St Clement's Church, Oxford

St Clement's
St Clement's Parish Church

The present church, completed in 1828, viewed from the east.
Country England
Denomination Church of England
Website St. Clement's Church, Oxford
Architecture
Architect(s) Daniel Robertson
Style Norman Revival
Administration
Deanery Cowley
Archdeaconry Oxford
Diocese Oxford
Province Canterbury
Clergy
Rector interregnum

St Clement's Church is an evangelical Church of England parish church east of central Oxford, England.

History

The parish of St Clement's, Oxford was outside the city of Oxford until boundary changes in 1835. It was originally sited where the roads into Oxford from the east meet to cross Magdalen Bridge into the centre of Oxford.[1] In 1004 AD, the manor was granted to St Frideswide's Church (now Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford). In 1122 King Henry I gave the royal chapel of St Clement to the Priory.

The original church building stood on The Plain, surrounded by the village, until 1829 when it was demolished.[1] A new church was built on a new site during 1827–28 near the other end of St Clement's, at the southern end of Marston Road.[2] The architect Daniel Robertson designed the new building in a Norman style: a very early example of the revival of this style of 11th and early 12th century architecture. It was built by John Hudson of Oxford and cost £6,032 19s. 5d, supported by a gift of land from Sir Joseph Lock [3] and public subscriptions principally collected by John Henry Newman.[1] The site of the original church is an open space that is now a roundabout called The Plain.

See also

References

The Plain, site of the original St. Clement's parish church
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 St Clement's Church, Oxford: Some History, UK.
  2. Old Oxford: East Oxford: The Plain.
  3. Diocese of Oxford Faculty & Consecration Register 1827-1844

Sources

External links

Coordinates: 51°45′12″N 1°14′16″W / 51.753233°N 1.237856°W