Group   

German Lutheran church in London

Categories: Religion

The history of the German Lutheran Church in London began in earnest  with many craftsmen from Hamburg coming here after the Great Fire of 1666 to help in the rebuilding. They were granted the site of the burned-out parish church of Holy Trinity the Less. Roque's 1746 map puts the Lutheran Church on the south-east corner of the junction of Little Trinity Lane and what is now Great Trinity Lane (see image).

Here a Lutheran church was built and opened in 1673. It served various nationalities in a variety of languages. Over the years other Lutheran churches were built and congregations formed, including two German chapels in the Savoy Palace, St Marys and (what would become) St Pauls; a Danish one in the Palace of St James, the Lutheran Court Chapel; and the Swedish Lutheran church in Swedenborg Square. Holy Trinity became known as the Hamburg Lutheran church, using only the German language.

Note: the St Pauls church was for the German Evangelical Reformed Church - see our St Pauls page for their story.

The 1714 arrival of Lutheran King George I (raised in Hanover)  brought another influx of German Lutherans to London. And the fourth German Lutheran church was founded in 1763, St George's in Alie Street, Aldgate. A Lutheran group briefly occupied Hanbury Hall sometime between 1787 and about 1820.

The church on the City site of Holy Trinity survived until 1871 when it was closed and demolished as part of the development of the Mansion House station and the new Metropolitan line. The last service took place on 15 January 1871 and the congregation moved to the newly-built Dalston church.

In 1875-7 the building of the Embankment caused St Mary's to move to Cleveland Street. A German Lutheran church was built in Sydenham in 1876. Dietrich Bonhoeffer was pastor at Sydenham and at St Pauls. In 1902 the St James congregation moved to Montpelier Place and was renamed Christ Church. 

See the Dalston church for information about their self-declared Nazi pastor.

Sources: Wikipedia, The History Of Lutherans In Britain

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
German Lutheran church in London

Commemorated ati

Hamburg Lutheran Church - Dalston

This stone was laid by HRH the Duke of Cambridge KC, May 4th AD 1875

Read More

St George's German Church - Alie Street

Deutsche Lutherische Gegr. 1762 St. Georgs Kirche

Read More

Other Subjects

John Bradford

John Bradford

Protestant martyr burned at Smithfield.

Person, Execution, Religion

1 memorial
Lydia Rogers

Lydia Rogers

Supposed witch. The wife of carpenter John Rogers, she belonged to a radical religious sect called the Anabaptists. She was accused of making a blood pact with the devil, who was said to have cut a...

Person, Paranormal, Religion

1 memorial
St Leonards, St Martin's-le-Grand

St Leonards, St Martin's-le-Grand

The church seems to have occupied a site between St Martin's-le-Grand and Foster Lane. Destroyed in the Great Fire its ruins were, amazingly, not removed until the early 1800s.

Building, Religion

1 memorial
Rabbi Leo Baeck

Rabbi Leo Baeck

Rabbi and theologian. Born in Leszno, in the German province of Posen, (now in Poland). He served as leader of Liberal Judaism in his native country and internationally, and later represented all G...

Person, Religion, Germany

1 memorial
Evelyn Underhill

Evelyn Underhill

Christian mystic, novelist and pacifist. Born Wolverhampton. 1907 married the barrister Hubert Stuart Moore, whom she had known since childhood, with no issue. Died Hampstead.

Person, Education, Philosophy, Religion

1 memorial