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Nicholas Hawksmoor



 
 
Nicholas Hawksmoor (probably 1661 - 25 March, 1736) was a British architect
Architect

An architect is trained and licenced in planning and designing buildings, and participates in supervising the construction of a building. Etymologically, architect derives from the Latin architectus, itself derived from the Greek arkhitekton , i.e....
 born to a humble family in Nottinghamshire
Nottinghamshire

Nottinghamshire is an Counties of England in the East Midlands, which borders South Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, Leicestershire and Derbyshire. The county town is traditionally Nottingham, though the council is now based in West Bridgford, a suburb of Greater Nottingham ....
.

His career formed the brilliant middle link in Britain's
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 trio of great baroque
Baroque

In the the arts, the Baroque was a Western cultural Epoch , starting roughly at the beginning of the 17th century in Rome, Italy. It was exemplified by drama and grandeur in Baroque sculpture, Baroque painting, literature, Baroque dance, and Baroque music....
 architect
Architect

An architect is trained and licenced in planning and designing buildings, and participates in supervising the construction of a building. Etymologically, architect derives from the Latin architectus, itself derived from the Greek arkhitekton , i.e....
s. Hawksmoor was characterised by Howard Colvin
Howard Colvin

Sir Howard Montagu Colvin, Royal Victorian Order, Order of the British Empire , was a British architectural historian who produced two of the most outstanding works of scholarship in his field....
 as "more assured in his command of the classical vocabulary than the untrained Vanbrugh
John Vanbrugh

Sir John Vanbrugh was an England architect and dramatist, perhaps best known as the designer of Blenheim Palace and Castle Howard. He wrote two argumentative and outspoken Restoration comedy, The Relapse and The Provoked Wife , which have become enduring stage favourites but originally occasioned much controversy....
, more imaginative in his vision than the intellectual Wren." From about 1684 to about 1700 Hawksmoor worked with his teacher, Christopher Wren
Christopher Wren

Sir Christopher Wren was a 17th century England designer, astronomer, geometer, and one of the greatest English architects in history. Wren designed 53 London churches, including St Paul's Cathedral, as well as many secular buildings of note....
, on projects including Chelsea Hospital, St.






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Nicholas Hawksmoor (probably 1661 - 25 March, 1736) was a British architect
Architect

An architect is trained and licenced in planning and designing buildings, and participates in supervising the construction of a building. Etymologically, architect derives from the Latin architectus, itself derived from the Greek arkhitekton , i.e....
 born to a humble family in Nottinghamshire
Nottinghamshire

Nottinghamshire is an Counties of England in the East Midlands, which borders South Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, Leicestershire and Derbyshire. The county town is traditionally Nottingham, though the council is now based in West Bridgford, a suburb of Greater Nottingham ....
.

His career formed the brilliant middle link in Britain's
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 trio of great baroque
Baroque

In the the arts, the Baroque was a Western cultural Epoch , starting roughly at the beginning of the 17th century in Rome, Italy. It was exemplified by drama and grandeur in Baroque sculpture, Baroque painting, literature, Baroque dance, and Baroque music....
 architect
Architect

An architect is trained and licenced in planning and designing buildings, and participates in supervising the construction of a building. Etymologically, architect derives from the Latin architectus, itself derived from the Greek arkhitekton , i.e....
s. Hawksmoor was characterised by Howard Colvin
Howard Colvin

Sir Howard Montagu Colvin, Royal Victorian Order, Order of the British Empire , was a British architectural historian who produced two of the most outstanding works of scholarship in his field....
 as "more assured in his command of the classical vocabulary than the untrained Vanbrugh
John Vanbrugh

Sir John Vanbrugh was an England architect and dramatist, perhaps best known as the designer of Blenheim Palace and Castle Howard. He wrote two argumentative and outspoken Restoration comedy, The Relapse and The Provoked Wife , which have become enduring stage favourites but originally occasioned much controversy....
, more imaginative in his vision than the intellectual Wren." From about 1684 to about 1700 Hawksmoor worked with his teacher, Christopher Wren
Christopher Wren

