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Ben Abel / 50,082 items
The Grade I Listed Saint Mary de Lode Church is believed by some to be on the site of the first Christian church in Britain. On Archdeacon Street Gloucester Gloucestershire.

The word Lode is from the old English word for water course or ferry and in this case it refers to a ferry that once crossed a branch of the River Severn to the west of the church which no longer exists. In 1979 archaeological excavations in the nave showed that the church is built over two Roman buildings. The first probably a baths building erected in the second century was destroyed in the fifth century and replaced by a timber mausoleum containing three burials. The mausoleum was destroyed by fire and followed by a sequence of buildings interpreted as churches culminating in the medieval church of St Mary. It is suggested that the original church was a post-Roman British foundation before the Anglo-Saxons occupied this area. The earliest reference to a church in written records dates from the late eleventh century.

It then comprised a nave chancel and tower which was destroyed by fire in 1190. A new chancel was built in the thirteenth century. A local legend first recorded in the eighteenth century holds that the church was the burial place of the legendary King Lucius first Christian king of Britain who was said to have established a bishopric in Gloucester in the second century A.D. This legend combined with the results of the archaeological work has apparently inspired the local belief that the church was built on the site of an ancient Roman templ and was the first Christian church in Britain. A tomb effigy in the north wall of the chancel formerly pointed out as marking the grave of King Lucius is of fourteenth-century date and shows a tonsured priest perhaps William de Chamberleyn who was vicar in 1302-5.

In March 1643 and also in 1646 during the English Civil War the church was used as a prison to hold royalist soldiers captured by Sir William Waller and Lieut. Col. Edward Massey. The church has a Norman central tower of about 1190. The nave was rebuilt in 1826 in early Gothic Revival style with cast iron columns by James Cooke a local monumental mason.

A Norman arch leads from the nave into the tower which is barrel-vaulted and connected through a thirteenth-century arch with the chancel. The chancel was begun like the tower in about 1190 but extended and vaulted in the thirteenth century. Further restorations to the church took place in the nineteent and the west part of the nave was converted for use as a church hall in 1980. There is an octagonal pulpit apparently made up of fifteenth-century carved wooden panels and an eighteenth-century organ brought in 1972 from the now-redundant church of St Nicholas Westgate Street. There are stained glass windows commemorating the Royal Gloucestershire Hussars and the Gloucester poet Ivor Gurney. In the grounds is a monument to Bishop John Hooper.
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Dates
  • Taken: Jul 5, 2014
  • Uploaded: Dec 20, 2014
  • Updated: Aug 31, 2021