Poets' Corner

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The Poets' Corner (around 1900)

The Poets' Corner (German: Dichterecke ) refers to a part of the transept of the London church Westminster Abbey , in which many of the most important English (or English-speaking) poets, playwrights and writers are buried.

The origin of the Poets' Corner is the grave of Geoffrey Chaucer , who was buried there in 1400. His current tomb was not erected until 1555. In 1599 Edmund Spenser was buried in close proximity to Chaucer's grave, and so the tradition of the Poets' Corner was established.

Some poets, such as William Shakespeare or Lord Byron , have monuments, busts or memorial plaques dedicated even if they were not buried in Poets' Corner. Often this only happened many decades or even centuries after her death.

Poets buried in Poets' Corner

Charles Dickens' grave

In addition, the composers Georg Friedrich Händel and Ralph Vaughan Williams , the actors David Garrick and Laurence Olivier as well as Thomas Parr († 1635), who allegedly died at the age of 152 and became famous as an attraction through this claim of age, are buried in Poets' Corner.

Poets who are remembered in Poets' Corner

Memorial to William Shakespeare

Coordinates: 51 ° 29 '57 "  N , 0 ° 7' 38.5"  W.