CHURCHES
All Saints by the Castle.
It seems probable that there was a church on Castle Hill well
before the Norman Conquest. Gravestones, the
artistic style of which indicates a date between 975
and 1050, were found within the castle enclosure
early in the 19th century. The church to which the
graveyard belonged may have been destroyed when
the castle was built or may have survived as the
castle chapel. (fn. 1)
All Saints by the Castle is no longer traceable, its
site, on the western side of the Huntingdon Road
where it entered the castle enclosure, being occupied
by a walled nursery garden. Its advowson was
granted to Barnwell in 1219 by the Blancgernon
family, most of whose land lay in the parish. (fn. 2) It was
valued at £3 6s. 8d. in 1217, 1254, and 1278; and at
£4 13s. 4d. in 1291. (fn. 3) Between 1257 and 1264 it was
appropriated to Barnwell by Bishop Hugh of Balsham (fn. 4) but the depopulation after the Black Death was
such that in 1365 Bishop Langham of Ely united the
parish with that of St. Giles, (fn. 5) and the church fell
into ruins, which are indicated on the map of 1634. (fn. 6)
There is an inventory of the church goods for
1278. (fn. 7)
All Saints, like St. Clement and St. Giles, served
not infrequently as a sanctuary for prisoners escaped
from the castle gaol. In 1286 seven such fugitives
took refuge there. (fn. 8)
All Saints in the Jewry or by the Hospital.
All Saints, which formerly stood in
St. John's Street, opposite to St. John's hospital, is
first mentioned, with the lands and tithe pertaining
to it, as having been bestowed upon the monks of
St. Albans in the days of Abbot Paul (1077–93). (fn. 9)
They apparently failed to retain it, for a Cambridge
townsman called Sturmi (fn. 10) gave the advowson in 1180
to St. Radegund's, whose prioress Lettice was his
sister, 'to hold as freely as he and his ancestors had
held it'. (fn. 11)
Bishop Geoffrey Ridel instituted the nuns in the
rectory and appointed a vicar who was to pay them
20s. a year and render all the episcopal customs, but
so that they might freely appoint his successor. (fn. 12) At
the Dissolution of the nunnery the advowson passed
to Jesus College.
Between 1246 and 1258 the parish of St. Radegund, consisting of the nun's demesne lands, was
detached from All Saints parish: it remained distinct
until the Dissolution. The church of St. Radegund
'served all the purposes and had all the privileges of
a parish church', and as late as 1555 the farmers of
the demesne lands adjoining Jesus College retained
the right of attending the college church, though the
privilege was then obsolescent. The rectory of St.
Radegund's as well as that of All Saints was appropriated to the nunnery, and the chaplain was appointed and paid by the nuns, without reference to
the bishop. (fn. 13) The two parishes were formally united
in 1857. (fn. 14)
All Saints in the Jewry was valued at £5 6s. 3½d.
in 1535. (fn. 15) In 1650 the parsonage house was valued at
£13 16s. and was leased by Jesus College to Christopher Rose. The tithes were valued at £20, and John
Rowse was impropriator, as the lessee of the college.
The commissioners proposed that St. Michael
should be united with All Saints, 'All Saints standing most convenient for both parishes'. (fn. 16) There is an
inventory of its church goods for 1278. (fn. 17)
The old church was destroyed in 1865, when St.
John's Street was widened. As LeKeux' print
showed, (fn. 18) the tower had rested on an arch over the
pavement.
The new church stands in Jesus Lane, opposite
the entrance to Jesus College; it was designed by
G. F. Bodley and decorated by William Morris, and
contains the font from the old church. The parish
registers begin in 1538, the minute book in 1611,
and the churchwardens' accounts in 1617. The
church possesses a copy of Bullinger's Fiftie Godlie
and Learned Sermons, 1587. In 1900 a legacy of
£500 for the care of the church was received. (fn. 19)
Holy Sepulchre.
At some date between 1114
and 1130 Reinald, Abbot of Ramsey, granted to the
members of the fraternity of the Holy Sepulchre the
graveyard of St. George's church and land adjoining
to build thereon a 'monasterium' in honour of God
and the Holy Sepulchre, always provided that the
church of Ramsey retained its rights there. (fn. 20) It seems
that Ramsey had been the patron of an earlier church
of St. George, but no other mention of it is known.
The architecture of the oldest part of St. Sepulchre
is consistent with the date 1120–40. (fn. 21) It is one of the
four or five round churches in England, and probably consisted originally of a round nave with an ambulatory and a semicircular apse. A chancel and north
and south aisle to the east of the round were added,
probably in the 15th century, when a polygonal belfry
was built over it. (fn. 22)
In 1841, part of the ambulatory having fallen in,
the Cambridge Camden Society, a body with High
Anglican sympathies, undertook the restoration of
the church. The 15th-century bell-tower was replaced by a neo-Romanesque conical roof and the
15th-century windows replaced by copies of a surviving 12th-century one. The erection of a stone
altar and credence-table led to a lawsuit and the
temporary closing of the church in 1843–5; the
Court of Arches declared them illegal in January
1845 and they were removed. (fn. 23)
By the middle of the 13th century the advowson
had come into the possession of Barnwell Priory,
which also had the appropriation. (fn. 24) At the Dissolution, since the Crown failed to exercise its
patronage, (fn. 25) the right to present passed to the
churchwardens and parishioners and the vicar is
today elected by the parochial church council. (fn. 26)
In 1217 the church was valued at £1 13s. 4d.; in
1254 at 13s. 4d.; in 1276 at £4 13s. 4d.; in 1402 at
£5 and in 1535 at £6 11s. (fn. 27) In 1650 it had had no
minister for eight years and had no endowments of
any sort. It was proposed to unite it to St. Clement. (fn. 28)
No further mention of the fraternity of the Holy
Sepulchre is found after 1130. There was a guild of
St. Etheldreda here, and a chantry of St. Mary,
founded by William Tuillet, Mayor of Cambridge,
in the 13th century. The chantry was served by a
brother of St. John's Hospital, which led to a close
traditional association of the church with St. John's
College. (fn. 29) Another chantry was founded in 1313. (fn. 30)
There is an inventory of church goods for 1278. (fn. 31)
The registers begin in 1571; the churchwardens'
accounts in 1778.
