Interior of The Greek cathedral of Aghia Sophia on Moscow Road
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Where to Find Byzantine Architecture in England

Byzantium made an unexpected mark in the 19th-century as part of a mini-revival across Europe. Here’s where you can find examples in England.

Byzantium was originally the name of an ancient Greek city that became the title of the Eastern Roman Empire.

In the year 330, Byzantium was chosen as the capital city of the Eastern Roman Empire (also known as the Byzantine Empire). The emperor Constantine the Great changed its name to Constantinople (and today, the city is called Istanbul).

A photograph of the exterior of a 6th century Italian church
The 6th-century Basilica of San Vitale in Ravenna, Italy, is considered one of the most important surviving examples of early Byzantine architecture. Photo by Чигот via Wikimedia Commons.

Over the following centuries, a new architectural style emerged, characterised by rich mosaics and high-rising domes. The style spread and original examples can still be found in Rome and Ravenna.

At the edge of the western Roman Empire, Britain never saw the significant influence of Byzantium, but the style finally made an unexpected mark in the 19th century as part of a mini-revival across Europe.

Here are some of the examples you can find in England.

Westminster Cathedral, London

The most ambitious Byzantine-style building in England is Westminster Cathedral.

The exterior of a church with ornate columns and detailing around the entrance
Westminster Cathedral in London. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

Built between 1895 and 1903, architect John Francis Bentley designed the cathedral in the early Christian style. For Roman Catholics, the Byzantine style was seen as an alternative to the Gothic, favoured by Anglicans (Church of England).

By returning to the early Christian style still seen in Rome, Ravenna and Istanbul, Catholics suggested they had a longer history than the Anglicans.

Christ Church, Brixton, London

You might think that the design of Westminster Cathedral would have influenced many churches across England, but the only notable example is Christ Church in Brixton, which shares significant stylistic similarities.

A photograph of the exterior of a church with a tall tower and domed roof, beside a road
Christ Church, Brixton Road, London. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

The church was built in 1907 and is one of the best examples of the work of architect Beresford Pite. It’s made of red and yellow brick in bands and features a dome over the centre.

Saint Sophia’s, Moscow Road, London

Santa Sophia in Bayswater is perhaps the most stunning example of a Victorian building in the Byzantine style.

A photograph of the interior of a Greek cathedral with a decorative, domed roof
The Greek cathedral of Aghia Sophia on Moscow Road, London. © Historic England Archive. DP094056.

The cathedral was designed by John Oldrid Scott and built between 1878 and 1879. It’s inspired by the mother church of Orthodox Christianity, Hagia Sophia in Istanbul, and features lavish use of marble, mosaic and terrazzo.

The cathedral was the fifth Greek church in London, built for a growing Greek community who lived in the new west London suburbs of Paddington, Bayswater and Notting Hill. In 1922, it became a Greek Orthodox Cathedral and the seat of the bishop of Thyateira.

Crystal Palace Subway, London

When the Crystal Palace in Sydenham opened in 1854, it drew an average of two million visitors annually. Railway companies sought to capitalise on this potential, opening a new station in 1865.

a photograph of a pedestrian subway with a highly decorative tilled ceiling
Pedestrian Subway, Crystal Palace Parade, Bromley, London. © Historic England Archive. DP232790.

The adjoining subway is a striking Byzantine-style construction, with dramatic fan vaults in red and cream brickwork. It’s said to have been built by Italian cathedral bricklayers and was intended as an exciting prelude to the Palace itself.

After the Crystal Palace was destroyed in 1936, the subway became one of the few surviving related structures.

The Church of Jesus Christ and the Wisdom of God, Lower Kingswood

This church in Lower Kingswood in Surrey is an unlikely building in an unlikely location.

A photograph of a small church surrounded by grass
The Church of Jesus Christ and the Wisdom of God, Lower Kingswood, Surrey. Source: The Voice of Hassocks via Wikimedia Commons.

Designed by architect Sidney Barnsley and built between 1890 and 1892, the church is somewhat based on the 4th-century Church of St Irene in Istanbul. The interior features a beautiful mosaic apse with an ostrich egg suspended in front of it.

The church has been interpreted as an Arts and Crafts response to the Byzantine style, as opposed to that used by Bentley at Westminster Cathedral.

Bristol Byzantine

This list wouldn’t be complete without a mention of the ‘Bristol Byzantine’ movement.

A photograph of the exterior of a tall, red brick building with decorative brickwork around the roof
The Granary in Bristol. © Historic England Archive. AA048314.

The term was coined by the architectural historian John Summerson to describe several industrial buildings built in Bristol during the 19th century, reflecting the city’s mercantile and seafaring traditions.

A photograph of a three-storey stone building with decorative brickwork around the curved windows
Carriage Works, Gloucester Road, Stokes Croft, Bristol. © Historic England Archive. DP083559.

The Granary is considered the finest example, although its beautiful arches share more in common with Gothic and Moorish architecture than the early Christians.

The Carriage Works and Gardiner’s Warehouse are also part of the movement.

Ilkeston School, Ilkeston

Although not Byzantine by design, the grammar school in Ilkeston features an octagonal hall with a domed roof, reminiscent of an early Byzantine basicalla.

A photograph of a red brick school building with a domed roof
Ilkeston School, King George Avenue, Ilkeston, Derbyshire. © Historic England Archive. DP084946.

Architect George Widdows designed the school between 1911 and 1914 following an extended cruise around Turkey and the eastern Mediterranean. The results are a combination of Byzantine, Islamic and Moorish influences.

