
The Guildhall

The crypt in 1884.
The
Guildhall is a building in the City of London
, off Gresham Street
and Basinghall Street
, in the wards of Bassishaw
and Cheap
.
It has
been used as a town hall for several hundred years, and is still
the ceremonial and administrative centre of the City of London
(which should not be confused with Greater London
, of which it is only a very small part) and its
Corporation. The
term Guildhall refers both to the whole building and to its main
room, which is a medieval style
great
hall similar to those at many
Oxbridge
colleges. The Guildhall complex houses the offices of the
City of London Corporation and
various public facilities.
Greater London also has a City
Hall
.
The
nearest London
Underground stations are Bank
, St
Paul's
and Moorgate
.
History
Roman, Saxon and Medieval
The great hall is believed to be on the site of an earlier
Guildhall (one possible derivation for the word 'guildhall' is the
Anglo-Saxon 'gild', meaning payment, with a "gild-hall" being where
citizens would pay their taxes).
During the Roman period it was the site of an
amphitheatre, the largest in Britannia,
partial remains of which are on public display in the basement of
the Guildhall Art
Gallery
and the outline of whose arena is marked with a
black circle on the paving of the courtyard in front of the
hall. Indeed, the siting of the Saxon Guildhall here was
probably due to the amphitheatre's remains Certainly excavations by
MOLAS in 2000
at the entrance to Guildhall Yard exposed remains of the great 13th
century gatehouse apparently built directly over the southern
entrance to the Roman amphitheatre, which raises the possibility
that enough of the Roman structure survived to influence the siting
not only of the gatehouse and Guildhall itself, but also of the
church of St Lawrence Jewry whose strange alignment may shadow the
elliptical form of the amphitheatre beneath. The first documentary
reference to a London Guildhall is dated 1128 and the current
hall's west crypt may be part of a late-13th century building.
Legendary British history made the Guildhall's site the site of the
palace of
Brutus of Troy.
1441-present
Parts of
the current building date from 1411 and it is the only stone
building not belonging to the Church to have survived the Great Fire of
London
in 1666. The complex contains several other
historic interiors besides the hall, including the large mediaeval
crypts, the old library, and the print room,
all of which are now used as function rooms.
Trials in this hall have included those of
Anne Askew (Protestant martyr),
Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey,
Sir Nicholas Throckmorton,
Lady Jane Grey,
Guildford Dudley,
Thomas Cranmer,
Henry Peckham,
John Daniel,
John Felton (Catholic),
Roderigo Lopez,
Henry
Garnet (in connection with the Gunpowder Plot),
Sir Gervase Helwys (in connection with the
Overbury plot) and it contains
memorials to
Pitt the Elder,
Pitt the Younger, Admiral
Lord Nelson, the
Duke of Wellington,
William Beckford and
Sir Winston Churchill. It also
played a part in
Jack Cade's 1450
rebellion.
The Great Hall did not completely escape damage in 1666, and was
partially restored - with a flat roof - in 1670. The present grand
entrance (the east wing of the south front), in
"Hindoostani Gothic", was added in 1788 by
George Dance (and restored in 1910). A
more thorough restoration than that in 1670 was completed in 1866
by City of London
architect Sir
Horace Jones who added a new timber
roof in close keeping with the original.
Sadly, this
replacement was destroyed during The Second
Great Fire of London
on the night of 29/30 December 1940, result of a
Luftwaffe fire-raid. It was replaced in 1954 during works
designed by Sir
Giles Gilbert
Scott.
Present
The day-to-day administration of the
City of London Corporation is now
conducted from modern buildings immediately to the north of the
Guildhall, but the Guildhall itself, and the adjacent historic
interiors, are still used for official functions, and it is open to
the public during the annual
London
Open House weekend.
The Guildhall Art Gallery
was added to the complex in the 1990s.
The
Clockmakers'
Museum
and the Guildhall Library
, a public reference library with specialist
collections on London which include material from the 11th century
onwards, are also housed in the complex.
Gog and Magog
Two giants,
Gog and Magog, are
associated with the Guildhall. Legend has it that the two giants
were defeated by
Brutus and chained
to the gates of his palace on the site of Guildhall. Carvings of
Gog and Magog are kept in the Guildhall and taken out and paraded
in the annual
Lord Mayor's
Show.
An early version of Gog and Magog were destroyed in the Guildhall
during the Great Fire of London. They were replaced in 1708 by a
large pair of wooden statues carved by Captain
Richard Saunders. These giants, on whom the
current versions are based, lasted for over two hundred years
before they were destroyed in
the Blitz.
They in turn were replaced by a new pair carved by David Evans in
1953 and given to the City of London by
Alderman Sir
George Wilkinson, who had
been
Lord Mayor in 1940 at the time of
the destruction of the previous versions.
Notes
External links