St Pancras Church (Ipswich)

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Catholic St. Pancras Church, Ipswich

The Church of St. Pankratius is a Roman Catholic parish church in the center of Ipswich .

The church was built by George Goldie and intended as the Catholic cathedral for Eastern England . Two years after the church was consecrated, in 1863, St Pancras was the target of an anti-Catholic uprising.

Architecture and interior design

St. Pancras is a prime example of Gothic Revival from Victorian times . The pointed arches of the nave and presbytery are alternately built in the so-called Venetian style from red and white bricks. The larger-than-life figures of Jesus Christ and the four evangelists stand in a columned gallery with three-pass arches in the choir above the altar.

The church is equipped with a two-manual organ from 1891, a neo-Gothic, colored way of the cross and colored glass windows, also from the 19th century.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ St Pancras , Official Parish Website
  2. St Pancras, Ipswich , suffolkchurches.co.uk , Simon Knott
  3. ^ St Pancras celebrates 150 years , website of the British Broadcasting Corporation

Web links

Commons : St Pancras Church  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Coordinates: 52 ° 3 ′ 20.7 "  N , 1 ° 9 ′ 31.8"  E