
St Ethelburga Bishopsgate, London
'St Ethelburga-the-Virgin within Bishopsgate' is an
Anglican church in the
City of London, located on
Bishopsgate near
Liverpool Street station.
The church is a rare survival of the medieval City churches that were mostly destroyed during the
Great Fire of London in
1666. It is dedicated to
St Ethelburga, a
7th century abbess of
Barking; she was the sister of
Saint Erkenwald, a
Bishop of London. Its foundation date is unknown, but it was first recorded in
1250 as the church of ''St Adelburga-the-Virgin''. The dedication to "-the-Virgin" was dropped in
Puritan times but was later restored.
The church was rebuilt in the
15th century – possibly around
1411 – and a small square bell turret was added in
1775. In order to raise revenue for the church, whose parish covered just three acres (12,000 m²), a wooden porch was built over its exterior in the
16th century to house two shops. It underwent major changes in
1932, when Bishopsgate was controversially widened. The shops were demolished and the porch dismantled, revealing the façade of the church for the first time in centuries.
It suffered modest bomb damage during the
Second World War and was restored in
1953. In
1993, the church was almost completely destroyed when a massive
IRA bomb exploded nearby, devastating Bishopsgate and causing an estimated £1bn worth of damage. The
Church of England proposed to demolish St Ethelburga's in the aftermath but, following a public outcry, it was rebuilt to its original plan, though much changed internally.
It now houses the St Ethelburga's Centre for Reconciliation and Peace, which organises a programme of more than 100 public events a year exploring the relationship between faith and conflict, as well as inter-faith dialogue and training. It is also used for private meetings to reconcile people in conflict.
The church's tiny interior comprises a nave and aisle divided by an arcade. Most of the original fittings were destroyed by the 1993 bombing (although they were, for the most part, not particularly historic as they dated mostly from the
19th and
20th centuries). One of the more notable survivals is the curious
19th century font, which is inscribed with one of the longest known
palindromes, written in
Greek:
NIΨON ANOMHMATA MH MONAN OΨIN, which translates as "Cleanse my transgressions, not only my face".
Famous people associated with the church
★
Henry Hudson, explorer, took communion with his crew before setting out to find the
Northwest Passage,
1607
★
John Medows Rodwell, Rector (1860 - 1900) who made the first reliable rendering of the
Qur'an into English (1861)
See also
★
List of churches and cathedrals of London
External links
★
St Ethelburga's Centre for Reconciliation and Peace