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London Oratory

London Oratory
Brompton oratory2.jpg
The Church of the Immaculate Heart of Mary is home to the London Oratory
Monastery information
Other names Brompton Oratory
Order Oratory of Saint Philip Neri
Established 1849
Dedicated to Immaculate Heart of Mary
Diocese Westminster
Controlled churches Brompton Oratory
People
Founder(s) Fr. Frederick Faber
Prior Julian Large
Archbishop Vincent Nichols
Site
Coordinates 51°29′50″N 0°10′12″W / 51.49722°N 0.17000°W / 51.49722; -0.17000Coordinates: 51°29′50″N 0°10′12″W / 51.49722°N 0.17000°W / 51.49722; -0.17000
Website www.bromptonoratory.co.uk

The London Oratory is a Catholic community of priests living under the rule of life established by its founder, Saint Philip Neri (1515-1595). It is housed in an Oratory House, next to the Church of the Immaculate Heart of Mary in the Brompton Road, Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, London, SW7.

There are three other Oratories in the UK, the Birmingham Oratory, the Manchester Oratory and the Oxford Oratory.

The London Oratory was founded in 1849, the year after John Henry Cardinal Newman established the Birmingham Oratory, when Newman sent Frederick Faber and some companions, including Thomas Francis Knox, to start an Oratory in London. The original premises (a former whisky store) were in King William Street (now William IV Street), near Charing Cross. In 1854 the community moved to its present Brompton Road site, adjacent to the Victoria and Albert Museum. An Oratory House was built in 1854, followed by a large temporary church. The church was replaced in 1884 by the present neo-baroque building, designed by Herbert Gribble. Until the opening of Westminster Cathedral in 1903, the London Oratory was the venue for all great Catholic occasions in London, including the funeral of Cardinal Manning in 1892.

Together with their Church of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, the community of the Oratorian Fathers is often popularly, though incorrectly, referred to as the 'Brompton Oratory'.


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