It was originally built in 1065 on the site of an earlier Benedictine church by order of King Edward, later Saint Edward the Confessor, who is still buried there. He died in 1066 and later that year, William of Normandy (the Conqueror) was crowned king of England, starting the long tradition of all coronations taking place in the Abbey. The place has been added to, extended and re-modelled over the centuries. It's strange to walk around the tombs of these almost mythical old kings and queens, earls and dukes, the plaques and flagstones engraved with names from over the centuries, the names of poets and writers, scientists and politicians. It was a big surprise to see the names of Harold Wilson and Jim Callaghan on flagstones. Younger readers might not even know who they were but I remember them.
The route takes you to the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior surrounded by red poppies. It was quite moving to read the long inscription ending with, 'They buried him among the Kings because he had done good towards God and toward his House'. It made me wonder what will happen to the Field of Remembrance in the grounds of the Abbey this year, when the grounds are planted with crosses and symbols of the regiments and names of the dead in wars and conflicts since the First World War.

Follow the route round and you come to Poet's Corner and the tomb of Geoffrey Chaucer ('Canterbury Tales' anyone?). Apparently the tradition of burying poets and writers in that area of the Abbey begun when Edmund Spencer asked to be buried near Chaucer in 1598. Not all of the poets named in plaques and memorials are actually buried there, some are named in honour on flagstones or with plaques on the walls. You see the names of Lord Byron, George Eliot/Mary Ann Evans, Dylan Thomas, Ted Hughes, Jane Austin, WH Auden, CS Lewis and a host of others, some still famous names, others not so famous. There's a large statue to Shakespeare, a bust to William Blake and a monument to Handel.

You then head back into the Abbey proper with a big memorial flagstone to Churchill and, near the West Door and exit is the Coronation Chair in a glass room on its own. It's over 700 years old and is where the monarch is seated in front of the High Altar to receive the crown. I thought it looked a bit strange, a bit too wide for its height maybe? And then out into the open air through the West Door and you can leave or visit the shop which also operates a one-way system. Looking back over the West Door is a frieze of statues that I've never really looked at before, despite walking past that door thousands of times over the years. The statues are of Modern Martyrs, most of whom I've never heard of but included is a statue to Martin Luther King.
I'm pleased I visited the Abbey, I remembered a lot and learned a lot. It was busier than I expected but not crowded. For some odd reason you're not allowed to take photos inside the Abbey (as I found out after taking a photo just inside the entrance) so the internal photos here are taken from the web. I think I'd quite like to go back in the run-up to Christmas, when the light is weaker and the air is cold. I suspect the place feels even more atmospheric. The Abbey also usually has a large Christmas Tree outside, near the North Door. I suspect Christmas 2020 will be a strange time in this strangest of years.
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