Holy Trinity.
This church is first mentioned
in 1174 when it is said to have been burnt down, but
no part of the present fabric goes back to the 12th
century. Parts of the tower and chancel are late 13thcentury work; large-scale rebuilding took place in
the 14th century; the transepts were added in the
15th century as guild chapels. (fn. 32) In the 17th century
the establishment of the town lecturership in this
church made it necessary to enlarge the accommodation, and a gallery was erected in 1616 on the north
side of the nave, others being later added in the
transepts. (fn. 33)
The advowson was given by William of Yarmouth, a Cambridge vintner, to the Premonstratensian canons at West Dereham (Norf.), at some
time between 1199 and 1254, (fn. 34) by which last date it
was already appropriated, since the Valuation of
Norwich refers to the vicars' portion. (fn. 35) At the Dissolution the advowson passed to the Crown, which
presented until well into the 17th century. When the
Crown failed to present, the Bishop of Ely as
diocesan filled the vacancy by sequestration, and in
time the living came to be regarded as a perpetual
curacy in the bishop's gift. (fn. 36) The patronage of this
perpetual curacy was, with the sanction of the
Ecclesiastical Commissioners, exchanged in 1862 for
the rectory of Girton, and the Revd. Alfred Peache
became the patron of Holy Trinity. (fn. 37) The patronage
is now exercised by the Peache trustees.
In 1217 the church was valued at £1 10s.; in 1254
at £1, the vicarage being rated at 10s.; in 1276 at £8.
In 1291 the Abbot of Dereham was rated at 10s. for
the rectory. (fn. 38) In 1535 the vicarage was valued at
£7 6s. 8d. (fn. 39) In 1650 there was no settled minister nor
any maintenance, but a vicarage house worth 40s. a
year; the town commissioners proposed to unite it
with St. Andrew the Great, better endowed but with
a ruinous church. (fn. 40) The benefice was augmented by
grants from Queen Anne's Bounty of £200 in 1742,
1751, 1779, and 1792, of £600 in 1811 and of £700 in
1812. In 1864 the patron and the Ecclesiastical Commissioners each added £1,000. (fn. 41)
In the 17th century the Sunday lecturership
founded by public subscription (fn. 42) became permanently fixed at Holy Trinity, and was held in
succession by John Jeffries (ante 1624), Dr. Preston
of Emmanuel (1624–8), and Thomas Goodwin
(1628–33), the last being appointed by the Crown
to the curacy in 1633. (fn. 43) The widespread influence of
the Sunday afternoon lectures of Benjamin Whichcote, the Cambridge Platonist, given at Holy Trinity
from 1636 to about 1656, is attested by Tillotson,
Shaftesbury, and Wishart. (fn. 44) The customary attendance of the Mayor at the sermon established a
special association of the church with the Corporation, which ended in 1756 when it was ordered that
the Mayor should appoint his chaplain each year.
The lecturership then became in effect an appendage
to the vicarage, the election being made by the
subscribers and parishioners. (fn. 45) After the appointment of Charles Simeon as curate in 1782 the
church became the centre of the Cambridge Evangelical revival associated with his name, although
owing to the opposition of the parishioners he did
not secure the lecturership until 1794. (fn. 46) Tablets in
the church commemorate two of its curates, Henry
Martyn and Thomas Thomason, as well as Claudius
Buchanan and David Corrie who all went out to
India as the Company's chaplains through Simeon's
influence. After Simeon's death in 1836 the tradition
was carried on by his assistant curate and biographer, William Carus (Vicar 1836–51), and its
continuing association with missionary activity and
with the Evangelical movement in Cambridge was
signalized in 1887 by the erection of the Henry
Martyn Hall, of which the Vicar of Holy Trinity is
an ex officio trustee. (fn. 47)
There were guilds of the Holy Trinity and of the
Assumption in this church in 1389, and of St.
Katherine, St. Clement, St. George, and St. Ursula
in 1504. (fn. 48) In 1530 when new regulations were made
for the election of parish officers there were ten
wardens in addition to the two churchwardens; two
each for the Sepulchre light, for St. Erasmus's light,
the Crucifix light, St. George's light and Our Lady
light, the wardens of the last being women. (fn. 49) The
churchwardens' accounts, which begin in 1504, make
many allusions to St. Erasmus's light; his altar
probably stood against the east wall of the south
transept. There is also preserved a list of subscribers
to the gallery put up in 1616–17, showing that the
lecture was attended by the parishioners of eight
other Cambridge churches. (fn. 50)
There is an inventory of church goods for 1278. (fn. 51)
The church registers begin in 1564. From at least
1402 until the 20th century the church owned
property in Cambridge whose income has, since the
16th century at least, been used for general parish
purposes, including the maintenance of the church
fabric. The property is now sold and represented by
over £12,000 in stocks. The income from two 19thcentury legacies of £1,000 each is also used for the
repair of the church. (fn. 52)
ST. ANDREW THE GREAT, outside the Barnwell Gate, was presented to Ely by Absolom, son of
Algar, the rector and patron between 1225 and 1228.
As, however, the Ely registers refer to a John who
was chaplain here in 1200, this was perhaps a
restitution. It is even possible that St. Andrew was
the church that lay in the fourth Domesday ward of
the Borough, for that church belonged to Ely. (fn. 53) It
was appropriated to the sacrist's office by Bishop
Geoffrey (1225–8). (fn. 54) On the Dissolution the advowson passed to the Dean and Chapter of Ely (fn. 55) who were
still the patrons in 1955.
