The Chapel Royal

Outstandingly rich, colourful and layered with history, the chapel's vaulted ceiling was installed by Henry VIII in the 1530s and is the grand culmination of Tudor opulence at Hampton Court. Queen Anne refurbished the interior of the chapel in the early 1700s.

About this building

For more information visit on this building visit www.explorechurches.org/church/chapel-royal-richmond

Key Features

  • Architecture
  • Stained glass
  • Interior features
  • Social heritage
  • Links to national heritage
  • Famous people or stories

Visitors information

  • Bus stop within 100m
  • Level access to the main areas
  • Car park at the building
  • Accessible toilets in the building
  • Café in the building

Other nearby buildings

Peter Anthony Gorman/Flickr

St Raphael

This beautiful church was designed by the eminent architect Charles Parker in an Italianate style, with early Christian and Renaissance influences. The cost was met by Alexander Raphael, a Catholic Armenian whose family came from India who became the first Roman Catholic elected Sheriff of London after the Catholic Emancipation Act of 1829.

(c) Steve Guess/Flickr

St Mary the Virgin

The present St Mary's was opened in 1895, but a medieval stone and tile in the porch are clues to the parish's much longer story. Cuddington is believed to mean ‘Cuda's farm'. Cuda was perhaps an Anglo-Saxon who founded a settlement in today's Nonsuch Park. The first church was built of wood, before the Norman Conquest. It was replaced with a stone church around 1100, rebuilt around 1250; this medieval church stood until 1538.

stevekeiretsu/Flickr

St Elizabeth of Portugal

St Elizabeth of Portugal Church is a Grade II listed Roman Catholic parish church in The Vineyard, Richmond in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, south west London. Dedicated to a 14th century queen consort of Portugal, it claims to be oldest standing Catholic Church in the Archdiocese of Southwark.