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All the United Kingdom England London St Bride's Church & Charnel House

St Bride's Church & Charnel House

This landmark church concealed a crypt packed with bones that was discovered thanks to the London Blitz.

London, England

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Nic Gusset
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Steel coffin   alleywaykid / Atlas Obscura User
Boxes o’ bones   alleywaykid / Atlas Obscura User
Don’t mix skeletons   alleywaykid / Atlas Obscura User
Charnel house   Jess Pottker
Funerary markers   Matt Brown
St. Bride’s Church famous spire, purportedly the inspiration for tiered wedding cakes   Jim Linwood
  Snowdrop68 / Atlas Obscura User
St. Bride’s main chapel   Pengwn / Atlas Obscura User
St. Bride’s crypt chapel   Pengwn / Atlas Obscura User
Mirrors show the Roman tile beneath the foundations   Pengwn / Atlas Obscura User
  rbenn250 / Atlas Obscura User
  Snowdrop68 / Atlas Obscura User
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About

Designed by Christopher Wren in the late 17th century, St. Bride's Church is a familiar part of the London skyline and has long been known as the "journalists' church," thanks to its location in the traditional hub of the British newspaper industry. One of its most intriguing features, however, had been completely forgotten until the church was gutted by German firebombs in World War II.

The current building is the eighth church to occupy the site on Fleet Street, with the first most likely being built in the 6th century by Irish missionaries. A different incarnation subsequently built on the spot in the Middle Ages was destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666. Wren was commissioned to design a replacement in 1672; the resulting church took seven years to build and ended up being one of the tallest and most expensive churches the architect ever built, second only to St. Paul's Cathedral.

The new church was built atop the remnants of the seven previous churches, including seven different crypts and two medieval charnel houses which Wren organized into one cohesive substructure. The crypts regularly welcomed new inhabitants for almost another two centuries, right up to the 1854 cholera epidemic. Faced with a growing pile of bodies and worried about spreading the disease further, Parliament ordered the closing of all London crypts. The ancient crypt beneath St. Bride's was sealed shut and subsequently forgotten.

In 1940, the Blitz inflicted severe fire damage on St. Bride's Church, leaving little more than a smoldering shell. Once efforts to rebuild Wren's design got underway a decade later, the crowded burial chambers below were unexpectedly rediscovered by preparatory excavations in 1953. The crypts were found to contain the remains of 227 individually identified people interred since the 17th century, as well as an estimated 7000 human remains in the more communal charnel house, where bones removed from the cemetery during the Middle Ages (in order to make room for new burials) were arranged according to type (skulls with skulls, femurs with femurs, etc.) and laid out in a checkerboard pattern to an as-yet unknown depth.

St. Bride's more recent bone cache is concerned one of the best resources for historic forensics in Europe. The crypts are accessible only via guided tour.

Related Tags

Ossuaries Churches Architecture Bones Skeletons Catacombs And Crypts Sacred Spaces

Know Before You Go

The church and crypt are free to explore when the church is open. Tours for groups can be arranged.  Photos are not allowed. Check their website for full details.

Community Contributors

Added By

alleywaykid

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RHyzer, fallofbabylon, nedavis166, Pengwn...

  • RHyzer
  • fallofbabylon
  • nedavis166
  • Pengwn
  • rbenn250
  • Snowdrop68

Published

October 27, 2014

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Sources
  • https://thelondonphile.com/2012/12/05/st-brides-church/
  • http://archive.museumoflondon.org.uk/Centre-for-Human-Bioarchaeology/Database/Post-medieval+cemeteries/stbridesfleetstreet.htm
  • http://www.traveldarkly.com/st-brides-crypt-london/
  • https://londoninsight.wordpress.com/2010/08/31/london-st-brides-church-fleet-street-charnel-house/
  • http://www.itv.com/news/london/2016-02-09/fascinating-history-buried-deep-below-st-brides-church/
  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Bride's_Church
St Bride's Church & Charnel House
Fleet Street
London, England
United Kingdom
51.513722, -0.10582
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