Online Encyclopedia

WESTMINSTER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 551 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

WESTMINSTER  , a

See also:
part of _
See also:
London, England; strictly a city in the administrative county of London, bounded E. by " the City," S. by the
See also:
river
See also:
Thames, W by the boroughs of
See also:
Chelsea and
See also:
Kensington, and N. by
See also:
Paddington, St Marylebone and
See also:
Holborn . Westminster was formed into a borough by the London Government Act of 18J9, and by a royal charter of the 29th of
See also:
October 'goo it was created a city . The council consists of a mayor, ro aldermen and 6o councillors . The city comprises the
See also:
parliamentary boroughs of the Strand, Westminster and St George's, Hanover Square, each returning one member . -
See also:
Area, 2502.7 acres . The City of Westminster, as thus depicted, extends from the western end of
See also:
Fleet Street to Kensington Gardens, and from Oxford Street to the Thames, which it
See also:
borders over a distance of 3 m., between Victoria (Chelsea)
See also:
Bridge and a point below
See also:
Waterloo Bridge . It thus includes a large number of the finest buildings in London, from the Law Courts in the east to the Imperial Institute in the west, Buckingham and St James's palaces, the
See also:
National Gallery, and most of the greatest residences of the wealthy classes . But the name of Westminster is more generally associated with a more confined area, namely, the quarter which includes the Abbey, the Houses of Parliament, the government and other buildings in
See also:
Whitehall, the
See also:
Roman Catholic
See also:
Cathedral, and the parts immediately adjacent to these . Westminster Abbey.—The Abbey of St Peter is the most widely celebrated church in the
See also:
British
See also:
empire . The Thames, bordered in early times by a
See also:
great expanse of fen on either hand from Chelsea and
See also:
Battersea downward, Tradition washed, at the point where the Abbey stands, one hnd istory .
See also:
shore of a low island perhaps three-quarters of a mile in circumference, known as Thorney or Bramble islet . Tributary streams from the north formed channels through the marsh, flanking the island north and south, and were once connected by a dyke on the west .

These channels belonged to the

See also:
Tyburn, which flowed from the high ground of
See also:
Hampstead . Relics of the Roman occupation have been excavated in the former island, and it is supposed that
See also:
traffic on the Watling Street, from Dover to Chester, crossed the Thames and the marshes by way of Thorney before the construction of London Bridge; the road continuing north-west in the
See also:
line .of the
See also:
modern Park Lane (partly) and Edgware Road . Tradition places on the island a temple of Apollo, which was destroyed by an
See also:
earthquake in the reign of the emperor Antoninus
See also:
Pius . On the site King
See also:
Lucius is said to have founded a church (c . A.D . 170) . The irruption of the
See also:
Saxons
See also:
left Thorney desolate . Traditional still, but supported by greater probability, a story states that Sebert . 550 king of the East Saxons, having taken part in the foundation of St Paul's Cathedral, restored or refounded the church at Thorney " to the honour of
See also:
God and St Peter, on the west side of the City of London " (Stow) . A splendid legend relates the coming of St Peter in person to hallow his new church . The sons of Sebert relapsed into
See also:
idolatry and left the church to the mercy of the Danes . A charter of Offa, king of
See also:
Mercia (785), deals with the
See also:
conveyance of certain
See also:
land to the monastery of St Peter; and King Edgar restored the church, clearly defining by a charter dated 951 (not certainly genuine) the boundary of Westminster, which may be indicated in modern terms as extending from the Marble Arch south to the Thames and east to the City boundary, the former river Fleet .