The church was valued at £3 6s. 8d. in 1217 and
1254, at £9 6s. 8d. in 1278, at £4 3s. 4d. in 1291, and
at £1 15s. in 1535. (fn. 56) In 1650 the parsonage was
valued at £10 a year, and the possessor, John
Burney of Barnwell, paid the rent to the churchwardens, the dean and chapter being temporarily
ousted. There was no minister nor any maintenance
for one. The church was in a ruinous state, and it
was proposed to unite the living with that of Holy
Trinity. (fn. 57) The church was restored shortly afterwards, largely from the contributions of Christopher
Rose, Mayor in 1637 and 1654, who founded a commemorative sermon in St. Andrew's and is buried
there. (fn. 58) It was completely destroyed in 1842 when
the present church was built by subscription. (fn. 59) It contains a monument to Captain Cook, whose widow
and two of whose children are buried there. (fn. 60)
There is an inventory of church goods for 1278. (fn. 61)
There was a guild of St. Katharine (1385–1500) and
two chantries. (fn. 62) The church registers begin in 1635;
the churchwardens' accounts in 1650. Sums of £400
and £100 were left for augmentation of the benefice
in 1921 and 1936 respectively. (fn. 63)
ST. ANDREW THE LESS is not mentioned in
the survey of 1279. It belonged to the Austin Canons
of Barnwell, and has long been known as 'the Abbey
Church', but it appears to have served as parish
church to the straggling suburb along the Newmarket Road even before the Dissolution. The
present building belongs to the early 13th century;
it may have been erected for the use of the parishioners so that the canons could have the exclusive
use of their own church. (fn. 64) It is probably the 'chapel
of St. Andrew' mentioned in 1274 as giving
sanctuary to a fugitive, (fn. 65) and was valued in 1254 at
12s. and in 1291 at £1. (fn. 66) There were guilds of St.
Catharine (1473), St. Mary, and St. Nicholas. (fn. 67)
St. Andrew's was served by one of the Barnwell
canons until the Dissolution, when the great tithes
passed with the rest of the priory estate to Sir
Anthony Brown and later to Lord Clinton, afterwards Earl of Lincoln. (fn. 68) In 1650 the impropriator
was Thomas Wendy, and the great tithes were
valued at £160. Wendy paid £16 to the minister who
served the altar. The town commissioners proposed
that the portions of St. Bene't's and Holy Trinity
parishes that extended to Barnwell should be joined
to St. Andrew's parish and served by Barnwell
church. (fn. 69)
After the inclosure of 1807 the population of the
parish rose from 252 in 1801 to close on 10,000 in
1841, and the small and decaying church became
quite inadequate. Charles Perry, later Bishop of
Melbourne, purchased the advowson in 1835 and
brought about the building and endowment of
Christ Church on the Newmarket Road in 1839, and
St. Paul's on Hills Road in 1842, to meet the needs
of the parishioners. St. Andrew's, closed in 1846,
was restored and reopened in 1856. (fn. 70) J. H. Titcomb,
later first Bishop of Rangoon (1877–82), was perpetual curate, 1845–59. (fn. 71) Christ Church has taken
the place of St. Andrew the Less as the parish church
since 1846. (fn. 72) The patronage is vested in trustees.
ST. BENE'T, architecturally the oldest church
in Cambridgeshire, (fn. 73) may well be the earliest foundation of those in the southern part of Cambridge. The
fragmentary character of its parish suggests that
later ones were carved out of it. Edward of Cambridge and his mother gave the advowson to St.
Alban's Abbey in the days of Abbot Paul (fn. 74) (1077–
1093) but in 1279 it belonged to the Argentine
family, from whom the Guild of Corpus Christi
purchased it in 1350. (fn. 75) Though licensed for appropriation in 1352, it was not until 1578 that the
church was actually appropriated to Corpus Christi
College, the present patron and rector. (fn. 76)
In 1217 St. Bene't's was valued at £5, in 1254 at
£5 6s. 8d., in 1276 at £10, between 1278 and 1303
at £10 6s. 8d., in 1290 at £6 13s. 4d., and in 1534 at
£4 9s. 9½d. (fn. 77) The benefice was augmented in 1729
by £200 from Bishop Greene of Ely, and £200 from
Queen Anne's Bounty. Further benefactions from
Queen Anne's Bounty were of £200 in 1759, £200
in 1810 and £1,000 in 1814. (fn. 78)
There is an inventory of church goods for 1278. (fn. 79)
The bells, cast in the 17th century, bear rhymed
inscriptions in English and Latin. Fabian Stedman,
inventor of the art of change ringing, and author of
Campanalogia, or the Art of Ringing Improved (1677),
was clerk of the parish in the middle of the 17th
century. (fn. 80)
From the time of the foundation of Corpus until
1579 the church served as the college chapel, being
connected with the college, at the end of the 15th
century, by a narrow gallery. It gave the college its
alternative name. By the terms of an agreement of
1273 the church bell was used by the University to
convene Congregations in return for an annual fee of
6s. 8d., paid until 1663. The Archdeacon of Ely held
his court in the vestry at the eastern end. There were
guilds of Corpus Christi, St. Augustine and St.
