Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Churches in Camden, St Giles in the Fields, Radha Krsna Temple, St Pancras Old Church, Church of Christ the King, Bloomsbury, St. George's Church, Bloomsbury, St Pancras New Church, St Michael's Church, Camden Town, All Saints, Camden Town, St. George's Cathedral, London, Whitefield's Tabernacle, Tottenham Court Road, St John's Chapel, Bedford Row, St John-At-Hampstead, St Mary's Church, Somers Town, St. Stephen's Church, Rosslyn Hill, St Dominic's Priory Church, St George the Martyr Holborn, Holy Cross Church, St Pancras, St Mary's Chapel, Rosslyn Hill Unitarian Chapel, St Paul's Church, Camden Square. Excerpt: St Giles in the Fields is a church in the London Borough of Camden, in the West End. It is close to the Centre Point office tower and the Tottenham Court Road tube station. The church is part of the Diocese of London within the Church of England. Several buildings have stood on the site; the present structure (in the Palladian style) was built in 1734. The first recorded church on this site was a chapel attached to a monastery and leper hospital founded by Queen Matilda, wife of Henry I, in 1101. At that time, it stood well outside the boundaries of the city of London, though on the main road to Tyburn and Oxford. This chapel probably came to function as the church of the small village that grew up to provide services to the hospital. The hospital was supported by the Crown and administered by the City for its first two hundred years; in fact, it was named a royal free chapel. Beginning in 1299, on the order of Edward I, it was administered by the Order of Saint Lazarus (in full, the Military and Hospitaller Order of Saint Lazarus), one of the chivalric orders to survive the era of the Crusades. The fourteenth century was a turbule... More: http://booksllc.net/?id=7795254