St Botolph's Church, Cambridge | |
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St Botolph's Church tower
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52°12′09″N 0°07′05″E / 52.2025°N 0.1181°ECoordinates: 52°12′09″N 0°07′05″E / 52.2025°N 0.1181°E | |
Location | Trumpington Street, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, CB2 1RG |
Country | England |
Denomination | Church of England |
Churchmanship | Book of Common Prayer |
Website | Church website |
History | |
Dedication | Botolph |
Architecture | |
Status | Active |
Functional status | Parish church |
Heritage designation | Grade I listed |
Administration | |
Parish | St Botolph, Cambridge |
Deanery | Cambridge South Deanery |
Archdeaconry | Archdeaconry of Cambridge |
Diocese | Diocese of Ely |
Clergy | |
Priest in charge | Interregnum |
St Botolph's Church, Cambridge is a Church of England parish church in the city of Cambridge, England. The church is a Grade I listed building.
The church is dedicated to Botolph, a seventh-century abbot in East Anglia, who is a patron saint of travellers. The church was by the south gate of medieval Cambridge, through which travellers from the south and west entered the town.
The present building mostly dates from the fourteenth century and is built of flint and rubble with Barnack stone dressing. The octagonal font of 1637 has a splendid Laudian wooden cover.
The tower was built in the fifteenth century. It is surmounted by stone figures representing the four evangelists (restored 1971) and has a sundial on the south-west buttress. The four bells were cast in 1460 and are still in use.
The elaborate chancel was rebuilt in 1872 by the Victorian architect George Frederick Bodley and worked on by local artists Frederick Leach and G. Gray. It is a fine example of high Victorian decoration and was conserved and restored in 2008 with help from the Heritage Lottery Fund. Bodley also designed the lectern. The church has the only medieval rood screen remaining in a Cambridge parish church; its paintings date from the late 19th-century restoration.
The South Chapel was refurbished in memory of those who died in the First World War. The war memorial window in the South Chapel was one of the earliest commissions of Rachel Tancock (later Rachel de Montmorency). The two-light window depicts St George and St Michael. The chapel also commemorates the First Eastern General Hospital, built at the outbreak of the First World War on what is now the Cambridge University Library site.
There are memorials to Thomas Playfere (1609, Lady Margaret's Professor of Divinity), James Essex (architect), members of the Darwin family and Sir Ernest Barker.