History in Structure

Church of SS Edmund and Frideswide (Greyfriars church)

A Grade II Listed Building in Oxford, Oxfordshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 51.7439 / 51°44'38"N

Longitude: -1.2403 / 1°14'25"W

OS Eastings: 452545

OS Northings: 205300

OS Grid: SP525053

Mapcode National: GBR 8Z4.R6S

Mapcode Global: VHCXV.GF4F

Plus Code: 9C3WPQV5+HV

Entry Name: Church of SS Edmund and Frideswide (Greyfriars church)

Listing Date: 1 June 2012

Grade: II

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1407742

ID on this website: 101407742

Location: Greyfriars University Hall and the Parish Church of St Edmund and St Frideswide, Headington Hill, Oxford, Oxfordshire, OX4

County: Oxfordshire

District: Oxford

Electoral Ward/Division: Iffley Fields

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Oxford

Traditional County: Oxfordshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Oxfordshire

Church of England Parish: Cowley St Mary and St John

Church of England Diocese: Oxford

Tagged with: Church building

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Summary


Roman Catholic church (originally Jesuit, now Capuchin), 1910-11 by Fr Benedict Williamson.

Description


MATERIALS: knapped flint with red sandstone dressings and pantile roofs.

PLAN: the buildings of Greyfriars form a single long range on the western side of Iffley Road. The church is at the northern end of the range and is aligned north-south. The main entrance is through the tower, with an organ gallery above. The nave and aisles are of four bays. There are two side porches, now blocked up to form a baptistery and a chapel. The chancel is flanked by side-chapels.

EXTERIOR: the church is built in a plain neo-Norman style. Door and window openings are round-headed, with simple cushion capitals to the imposts. The five-stage tower has angle buttresses and a clasping stair turret. A triple-arched doorway to the north forms the main entrance, with a small quatrefoil window above; the middle stage has three blind arches, above which are two tiny slit windows. The topmost stage has twin belfry openings and rises into a saddleback roof pierced by a short copper spire. The former east porch has an arched doorway of three orders, now blocked up with flint work in which is set a circular relief of the Virgin and Child.

INTERIOR: the interior of the church is simple and unadorned. The nave arcades comprise unmoulded semicircular arches springing from cylindrical columns with plain cushion capitals; similar arches open from the aisles into the side chapels and porches, while the tower and chancel arches are enlarged versions of the same type. The wall above the chancel arch is pierced by three round-headed openings, echoing the three tall lights of the south window. Nave and chancel have open king-post roofs. The chancel floor, originally almost level with the nave, was raised up by four steps in the 1967 reordering.

FITTINGS: the tower contains a panelled organ gallery with a balustrade above, the organ itself being a William Drake instrument built in 1981 for a private house and transferred to Greyfriars in 2001. In the aisles are statues of St Francis, St Clare and St Maria Goretti, as well as a set of Stations of the Cross in opus sectile [glass mosaic], installed in 1938 and reputedly designed by Fr Benedict Williamson himself. The aisle windows are of c1960 and depict St Francis, St Anthony and St Clare. Elaborate wrought-iron screens, installed c1930, mark the entrances to the side chapels and the former porches. The east porch was converted in 1954 into a chapel dedicated to the Mother of the Good Shepherd, and contains a painting (attributed to Murillo) of that subject set into a painted and gilded shrine. A C13 stone capital, excavated from the site of the original Greyfriars in the city centre, forms a credence table. The west porch is now a baptistery and contains a square stone font. The wrought-iron screen here contains symbols and inscriptions associated with baptism: in the tympanum is an image of the Holy Spirit descending amid a sunburst, with a Greek text from Mark 1:8 ('he shall baptise you with the Holy Ghost'); the gates display the symbols Alpha and Omega and the Latin phrase PORTA COELI ('the gate of Heaven'). The chapels to left and right of the chancel are dedicated to the Sacred Heart and Our Lady of Pity; both are marble-lined, with stone altars and painted statues. The chancel fittings – lectern, altar, candlesticks and tabernacle – were reordered and remodelled in 1967 . The three windows above the altar were installed in 1978 to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the Capuchin friary and depict St Edmund of Abingdon, St Agnellus of Pisa and St Frideswide of Oxford.

History


The Church of SS Edmund and Frideswide was built in 1910-11 by the Oxford Jesuit mission. Served from the Oratory, the main Jesuit base in the city, it succeeded St Ignatius' chapel in St Clement's (1793) as the principal site of Roman Catholic worship in east Oxford. The new church was designed by the architect-priest Fr Benedict Williamson (1868-1948), whose other work includes the Jesuit church of St Ignatius in Stamford Hill, north London, and a range of monastic buildings at Farnborough Abbey in Hampshire - both, like his Oxford church, in a neo-Romanesque style. The builders were Hunt & Sons of High Wycombe.

In 1928 responsibility for the church was transferred to the Capuchins, a Franciscan order whose Oxford student hostel, Grosseteste House, occupied a pair of nearby houses on Iffley Road. In 1930-31 the present friary buildings, designed by the Oxford architect Gilbert Gardner under the supervision of Fr Cuthbert Hess, were built to the south of the church (these are not included in the listing). In 1954 an enclosed porch was formed under the north tower of the church, allowing the east porch to be blocked up and converted into a chapel dedicated to the Mother of the Good Shepherd - a Capuchin devotion of C18 Spanish origin. The chancel area was re-ordered in 1967 following the liturgical reforms of the Second Vatican Council. In 1957 Greyfriars became a Permanent Private Hall (PPH) of the University, a status it surrendered in 2008; it now houses the Oxford Centre for Franciscan Studies.


Reasons for Listing


The church of SS Edmund and Frideswide (Greyfriars church), built in 1910-11 to designs by Fr Benedict Williamson, is listed at Grade II for the following principal reason:
* Architectural interest: an austerely dignified neo-Romanesque church by an accomplished architect, with a particularly serene and well-proportioned interior.

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