Westminster was a

See also:
Benedictine foundation . In ro5o
See also:
Edward the
See also:
Confessor took up the erection of a magnificent new church, cruciform, with a central and two western towers . Its
See also:
building continued after his
See also:
death, but it was consecrated on Childermas Day, 28th December io65; and on the following " twelfth mass
See also:
eve " the king died, being buried next day in the church . In 1245 Henry III. set about the rebuilding of the church east of the
See also:
nave, and at this point it becomes necessary to describe the building as it now appears . Westminster Abbey is a cruciform structure consisting of nave with aisles, transepts with aisles (but in the south transept The the place of the western aisle is occupied by the church. eastern cloister walk), and choir of polygonal apsidal form, with six chapels (four polygonal) opening north and south of it, and an eastern Lady
See also:
Chapel, known as Henry VII.'s chapel . There are two western towers, but in the centre a low square tower hardly rises above the pitch of the roof . The main entrance in
See also:
common use is that in the north transept . The chapter-house, cloisters and other conventual buildings and remains lie to the south . The
See also:
total length of the church (exterior) is 531 ft. and of the transepts 203 ft. in all . The breadth of the na•,e without the aisles is 38 ft . 7 in. and its height close upon 102 It . These dimensions are very slightly lessened in the choir .

Without, viewed from the open Parliament Square to the north, the beautiful proportions of the building are readily realized, but it is somewhat dwarfed by the

absence of a central tower and by the vast adjacent
See also:
pile of the Houses of Parliament . From this point (considered as a building merely) it appears only as a secondary unit in a magnificent
See also:
group . Seen from the west, however, it is the dominant unit, but here it is impossible to overlook the imperfect conception of the "
See also:
Gothic humour " (as he himself termed it) manifested by Wren, from whose designs the western towers were completed in 1740 . The north front, called Solomon's Porch from a former porch over the main entrance, is from the designs of
See also:
Sir G . G . Scott, considerably altered by J . L . Pearson . Within, the Abbey is a superb example of the pointed style . The
See also:
body of the church has a remarkable appearance of uniformity, because, although the building of the new nave was continued with intermissions from the 14th century until Tudor times, the broad design of the Early
See also:
English
See also:
work in the eastern part of the church was carried on throughout . The choir, with its unusual form and radiating chapels, plainly follows French
See also:
models, but the name of the architect is lost . Exquisite ornament is seen in the
See also:
triforium
See also:
arcade, and between some of the arches in the transept are figures, especially finely carved, though much mutilated, known as the censing angels .

Henry VII.'s Chapel replaces an earlier Lady Chapel, and is the most remarkable building of its

period . It comprises a nave with aisles, and an apsidal eastward end formed of five small radiating chapels . Both within and without it is ornamented with an extraordinary
See also:
wealth and minuteness of detail . A splendid series of carved oak stalls lines each side of the nave, and above them hang the banners of the Knights of the Bath, of whom this was the place of
See also:
installation when the Order was re-constituted in 1725 . The fan-traceried roof, with its carved stone pendants, is the most exquisite architectural feature of the chapel . The choir stalls in the body of the church` are modern, as is the
See also:
organ, a
See also:
fine instrument with- an " echo "
See also:
attachment, electrically connected, in the triforium of the south transept . The reredos is by Sir G . G . Scott, with mosaic by Salviati . In Abbot
See also:
Islip's chapel there is a series of effigies in
See also:
wax, representing monarchs and others . The earliest, which is well preserved, is of Charles Il., but remnants of older figures survive . Some of the effigies were carried in funeral processions according to custom, but this was not done later than 1735 .

There are, however, figures of

Lord Chatham and Nelson,set up by the officials who received the fees formerly paid by visitors to the
See also:
exhibition . But the
See also:
peculiar fame of the Abbey lies not in its architecture, nor in its connexion with the metropolis alone, but in the fact that it has long been the place of the coronation of sovereigns Cereand the
See also:
burial-place of many of them and of their greatest mo subjects . The
See also:
original reason for this was the reverence andnies moan• attaching to the memory of the Confessor, whose shrine meats. stands in the central chapel behind the high altar . The Norman kings were ready to do honour to his name . From William the Conqueror onward every
See also:
sovereign has been crowned here excepting Edward V . The coronation chairs stand in the Confessor's chapel . That used by the sovereign
See also:
dates from the time of Edward I., and contains beneath its seat the stone of Scone, or stone of destiny, on which the
See also:
Celtic kings were crowned . It is of Scottish origin, but tradition identifies it with Jacob's pillow at Bethel . Here also are kept the sword and shield of Edward III., still used in the coronation ceremony . The second chair was made for Mary, consort of William III . Subsequent to the
See also:
Conquest many kings and queens were buried here, from Henry III. to George II . Not all the graves are marked, but of those which are the tomb of Henry VII. and his queen, Elizabeth of York, the central
See also:
object in his own chapel, is the finest .

