Hannen Columbarium Explained

The Hannen Columbarium is a columbarium mausoleum – a resting place for the cremated remains of the deceased – built for the Hannen family of Wargrave, Berkshire, England and designed by Edwin Lutyens.

Columbarium

Lutyens became acquainted with the Hannen family in about 1897 and from 1902 to 1905 employed Nicholas Hannen as an architectural trainee.[1]

The Hannen Columbarium was built in 1906–07 to house the ashes of Nicholas's father, Sir Nicholas Hannen, a barrister, diplomat and judge who died in Shanghai in 1900.

Lutyens was commissioned in 1905, and produced a columbarium design combining Byzantine Revival with Arts and Crafts and with classical architectural lines, in the form of a square building of red-brick, red-tile, glass-tile and stonework, sited in the south-east of the graveyard of St. Mary's Church, Wargrave.[2] [3] Within – in Lutyens's words – is "a circular cella within four piers, which carry intersecting arches forming pendentives and completed by a saucer dome."[1] The cilla is decorated with text from Luke, chapter 20, verse 38: 'He Is Not The God Of The Dead But Of The Living For All Live Unto Him'.[1] [2]

The Columbarium is a Grade II* listed building.[2] It was restored in 1985, but concerns exist as to its condition.[1] It forms Lutyens's earliest mausoleum design, and (with Heathcote in Ilkley), is recognised as an embodiment of the point at which he fully incorporated classical architecture in his designs.[1]

Interments

The following individuals are interred in the Columbarium:

See also

References

51.4995°N -0.8734°W

Notes and References

  1. News: Byzantium in Berkshire. Apollo - The International Art Magazine. 1 April 2005. 5 April 2016. Press Holdings Media Group Ltd.
  2. Web site: Hannen Mausoleum. The Mausolea and Monuments Trust website. The Mausolea and Monuments Trust. 5 April 2016.
  3. Book: Pearson, Lynn F.. Mausoleums. Osprey Publishing. 2008. 978-0-7478-0518-2. 5 April 2016.