• In 1170 King
Alfonso VIII of Castille married
Eleanor Plantagenet, second daughter of Henry II and
Eleanor, Queen of England and Duchess of Aquitaine. She honoured Becket with a wall painting of his martyrdom that survives in the church of
San Nicolás de Soria in Spain. Becket's assassination made an impact in Spain: within five years of his death
Salamanca had a church named after him, Iglesia de Santo Tomás Cantuariense. Monumental frescoes with the martyrdom of Becket were depicted in the romanesque church of Santa Maria in
Terrassa. •
Geoffrey Chaucer's
The Canterbury Tales features a company of pilgrims travelling from
Southwark to Becket's shrine in Canterbury Cathedral. • The story of Becket's life became a popular theme for medieval Nottingham alabaster carvers. One set of Becket panels is shown in the
Victoria and Albert Museum. • The arms of the city of Canterbury, officially registered in 1619 but dating back to at least 1380, is based on the
attributed arms of Becket:
Argent, three Cornish choughs proper, with the addition of a chief
gules charged with
a lion passant guardant or from the
Royal Arms of England. • In 1884
Alfred, Lord Tennyson wrote
Becket, a play about Becket and Henry II that
Henry Irving produced after Tennyson's death and played in the title role. Modern works based on the Becket story include:
T. S. Eliot's play
Murder in the Cathedral, adapted as the opera by
Ildebrando Pizzetti;
Jean Anouilh's play
Becket, where Becket is not a Norman but a Saxon, adapted for the screen in 1964, and starring
Peter O'Toole and
Richard Burton; and Paul Webb's play
Four Nights in Knaresborough, which Webb adapted for the screen, selling the rights to
Harvey and Bob Weinstein. The power struggle between Church and King is a theme of
Ken Follett's novel
The Pillars of the Earth, where a late scene features the murder of Becket. An oratorio by
David Reeves,
Becket – The Kiss of Peace, was premièred in 2000 at Canterbury Cathedral, where the event had occurred, as a part of the
Canterbury Festival, and a fundraiser for the
Prince's Trust. • The
Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, a non-profit, non-partisan legal and educational institute in the United States fostering free expression for religious traditions took its inspiration from Becket. • In 2005 a poll of historians by
BBC History magazine of the "worst Briton" in each century of the last 1,000 years selected Becket as the worst of the 12th century. The following year the magazine polled its readers which of the ten selected by historians was the worst of the last millennium. Becket came second behind
Jack the Ripper. The editor of the magazine suggested that Becket and the Ripper had been chosen because they were the best known names, and few would have heard of most of the other candidates. • The many UK churches dedicated to Becket include
Cathedral Church of St Thomas of Canterbury, Portsmouth,
St Thomas of Canterbury Church, Canterbury,
Church of St Thomas the Martyr, Monmouth,
St Thomas à Becket Church, Pensford,
St Thomas à Becket Church, Widcombe,
Church of St Thomas à Becket, Capel,
St Thomas the Martyr, Bristol, and
St Thomas the Martyr's Church, Oxford. Those in France include Église Saint-Thomas de Cantorbéry at
Mont-Saint-Aignan, Upper-Normandy, Église Saint-Thomas-Becket at
Gravelines (Nord-Pas-de-Calais), Église Saint-Thomas Becket at
Avrieux (Rhône-Alpes), and Église Saint-Thomas Becket at
Bénodet (Brittany), • Among his obligations in contrition to Henry, William de Tracy much enlarged and re-dedicated to St Thomas of Canterbury the parish church in
Lapford, Devon, in his manor of
Bradninch. The martyrdom day is still marked by a Lapford Revel. • British schools named after Becket include
Becket Keys Church of England School and
St Thomas of Canterbury Church of England Aided Primary School. British hospitals include
St Thomas' Hospital. • Part of the Hungarian city of
Esztergom is named
Szenttamás ("Saint Thomas"), on a hill called "Szent Tamás" dedicated to Thomas Becket – a classmate of
Lucas, Archbishop of Esztergom in Paris. • In the treasury of
Fermo Cathedral is the
Fermo chasuble of Thomas Becket, on display at Museo Diocesano. • Becket is honoured in the
Church of England and in the
Episcopal Church on 29 December. File:SouthNewington StPeterAdVincula StThomasBeckettMartyrdom.JPG|Wall painting of Thomas Becket's martyrdom painted in the 1330s in the parish church of
St Peter ad Vincula, South Newington, Oxfordshire File:Thomas Becket at Church of the Good Shepherd (Rosemont, Pennsylvania).jpg|Thomas Becket in clerestory of
Church of the Good Shepherd (Rosemont, Pennsylvania) File:Lyngsjo church Sweden 6.jpg|
Baptismal font depicting Henry II of England ordering the murder of Thomas Becket (
Lyngsjö Church, Sweden, late 12th century) ==Explanatory notes==