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St Swithin, London Stone

St. Swithin, London Stone
Swithin londonstone godwin.jpg
Location Cannon Street, London
Country United Kingdom
Denomination Church of England
Architecture
Architect(s) Christopher Wren
Style Baroque
Closed 1940
Demolished 1962

St Swithin, London Stone, was an Anglican Church in the City of London. It stood on the north side of Cannon Street, between Salters' Hall Court and St Swithin's Lane, which runs north from Cannon Street to King William Street and takes its name from the church. Of medieval origin, it was destroyed by the Great Fire of London, and rebuilt to the designs of Sir Christopher Wren. It was badly damaged by bombing during the Second World War, and the remains demolished in 1962.

St Swithin's church was first recorded in the 13th century, and was dedicated to Saint Swithin, a 9th-century bishop of Winchester. At first known as "St Swithin in Candlewick Street" (the medieval name of Cannon Street), in 1597 it was referred to as "St Swithin at London Stone", and this became the normal designation.London Stone itself stood on the south side of Candlewick Street, opposite the church.

One of the earliest references to the church is as the final resting place of Catrin Glyndŵr, wife of rebel Edmund Mortimer and daughter of Owain Glyndŵr, the legendary Welsh leader. She was taken hostage when the English captured Harlech Castle in 1409 and incarcerated in the Tower of London. Catrin Glyndŵr died in mysterious circumstances four years later. The only record of her death is in the Exchequer documents of 1413: "for expenses and other charges incurred for the burial of the wife of Edmund Mortimer and her daughters, buried within St Swithin's Church London ... £1".

The church was rebuilt at the expense of Sir John Hind in 1420, renovated in 1607–8, and again, shortly before the Great fire, at a cost of £1,000.


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