Catharine and a Scala Caeli. (fn. 81) A chapel of St. Anne
was licensed in 1487. (fn. 82)
In 1650 it was reported that the acting minister
was supported at the charge of the parish, as there
was no provision for house or stipend. The town
commissioners proposed that St. Benedict should
be united to St. Edward, St. Edward being the fitter
church, and that the parish should be distributed
between St. Botolph and Barnwell (St. Andrew the
less). (fn. 83)
Among those buried in the churchyard were John
Mere, esquire bedel in the 16th century, and
Alderman Samuel Newton, whose diaries are valuable sources for Cambridge history. Fuller, the
church historian, was the incumbent from 1630 to
1633 and Thomas Hobson, the carrier, presented the
church with a black letter Bible of 1617. (fn. 84)
ST. BOTLPH. The foundation of St. Botolph
has been conjecturally assigned to the late 10th or
early 11th century, when the cult of the saint was
being promoted at Ely, Thorney, and Bury by
Aethelwold of Winchester. (fn. 85) When it is first mentioned (c. 1200) the advowson belonged to the Bishop
of Ely, which may indicate a foundation by a group
of townsmen who later surrendered the patronage
to an ecclesiastical authority. It was appropriated to
Barnwell Abbey by Bishop Eustace (1198–1215), a
'competent' stipend for a vicar being reserved. (fn. 86) In
1235 Bishop Hugh conferred the vicarage on Peter
of Bottisham, chaplain, who was to have the church
with all its tithes and income and pay an annual rent
of 4 marks to Barnwell, himself bearing all the
episcopal burdens. (fn. 87) This became the arrangement
for all future vicars. In the early 14th century, three
newly founded colleges were looking for churches to
serve their needs, and the foundress of Pembroke
secured from Barnwell something like an option on
St. Botolph's, which she later surrendered to the
College of the Annunciation, later Gonville Hall,
who, as part of an exchange of properties, made over
their rights on 1 June 1353 to the Guild of Corpus
Christi. (fn. 88) By royal licence of 5 October 1353 the
advowson was transferred to Corpus.
Disputes as to who should pay for repairs to the
fabric finally induced the prior and canons to surrender the rectory to the incumbent, Andrew
Dockett, c. 1442, and in 1460 Corpus secured a
final release from the obligation to pay the annual
rent to Barnwell, and on the same day sold the advowson to Queens' College, of which Dockett was
now President, for 80 marks, reserving to themselves
freedom to use the church for their customary worship. (fn. 89) Since that date, Queen's College have been
the patrons. Thus St. Botolph's, alone of all the
medieval churches of Cambridge, is a rectory, but,
its rector being usually a fellow of Queens' and residing in college, no permanent rectory house has ever
been built for the parish. (fn. 90)
In 1217 St. Botolph's was valued at £3 6s. 8d., in
1254 and 1278 at £5 6s. 8d., in 1276 at £9 6s. 8d., in
1291 at £5 6s. 8d., and in 1534 at £2 14s. 4½d. (fn. 91) The
rectory was augmented in 1748 by £200 (Queens'
College), by £200 in 1737 (Queen Anne's Bounty),
in 1749 by £200 (Queen Anne's Bounty), in 1784 by
£200 (Trustees of David Hughes), in 1785 by £200
(Queen Anne's Bounty), and in 1814 by £200
(Queen Anne's Bounty). (fn. 92)
In 1650, when there was neither minister, parsonage, nor maintenance, Queens' College was
annually receiving £3 15s. 8d. for tithe corn, and
20s. for the rent of a house 'commonly called the
parsonage house'. The commissioners proposed that
St. Mary the Less should be joined with St.
Botolph, 'Buttolph being the fitter Church', and that
part of St. Bene't's parish should be united to
St. Botolph's parish.
The parish is in two detached portions, extending,
as Maitland failed to note, (fn. 93) across the Cam into
Newnham, and tithing in the Western as well as the
Eastern Fields of the town. The structure goes back
to the first quarter of the 14th century, a vestry having been added in 1638, and a number of alterations
and additions having been made in the 15th, 18th,
19th, and 20th centuries. (fn. 94) In 1392 a chantry was
founded and endowed by Sir John Morice, for the
maintenance of which St. John's Hospital was
responsible. (fn. 95) The Guild of St. Mary, founded in
1378, was associated with St. James's altar in this
church, (fn. 96) which was also used for worship by the
Guilds of Corpus Christi and the Blessed Mary.
Both the chancel screen (fn. 97) and the complete ring of
four bells are of pre-Reformation date. These last
came from the foundry of John Danyell of London,
and can be dated about 1460. (fn. 98) The church contains
monuments to Thomas Playfere (d. 1609) (fn. 99) and to
James Essex the architect (d. 1784). (fn. 100)
An afternoon lecture was founded here in 1691
by Bishop Patrick, the lecturer being allowed £30 a
year, but was apparently terminated at the Bishop's
death in 1707. (fn. 101)
ST. CLEMENT. The dedication of this church
suggests Danish influence, but the oldest part of the
fabric are late 12th or early 13th century, (fn. 102) and it is
first mentioned about 1218. Hugh fitz Absalom, a
member of the Le Rus family, gave it to the nuns
of St. Radegund about that date, by the advice of
Eustace the late Bishop of Ely. The grant was confirmed by Hugh's descendant Walter of St. Edmund
1230–40. (fn. 103) The rectory was appropriated to the nuns
by Bishop John of Fountains (1220–5) saving a
competence for a priest to have the cure of souls.
Bishop Hugh of Northwold decreed that the vicar
should pay the nuns a yearly pension of £3 6s. 8d.
which was assigned for the nuns' clothing. It
appears to have been a bad bargain, leading to
disputes as to arrears, and the complaint that
the income was tenuis et exilis in 1401. In 1402 the
nuns agreed to allow the vicar a dwelling house, but
the payment of the pension was exacted until the
dissolution of the convent, and even to 1536. (fn. 104) The
advowson passed to Jesus College with the other possessions of the nunnery. The church and vicarage
together were valued at £4 13s. 4d. in 1254, at
£11 6s. 8d. in 1276, and at £4 5s. 8d. in 1535. (fn. 105) In
1650 the parish was reported to have neither minister
nor maintenance; it was proposed to unite it with St.
