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St Clement Danes is a partially selective school, providing education to students aged 11 through to 18 ().Most students are admitted based on proximity to the school, with priority given to students with siblings already at the school, or whose parents are staff at the school, but up to 10% of the year 7 cohort are admitted based on performance in the eleven-plus exam, and a further 10% may ...
Former pupils of St. Clement Danes School are known as Old Danes. Pages in category "People educated at St. Clement Danes School" The following 23 pages are in this category, out of 23 total.
St Clement Danes is an Anglican church in the City of Westminster, London.It is now situated near the 19th-century Royal Courts of Justice on the Strand.Although the first church on the site was reputedly founded in the 9th century by the Danes, the current building replaced the medieval church building and was completed in 1682 by celebrated architect Sir Christopher Wren.
She took the pseudonym "Clemence Dane" from the church, St Clement Danes on the Strand, London. Her first novel, Regiment of Women , written in 1914, was a study of life in a girls' school. [ 1 ] In 1919 she wrote Legend , the story of a group of acquaintances who debate the meaning of a dead friend's life and work.
The rest of his life was spent in private practice. On 12 June 1609 he was incorporated M.D. at Oxford. He died on 3 November 1611, and was buried in the church of St. Clement Danes, London, where a monument, with inscription, was erected to his memory on the south aide of the chancel (see Stow, Survey of London, iv. 113).
St Clement Danes was a civil parish in the metropolitan area of London, England; an ecclesiastical version remains (see its Anglican church, St Clement Danes). The parish was split between the Liberty of Westminster and the Liberty of the Duchy of Lancaster (also known as of the Savoy) .
Saint Clement is also commemorated every April at St Clement Danes church in London, a modern clementine custom/revival. Reverend William Pennington-Bickford initiated the service in 1919 to celebrate the restoration of the famous church bells and carillon, which he had had altered to ring out the popular nursery rhyme (although this might ...
The Crown and Anchor tavern is visible on the right. The Church on the left is St Clement Danes.. The Crown and Anchor, also written Crown & Anchor and earlier known as The Crown, was a public house in Arundel Street, off The Strand in London, England, famous for meetings of political (particularly the early 19th-century Radicals) and various other groups. [1]