St John the Baptist Church, Windsor
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St John the Baptist Church is a parish church in Windsor in the English county of Berkshire. It is dedicated to St John the Baptist. The church was rebuilt in Gothic Revival style in 1822. It is the civic church of Windsor, and many Mayors of Windsor are buried in the church and churchyard. The church is Grade II* listed.[1] Two of the three Protestant Windsor Martyrs, who were burnt at the stake in 1543, were associated with the church.
The original settlement at Windsor was at what is now called Old Windsor. Henry I moved the Royal Court to the Windsor Castle site in New Windsor. There are references to the existence of St John's Church by the reign of Henry II, by which point there had been several previous incumbents.[2] By the end of its existence, the church consisted of a nave, chancel and aisles, each under a separate gable and all flush at the east end. The poor condition of the building led to a proposal in 1818 to rebuild.[3]
Windsor Martyrs
Although Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries from 1536 to 1541 and established himself as Supreme Governor of the Church of England in place of the Pope in 1531 and 1534, Anglican doctrine during his reign remained Catholic in most respects, particularly after 1539. The Six Articles Act 1539 was described as "An Act abolishing diversity of Opinions"; it asserted transubstantiation, clerical celibacy, and auricular confession. The penalty for refusing to make confession or to take communion was death.[4]
Anthony Pearson was a Protestant preacher, who preached in and around Windsor, including in St John's. Henry Filmer, a tailor, was Churchwarden of St John's. Filmer was much-influenced by Pearson's sermons, and sought to convince the Vicar, Thomas Meister, to adopt similar views.[5] News of these developments reached William Simmonds, Mayor of Windsor, 1529 and 1542,[6] and MP for Windsor, 1529–36 and 1542–44.[7] Simmonds, together with Dr John London, Canon of Windsor, reported to Stephen Gardiner, Bishop of Winchester. Houses were searched, and arrests made of Pearson and Filmer, as well as those of Robert Testwood, a chorister at St George's Chapel, John Merbecke, the organist at St George's, and Robert Benet, a lawyer in Windsor. Benet avoided being tried by virtue of being sick with 'pestilence'. The others were tried for heresy by a jury, specially chosen to be sure to convict.[5] Convictions were obtained, and Pearson, Filmer and Testwood were burnt at the stake on wasteland north of the castle; the site of the execution is now Windsor & Eton Riverside railway station. Merbecke, meanwhile, had been pardoned, and would go on to write a standard setting for the Anglican service of Holy Communion.
