St Anne’s, Limehouse

St Anne, Limehouse

St Anne’s, Limehouse ist eine anglikanische Kirche im Londoner Stadtteil Limehouse.

Erbaut wurde die Kirche 1712 bis 1724 durch den Architekten Nicholas Hawksmoor im Rahmen des 1711 vom britischen Parlament verabschiedeten Kirchenbauprogramms für Fünfzig Neue Kirchen. Ihr Patrozinium bezieht sich auf die Initiatorin des Projekts, Queen Anne.

Das Kircheninnere stellt einen nach dem Viersäulenplan angelegten längsgerichteten Saalbau mit Emporen in den durchgehenden Seitenschiffen dar, mit einem raumübergreifenden kreisförmigem Rahmen im Plafond, wodurch sich eine gewisse Ambiguität der Raumwirkung ergibt. Eingangsseitig erhielt die Kirche einen riegelartigen Abschluss mit gestaffeltem Turmaufbau und einer halbkreisförmig vortretenden Vorhalle, artikuliert durch gotische Strebepfeiler.

1850 wurde die Kirche durch einen Brand beschädigt, anschließend aber 1851 bis 1854 wiederaufgebaut. Der aufragende Kirchturm von St Anne dient zugleich als Navigationspunkt der Schifffahrt.

Literatur

  • Kerry Downes: Hawksmoor. Thames & Hudson, London 1970, S. 121–127. ISBN 0-500-20096-3

Weblinks

Commons: St Anne's Limehouse – Sammlung von Bildern, Videos und Audiodateien

Koordinaten: 51° 30′ 42,1″ N, 0° 1′ 49″ W

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St Anne, Limehouse (36640179641).jpg
Autor/Urheber: Amanda Slater from Coventry, West Midlands, UK, Lizenz: CC BY-SA 2.0

St Anne's Limehouse was formed from part of the parish of St. Dunstan's Stepney, prior to the 18th century a large (but then thinly populated) East London parish that extended all the way down to the Thames River. As the population of London increased, growing parishes were subdivided. In 1709 a new parish in Limehouse was formed from part of the parish of St. Dunstan. The church may be named for Queen Anne as she raised money for it by taxing coal passing along the River Thames.

The building was designed by Nicholas Hawksmoor, as one of twelve churches built to serve the needs of the rapidly expanding population of London in the 18th century. The scheme never met its original target, but those built were also known as the Queen Anne Churches. The building was completed in 1727 and consecrated in 1730.

Queen Anne decreed that as the new church was close to the river it would be a convenient place of registry for sea captains to register vital events taking place at sea. Therefore, she gave St. Anne's Church the right to display the second most senior ensign of the Royal Navy, the White Ensign. The prominent tower with its golden ball on the flagpole became a Trinity House "sea mark" on navigational charts, and the Queen's Regulations still permit St. Anne's Limehouse to display the White Ensign 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.

Hawksmoor, who worked with Wren and Vanburgh, has been 'rediscovered' in recent years. His style is innovative and eclectic. Some have portrayed his churches as centres of gloom and mystery, full of occult and morbid energies and pagan symbols, linked to ancient lay lines and to murders in Whitechapel and on the notorious Ratcliffe Highway (which now links the City and Canary Wharf).