Monument

Knights Templar, Great Fire & Millennium

Erection date: 2000

Inscription

{Around the base:}
AM + DG {these letters forming a cross}
NE TEMPLO DEESSET HOC SIGNUM CURAVIT
MONUMENTUM TERTII ERIGENDUM HON SOC
MILLENNII INCIPIENTIS INT TEMPLI
Ptolemy Dean, Arch.
Nicola Hicks, Sculp.
LT {intertwined, indicating that Lord Lloyd of Berwick was Treasurer when the column was erected.}

{On the east face:}
AD MM

{See the Commentary below for a translation.}

A nearby information board gives:
The column in this court was erected and dedicated in the year 2000 AD in the centre of what was formerly the cloister courtyard of the monastery of the Knights Templar. The Templars were founded in 1119 to protect pilgrims in the Holy Land. The column is in gothic style, modelled on the Purbeck marble columns in the church. The image of the horse with two riders is derived from the seal of the knights who were originally too poor to have a horse each. The same image can be seen depicted in the east window of the church.
The column also marks the point at which the great fire of 1666 was extinguished. The church was saved and the old gothic order survived. The column thus contrasts with Sir Christopher Wren's Monument in the City, which stands where the fire started and marks the arrival of the new classical order.
The overall design was in the hands of Tom Stuart-Smith. Ptolemy Dean designed the column. The sculpture is by Nicola Hicks. The inscription was carved by James Honeywood. It means "Lest the Temple should be without a memorial of the start of the third millennium the Inner Temple caused this monument to be erected for the greater glory of God."
The London Plane trees were presented by Christian Bevington, a Bencher of the Inner Temple, in memory of Canon Joseph Robinson, Master of the Temple from 1980 - 1999. The column and sculpture were the gift of Lord Lloyd of Berwick, Treasurer 1999.

The column is about 10m high. The statue on top is bronze.

2021: We came across a proposed design for a WW1 war memorial by Lutyens intended for the interior of this church. There are striking similarities to the design of this monument.

Site: Church Court (4 memorials)

EC4, Inner Temple

On the ground of this court two circles are marked out in the flags, one has the column at the centre, the other is centred on the Lamb Building plaque. This court was formerly the cloister courtyard of the monastery of the Knights Templar.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
Knights Templar, Great Fire & Millennium

Subjects commemorated i

Great Fire of London

Started on a Sunday morning. After 4 days the destruction included: - an area...

Read More

Knights Templar

The seal of the Knights incorporated the image of a horse with two riders, th...

Read More

Canon Joseph Robinson

Joseph Robinson was born on 23 February 1927, the elder of the two children o...

Read More

This section lists the subjects who helped to create/erect the memorial on this page:
Knights Templar, Great Fire & Millennium

Created by i

Lord Lloyd of Berwick

Treasurer at the Inner Temple, 1999.

Read More

Christian Bevington

Bencher of the Inner Temple.

Read More

Ptolemy Dean

Architect. Brother of artist Tacita Dean. Grandson of film director Basil Dean.

Read More

Nicola Hicks

Born London.

Read More

Show all 6

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
Knights Templar, Great Fire & Millennium

Also at this site i

Lamb Building

Lamb Building

Lamb Building stood here. Built in 1667, destroyed by enemy action 11th May ...

Read More

Niblett Pegasus

Niblett Pegasus

Niblett Hall was replaced with Littleton Building in 1994.

Read More

William Charles Niblett

William Charles Niblett

The date of birth given on the plaque, 1856, is wrong. Niblett was born in 1851.

Read More

Nearby Memorials