Sir Christopher Wren was a 17th century England designer, astronomer, geometer, and one of the greatest English architects in history. Wren designed 53 London churches, including St Paul's Cathedral, as well as many secular buildings of note....
, on projects including Chelsea Hospital, St. Paul's Cathedral (London
London

London is the capital of both England and the United Kingdom, and the most populous municipality in the European Union. An important settlement for two millennia, History of London goes back to its founding by the Roman Empire....
), Hampton Court Palace
Hampton Court Palace

Hampton Court Palace is a former English royal palace in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames in south west London. The palace is located south west of Charing Cross and upstream of Central London on the River Thames....
 and Greenwich Hospital. Thanks to Wren's influence as Surveyor-General, the modest and diffident Hawksmoor was named Clerk of the Works at Kensington Palace
Kensington Palace

Kensington Palace is a royal residence set in Kensington Gardens in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in London, England. It has been a residence of the British Royal Family since the 17th century....
 (1689) and Deputy Surveyor of Works at Greenwich
Greenwich

'Greenwich' is a district in south-east London, England, on the south bank of the River Thames in the London Borough of Greenwich. It is best known for its maritime history and as giving its name to the Greenwich Meridian and Greenwich Mean Time....
 (1705). In 1718, when Wren was superseded by the new, amateur Surveyor, William Benson
William Benson

William Benson was a talented amateur architect and an ambitious and self-serving British Whig Party place-holder in the government of George I of Great Britain....
, Hawksmoor was deprived of his double post to provide places for Benson's brother, a bitter blow. "Poor Hawksmoor," wrote Vanbrugh in 1721. "What a Barbarous Age... What wou'd Monsr. Colbert
Jean-Baptiste Colbert

Jean-Baptiste Colbert served as the Controller-General of Finances from 1665 to 1683 under the rule of Louis XIV of France. He was described by Marie de Rabutin-Chantal, marquise de S?vign? as "Le Nord", because he was cold and unemotional....
 in France have given for such a man?"

He then worked for a time with Sir John Vanbrugh, helping him build Blenheim Palace
Blenheim Palace

File:Blenheim main entrance.jpgBlenheim Palace is a large and monumental English country house situated in Woodstock, Oxfordshire, Oxfordshire, England....
 for John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough
John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough

John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough Order of the Garter was an England soldier and statesman whose career spanned the reigns of five monarchs throughout the late 17th and early 18th centuries....
, where he took charge after Vanbrugh's final break with the demanding Duchess of Marlborough, and Castle Howard
Castle Howard

Castle Howard is a stately home in North Yorkshire, England, 15 miles north of York. One of the grandest private residences in Britain, most of it was built between 1699 and 1712 for the Charles Howard, 3rd Earl of Carlisle, to a design by Sir John Vanbrugh....
 for Charles Howard, later the 3rd Earl of Carlisle. There is no doubt that Hawksmoor brought to the brilliant amateur the professional grounding he had received from Wren, and in Colvin's words, "enabled Vanbrugh's heroic designs to be translated into actuality."

In 1702, Hawksmoor designed the baroque country house of Easton Neston
Easton Neston

Easton Neston is a country house near Towcester in Northamptonshire, England. It was designed in the classicism style by the architect Nicholas Hawksmoor....
 in Northamptonshire
Northamptonshire

Northamptonshire is a landlocked Counties of England in the England East Midlands, with a population of 629,676 as at the United Kingdom Census 2001....
 for Sir William Fermor. This is the only country house for which he was the sole architect, though he extensively remodelled Ockham House for the Lord Chief Justice King (now mostly destroyed). Perhaps fortunately, Easton Neston was not completed as he intended, for the symmetrical unexecuted flanking wings and entrance colonnade were very much in the style of John Vanbrugh
John Vanbrugh

Sir John Vanbrugh was an England architect and dramatist, perhaps best known as the designer of Blenheim Palace and Castle Howard. He wrote two argumentative and outspoken Restoration comedy, The Relapse and The Provoked Wife , which have become enduring stage favourites but originally occasioned much controversy....
; whereas the house as it stands is pure innovative Hawksmoor at his finest.