St John the Baptist Church, Rochdale

Henry Chipp, the Catholic priest in Rochdale from 1897 to 1936, presided over the building of the St John the Baptist church.

A photograph of a large red brick church with a large domed roof
St John the Baptist Church, Rochdale. Source: Jza84 via Wikimedia Commons.

Inspired by the example of Westminster Cathedral, he wanted a new church in the Byzantine style of the Hagia Sophia, Istanbul.

The sanctuary is completely covered in a mosaic scheme designed by Eric Newton, a mosaic craftsman in 1914 known to have studied early Byzantine mosaics in Venice, Ravenna and Rome.


Further reading

31 comments on “Where to Find Byzantine Architecture in England

  1. Regarding Bristol Byzantine, there are also some houses in the harbour that partake of the style, and the miniature Doge’s palace at the top of Wills Road is surely an example too.

  2. Boris Van Der Ree

    The Crystal Palace Subway would be a great addition to this list.

    • Historic England

      Great suggestion, we’ve updated the blog

  3. St John’s church Rochdale

    • Historic England

      Great suggestion, we’ve updated the blog

  4. Noelle Greenaway

    who wrote this?

    • Historic England

      This was written by Jack in our content team.

  5. Oxford is full of Byzantine(sque) architecture, with Keble College Chapel probably the most spectacular example. But also, perhaps more surprising, the church St George in Jesmond, Newcastle, is a complete and recently restored striking Byzantium inspired building https://www.stgeorgesjesmond.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Exploring-St-Georges-2018.pdf

    • Anna Collins

      Henrike I found your comment very interesting in that I know St George’s Jesmond well and have never considered it, or heard it described as, Byzantine.

  6. Steve Blyton

    St Peter`s RC Church in Ludlow. Built with local Dhustone

    Serbian Orthodox Church in Bournville, Birmingham

  7. A. Lommaert-Blondeel

    Saint Dunstan, (formerly St Osmund), Pearlstone, Poole. Built in the Arts & Crafts Free Byzantine style, Grade ll* listed on your list. http://www.saint-dunstan.org

  8. David Byrne

    Holy Cross RC Church, Bedminster, Bristol is Bristol Byzantine reflection of Westminster Cathedral. It is currently closed. I understand that structural damage, possibly caused by flooding in the 1960s, is threatening it’s future. £160K is needed to save it and an appeal has been launched..

  9. Ian Wells

    a number of RC churches by John Sidney Brocklesby (1879-1955) have something of a Byzantine look to them. Starting with St Augustine’s Woodborough Road Nottingham (1920-23) there are two in Stoke on Trent (Burslem and Tunstall, built as rivals to each other in the mid 1920s) and St Oswald and St Edmund Arrowsmith, Ashton in Makerfield (1928, with glass by Harry Clarke of Dublin), all – thanks to your good selves – now.listed.

  10. Valerie Chamberlain

    The octagonal chapel at Cliveden (NT) is Byzantine.
    The chapel of Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford is Byzantine.
    So is St. Bartholomew’s Church, Oxford.
    Thanks for the article.

  11. You missed the Greek Orthodox Church of St Nicholas, Toxteth

  12. S. Alcala

    Suggest you look at Serbian Orthodox Church of the Holy Prince Lazar in Birmingham in Bournville, I think. Or does this not count since it’s a church from that culture, historically? Absolutely amazing.

  13. Sheila Ripper

    St Mary’s Church, Wreay, Cumbria deserves a mention here. Created and designed by an amazing Victorian woman Sarah Losh, 1840-42. Although described as being based on the form of a Roman basilica, its semi-circular apse with domed roof is very much along Byzantine lines.

  14. Gillian Crow

    The Greek church in Harrow.

  15. It would be great if you could add the Lantern Methodist Church, Raynes Park, London.

  16. Margaret Haig

    I would suggest the Chapel within King’s College London, Strand building, Grade I listed. The chapel was designed by Sir Gilbert Scott in the Normano-Byzantine style (as per the listing). I went to King’s and loved this place. I still visit when I can.

  17. Would love to see that Cathedral on Moscow Road sometime.

  18. Helen Fisher

    St Nicholas Orthodox Church in Liverpool

  19. Maggie G

    How about Fairhaven United Reformed Church, Lytham St Annes (“the white church” on the Fylde) by Briggs Wolstenholme and Thornley c1911?

  20. Flavia

    Hi! Two cases from the Midlands:
    the church of St. Nicholas in. Liverpool which takes the Vega kilise camii in Istanbul (former Byzantine church) for inspiration. See here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_Orthodox_Church_of_St_Nicholas,_Toxteth
    Another is the Main hall of the University of Birmingham

  21. St Nicholas Church, Liverpool.

  22. Serbian orthodox Church of the Holy prince Lazar
    Bournville , Birmingham

    https://lazarica.co.uk/

  23. Nick Biskinis

    What about Fullwell Cross Library in Barkingside? This was by the British Modernist architect Frederick Gibberd but if you see the dome design with the curved arches supporting, it looks very Byzantine influenced

  24. Shadie Chahine

    What about St Mary Undercroft within the Palace of Westminster. It’s kind of a mix of Pugin and Byzantine.

  25. olibennett

    http://www.fitzroviachapel.org/ has a wonderful mosaic interior in late 19c Byzantine revival style and now has very interesting exhibitions, so is easy to visit. Shout out, too, for the once ultra-trendy Criterion resto in Piccadilly Circus, with its killer mosaic ceiling https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criterion_Restaurant

  26. Why not include these two Byzantine revival churches:

    St Mary & St Nicholas, Wilton, Wiltshire
    St James, Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire ?

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