ecclesiastical Parochial History of the Diocese of London Vol I London C Bateman p 522 Weever John 1631 Ancient Funerall Monuments London p 413 a b Godwin George John Britton 1839 The Churches of London A History and Description of the Ecclesiastical Edifices of the Metropolis London C Tilt Wilkinson Robert 1819 25 Londina Illustrata London Robert Wilkinson An illustration of Wilkinson s engraving is accessible at Reduced facsimile copy of the brass plate in the Church of St Peter upon Cornhill Tufts University hdl 10427 54651 See The Electronic Sawyer Online catalogue of Anglo Saxon charters University of Cambridge S1489 accessed 17 January 2022 See original text and translation on Anglo Saxons net accessed 17 January 2022 and also Henry A Harben Peltry The Peter St de Bradestrate Broadstreet in A Dictionary of London London 1918 British History Online accessed 16 January 2022 Transactions of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society Volume 4 1875 St Peter s Church Cornhill by the Rev Richard Whittington M A Vicar p302 accessed 12 June 2022 A Manuscript list of Rectors of Saint Peter Upon Cornhill hanging in the church viewed 7 February 2022 The authority cited for this entry is Royal Letters Vol IV p 413 Transactions of the London and Middlesex Archaeological Society Volume 4 1875 St Peter s Church Cornhill by the Rev Richard Whittington M A Vicar p302 accessed 12 June 2022 The Tomb the Palace and a Touch of Shakespeare The Memory of Sir John Crosby Christian Steer 2006 The Riccardian p5 accessed 6 February 2022 David Knight King Lucius 2008 p 101 Jenkinson Wilberforce 1917 London Churches Before the Great Fire London Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge pp 120 3 Nairn Ian 1966 Nairn s London Harmondsworth Penguin Books p 27 a b Bradley Simon and Pevsner Nikolaus London The City Churches New Haven Yale 1998 ISBN 0 300 09655 0 p 123 Malcolm James Peller 1807 Londinium Redivivium or an Ancient History and Modern Description of London Vol 4 London Hatts Leigh London City Churches 2003 p 84 ISBN 978 0 9545705 0 7 Regimental Church amp Collect Royal Tank Regiment Archived from the original on 20 July 2017 Retrieved 16 August 2017 Historic England Details from listed building database 1192245 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 23 January 2009 St Helens Bishopsgate Archived from the original on 27 April 2007 Retrieved 28 April 2007 Players of St Peter cast lists Archived 23 December 2012 at archive today The Englishwoman s Review of Social and Industrial Questions 1882 Reprint ed Routledge 2016 p 318 ISBN 978 1 315 40352 6 Musical Times 1 November 1905 page 719 In addition to the Passacaglia he played Bach s Prelude and Fugue in E minor and his own Prelude and Fugue in C minor Op 37 No 1 and another fugue in F minor Goodwin G revised by H C G Matthew Jowett William 1787 1855 missionary in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to St Peter upon Cornhill St Peter upon Cornhill from Friends of the City Churches Emporis com UK Attraction Set of 60 photographs of St Peter upon Cornhill Church by Rex Harris 1815 Seat plan of St Peter upon Cornhill Church St Helen s Bishopsgate 51 30 47 7 N 0 5 4 5 W 51 513250 N 0 084583 W 51 513250 0 084583 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Peter upon Cornhill amp oldid 1221648868, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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