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Tussaud's
St. Paul's Cathedral
When most people think of St.
Paul's Cathedral in London the image of Christopher Wren's magnificent
classical church rises in their minds, but there was a cathedral
dedicated to St. Paul long before the able Mr. Wren put his stamp on the
skyline of Stuart London.
The first church on this spot was erected in 604 AD, just 8 short years
after the first Christian mission under St. Augustine landed in Kent.
This wooden church was established by King Ethelbert of Kent as home to
the first bishop of the East Saxons, Mellitus.
That first church was destroyed by fire and rebuilt by St. Erkenwald,
then bishop, in 675-85. Fire was not the only danger faced by buildings
in those dark centuries of Anglo-Saxon England - the Vikings destroyed
the second St. Paul's in 962 during on of their periodic invasions.
Once again, fire destroyed the church in 1087. The new Norman building,
now called Old St. Paul's, took over 150 years to complete, the final
touches being applied in 1240. Well, not quite final touches - a new
Gothic choir was added by 1313, making St. Paul's the third longest
church in Europe at 596 feet. The following year the spire was
completed. At 489 feet it was the tallest in all Europe.
In the Tudor period an open-air pulpit called Paul's Cross was
established by the south wall of St. Paul's. There crowds gathered to
hear rabble-rousing Protestant sermons. In 1549 the preachers incited a
mob to sack the cathedral itself. They rampaged through the interior,
destroying the high altar and ravaginbg the tombs, wall-hangings, and
tombs.
St. Paul's bad luck continued. The spire was struck by lightning (not
too surprising, considering how it towered over the city). The cathedral
became a centre of trade, with merchants selling their wares in the nave
of the church itself. Architect Inigo Jones was called in to resurrect
the decaying building, but his efforts, hampered by lack of funds, only
delayed the inevitable.
During the English Civil War, Parliamentary troops commandeered the
cathedral and used the nave as cavalry barracks. They broke up the
scaffolding and sold the material.
The fortunes of Old St. Paul's seemed to take a turn for the better with
the Restoration of the Monarchy in 1660. Charles II appointed a young
architect named Christopher Wren to undertake major repairs to the
building. Wren had only begun his work when final calamity struck.
On September 4, 1666, fire broke out in a bakehouse in Pudding Lane.
Fanned by a fierce wind, the fire spread through the close-packed
streets of London, destroying everything in its path. For four days the
fire raged, and when the smoke finally cleared, Old St. Paul's was
nothing but charred timbers and rubble.
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