The splendid recumbent effigies in

See also:
bronze, of
See also:
Italian workmanship, rest upon a tomb of black marble, and the whole is enclosed in a magnificent shrine of wrought brass . Monuments, tombs, busts and memorials crowd the choir, its chapels and the transepts, nor is the nave wholly
See also:
free of them . All but the minority of the Gothic period (among which the canopied tombs of Edmund Crouchback and Aymer de
See also:
Valence, in the sanctuary, are notable) appear incongruous in a Gothic setting . Many of the memorials are not worthy of their position as
See also:
works of
See also:
art, nor are the subjects they commemorate always worthy to lie here, for the high honour of burial in the Abbey was not always so conscientiously guarded as now . Eliminating these considerations, however, a wonderful range of sculptural art is found . A part of the south transept is famed under the name of the Poet's Corner . The north transept contains many monuments to statesmen . The monastery was dissolved in 1539, and Westminster was then erected into a bishopric, but only one prelate, Thomas Thurleby, held the office of bishop . In 1553 Mary again appointed an conventual abbot, but Elizabeth reinstated the dean, with twelve pre- bendaries . Of the conventual buildings, the cloisters are of and other the 13th and 14th centuries . On the south side of the buildings.
See also:
southern walk remains of a wall of the refectory are seen from without . From the eastern walk a porch gives entry to the chapter house and the chapel of the Pyx .

The first is of the time of Henry III., a fine octagonal building, its vaulted roof supported by a slender clustered

column of marble . It was largely restored by Sir Gilbert Scott . There are mural paintings of the 14th and 15th centuries . The chapel or chamber of the Pyx is part of the under-croft of the original dormitory, and is early Norman work of the Confessor's time . It was used as a
See also:
treasury for the regalia and other articles of value in early times, and here were kept the standard coins of the
See also:
realm used in the trial of the pyx now carried out at the Mint . The undercroft is divided into compartments by walls, and part of it appears in the gymnasium of Westminster School . Above it is now the chapter library . To the south-east lies the picturesque Little Cloister, with its court and fountain, surrounded by residences of canons and officials . Near it are slight ruins of the monastic infirmary chapel of St Catherine . West of the main cloisters are the Deanery, Jerusalem chamber and College Hall, the building surrounding a small court and dating in fabric mainly from the 14th century . This was the Abbot's house . Its most famous portion is the Jerusalem chamber, believed to be named from the former tapestries on its walls, representing the
See also:
holy city .

Here died Henry IV. in 1413, as set forth in

Shakespeare's Henry IV . (Pt. ii., Act iv . Sc . 4) . It is a beautiful
See also:
room, with open
See also:
timber roof, windows partly of stained glass, and walls tapestried and panelled The College Hall, adjoining it, is of similar construction, but plainly fitted in the common manner of a refectory, with a dais for the high table at the north and a gallery at the south . It is now the dining-hall of Westminster School . Westminster School.—St Peter's College, commonly called Westminster School, is one of the most ancient and eminent public
See also:
schools in England, and the only school of such
See also:
standing still occupying its original site in London . A school was maintained by the monks from very early times . Henry VIII. took steps to raise it in importance, but the school owes its
See also:
present eminence to Queen Elizabeth, who is commemorated as the foundress at a Latin
See also:
commemoration service held periodically in the Abbey, where, moreover, the daily school service is held . The school buildings lie east of the conventual buildings, surrounding Little Dean's Yard, which, like the cloisters, communicates with Dean's Yard, in which are the picturesque houses of the headmaster, canons of the Abbey, and others . The buildings are modern or large modernized . The Great Schoolroom is a fine panelled hall, bearing on its walls the arms and names of many eminent alumni; it is entered by a gateway attributed to Inigo Jones, also covered with names .

