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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
Es Features

Hidden London: St George's, Bloomsbury, home to 'raunchy lions' and modern fashion shows

In 1751, William Hogarth, the great London painter and satirist, produced Gin Lane, arguably his most famous etching. This raucous image is a good place to introduce one of London’s hidden gems, because in the background is the unique spire of St George’s church in Bloomsbury.

In the late 1600s London was expanding. To the north of the city, new mansions were being constructed and squares laid out on open land by people such as the Earl of Southampton. Soon, a genteel neighbourhood became established.

But there was a problem! The nearest church for the smart folk of Bloomsbury to worship in was St Giles in the Fields, which meant passing through the infamous Rookery, a dangerous overcrowded slum filled with the drunkenness, criminality and debauchery so vividly depicted in Hogarth’s Gin Lane.

Could the new residents of Bloomsbury possibly hold their breath or stave off temptation for so long?! Petitions were made, strings were pulled and, thanks to an act of Parliament in 1711, a small plot of land off what is now Bloomsbury Way was purchased to build a new church for the princely sum of £1,000.

(Alamy Stock Photo)

Next, an architect was required. Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir Christopher Wren’s assistant, had been selected as one of two designers to oversee a massive expansion of London’s churches sparked by the growing city and funded from the same tax on coal that had financed the new St Paul’s Cathedral.

Inevitably, money ran out and only 12 churches were completed, six by Hawksmoor, with one being St George’s. Hawksmoor’s church was not simply a place of worship. Completed in 1731, it was a building inspired by classical references that point to a wider, political ambition.

The early decades of the 18th century witnessed the Acts of Union that brought together the parliaments of England and Scotland under the protestant Queen Anne, who was succeeded by the new Hanoverian King, George I. Finally, there was peace across Europe: the long wars with France were over (temporarily at least), and a

Jacobite rebellion quashed in 1715. The capital was booming, and Britain’s rulers wished to showcase a protestant city that rivalled the magnificence of Paris and Rome. St George’s plays to that theme. Hawksmoor’s baroque masterpiece is ingenuous. Its massive colonnaded entranceway is a copy of the Temple of Bacchus in the Roman city of Baalbek, Lebanon.

(Alamy Stock Photo)

There’s also a touch of Rome’s iconic Pantheon about it. The crowning glory of St George’s is its spire — again inspired by classical architecture, this time from the ancient Greek tomb of Mausolus of Halicarnassus in Turkey (from which we now get the term “mausoleum”, meaning above ground tomb). At St George’s this is a tall, stepped pyramid on an array of columns. And on top, dressed as a Roman emperor, is none other than George I, looking out over the capital and beyond it to the country.

This is architecture as a metaphor — marking the emergence of a new confident nationhood, inheritor to the classical empires of Greece and Rome. There is a final, unusual twist to Hawksmoor’s design, because underneath King George are two enormous stone lions and two equally large unicorns with copper horns chasing each other around the base of the spire. They are so large (3m-plus tall) that they can be seen in the Gin Lane etching. Their meaning? A reference to the heraldic emblems of England (the lion) and Scotland (the unicorn) fighting for control over the kingdom, which ended for the time being in the defeat of the Stuarts and Jacobites in 1715.

Decline and renewal As soon as Hawksmoor finished his church, others began to alter his building, much to his annoyance. Over the decades, new galleries were added and removed, box pews were taken out and the whole internal orientation of the church was changed. The clear glass which originally spread generous light onto the interior was replaced by darker Victorian stained glass.

Worst of all, someone decided that the lions and unicorns were too raunchy for Victorian taste

John Darlington

Worst of all, someone decided that the lions and unicorns were too raunchy for Victorian taste — so they were removed, to be replaced by dull swags of cloth modelled in stone.

By the Nineties, St George’s was in a sad state, its once bright stone covered in soot, its interior shabby and overpainted. The congregation was in decline too, with the interior layout too large for the people who wanted to worship and too inflexible for alternative uses. In short, the building had lost the soul of Hawksmoor’s original design.

Fortunately, the story has a happy ending. Thanks to the local parishioners and with the support of World Monuments Fund and others, a major restoration programme was launched, which by 2008 had returned St George’s to Hawksmoor’s original vision.

(Getty Images for BFC)

Today, there’s a thriving congregation and the church is used for concerts, clubs, a café and charitable work, as well as a place of worship — there’s even a Museum of Comedy in the Undercroft. And, thankfully, those magnificent lions and unicorns have been recreated.

So, next time you are walking to the British Museum, or perhaps heading down Bloomsbury Way on the top of the No38 bus, look up at St George’s famous spire, and be inspired by both Hawksmoor’s genius, and a traditional rhyme brought to life: The lion and the unicorn Were fighting for the crown The lion beat the unicorn All around the town.

John Darlington is director of projects for World Monuments Fund

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