Construction In the mid-12th century, before the construction of the church, the Knights Templar in London had met at a site in
High Holborn in a structure originally established by
Hugues de Payens (the site had been historically the location of a
Roman temple in
Londinium, now known as London). Because of the rapid growth of the
order, by the 1160s the site had become too confined, and the order purchased the current site for the establishment of a larger
monastic complex as their headquarters in England. In addition to the church, the new compound originally contained residences, military training facilities, and recreational grounds for the military
brethren and novices, who were not permitted to go into the City without the permission of the Master of the Temple. The church building comprises two separate sections: The original circular church building, called the
Round Church and now acting as a
nave, and a later rectangular section adjoining on the east side, built approximately half a century later, forming the
chancel. After the capture of Jerusalem in 1099 by the Crusaders, the
Dome of the Rock was given to the Augustinians, who turned it into
a church (while the
Jami Al-Aqsa became a royal palace). Because the Dome of the Rock was the site of the Temple of Solomon, the Knights Templar set up their headquarters in the Al-Aqsa Mosque adjacent to the Dome for much of the 12th century. The
Templum Domini, as they called the Dome of the Rock, featured on the official seals of the order's Grand Masters (such as
Everard des Barres and
Renaud de Vichiers), and along with the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre upon which it was based soon became the architectural model for Round Templar churches across Europe. The round church is in
diameter, and contains within it a circle of the earliest known surviving free-standing
Purbeck Marble columns. It is probable that the walls and grotesque heads were originally painted in colours. It was
consecrated on 10 February 1185 by
Heraclius,
Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem. It is believed that King
Henry II (1154–1189) was present at the consecration.
1185–1307 The Knights Templar order was very powerful in England, with the Master of the Temple sitting in
parliament as
primus baro (the first
baron in precedence of the realm). The compound was regularly used as a residence by kings and by
legates of the
Pope. The Temple also served as an early safety-deposit bank, sometimes in defiance of the Crown's attempts to seize the funds of nobles who had entrusted their wealth there. The quasi-supra-national independent network and great wealth of the order throughout Europe, and the jealousy this caused in secular kingdoms, is considered by most commentators to have been the primary cause of its eventual downfall. In January 1215
William Marshal served as a negotiator during a meeting in the Temple between King
John and the
barons, who demanded that the king should uphold the rights enshrined in the
Coronation Charter of his predecessor and elder brother King
Richard I. Marshal swore on behalf of the king that the grievances of the barons would be addressed in the summer, which led to the signing by the king of
Magna Carta in June. Marshal later became
regent during the reign of John's infant son, King
Henry III (1216–1272). Henry later expressed a desire to be buried in the church and, to accommodate this, in the early 13th century the
chancel of the original church was pulled down and a new larger chancel was built, the basic form of which survives today. It was consecrated on
Ascension Day 1240 and comprises a central aisle and two side
aisles, north and south, of identical width. The height of the vault is . Although one of Henry's infant sons was buried in the chancel, Henry himself later altered his will to reflect his new wish to be buried in
Westminster Abbey.
Crown seizure After the destruction and abolition of the Knights Templar in 1307, King
Edward II took control of the church as a Crown possession. It was later given to the
Knights Hospitaller, who leased the Temple to two colleges of lawyers. One college moved into the part of the Temple previously used by the Knights, and the other into the part previously used by its clergy, and both shared the use of the church. The colleges evolved into the
Inner Temple and the
Middle Temple, two of the four London
Inns of Court.
16th–19th centuries In 1540 the church became the property of
the Crown once again when King
Henry VIII abolished the Knights Hospitaller in England and confiscated their property. Henry provided a priest for the church under the former title "Master of the Temple". In the 1580s the church was the scene of the
Battle of the Pulpits, a
theological conflict between the
Puritans and supporters of the
Elizabethan Compromise.
Shakespeare was familiar with the site and the church and garden feature in his play
Henry VI, part 1 as the setting for the fictional scene of the plucking of two roses of York and Lancaster and the start of the
Wars of the Roses. In 2002 this event was commemorated with the planting of new white and red roses in the modern gardens. Following an agreement in 1608 by King
James I, the two Inns were granted use of the church in perpetuity on condition that they should support and maintain it. They continue to use the Temple church as their ceremonial chapel. The church escaped damage in the
Great Fire of London of 1666. Nevertheless, it was refurbished by
Christopher Wren, who made extensive modifications to the interior, including the addition of an altar screen and the installation of the church's first organ. The church underwent a
Victorian restoration in 1841 by Smirke and Burton, who decorated the walls and ceiling in high
Victorian Gothic style in an attempt to return the church back to its supposed original appearance. In 1850 a fire begun in the furnace room badly damaged the chorister's room above and threatened the organ situated behind that room's wall, but was extinguished before it could spread further. Further restoration work was executed in 1862 by
James Piers St Aubyn.
Twentieth and twenty-first century On 10 May 1941,
German incendiary bombs set the roof of the Round Church on fire, and the fire quickly spread to the nave and chapel. The organ and all the wooden parts of the church, including the Victorian renovations, were destroyed and the Purbeck marble columns in the chancel cracked due to the intense heat. Although these columns still provided some support to the vault, they were deemed unsound and were replaced in identical form. The original columns had a slight outward lean, which architectural quirk was followed in the replacement columns. The Master's House was burned down on the same night. Thomas E. Browne, the Hackney A.R.P. Warden diarist provides a first hand account 3 December 1941 as whilst on business in the City he visits Temple saying "Brick Court doesn't exist, its place being taken up by a static water supply" and Temple Church's "outside fabric is OK but there has been a tremendous fire inside. The damage all around is immense". During the renovation by the architect
Walter Godfrey, it was discovered that elements of the 17th-century renovations made by
Wren had survived in storage and these were replaced in their original positions. The church was rededicated in November 1958. The church was designated a Grade I
listed building on 4 January 1950. The recruitment pack for the next master, stated that they would be required to support the blessing of same-sex relations. ==Use==