Ashburnham House, now containing one of the school houses, the library and class-rooms, is named from the
See also:
family for whom it was built, traditionally but not certainly, by Inigo Jones . The finest part remaining is the
See also:
grand
See also:
staircase . The number of scholars, called King's Scholars, on the foundation is 6o, of which 4o, who are boarders, represent the original number . The great proportion of the boys are home boarders (
See also:
Town Boys) . In the College dormitory a Latin
See also:
play is annually presented, in accordance with ancient custom . It is preceded by a prologue, and followed by a humorous
See also:
epilogue, in Latin adapted to subjects of the moment . Other customs for which the school is noted are the acclamation of the sovereign at coronation in the Abbey, in accordance with a
See also:
privilege jealously held by the boys; and the " Pancake Greaze," a struggle in the Great Schoolroom on Shrove Tuesday to obtain possession of a pancake carrying with it a
See also:
reward from the Dean . The number of boys is about 250 . Valuable close scholarships and exhibitions at Christ Church, Oxford, and Trinity College, Cambridge, are awarded annually . St Margaret's.—On the north side of the Abbey, close beside it, is the parish church of St Margaret . It was founded in or soon after the time of the Confessor, but the present building is Perpendicular, of greater beauty within than without . St Margaret's is officially the church of the House of
See also:
Commons .

It is frequently the

scene of fashionable weddings, which are rarely held in the Abbey . On the south side of Dean's Yard is the Church House, a memorial of Queen Victoria's Jubilee (1887), consisting of a spacious hall of brick and stone, with offices for numerous Church societies . Westminster Palace: Houses of Parliament.—A royal palace existed at Westminster at least as early as the reign of Canute, but the building spoken of by Fitzstephen as an " incomparable structure furnished with a breastwork and a bastion " is supposed to have been founded by Edward the Confessor and enlarged by William the Conqueror . The Hall, called Westminster Hall, was built by William Rufus and altered by Richard II . In 1512 the palace suffered greatly from fire, and thereafter ceased to be used as a royal residence . St Stephen's chapel, originally built by King Stephen, was used from 1547 for the meetings of the House of Commons, which had been held previously in the chapter house of the Abbey . The Lords used another apartment of the palace, but on the 16th of October 1834 the whole of the buildings, except the hall, was burnt down . In 184o the building of the New Palace, or Houses of Parliament, began, and it was completed in 1867, at a cost of about three millions sterling . (For plan, &c., see ARCHITECTURE: Modern.) It covers an area of about 8 acres, and has a frontage of about 300 yds. to the Thames . The architect was Sir Charles Barry, and the style is
See also:
late Perpendicular . Towards the river it presents a rich
See also:
facade with a terrace rising directly from the
See also:
water . At the south-west corner rises the vast Victoria tower, above the royal entrance, 340 ft. high, and 75 ft. square .

