| HISTORY
OF THE CHAPEL
The Leper Chapel in Cambridge, also known as the
Chapel of St. Mary Magdalene, lies on the east side of the city,
off Newmarket Road just after crossing over the railway line at
Barnwell Junction. It is probably the oldest surviving building
in Cambridge, dating from about 1125, during the reign of Henry
I.
The Leper Chapel was part of the buildings of a leprosy hospital
which stood a little beyond the outskirts of the city on the road
to Bury St. Edmunds. Parts of the east wall (right) are original,
but most of the rest of the chapel was rebuilt in the 13th century,
although it still retains many Romanesque features.
In 1199 the chapel was given royal dispensation by King John to
hold a three day fair in order to raise money to support the lepers.
Starting in 1211, the fair took place around the Feast of the Holy
Cross (14 September) on Stourbridge Common which lies a little way
behind Chapel and continues down to the River Cam.
Stourbridge fair grew to become the largest Medieval fair in Europe
and raised so much money that the post of priest at the Leper Chapel
became one of the most lucrative jobs in the Church of England.
The job was also a sinecure, since the leper hospital had ceased
to admit new lepers in 1279, and what few lepers remained were moved
to a new colony near Ely. The chapel had no parish, so there was
no need to maintain any religious services. Under legislation of
1546, the chapel was closed and its property assumed by the Crown.
Town and University battled over the rights to the Fair until Queen
Elizabeth I ruled in favour of the town, reserving the University's
rights to control weights, measures and quality of goods. The chapel
was thence used only to store the stalls for the next fair and,
in the eighteenth century at least, as a pub during the Fair. After
1751, there were no further religious services held at the chapel.
In 1783 it was advertised for sale as a storage shed. The fair was
finally abolished in 1933.
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A watercolour of the Leper Chapel
by Richard Relhan in the early 1800s |
Whilst at Cambridge University in 1665, Isaac Newton visited the
Fair. He is known to have bought a copy of Euclid's Elements which
he used to teach himself mathematics. He is also thought to have
acquired some optical instruments including a pair of prisms - which
he used to prove that white light could be split in to the colours
of the rainbow, whilst the individual colours could not be further
divided.
In 1816, the Chapel was bought and restored by Thomas Kerrich. Kerrich
gave the Chapel to the University, that in turn gave it the Cambridge
Preservation Society in 1951.
The Chapel is currently maintained by the Cambridge Preservation
Society. It is again being used for worship and it is now part of
the Parish of Christ the Redeemer. The "Friends of the Leper
Chapel" was formed in 1999 to promote use of this chapel for
education, cultural events and worship.
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