Chapel of the Charterhouse

The Charterhouse is an almshouse on a secluded 7 acre site in Smithfield, London. The chapel has been, variously, the Chapter House of a Carthusian monastery, a storage place for Henry VIII's hunting equipment, and the private chapel of a Tudor mansion. Since 1613 it has been the place of worship for the beneficiaries (called Brothers) of the charity, Sutton's Hospital, and until 1872, the boys and staff of Charterhouse school.

About this building

For more information visit on this building visit www.explorechurches.org/church/chapel-charterhouse-city-london

Other nearby buildings

MisterPeter!/Flickr

St Bartholomew the Great

There are very few historic places in London where the early medieval period is so beautifully preserved as at St Bartholomew the Great. The interior is astonishingly beautiful, with the view down to the Norman east end offering one of the most attractive historic visions in the city. Entry to the church is through a 13th century arch with a half timbered gatehouse.

(JLB)/Flickr

St Etheldreda

St Etheldreda's is the oldest Catholic church in England and one of only two remaining buildings in London from the reign of Edward I.
The church was built in 1290 by John De Kirkeby, Bishop of Ely. It is here that Shakespeare has John O'Gaunt making one of the finest speeches in the English language; ‘This blessed plot, this Earth, this realm, this England'.

Tom Bastin/Flickr

St Peter's Italian Church

A piece of Italy in London. The church is of a scale and significance belied by its modest contribution to the townscape; hemmed in by other buildings, only the (later) narrow entrance front and loggia are visible. The design was conceived in the early 1850s, soon after the restoration of the Catholic hierarchy, when sensitivities about the ‘papal aggression' were still high. It was modelled on the basilica of San Crisogono in Trastevere. Built in 1862-63, it was still the largest Catholic church hitherto in Great Britain.