At the north is the

See also:
clock tower, 32o ft. high, bearing the great clock which chimes the quarters on four bells, and strikes the hours on a bell weighing over 13 tons, named Big Ben after Sir Benjamin Hall, First
See also:
Commissioner of Works at the time when the clock was erected . The building incorporates Westminster Hall, which
See also:
measures 290 ft. in length, 68 in width, and 90 in height . It has a magnificent open roof of carved oak, and is used as the vestibule of the Houses of Parliament . Of the modern rooms, the House of Peers is a splendidly ornate chamber, 97 ft. in length; that of the Commons is 7o ft. long, and less lavishly adorned . The sitting of parliament is signified by a flag on Victoria Tower in daytime and by a
See also:
light at the
See also:
summit of the clock tower at
See also:
night . Whitehall.—Northward from Parliament Square a broad, slightly curving thoroughfare leads to Trafalgar Square . This is Whitehall, which replaced the narrow King Street . Here, between the Thames and St James's Park, formerly stood York House, a residence of the archbishops of York from 1248 . Wolsey beautified the mansion a,F1d kept high state there, but on his disgrace Henry VIII. acquired and reconstructed it, employed
See also:
Holbein in its decoration, and made it his
See also:
principal residence . Inigo Jones designed a magnificent new palace for James I., but only the banqueting hall was completed (1622), and this survived several fires, by one of which (1697) nearly the whole of the rest of the palace was destroyed . The hall, converted into a royal chapel by George I., and now
See also:
housing the museum of the Royal
See also:
United Service Institution, the buildings of which adjoin it, is a fine specimen of
See also:
Palladian architecture, and its ceiling is adorned with allegorical paintings by Rubens, restored and rehung in 1907 . The museum contains military and
See also:
naval relics, models and other exhibits .

Through this hall Charles I. passed on his way to

execution beneath its windows; and the palace was the scene of the death of Henry VIII., Cromwell and Charles II . The principal government offices are situated in Whitehall . On the left, following the northerly direction, are buildings completed in 1908, from the designs of J . M . Brydon, for the Boards of
See also:
Education, Trade,
See also:
Local Government, &c . The Home,
See also:
Foreign, Colonial and India Offices occupy the next block, a heavy building, adorned with allegorical figures, by Sir G . G . Scott (1873) . Downing Street, separating these from the Treasury, contains the official residences of the First Lord of the Treasury and the Chancellor of the Ex-chequer . The Treasury itself dates from 1737, but the facade is by Sir Charles Barry . The Horse Guards, containing the offices of various military departments, is a low but not unpicturesque building surrounding a court-yard, built in 1753 on the site of a guard-house for the security of Whitehall palace, dating from 1631 . On the parade ground between it and St James's Park the ceremony of trooping the colour is held at the celebration of the sovereign's birthday .

The portion of the

Admiralty facing Whitehall dates from 1726 and is plain and sombre; but there are handsome new buildings on the Park side . On the right of Whitehall, besides the banquet hall, are the fine War Office, completed in 1906, from the designs of W . Young, and Montagu House, the residence of the duke of Buccleuch . In front of the War Office an equestrian statue of the duke of Cambridge (d . 1904) was unveiled in 1907 . Trafalgar Square is an open space sloping sharply to the north . On the south side, facing the entry of Whitehall, is the Nelson column (1843) by W . Railton, 145 ft. in height, a copy in granite from the temple of Mars Ultor in Rome, crowned with a statue of Nelson by E . H . Baily, and having at its
See also:
base four
See also:
colossal lions in bronze modelled by Sir Edwin Landseer . The centre of the square is levelled and paved with asphalte, and contains two fountains . There are statues of George IV., Napier, Havelock and Gordon .

Behind the terrace on the north rises the National Gallery (1838), a Grecian building by William

Wilkins, subsequently much enlarged, with its splendid collection of paintings . The ;National Portrait Gallery is contained in a building (1895) on the north-east side of the National Gallery . Westminster Cathedral.—A short distance from Victoria Street, towards its western end, stands Westminster Cathedral (Roman Catholic) . Its foundation was laid in 1886, and its consecration took place at the close of 1903 . Its site is somewhat circumscribed, and this and its great bulk renders impossible any general appreciation of its complex outline; but its stately domed campanile, 283 ft. in height, forms a landmark from far over London . The style was described by the architect, J . F . Bentley, as early Christian
See also:
Byzantine, and the material is mainly red brick . The extreme length is 36o ft., the breadth 156 ft., the breadth of the nave 6o ft., and its height (domes within) 112 ft .

End of Article: WESTMINSTER
[back]
EARL OF WESTMEATH
[next]
MARQUESSES AND DUKES OF WESTMINSTER

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.