Our Most Holy Redeemer

Coordinates: 51°31′32″N 0°06′33″W / 51.5255°N 0.1092°W / 51.5255; -0.1092
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Our Most Holy Redeemer, Clerkenwell
Church of Our Most Holy Redeemer
Hackney
DeaneryIslington
Clergy
Bishop(s)The Rt Revd Jonathan Baker (AEO)
Vicar(s)Fr Christopher Trundle SSC
Asst Curate(s)Fr Nigel Palmer SSC

Our Most Holy Redeemer is a late 19th-century

campanile, and parish hall is a Grade II*-listed building.[2]

History

This

Spa Fields Chapel
, originally comprised just the building on the left in the illustration, the campanile tower and clergy house on the right being added in 1906. The inscription on the cornice of the original structure reads Christo Liberatori translated as 'To Christ The Redeemer'.

The interior of the church, including the

baldacchino, was modelled upon Brunelleschi's Santo Spirito, Florence. Sculptural carving to the interior is by F. W. Pomeroy
.

Present day

The Church of Our Most Holy Redeemer is within the

  • Side of the church
    Side of the church
  • Tower of the church
    Tower of the church
  • Alternative view of the front of the church
    Alternative view of the front of the church

References

  1. ^ "Our Most Holy Redeemer, Clerkenwell". The Church of England. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
  2. ^ Historic England. "Church of Our Most Holy Redeemer, clergy house, campanile and parish hall (1209007)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 23 August 2013. "This church is of outstanding importance as an example of the late C19 reaction against High Victorian Gothic. Sedding accomplished this by using the pure Italian Renaissance style. In doing so, he not only created a 'monument to the Aestheticism of the late Victorian Anglo-Catholics', but made the church look Roman Catholic. Wilson's work to the church is particularly fine; and his interesting subsidiary buildings (parish-hall, clergy-house, and especially the campanile) flanking the front facade are extremely clever and idiosyncratic. This complex was built in the heart of a significant Italian community. These buildings form a remarkable group."
  3. ^ "Our Most Holy Redeemer, Clerkenwell". bishopoffulham.org.uk. The See of Fulham. Retrieved 29 November 2016.

51°31′32″N 0°06′33″W / 51.5255°N 0.1092°W / 51.5255; -0.1092