St Stephen Walbrook

You can imagine why the artistically gifted Lady Sarah Chatto, daughter of Princess Margaret and Lord Snowdon, would have chosen to have her wedding held underneath this beautiful dome. 
 
This is St Stephen Walbrook in the heart of the City of London and nestling in the shadow of the Lord Mayor’s Mansion House. It was re-built by Christopher Wren after it was destroyed in the great fire of London in 1666.

After more damage in World War Two bombing raids, it was re-built again in the same style. Wren was more than likely a parishioner of the original destroyed church, and this one was considered to be his blueprint for his major creation, St Paul’s Cathedral, less than half a mile up the road. 

It’s crowning glory, for me anyway, is this dome. That and knowing that the man who masterminded the church’s construction was hailed as “that miracle of youth”.  

He was certainly one who as a mathematician, astronomer and alumni of Oxford University believed heartily in, as he put it, “beauty through geometry”. His finished buildings amply demonstrate this. 

Jewish London

A truly moving experience for British TV viewers came a few years back when astonished world-famous philanthropist Sir Nicholas Winterton suddenly realised he was sitting in a studio full of people whose lives he had saved decades before. Back then they were very young Jewish children for whom, at great personal risk, he had organised trans-European trains that plucked them out of the clutches of the Nazis.

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Three religions under one roof

As the world holds its breath over the latest Middle Eastern conflict, it’s comforting to think that in London’s East End, three religions traditionally normally associated as being at loggerheads with each other have peacefully evolved over three centuries in one building.

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