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Templar

Compliment Templar (06-05-2008) 5

Built 1185. It is round as Templar churches were.
The tombs in Temple Church were quite badly damaged in the Blitz. One of them is William Le Marshall who was an honoury Templar and I believe two of his sons.
For an idea of William see the novel “The Greatest Knight” but he was Regent for a while. I believe he earned his spurs jousting.
One of the vergers told me the crypt is bricked up and inaccesible and has been for a long time.
The other fascinating things to see are the grotesque heads all around the church. They include a nose picker.
I studied The Knights Templar for my degree hence my nickname and a weird thing happened to me here..a friend took a photo of me there and next to my head, surrounded by mist, is a bearded head.

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User photo: dmj1962

dmj1962

Compliment dmj1962 (24-04-2007) 4

This church has had a tumultuous history. Built as the London headquarters of the Templars, an order of soldier-monks established to protect pilgrims travelling to the Holy Land, its fortunes waxed and waned with theirs. After their demise in 1340, it was given by Edward II to the Order of St John (the ‘Knights Hospitallers’), who leased it to the lawyers of the colleges of the Inner and Middle Temples.

The Crown acquired it after the dissolution in 1540, and established it permanently as the church for the Inner and Middle Temples, who still run it to-day. Its most famous incumbent, Richard Hooker (1554-1600), is regarded as a founding theologian of the Anglican communion, and the church witnessed fierce debates on theology in his time.

The location is fascinating: getting to the church through the collegiate architecture of the Inner and Middle Temples is to walk back through an earlier time. The oldest part of the present building, the nave, was consecrated in 1185, its circular design reflecting that of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem.

From the outside, the West Door is pure Norman romanesque, but the windows and interior are an uncluttered early gothic, with arches resting on slender pillars of Purbeck marble. The spacious chancel is a delicate and pure Early English gothic, built in 1240 by Henry III, who had originally intended to be buried here. (Although he ended up in Westminster Abbey instead.)

Badly burned in 1941, it has been lovingly restored. The only interior details to survive were the tombs, located in the nave, but for many these are the main draw: fascinating life-sized effigies of 13th century knights.

To-day, it is best known for featuring in the Da Vinci code, which has ensured great crowds of pilgrims on a different quest: arrive half an hour after opening time if you want to see the church at its best. Better still, attend a choral service or concert: the choir is superb.

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