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London Charterhouse

The London Charterhouse was set up as a Carthusian monastery in 1371 by Walter de Manny, in Smithfield to the north west of the City of London. It was set up near a 1348 plague pit where many victims of the Black Death were buried. The twenty-five monks each had their own small building and garden.

Thomas More came to the monastery for spiritual recuperation. The monastery was closed in the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the English Reformation. As it resisted dissolution the monastery was treated harshly: the Prior, John Houghton was hanged, drawn and quartered at Tyburn. Subsequently, ten monks were taken to the nearby Newgate Prison; of these nine starved to death and the tenth was executed three years later at Tower Hill.

The site was subsequently used by Lord North and the Duke of Norfolk as a home. Ricardo Riddulphi was arrested in the House and the Riddulphi plot of 1571 against Elizabeth I failed and was followed by the execution of Norfolk. During this period the Bassano family of musicians, originally from Venice, also had some involvement with the house.

Charterhouse: mainly Tudor buildings visible
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Charterhouse: mainly Tudor buildings visible
The Charterhouse was purchased by Thomas Sutton who in 1611 turned it into a school, which became famous as Charterhouse School, and a home for elderly gentlemen who had served the King as 'Captains by land or by sea'.

The buildings were badly damaged in the Blitz but are now restored and some medieval and 16th Century fabric remains. Charterhouse School moved out in 1872, being replaced (till 1933) by the Merchant Taylors' School, but Charterhouse is still home to senior (male) citizens. The school buildings on the site of the former monastic cloister eventually became the home of the St Bartholomew's Hospital Medical School, and remain (though now much redeveloped) one of the sites of its successor, Barts and The London, Queen Mary's School of Medicine and Dentistry. The site is also home to Queen Mary Intellectual Property Research Institute and the school of radiography of The City University. The main part of the cloister garth continues to be a pleasant lawn in the quadrangle of the university site.

Visitor information

The Charterhouse itself may be visited by guided tour only, usually at a fixed time one day a week in the summer months. The tour, usually delivered by one of the elderly gentlemen residents, has been found interesting and pleasing by many visitors. The southern side of the outside is open to view from Charterhouse Square, which is publicly accessible. The university site is not open to visitors but may be glimpsed from the gates in the NE corner of Charterhouse Square or seen from the Charterhouse tour if it reaches the terrace on top of the former tennis court walkway along the side of the old cloister: this overlooks the entire quadrangle.

The nearest tube is Barbican but Farringdon tube and surface rail station is also close.

10-26-2009 08:16:03
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