Sepulchre and use St. Clement, as the larger
church. (fn. 106) The benefice was augmented in 1800 by
£200 from the Bishop of Ely, in 1810 by £200 from
Jesus College and £300 from Queen Anne's Bounty,
and in 1815 by £800 from Parliament. (fn. 107)
It is possible that Dr. Lawrence Chaderton, the
first Master of Emmanuel College, who lectured
here from 1570 to 1586, like Michael Bentley, who
succeeded him, was exercising the Town Lecturership which became associated with Holy Trinity
from 1610. (fn. 108) Another lecturership was endowed in
this church by Bishop Patrick about 1691, and held
by William Whiston, Lucasian Professor, until 1709,
when he resigned it on doctrinal grounds. (fn. 109) The
tower and spire were erected in 1821 with a bequest
from William Cole of Milton who had described it
in 1742 as 'the lightest and most airy church and in
the best repair that I ever saw for an old one'. (fn. 110) He is
commemorated in the inscription over the doorway,
Deum Cole, and is buried here.
The church is noteworthy also for the oldest
memorial to a Cambridge Mayor. The French
inscription on the tombstone of Eudo of Helpringham who died in 1329 during his sixth mayoralty
gives an early version of the modern form of the
name of the town—'Caunbrege'. (fn. 111)
There were in the church guilds of St. Clement
and of Jesus, as well as St. Mary's chantry, founded
by Robert Aungier in 1278, and St. Nicholas's
Chantry, founded by William de Lolleworth in 1325
and augmented by William Horwood in 1352. (fn. 112) In
1535 the chantries were valued at £7 11s. 8d. (fn. 113) There
is an inventory of church goods for the year 1278 (fn. 114)
with later additions. The church registers begin in
1560.
ST. EDWARD KING AND MARTYR. An
Anglo-Saxon origin for this church is suggested not
only by the dedication but by the finding of a Saxon
coffin stone on the site in this century, (fn. 115) but the earliest
part of the present structure goes back no further
than the second half of the 12th century. (fn. 116)
The advowson was granted to Barnwell Priory by
Bishop Hugh of Northwold (1229–54) (fn. 117) and was retained by the canons until February 1446. It was
then purchased, along with that of St. John Zachary,
by Henry VI, who, a month later, bestowed it upon
Trinity Hall. In November 1446, when the two
parishes were united, St. Edward's was appropriated to Trinity Hall, and the fellows were empowered to employ whom they chose as chaplain
without any application to the bishop, to whom they
were to pay an annual pension of 20d. (fn. 118) St. Edward's
thus became a donative, as it is today.
The destruction of St. John's Church (1446)
meant that the scholars both of Clare Hall and
Trinity Hall were deprived of their customary
place of worship. Each college now added an aisle, or
chapel, on either side of the chancel of St. Edward
for its particular use; these still bear the names of
Clare Hall Aisle and Trinity Hall Aisle. (fn. 119) The
church contained chapels of St. John the Evangelist
and of St. Mary. There was a guild of St. Edward
the King and St. Thomas the Martyr, founded
probably about 1291, and served by two chaplains. (fn. 120)
St. Edward's was valued at £2 13s. 4d. in 1217, at
£2 in 1254, at £6 13s. 4d. in 1276 and at £2 13s. 4d.
in 1291, when the pension of the Prior of Barnwell
was further valued at 13s. 4d. (fn. 121) In 1650 there was
neither minister, maintenance, nor parsonage but
Trinity Hall received £8 a year as rent for a house
once known as the Vicarage House, and had usually
provided a minister and kept the chancel in repair.
The commissioners proposed that St. Bene't and
St. Edward should be united, St. Edward being the
fitter church. (fn. 122)
The church is notable for the sermons preached
there in the early years of the Reformation by the
three Protestant martyrs, Bilney, Barnes, and Latimer. Amongst those buried here were Edward
Lively and Richard Thompson, two of the translators of the Authorized Version of the Bible; John
Mortlock, (fn. 123) and his grandfather, who was churchwarden here. There is a memorial to F. D. Maurice,
whose chaplaincy here from 1871–2 was his last
charge. (fn. 124) The church is today the Cambridge centre
of Toc H.
There is an inventory of church goods for 1278
with notes of further gifts in the 14th century. (fn. 125) The
chalice in use dates from 1569 and the flagon and
paten from 1711. Of the six bells the oldest belongs
to the last quarter of the 15th century, the second,
cast by Stephen Tonni of Bury St. Edmunds, is
dated 1576, the third, cast in 1622, bears the
inscription 'non clamor sed amor cantat in aure Dei',
and the ring was completed by the recasting of two
and the addition of a treble in 1669. They have not
been rehung since that date. (fn. 126)
The Registers begin in 1558 and the churchwardens' accounts in 1640.
From at least the 17th century the parish owned
land which was sold in 1914 for £1,570, the income
of which is spent on the maintenance of the church
building. In 1948 the income on about £5,760 stock
was applicable under a legacy of 1902 to the augmentation of the benefice. (fn. 127)
ST. GILES. St. Giles' Church contains traces of
work that may be earlier than 1092, (fn. 128) the traditional
date of its foundation by Picot in fulfilment of his
wife's vow. (fn. 129) Its fabric was extensively remodelled
in the early 19th century by the vicar, Professor
William Farish, who enlarged the accommodation
from 100 to 600 seats. (fn. 130) The resulting 'strange and
repulsive medley' (fn. 131) was in its turn destroyed in 1875,
when the present church was built, in which the only
traces of the original church are the 11th-century
chancel arch, and the 12th-century south doorway
of the nave. (fn. 132)
The advowson, lost by Barnwell through negligence or unlawful seizure, was restored to the priory
by Bishop Longchamp of Ely (1189–96) and appropriated to maintain the infirmary. (fn. 133) It remained with
Barnwell until the Dissolution.
