Notre Dame de France


Notre Dame de France

An extraordinary church bombed out in the 1940s

Location: 5 Leicester Place, Leicester Square, WC2H 7BX

Description: This extraordinary church was bombed out in the 1940s and almost entirely rebuilt in 1955. With murals depicting an energetic 'annunciation' - care of Jean Cocteau...this really is a special place.

Once he had finished his task, Jean Cocteau was sad to leave : I am sorry to go, as if the wall of the chapel had drawn me into another world.

He went on to comment :

I shall never forget that wide open heart of Notre Dame de France, and the place you allowed me to take within it.

Jean Cocteau wished to be buried in a chapel the chapel of St Blaise of the Simple Ones, at Milly la Fort, near Fontainebleau. He died on 11th October 1963.

Is there a secret message in the mural?

It became a church in 1865 after the church bought the building built as a panorama, a forerunner of the cinema, hence why it's shape is virtually circular.

Tours: Top Ten London Murals

Themes: ChurchChurch Theme  HistoricalHistorical Theme  ArtArt Theme
Notre Dame de France

An extraordinary church bombed out in the 1940s

Ranking This Month: 1758/3067

Pages Hit This Month: 41


Credits: TimeOut - London

Your Comments:

Name:
Email:
Your email will ONLY be used once, to confirm the publication of your comments. We value your contribution and privacy.

Anti-spam Security: Please enter this code:


Other places nearby:


St Patrick's Church and Tunnels», 0.2km

St John's Wood Church», 2.1km

St Luke's & Christ Church», 2.2km

St Matthias Church», 4.8km

London's oldest parish church», 1.3km

Notre Dame de France», 0km

St Botolph's Church Aldgate», 2.3km

Religious Phrase With A Twist», 0.8km

The Tower of St Alban», 1.5km

Torrigiano's Henry VII tomb», 0.8km

Location Pinpointed:


Open Street Maps», Google Maps»