Charterhouse Square is a garden square, a pentagonal space, in Smithfield,[n 1] central London and is the largest courtyard or yard associated with London Charterhouse, mostly formed of Tudor and Stuart architecture restored after the London Blitz. The Square adjoins other buildings including a small school. It lies between Charterhouse Street, Carthusian Street and the main Charterhouse complex of buildings south of Clerkenwell Road. The complex includes a Chapel, Tudor Great Hall, Great Chamber, the Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry and a 40-residents almshouse.
The 2-acre (0.8 ha) square roughly covers a large 14th century plague pit, discovered by deep excavations of Crossrail near which, within the main site, the history of the Charterhouse is exhibited in a branch of the Museum of London. The centre of one of its roads forms the boundary between the extreme south of the London Borough of Islington and the City of London.
File:Insurance Plan of London Vol. VI; sheet 134 (BL 150424).tiff In 1371 a Carthusian monastery was founded by Walter de Manny on what is now the north side of the square. It was established near a 1348 plague pit,[3] which formed the largest mass grave in London during the Black Death, and tens of thousands of bodies were buried there. The name of the monastery, Charterhouse, was derived as an Anglicisation of La Grande Chartreuse, whose order founded the monastery.[4]
The Charterhouse was dissolved as a monastery in 1537, and in 1545 was purchased by Sir Edward (later Lord) North (c. 1496–1564) and transformed into a mansion house. Following North's death, the property was bought by Thomas Howard, 4th Duke of Norfolk, who was imprisoned there in 1570 after scheming to marry Mary, Queen of Scots. Later, Thomas Sutton bought the Charterhouse, and on his death in 1611, endowed a hospital (almshouse) and school on the site, which opened in 1614, supporting 80 pensioners (known as 'brothers'). The school for boys coexisted with the home for pensioners until 1872 when Charterhouse School moved to Godalming in Surrey. Following this, the Merchant Taylors' School occupied the buildings until 1933. One side is partially occupied by Charterhouse Square School a much smaller school and which is at primary level.
In July 2011, English Heritage granted Grade II listed status to the "setted" road surface in the Square, which was laid down in the 1860s.[5]
In 2014 evidence of the large burial pit for plague victims dating from 1348–50, the time of the Black death, was discovered under the square by workers building the Crossrail project.[6] Subsequent analysis of DNA and isotopes from the skeletons of those buried revealed data about Londoners who fell victim to the pandemic, such as their birthplace, diet, and the fact that there were actually three periods of plague burials, from 1348, 1361 and the early 15th century as outbreaks recurred.[7]
Charterhouse gives accommodation as an Almshouse to over forty single pensioners aged over sixty many of whom retain the tradition of having been "military men, schoolmasters, clergy, artists, musicians, writers and businessmen",[8] who are in financial, housing and social need but not in significant debt and keen to contribute to the community.[9] Additionally it has the Queen Elizabeth II Infirmary Care Home and private tenants in 9 commercial units, 13 flats and 3 houses.[10] The complex is open for pre-booked guided tours.[11] The chapel can be viewed as part of the annual Open House London event. The site extends far back from the north side of the Square in restored buildings and garden courtyards of the old monastery/school.
The Charterhouse Square campus of Queen Mary University of London starts at the north-east corner of the Square and then spreads out (close to a café and few narrow houses fronting that side it occupies new buildings and some of the former school buildings). It comprises student accommodation and departments of Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry: Barts Cancer Institute (BCI),[12] the Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine[13] and the William Harvey Research Institute (WHRI).[14] The BCI and the Centre for Cancer Prevention (CCP) within the Wolfson Institute also make up the Cancer Research UK Barts Centre of Excellence, together with Barts and the London NHS Trust.[15]
Related to the above the City of London Migraine Clinic lines part of the south-west side of the Square.
Florin Court, a residential building in the Art Deco style built in 1936 by Guy Morgan and Partners, is on the east side. The building has a concave façade, roof garden and basement swimming pool.[16]
Charterhouse Square School is on the south side of the square, co-educational, independent,[17] for ages 3 to 11, with a small roll of pupils: intaking 26 pupils in the first year of learning.[18] Smithfield Market is to the south-west along Charterhouse Street.
The nearest station to the Square is Barbican tube station 80 metres to the south-east facing Barbican bus stop on the urban A1. The next nearest is Farringdon on the same tube lines, plus the Metropolitan Line, hybrid Elizabeth Line (from December 2018) and the mainly overground line crossing London north-south, Thameslink.
Florin Court was used as the fictional residence of Hercule Poirot, Whitehaven Mansions, in the 1980s TV series Agatha Christie's Poirot based on Agatha Christie's crime novels.[19]
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