Hawksmoor conceived grand rebuilding schemes for central Oxford
Oxford

Oxford is a City status in the United Kingdom, and the county town of Oxfordshire, in South East England. It has a population of 151,000. The rivers River Cherwell and River Thames run through Oxford and meet south of the city centre....
, most of which were not realised. The idea was for a round library for the Radcliffe Camera
Radcliffe Camera

The Radcliffe Camera is a building in Oxford, England, designed by James Gibbs in the Palladian architecture#English Palladian revival and built in 1737?1749 to house the Radcliffe Science Library....
 but that commission went to James Gibbs. He did design the Clarendon Building
Clarendon Building

The Clarendon Building is a landmark Grade I listed building in Oxford, England, owned by the University of Oxford. It was built between 1711 and 1713 to house the Oxford University Press....
 at Oxford
Oxford

Oxford is a City status in the United Kingdom, and the county town of Oxfordshire, in South East England. It has a population of 151,000. The rivers River Cherwell and River Thames run through Oxford and meet south of the city centre....
; the Codrington Library and new buildings at All Souls College, Oxford
All Souls College, Oxford

All Souls College is one of the Colleges of the University of Oxford of the University of Oxford in England.Unique to All Souls, all of its members automatically become Fellows, i.e., full members of the College's governing body....
; parts of Worcester College, Oxford
Worcester College, Oxford

Worcester College is one of the Colleges of the University of Oxford of the University of Oxford in England. Its predecessor had been an institution of learning since the late thirteenth century, even though the current college was founded only in the eighteenth century....
 with Sir George Clarke
George Clarke

George Clarke , the son of William Clarke , enrolled at Brasenose College, Oxford in 1676. He was elected a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford in 1680....
; the High Street screen at The Queen's College, Oxford
The Queen's College, Oxford

The Queen's College, founded 1341, is one of the Colleges of the University of Oxford of the University of Oxford in England. Queen's is centrally situated on the High Street, and is renowned for its eighteenth-century architecture....
 and six new churches in London. Although he did not live to see them built, Hawksmoor also designed the West Towers of Westminster Abbey
Westminster Abbey

The Collegiate Church of St Peter at Westminster, which is almost always referred to popularly and informally as Westminster Abbey, is a large, mainly Gothic architecture Church , in Westminster, London, just to the west of the Palace of Westminster....
. In addition, he superimposed on the medieval portal, and became Surveyor of the Abbey when Wren died in 1723.

Unlike many of his wealthier contemporaries, Hawksmoor never travelled to Italy
Italy

Italy , officially the Italian Republic , is a country located on the Italian Peninsula in Southern Europe and on the two largest islands in the Mediterranean Sea, Sicily and Sardinia....
 on a Grand Tour
Grand Tour

The Grand Tour was the traditional travel of Europe undertaken by mainly Upper class European young men of means. The custom flourished from about 1660 until the advent of mass railroad transit in the 1840s, and was associated with a standard itinerary....
, where he might have been influenced by the style of architecture
Architecture

The term architecture can refer to a process, a profession or documentation.As a process, architecture is the activity of designing and construction buildings and other physical structures by a person or a computer, primarily to provide shelter....
 there. His ideas seem to derive from engravings, especially monuments of ancient Rome
Rome

Rome is the capital city of Italy and Lazio, and is Italy's largest and most populous city, with 2,724,347 residents in an urban area of some ....
 and reconstructions of the Temple of Solomon. But he was versatile in his work, and all the buildings he designed are distinctly different from each other. The influence of Italian Baroque
Baroque

In the the arts, the Baroque was a Western cultural Epoch , starting roughly at the beginning of the 17th century in Rome, Italy. It was exemplified by drama and grandeur in Baroque sculpture, Baroque painting, literature, Baroque dance, and Baroque music....
 architect Borromini can be detected in some.