Both rectory and advowson were granted by the
Crown to the Bishop of Ely and his successors in
1562, as part of the exchanges imposed on Bishop
Cox by Elizabeth I. (fn. 134) The church was valued at
£3 6s. 8d. in 1217 and 1254, at £5 6s. 8d. in 1276 and
at £6 13s. 4d. in 1291. (fn. 135) It was described by the
commissioners of 1650 as 'an impropriate parsonage
worth £120 per annum, John Rouse Esquire as
lessee for lives to the late Bishop of Ely being the
impropriator and possessor thereof, . . . he living remote from thence in the County of Suffolk'. The
commissioners recommended that St. Peter should
be united with St. Giles. (fn. 136) The benefice was augmented by £200 in 1792 by Queen Anne's Bounty. (fn. 137)
There is an inventory of church goods for 1278. (fn. 138)
There was a guild of St. Giles in the church. (fn. 139) The
register of baptisms begins in 1596, those of marriages and burials in 1607, the churchwardens'
accounts in 1620.
ST. JOHN ZACHARY. The church of St. John
Baptist, commonly called St. John Zachary, is first
mentioned in the taxation of 1217. It stood on the
west side of Milne Street and served a parish originally containing many dwelling-houses which were
gradually taken over (fn. 140) by religious houses and University hostels, which, in their turn, were destroyed
to make room for King's College. The site of its east
end is today covered by the western bays of King's
College Chapel. Besides being the parish church it
served as a chapel for the scholars of Clare Hall and
of Trinity Hall. (fn. 141) In 1445 Henry VI acquired both
the church and the churchyard, along with the
adjoining lands. The church was probably destroyed
soon after 25 July 1446, when the first stone of
King's College Chapel was laid. (fn. 142) By 1453 it had
been rebuilt at the charges of Henry VI at the
north-west corner of the Old Court of King's
College, on a site now occupied in part by the departmental libraries of the University. This second
edifice is last mentioned in 1488–9; it was presumably allowed to fall into decay since by that time the
parish no longer existed, (fn. 143) and its site was used for
King's College buildings. (fn. 144)
The advowson, like that of St. Clement's, belonged
to the Fitz Absalom or le Rus family. At some date
before 1220 Hugh Fitz Absalom gave it to Barnwell
Priory. (fn. 145) In February 1446 Henry VI purchased it
from Barnwell along with that of St. Edward's, and
the union of the two parishes was approved by the
Bishop of Ely in the following November. (fn. 146) The
advowson of the united parish was granted to Trinity
Hall; whilst that of the new church of St. John,
built in 1453, was granted to King's College. (fn. 147)
The church was valued at £3 in 1217, £2 10s. in
1254, and at £6 in 1276. (fn. 148) In 1291 the vicarage was
valued at £2 13s. 4d. and the Prior of Barnwell's
portion at £1. (fn. 149) There is an inventory of church
goods for 1278 and further details of its plenishings
in 1453. (fn. 150)
ST. MARY THE GREAT. The Church of St.
Mary the Virgin, by the Market, known after 1352
as Great St. Mary's and commonly called the University Church, was the only church whose patronage
was in the Crown in 1279. It is first mentioned in
1205, when King John presented Thomas de Chimeleye to the rectory, and Gervase, his chaplain, to the
vicarage for life. (fn. 151) A number of subsequent references
to incumbents of the rectory indicate that the advowson remained in the Crown. (fn. 152) The notable
diplomatic official, Elias de Joneston, keeper of the
processes of Aquitaine from 1306 to 1336, (fn. 153) was
presented in February 1324. He is said to have
exchanged it for the benefice of Bexwell (Norf.) in
1330, (fn. 154) but he was still Rector of St. Mary's in 1338,
when he appointed a proctor to receive the offerings
and fruits of the church and let it to farm. (fn. 155) The last
presentation was made by the Crown in 1341; (fn. 156) on
15 July 1342 Edward III granted the advowson to
his new foundation of King's Hall, with licence to
appropriate. (fn. 157) In 1546 the advowson and rectory
passed with the other possessions of King's Hall to
Trinity College, which still owns them. (fn. 158)
The church was valued at £6 13s. 4d. in 1217, at
£8 in 1254, at £10 in 1260, at £12 in 1276, and at
£4 6s. 8d. in 1291. (fn. 159) In 1279 fifteen several rents
amounting altogether to £1 5s. 1d. were payable to
the church from town properties, four being appropriated to the maintenance of lights, and two to the
chaplain of St. Mary's Chantry. (fn. 160) The chantry was
valued at £10 6s. 5d. in 1535. (fn. 161)
In 1650 the church had no minister or parsonage,
nor could the parishioners estimate its value, but the
commissioners conceived it fit that it should 'remayne sole, as it is, in respect as the University hath
been and is permitted to exercise there'. (fn. 162)
The use of the church for University functions
was established from an early date. Bachelors incepting in divinity preached there; Congregations were
held there until the Schools were built in 1400;
University documents were stored there; disputations were held and degrees conferred there down to
the building of the Senate House in 1730. (fn. 163) It was
also used until the beginning of the 20th century for
sessions of the bishop's consistory court. (fn. 164) Convocation sat there during the Parliament of 1388. (fn. 165) Conferences between town and gown took place there,
and the Black Assembly was held there annually. (fn. 166)
It was the connexion with the University which led
to St. Mary's being ransacked by the rioters in 1381.
