- St Magnus-the-Martyr
Infobox church
name = St. Magnus-the-Martyr
fullname =
color =
imagesize =
caption = Exterior photo of St. Magnus-the-Martyr
landscape =
denomination =Anglican , earlierRoman Catholic
diocese =
parish =
division =
subdivision =
founded_date =
founder =
architect =
style =
constructed_date =
dedicated_date =
closed_date =
demolished_date =
bishop =
priest =
archdeacon =
dean =
provost =
rector =
canon =
prebendary =
curate =
chaplain =
vicar =
deacon =
abbot =
minister =
seniorpastor =
pastor =
address =City of London
country =United Kingdom
phone =
website =St Magnus-the-Martyr is an
Anglican church in Bridge ward of theCity of London , located on Lower Thames Street near the modernLondon Bridge . It is a part of theDiocese of London and under the care of theBishop of Fulham .Dedication
The church is dedicated to St Magnus,
Earl of Orkney, who died in 1117. It is mis-named as St Magnus was not martyred for his religious beliefs but was executed after being captured during a power struggle with his cousin, a political rival.Early church
The church of St Magnus is mentioned in the Westminster Charter, dated 1067 [ "London:the City Churches" Pevsner,N/Bradley,S New Haven, Yale, 1998 ISBN 0300096550] . However, this document is now accepted to be a 12th century
forgery . The first church on the site was probably built in the early 12th century. In pictures from the mid-16th century the old church looks very similar to the present-daySt Giles-without-Cripplegate in the Barbican.After theReformation , the church was home to a series of distinguished rectors, includingMyles Coverdale , John Young (Bishop of Rochester ), and Theophilus Aylmer, son of John Aylmer andArchdeacon of London in the early years of the seventeenth century.The Great Fire
St Magnus' was one of the first buildings to be destroyed in the
Great Fire of London , ["Samuel Pepys - The Shorter Pepys", Latham, R. (ed.), p. 484: Harmondsworth, 1985, ISBN 0140094180.] in 1666, as it stood less than 300 yards fromPudding Lane , where the fire started. It was rebuilt by 1676, under the direction of Sir Christopher Wren. [Betjeman describes it as "Wren's welcome to the city for people coming over old London Bridge" "The City of London Churches" Betjeman, J. Andover, Pikin, 1967, ISBN 0853721122.] A steeple, copied from the church of St Charles Borromée, inAntwerp , was added thirty years later ["The Old Churches of London" Cobb,G: London, Batsford, 1942] ..econd fire
Another fire, in 1760, damaged the western end of the church and destroyed several of the buildings on the neighbouring Old London Bridge. Instead of repairing the buildings on the bridge the opportunity was taken to demolish them all to widen the roadway and ease traffic congestion. At the same time a new pedestrian walkway was built along the eastern side of the bridge.
With the other buildings gone St Magnus' blocked the new walkway so the western end of the church was demolished. Rather than demolish the church tower its base was opened out to allow the walkway to pass through it. The open base of the tower now forms the church porch.
The large clock projecting from the tower was a well-known landmark in the City, and would have hung over the roadway of Old London Bridge.
Anglo-Catholic influence
The interior of the church survived
the Blitz ofWorld War II intact and stands in contrast to the interiors of the other London city churches. It was restored by Martin Travers in 1924, in aneo-baroque style, and reflects the Anglo-Catholic character of the congregation ["The Visitors Guide to the City of London Churches" Tucker,T: London, Friends of the City Churches, 2006 ISBN 0955394503] .The high altar is backed by a two-storey high
reredos and flanked by two side-chapels. On the north wall there is aRussia nicon , painted in 1908, and in the north aisle is a shrine containing a fragment of theTrue Cross . In the south aisle stands a statue of St Magnus, holding a model of the church.tained glass
One of the windows in the north wall dates from 1671 and is from the old Plumber's Hall. The windows in the south wall are all modern and represent lost churches associated with the parish: St Magnus and his ruined church of
Egilsay , St Margaret with her lost church in New Fish Street (where the Monument to the Great Fire now stands), St Michael with his lost church of Crooked Lane (demolished to make way for the present King William Street) and St Thomas with his chapel on Old London Bridge.Model of Old London Bridge
In the vestibule of the church stands a fine model of Old London Bridge. One of the tiny figures on the bridge appears out of place in the medieval setting, wearing a policeman's uniform. This is rumoured to be a representation of the model-maker who was formerly in the police service.
Relics of the past
In 1921 two stones from Old London Bridge were discovered across the road from the church. They now stand in the churchyard. In 1931 a piling from a Roman river wall was discovered during the excavation of the foundations of a nearby building. It now stands in the church porch.
Poetic reference
This church is referred to briefly in the poem "
The Waste Land " byT. S. Eliot at line 265.Notes
*
List of churches and cathedrals of London
* [http://www.stmagnusmartyr.org.uk Parish Website.]External links
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.