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The Savoy Chapel is mentioned in Evelyn Waugh's 1946 novel Brideshead Revisited where the venue for the marriage of Julia Flyte and Rex Mottram is discussed: "Oh, Charles, what a squalid wedding! The Savoy Chapel was the place where divorced couples got married in those days—a poky little place not at all what Rex had intended.
The King's Chapel of the Savoy, which acts as the chapel of the Royal Victorian Order (photographed in 2020). The banners are those of the Sovereign (right) and of the Grand Master (left) of the Order as they were then in office. Since 1938, the chapel of the Royal Victorian Order has been the King's Chapel of the Savoy, [3] in central London ...
King's Chapel is a church in Boston, Massachusetts. King's Chapel may also refer: King's College Chapel, Cambridge , chapel to King's College of the University of Cambridge
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The St Marienkirche (St Mary's) Lutheran Chapel stood in the Savoy Precinct, along with the Savoy Chapel, in Savoy Street, south of Strand. [1] It was founded in 1694 with the approval of the protestant William III, after a group of members of the Holy Trinity Lutheran Church split from those in the City of London and were allowed to establish a separate chapel in the City of Westminster. [2]
A rectangular part of the parish of St Clement Danes, south of the Strand, now the location of the Savoy Hotel and Shell Mex House. All of the Precinct of the Savoy, now the location of the Savoy Chapel, Savoy Street and the IET London. Part of the parish of St Clement Danes, north of the Strand, around Burleigh House/Lyceum Theatre.
The Savoy Chapel was widely known during Chapman's incumbency as a location where divorced persons were permitted to marry or to have their civil marriages blessed. [10] Notable weddings included that of Consuelo, Duchess of Marlborough and Lt Col Jacques Balsan in 1921 [11] and Edith Stuyvesant Vanderbilt and Senator Peter Goelet Gerry in 1925 ...
Rev. Henry White (1833 – 7 October 1890, London) [1] was a priest of the Church of England and the chaplain of the Queen's Chapel of the Savoy. [2] After education at King's College London and Worcester College, Oxford, Henry White was ordained deacon in 1859 and priest in 1860 by the then Archbishop of Canterbury John Bird Sumner.