In 1574 the town officers were elected in the
church, probably on account of the plague being
near the Guildhall. (fn. 167) In 1624 it was ordered in
Common Day that the Mayor and Aldermen should
attend sermons there monthly, absentees to be
fined. (fn. 168)
St. Mary's was completely rebuilt between 1478
and 1519, University meetings being held for the
time being in the churches of the Austin or Grey
Friars. Subscription lists are extant and include the
names of Richard III and Henry VII, but most of
the funds came from the University. (fn. 169) The contract
also survives for the building of the magnificent rood
loft in 1522–3, the scale of which was made possible
by the great height of the new nave. (fn. 170) The loft was
demolished in 1562 by Parker's orders. (fn. 171) The tower,
the first stone of which was laid in 1491, was completed as far as the belfry in 1596, when the parish
books record that 'this year all our bells are rung out
and was never before' [sic]. (fn. 172) The corner turrets
were completed in 1608, (fn. 173) when John Warren,
churchwarden and acting clerk of the works, was
killed in an accident. An inscription on the tower
wall, copied from his former monument, records:
Here John Warren sleeps among the dead,
Who with the church his own life finished. (fn. 174)
The report sent to Laud as to the use made of the
church in 1636 gives a vivid picture of its interior at
that date, serving as a 'lumberhouse' between commencements and 'blinded up' by shops. (fn. 175) In 1640,
chiefly owing to the efforts of Cosin, then Master of
Peterhouse, a new chancel screen was erected, (fn. 176) seen
and described by Cole before it was destroyed in
1754 to make room for the gallery over the chancel
known as the Throne, or Golgotha. (fn. 177) The building
of galleries to accommodate the listeners to University sermons had begun in 1610 with a gallery for the
doctors which was pulled down seven years later by
order of James I. (fn. 178) In 1736 the galleries over the
aisles were built, under James Gibb's directions, to
accommodate undergraduates and bachelors, a legacy
for their erection and maintenance having been left
by William Worts in 1709. (fn. 179) James Essex directed
the building of the Throne in 1754, (fn. 180) and William
Wilkins designed the west gallery, erected in 1819.
Both Throne and west gallery were taken down in
1863, (fn. 181) but the aisle galleries remain, supplying over
400 of the 1,700 seats which the church affords today.
There are inventories of church goods not only for
1278 (fn. 182) but for 1504, 1508, 1514 and a number of
years between 1550 and 1635. (fn. 183) The churchwardens' accounts, which begin in 1504, have been
printed down to 1635. (fn. 184)
The five bells hung in 1596 were originally intended to be chimed every four hours, but it was
not until 1671 that chimes were installed, (fn. 185) perhaps
in connexion with the visit of Charles II. (fn. 186) When, in
1722–3, the bells were recast (for the fourth time)
and increased from eight to ten the chimes were replaced by change-ringing, and the society of bellringers was founded. (fn. 187) The quarter-hour chimes now
sounded from St. Mary were composed and installed
in 1793 by Joseph Jowett of Trinity Hall, Professor
of Civil Law. He may have been assisted by William
Crotch, a former pupil of the organist of St. Mary.
Having been copied at the new Houses of Parliament in 1859, the Cambridge chimes have been
widely adopted by the name of the Westminster
Quarters. (fn. 188) Since 1769 the bells have numbered
twelve; they are considered perhaps the finest toned
in the eastern counties.
A circular disc on the tower of St. Mary's marks the
datum point from which, since 1732, the mile distances from Cambridge have been measured. (fn. 189) Dr.
John Hatcher (d. 1587) left money for the repair of
the clock which he had given to be put up on the
steeple. This later became absorbed in what was the
church estate, the income on which was nearly £15
in 1849 and was payable to general church purposes. (fn. 190)
ST. MARY THE LESS, formerly ST. PETER
OUTSIDE TRUMPINGTON GATES. Of the
sixteen medieval parish churches of Cambridge,
seven, namely St. Michael, St. John, St. Clement,
All Saints by the Castle, All Saints in the Jewry,
Holy Trinity, and St. Peter, seem to have had Cambridge townsmen as their first patrons. The history
of St. Peter supplies the instance of a church reported to be served by the founder and his kin. In
1207 a jury found that one Langlin had held the
church and had been its parson, and had given it to
his kinsman Segar 'secundum quod tunc fuit mos
civitatis Cantebr'; that Segar had held it and served
it for 60 years, and then given it to his son Henry,
who was parson there for a like term, and that Henry
gave it to St. John's Hospital, apparently about
1197. (fn. 191) This would, if correct, carry the beginnings
of the church back to before Domesday. The church
was appropriated to the hospital by Bishop Eustace
(1198–1215). (fn. 192) Bishop Hugh of Balsham transferred
both church and appropriation to his new foundation, Peterhouse, in 1286, empowering the scholars
to serve the church by a parochial chaplain. Disputes
between the college and the hospital as to the advowson were finally settled in favour of the college by
the award of Bishop Simon de Montacute in 1339–
40. St. Mary's was used as a chapel by Peterhouse
until the consecration of the present chapel in 1632. (fn. 193)
In 1217 the church was valued at £3, in 1254 at
£4, in 1276 at £6 13s. 4d. and in 1291 at £7. (fn. 194) In
1650 it was reported that the tithes of parsonage and
vicarage were worth £17 a year and were paid to
Peterhouse, which provided a preacher. The commissioners proposed that St. Mary the Less should
be united to St. Botolph. (fn. 195) The benefice was augmented in 1815 by the grant of £1,200 from Queen
Anne's Bounty.
By 1340 the church was old and ruinous and the
scholars were worshipping in the college. By 1352 it
had been entirely rebuilt, on an extended site, and it
was rededicated to the Virgin Mary. It was apparently intended to use the present church as a
chancel for the scholars' use, but if so the projected
nave was never built. (fn. 196) Consistory courts were held
in the church by the bishop's official in 1384 and
1386. (fn. 197) Two chantry chapels to the north and south
were added in the 14th and 15th centuries by two
Masters of Peterhouse, two earlier chantries having
been founded in the 14th century. (fn. 198) In 1535 an
unnamed chantry in the church was valued at
£2 5s. 2½d. (fn. 199) There is an inventory of church goods
for 1278. (fn. 200) There was a guild of St. Mary in the
church. The registers begin in 1557.
The church estate probably existed by the 17th
century; the property it comprised was sold in 1920
and is now represented by £2,100 stock the income
on which is applicable to general church purposes. (fn. 201)
ST. MICHAEL. The first reference to St.
