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England's most visited religious site and a living monument to British History |
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Photo © Wolfiewolf (CC) |
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Western Towers |
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The Nave |
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Coronation Chair |
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Tombs and Memorials |
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Grave of Unknown Warrior |
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Poets Corner |
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Lady Chapel |
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Chapter House |
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The Abbey is open to visitors Monday to Saturday from 10am to 4pm (times may vary). Entry costs £10 for adults, £7 concessions. |
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Westminster Abbey is
England’s most visited religious site, and a living monument to British
history. It has witnessed Coronations and other great ceremonies, and
is the final resting place for many British Monarchs. |
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Westminster Abbey with a procession of Knights of the Bath, by Canaletto, 1749 |
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Source WikiMedia (PD) |
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The land here used to form part of Thorn Island,
a ridge between the River Thames and a tributary called the River
Tyburn. A legend says in AD 616 a shrine was established after a local
fisherman saw a vision of Saint Peter with salmon caught from the
river. Serbert, the first Christian King of the East Saxons, was the
earliest person to build a church here in about AD 785 and a small
community of monks was established on the island. St. Edward the Confessor then built a new church on the site, which was consecrated in 1065. In 1245 Henry III
pulled down the whole of Edward's church except the nave, and replaced
it with the present Abbey in a Gothic style, typical for the period.
Work continued for the next 300 years with various additions, including
the Lady Chapel, added by Henry VII in the early 16th Century and described as the wonder of the entire world. The Western Towers, completed in 1745, were the last addition to the building and built by Nicholas Hawksmoor in a Gothic Revival design. |
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The Western Towers |
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Building Detail |
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Above the North entrance you can see Flying Buttresses, which take the weight of the massive roof |
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The
Abbey has seen the coronation of every English monarch since William
the Conqueror, with the exception of Edward V and Edward VIII, who were
in fact never actually crowned. It continues to play a crucial role in
royal state occasions and was the setting for the coronation of the
present monarch, Queen Elizabeth II, as well as the funerals of the
late Princess of Wales and Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother. |
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Tha magnificent stone vaulted Nave roof |
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Photo © Eleutheromanic (CC) |
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Views inside the Abbey |
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Photos © Wolfiewolf (CC) |
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Many
kings and queens, including James I and Charles II, are buried near the
shrine of Edward the Confessor or in Henry VII's Lady Chapel. The last
sovereign to be buried in the abbey was George II in 1760, and since
then burials have taken place at Windsor. The abbey is also crowded
with the tombs and memorials of famous British subjects, strangely
including the scientist Charles Darwin, famous for his theories of
evolution. |
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Did You Know? |
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Until
the 19th century, Westminster Abbey was the third seat of learning in
England, after Oxford University and Cambridge University. It was here
that the first third of the King James Bible Old Testament and the last
half of the New Testament were translated into English. |
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Highlights of the Abbey include the Chapter House,
an octagonal building, dating from around 1250 and one of the largest
in England. The monks met here every day for prayers and to read a
chapter from the rule of St Benedict. Part of the South Transept is well known as Poets' Corner, where writers, playwrights and poets are buried, the first being Geoffrey Chaucer, author of the Canterbury Tales. The North Transept has many memorials to British statesmen and 3 chapels containing some fascinating monuments. The grave of the Unknown Warrior whose remains were brought from Flanders in 1920, is in the centre of the Nave below the magnificent West Window.
The Unknown Warrior represents all the soldiers who gave their lives in
the First World War, whose bodies could not be identified on the
battlefield. It is the only memorial in the Abbey that visitors cannot
walk over. |
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Poets Corner |
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Photo © Wolfiewolf (CC) |
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Stained glass window in the Chapter House |
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Photos © Wolfiewolf (CC) |
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Did You Know? |
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The
20th November 2007 was the Diamond wedding anniversary for the Queen
and Prince Philip. Their wedding took place in Westminster Abbey in
1947 and the floor of the Abbey was completely covered with fine carpet
for the occasion, with the exception of the grave of the unknown
warrior. The day after the wedding, Princess Elizabeth followed a Royal
tradition started by her mother, of sending her wedding bouquet back to
the Abbey to be laid on this grave. |
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West Cloister |
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Photo © OliverN5 (CC) |
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