Hawksmoor's six London churches


These churches were built in accordance with a Parliamentary Act of 1711
Commission for Building Fifty New Churches

The Commission for Building Fifty New Churches was an organisation set up by Act of Parliament in England in 1711, with the purpose of building fifty new churches for the rapidly growing conurbation of London....
 providing tax money for the building of fifty new London churches, only a dozen of which were actually built, six of them to Hawksmoors design. He also designed towers for two more, designed by others: St John Horsleydown and St Luke Old Street. The six churches wholly designed by Hawksmoor's best-known wholly independent works of architecture. They compare in their complexity of interpenetrating internal spaces with contemporaneous work in Italy by Francesco Borromini
Francesco Borromini

Francesco Borromini, byname of Francesco Castelli was a prominent and influential Italy Swiss born Baroque architect in Rome....
. Their spires, essentially Gothic outlines executed in innovative and imaginative Classical detail, dominated the London skyline as a counterpoint to St. Paul's dome deep into the 20th century.

  • St Alfege's Church, Greenwich
    St Alfege's Church, Greenwich

    St Alfege Church is a Church of England place of worship in the town centre of Greenwich in the eponymous London Borough of Greenwich....
  • St George's Church, Bloomsbury
    St. George's Church, Bloomsbury

    St George's Church, Bloomsbury is a parish church in Bloomsbury, London Borough of Camden....
  • Christ Church, Spitalfields
  • St George in the East
    St George in the East

    St George in the East is an Anglican Church and one of six Nicholas Hawksmoor churches in London, England, built from 1714 to 1729, with funding from the Commission for Building Fifty New Churches....
    , Wapping
    Wapping

    Wapping is a place in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets which forms part of the London Docklands to the east of the City of London. It is situated between the north bank of the River Thames and the ancient thoroughfare simply called The Highway....
  • St Mary Woolnoth
    St Mary Woolnoth

    St. Mary Woolnoth is an Anglican church in the City of London, designed by Nicholas Hawksmoor, located on the corner of Lombard Street, London and King William Street near the Bank of England....
  • St Anne's Limehouse
    St Anne's Limehouse

    St Anne's Limehouse is a Nicholas Hawksmoor Anglican Church in Limehouse, in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. It was consecrated in 1730, one of the twelve churches built through the Commission for Building Fifty New Churches....


Hawksmoor in recent literature

Hawksmoor's architecture has influenced several poets and authors of the twentieth century. His church St Mary Woolnoth
St Mary Woolnoth

St. Mary Woolnoth is an Anglican church in the City of London, designed by Nicholas Hawksmoor, located on the corner of Lombard Street, London and King William Street near the Bank of England....
 is mentioned in T. S. Eliot
T. S. Eliot

'Thomas Stearns Eliot', Order of Merit , was a poet, dramatist, and literary critic. He received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1948. Among his most famous writings are the poems The Love Song of J....
's poem The Waste Land
The Waste Land

The Waste Land is a revolutionary, highly influential 434-line Modernist poetry in English by T. S. Eliot. Despite the alleged obscurity of the poem ? its shifts between satire and prophecy, its abrupt and unannounced changes of Narrator, Setting , its elegiac but intimidating summoning up of a vast and dissonant range of cultures and li...
 (1922).

Algernon Stitch lived in a "superb creation by Nicholas Hawksmoor" in London in the novel Scoop
Scoop (novel)

Scoop is a 1938 novel by England writer Evelyn Waugh, a satire of sensationalist journalism and foreign correspondence....
 by Evelyn Waugh
Evelyn Waugh

Arthur Evelyn St. John Waugh was a United Kingdom writer, best known for such darkly humorous and Satire novels as Decline and Fall, Vile Bodies, Scoop , A Handful of Dust, and The Loved One, as well as for serious works, such as Brideshead Revisited and the Sword of Honour trilogy that clearly manifest his Catho...
 (1938).