Michael's appears to be the record of a plea as to its
advowson held in the year 1231. Ives Pipestraw,
who contributed to the tallage of 1211, had last presented to the church of St. Michael, and there was a
dispute over the descent of the patronage between
his nephew, Walter Fitz Absalom, and his greatnephew, John. (fn. 202) The Hundred Rolls of 1279 carry
the history of the patronage back to Ives's father
Reynold and on to Ives's great niece, Maud de
Walda, (fn. 203) who was apparently intending in 1292 to
bestow it on the University, as an inquest ad quod
damnum was ordered to determine whether she
could do so. (fn. 204) The advowson was, however, still in
private hands in 1323, when Harvey of Stanton
acquired it from Dera, relict of Robert of Madingley, (fn. 205) for the use of the scholars of his new college,
which took the name of Michaelhouse from the
church. The appropriation to the college followed
eighteen months later. (fn. 206) Advowson and rectory
passed with the other possessions of Michaelhouse
in 1546 to Trinity College, still the patrons. In 1550
it was proposed to unite part of the parish to Great
St. Mary and the other part to All Saints, but nothing
came of it. In 1650 it had neither minister nor maintenance, and it was proposed to unite it with All
Saints. (fn. 207)
The original church was rebuilt from its foundation by Hervey of Stanton and has been little altered
since, though it was thoroughly repaired and restored after a fire in 1849. The south aisle was used
by Michaelhouse and the north aisle by Gonville
Hall. There were altars to St. Gregory and Our
Lady. (fn. 208) The church contains the remains of the tomb
of the founder, whose bones were discovered in
1804. (fn. 209) Fagius, the Hebrew scholar, was buried here
in 1549, which led to the church's being laid under
an interdict in 1557. His remains were then disinterred and burnt in the market place with those of
Martin Bucer. (fn. 210)
The church was valued at £4 in 1217, £1 6s. 8d.
in 1254, and £7 6s. 8d. in 1276. (fn. 211) The benefice was
augmented by sums of £200 granted by Queen
Anne's Bounty in 1757, 1784, 1789, and 1793. (fn. 212)
In 1908 the vicarage was united with that of St.
Mary the Great, also a Trinity living. (fn. 213) The registers
begin in 1538; the churchwardens' accounts in
1583.
ST. PETER BY THE CASTLE, or BEYOND
THE BRIDGE. This little church measuring 15 by
35 feet, and used today only for children's services,
is the remnant of one that went back to the 12th
century, and consisted of a nave, chancel, south
aisle, and west tower and spire. The aisle had already
been destroyed when Cole sketched and described
the church in 1742. (fn. 214) The church ceased to be used
in 1749 and was roofless and windowless by 1772.
In 1780 there was talk of using its fabric for roadmending, (fn. 215) but in 1781 it was rebuilt, under a brief,
on a reduced scale, largely from the old material,
including, it is believed, some Roman bricks. The
south doorway and the bowl of the font, both of the
late Norman period, survive from the old church. (fn. 216)
St. Peter's is first mentioned in the valuation of the
diocese of Ely for the papal 20th of 1217 (fn. 217) when it
was valued at £2 13s. 4d. (fn. 218) In 1254 when the church
was valued at 20s., the advowson belonged to the
canons of Barnwell, to whom the church had presumably been appropriated. (fn. 219) In 1276 it was valued
at £4. (fn. 220) At the Dissolution the advowson came to the
Crown, and Elizabeth I granted it to the See of Ely. (fn. 221)
Under a commission dated 1349 the church was
dedicated to St. Peter and St. Paul. (fn. 222) The Guild of
St. Peter and St. Paul was held in it, (fn. 223) and chapels of
St. Mary and St. Saviour are also mentioned.
In 1650 the town commissioners found that the
parish had neither parsonage nor vicarage, though
the parishioners were finding £5 a year for a preacher.
They recommended that it should be united with
St. Giles'. (fn. 224) Though it has now been annexed to the
vicarage of St. Giles for several hundred years, the
two parishes are not merged and each elects its own
officers. There is an inventory of goods for 1278. (fn. 225)
The registers begin in 1586.
Modern Parish Churches.
The growth of
population in 19th- and 20th-century Cambridge
has caused the addition of new churches and the
creation of new ecclesiastical parishes. In the old
parish of St. Andrew the Less: CHRIST CHURCH,
Newmarket Road, built 1839, architect Ambrose
Poynter, became the parish church 1846, patron
trustees; ST. PAUL, Hills Road, built 1842 through
the efforts of Charles Perry, the first vicar; (fn. 226) architect
Ambrose Poynter, distinct parish in 1845, patron
Church Trust Fund; ST. MATTHEW, near East
Road, built 1866, architect R. R. Rowe, distinct
parish 1870; patron Vicar of St. Andrew the Less;
ST. BARNABAS, Mill Road, built 1869–88,
architect William Smith, distinct parish 1888, patron
Vicar of St. Paul. Will proved 1919 left £2,000 in
trust for the benefice and parish work; ST. PHILIP,
Mill Road, built 1891 by William Wade of St.
Neots, distinct parish 1902, patron Perry Trustees.
£2,000 left to endowment in 1919; ST. JOHN
mission church, Wellington Street, built 1874,
closed between 1933 and 1950.
In St. Giles' parish: ST. MARK, Barton Road,
built 1901, patron Diocesan Board of Patronage;
£100 left in 1936 with income to augment living.
In Chesterton parish: ST. LUKE, Victoria Road,
built 1874, architect William Smith, distinct parish
1876, patron the Bishop of Ely; ST. GEORGE,
Chesterfield Road, built c. 1937, architect T. H.
Lyon, distinct parish 1939; patron the Bishop of Ely.
In Cherry Hinton parish: ST. JOHN THE
EVANGELIST, Hills Road, built 1896, architects
Gordon, Lowthers and Gunton, distinct parish,
1897, patron the Bishop of Ely; ST. STEPHEN,
Coldham's Lane, church district 1948, patron
Church Trust Fund.