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Building    From 1371  To 1538

London Charterhouse

Categories: Religion

London Charterhouse

Carthusian priory, founded by Sir Walter Manny and Bishop Michael Northburg of London. Inhabited by 25 monks. The priory was suppressed in 1538 (re: Dissolution of the Monesteries) and the land passed to the crown. It passed through a few hands until it was sold to Thomas Sutton who endowed Sutton's Hospital in Charterhouse to educate boys (otherwise known as Charterhouse School) and to care for elderly gentlemen. This later objective was met by the almshouse, now known as Sutton's Hospital in Charterhouse, which continues to occupy the land to the west. It was badly damaged in WW2 but restored and reopened in 1951.
2013:  and both visited and took photos.

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This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
London Charterhouse

Commemorated ati

Carthusian martyrs

The verse comes from "The Apocrypha: Prayer of Azariah, Chapter 1". We don't...

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Charterhouse

The Great Cloister of The London Charterhouse, 1371 - 1538, once occupied thi...

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Other Subjects

Revd. Thomas Rose

Revd. Thomas Rose

Tortured and exiled for his Protestant beliefs. Chaplain to the Earl of Essex and vicar of West Ham, 1551 - 1563. Although not a martyr he was tortured & exiled for preaching against auricular ...

Person, Religion

1 memorial
Lincoln Stanhope Wainright

Lincoln Stanhope Wainright

He came to St Peter's Church, London Docks in 1873, and devoted himself to providing the local people with schools, clubs and medical facilities. On one occasion he gave away his own clothes to a n...

Person, Religion

1 memorial
William Jenkyn, MA

William Jenkyn, MA

Nonconformist minister.  Born Suffolk.  His mother was great-granddaughter of John Rogers.  A pro-royalist, he was held in the Tower in 1651 but escaped execution.  In 1684 he was again arrested fo...

Person, Religion

1 memorial
St Leonard, Eastcheap

St Leonard, Eastcheap

Lost in the Great Fire and never rebuilt.

Building, Religion

1 memorial
Swedish Church

Swedish Church

There were enough Swedes in London (mainly sailors) for a congregation to form in 1710 and the first church was set up in Wapping in 1728 (pictured), opened by and named for (the future queen) Ulri...

Building, Religion, Sweden

2 memorials