Hawksmoor is the subject of a poem by Iain Sinclair
Iain Sinclair

Iain Sinclair is a United Kingdom writer and film maker. Much of his work is rooted in London, most recently within the influences of psychogeography....
 called 'Nicholas Hawksmoor: His Churches' which appeared in Sinclair's collection of poems Lud Heat (1975). Sinclair, a practised psychogeographer, argued that Hawksmoor's churches formed a pattern consistent with the forms of Theistic Satanism
Theistic Satanism

Theistic Satanism, also known as Traditional Satanism, is a form of Satanism with the primary belief that Satan is an actual deity or force worthy of reverence or worship....
.

This idea was developed by Peter Ackroyd
Peter Ackroyd

Peter Ackroyd CBE is an England novelist and biographer with a particular interest in the history and culture of London. His works are comparable to Martin Amis, John Banville and Sebastian Barry....
 in his novel Hawksmoor
Hawksmoor (novel)

Hawksmoor is a 1985 novel by the English people writer Peter Ackroyd. It won Best Novel at the 1985 Whitbread Awards....
 (1985). In this, the historical Hawksmoor is refigured as the fictional Devil-worshiper Nicholas Dyer, while the eponymous Hawksmoor is cast as a twentieth-century detective charged with investigating a series of murders perpertrated on Dyer's (Hawksmoor's) churches. The novel is arguably a good example of magic realism
Magic realism

Magic realism, or magical realism, is an artistic genre in which magical elements or illogical scenarios appear in an otherwise realistic or even "normal" setting....
.

Both Sinclair and Ackroyd's ideas in turn were further developed by Alan Moore
Alan Moore

Alan Moore is an English writer most famous for his influential work in comics, including the acclaimed graphic novels Watchmen, V for Vendetta and From Hell....
 and Eddie Campbell
Eddie Campbell

Eddie Campbell is a Scotland comics artist and cartoonist who now lives in Australia. Probably best known as the illustrator and publisher of From Hell , Campbell is also the creator of the semi-autobiographical Alec stories, and Bacchus , a wry adventure series about the few Greek gods who have survived to the present day....
 in their graphic novel
Graphic novel

A graphic novel is a type of comic book, usually with a lengthy and complex storyline similar to those of novels. The term also encompasses comic short story anthologies, and in some cases bound collections of previously published comic book series ....
, From Hell
From Hell

From Hell is a graphic novel by writer Alan Moore and artist Eddie Campbell speculating upon the identity and motives of Jack the Ripper. The title is taken from the first words of the From Hell letter, which some authorities believe was an authentic message sent from the killer in 1888....
, which speculated that Jack the Ripper
Jack the Ripper

Jack the Ripper is an pseudonym given to an unidentified serial killer active in the largely impoverished Whitechapel area and adjacent districts of London, England, in late 1888....
 used Hawksmoor's buildings as part of ritual magic, with his victims as human sacrifice
Human sacrifice

Human sacrifice is the act of killing human beings as part of a religious ritual . Its typology closely parallels the various practices of ritual slaughter of animals and of religious sacrifice in general....
. In the appendix, Moore revealed that he had met and spoke with Sinclair on numerous occasions while developing the core ideas of the book.

In 2002 Hawksmoor was the subject of an award-winning monograph by the architectural historian Vaughan Hart
Vaughan Hart

Vaughan Hart is a leading architectural historian and Professor of Architecture and Head of the Department of Architecture and Civil Engineering at the University of Bath....
, which redefined Hawksmoor with new insights and discoveries. There is a school named after him called Nicholas Hawksmoor Primary School in Towcester Northamptonshire with over 500 pupils.

Hawksmoor is mentioned in "The History Boys" by Alan Bennett, p82, where Akthar is questioned by Mrs Lintott about his interest in architecture.

Memorials

  • There is a school in Towcester
    Towcester

    Towcester , the Roman Britain of Lactodorum, is a small town in south Northamptonshire, England. The English name is derived from the Latin for "Camp on the River Tove"....
    , Northamptonshire
    Northamptonshire

    Northamptonshire is a landlocked Counties of England in the England East Midlands, with a population of 629,676 as at the United Kingdom Census 2001....
     named Nicholas Hawksmoor Primary School for the architect.


See also

Category:Nicholas Hawksmoor buildings

External links