There is a long-standing tradition in London that
St Peter upon Cornhill church was founded by King Lucius. Interestingly, the church altar is sited directly above the potential location of a pagan shrine room, of the great Roman London basilica. Two other facts however, may give credence to a Roman past. The first is that London sent a bishop,
Restitutus, to the
Council of Arles in 314 AD. Restitutus must have had a church base. Secondly, in 1417, during a discussion about the order of precedence in a Whit Monday procession, the Mayor of London confirmed that St Peter's was the first church founded in London. Given that
St Paul's Cathedral was founded in 604, this clearly implies that St Peter's was considered in 1417 to be founded pre-600.
King Lucius Tablet The London historian
John Stow, writing at the end of the 16th century, reported "there remaineth in this church a table whereon is written, I know not by what authority, but of a late hand, that King Lucius founded the same church to be an
archbishop's see metropolitan, and chief church of his kingdom, and that it so endured for four hundred years". The "table" (tablet) seen by Stow was destroyed when the medieval church was burnt in the
Great Fire of London, but before this time a number of writers had recorded what it said. The text of the original tablet as printed by
John Weever in 1631 began: Be hit known to al men, that the yeerys of our Lord God an clxxix [AD 179].
Lucius the fyrst christen kyng of this lond, then callyd Brytayne, fowndyd the fyrst chyrch in London, that is to sey, the Chyrch of Sent
Peter apon Cornhyl, and he fowndyd ther an Archbishoppys See, and made that Chirch the Metropolitant, and cheef Chirch of this kingdom... A replacement, in the form of an inscribed brass plate, was set up after the Great Fire and an engraving of it was included in Robert Wilkinson's
Londina Illustrata (1819–25). ==Lucius of Chur==