Name | Image | Refs | Dedication | Founded | Denomination | Location | Notes |
---|
Christ Church | | [1] | Jesus | 1837-1839 | Church of England | | Received a church graft from St Andrew the Great 2004 |
Christ the Redeemer | | [2] | Jesus | | Church of England/ Methodist | | 2004 merger of Meadowlands Methodist Church (founded in or before 1953[3]) and Holy Cross, Fen Ditton |
| | [4] | Jesus | 1958[5] | Church of England | | |
| | [6] | Trinity | 1189 | Church of England | | |
St Andrew's, Cherry Hinton | | [7] | Andrew | c. 1200 | Church of England | | |
St Andrew's, Chesterton | | [8] | Andrew | c. 1200 | Church of England | | |
| | [9] | Andrew | | Church of England | | Medieval church demolished 1842, rebuilt in Victorian style.[10] Redundant 1984; home to the congregation of Holy Sepulchre since 1994. |
St Augustine of Canterbury | | | Augustine of Canterbury | | Church of England | | Forms the Parish of the Ascension with St Giles's and St Peter's. Member of the 'Church at Castle' partnership[11] |
| | [12] | Barnabas | 1869[13] | Church of England | | |
| | [14] | Benedict of Nursia[15] | | Church of England | | Oldest church in Cambridgeshire[16] as well as the oldest building in Cambridge.[17] |
| | [18] | Botwulf of Thorney | | Church of England | | |
| | [19] | ? | c. 1225 | Church of England | | |
| | [20] | Edward the Martyr | c. 1250 | Church of England | | Rebuilt 1400. Royal Peculiar[21] |
| | | Giles | 1092 | Church of England | | Forms the Parish of the Ascension with St Augustine's and St Peter's. Member of 'Church at Castle' partnership |
St George | | | George | 1938[22] | Church of England | | [23] |
St James | | [24] | James | 1955[25] | Church of England | | |
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints | | | Jesus | 1965[26] | The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints | | |
| | [27] | John the Evangelist | 1891 | Church of England | | |
| | | Luke | 1863 | URC / CoE | | Current structure erected 1873-1874.[28] Local ecumenical partnership. Member of the 'Church at Castle' partnership |
| | [29] | Mark | 1870 | Church of England | | Smaller wooden structure on site of current building in use until 1901[30] |
| | [31] | Martin of Tours | 1932 | Church of England | | Services took place in temporary structures on the site of the current building until 1961[32] |
| | [33] | Mary | 1205 | Church of England | | |
| | [34] | Mary | 1352 | Church of England | | |
SS Mary and Michael | | [35] | Mary & Michael | 1200-1330 | Church of England | | |
| | [36] | Matthew | 1866[37] | Church of England | | Received a church graft from St Andrew the Great 2008 |
| | [38] | Paul | 1841[39] | Church of England | | |
| | [40] | Philip | 1889[41] | Church of England | | |
St Thomas's Hall | | | Thomas | 1980 | Church of England | | Part of St Martin's parish; used regularly for services[42] |
| | [43] | Mary & Forty Martyrs | 1885-1890 | Catholic Church | | |
| | [44] | Lawrence of Rome | 1947 | Catholic Church | | Permanent structure built 1958 |
St Philip Howard | | [45] | Philip Howard | 1978 | Catholic Church | | |
St Vincent de Paul | | | Vincent de Paul | 1958 | Catholic Church | | Parish of Our Lady and the English Martyrs.[46] Current building was old St Laurence's until 1958 when it was moved to Ditton Lane. |
Fisher House University Catholic Chaplaincy | | [47] | John Fisher | 1925 | Catholic Church | | |
St Athanasios | | [48] | Athanasius of Alexandria | 1902 | Greek Orthodox | | Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, the building was formerly the Cherry Hinton Road United Reformed Church |
Arbury Road Baptist Church | | [49] | | 1842 | Baptist Union | | Originally called the Ebenezer. Moved to current site 1930. New chapel built 1966.[50] |
Barnwell Baptist Church | | [51] | | | Baptist Union | | |
Cherry Hinton Baptist Church | | [52] | | | Baptist Union | | |
| | [53] | | 1881[54] | Baptist Union | | |
St Andrew's Street Baptist Church | | [55] | | 1721 | Baptist Union | | Rebuilt 1836, 1903[56] |
Zion Baptist Church | | [57] | Zion | 1837 | Baptist Union | | Rebuilt 1879 |
Eden Baptist Church | | [58] | Eden | 1823 | FIEC | | Originally a Strict and Particular Baptist chapel. Rebuilt 1874, 1982[59] |
Castle Street Methodist Church | | [60] | | 1823 | Methodist Church | | Member of the 'Church at Castle' partnership. Built as a Primitive Methodist church; rebuilt 1841, 1863, 1914.[61] |
Chesterton Methodist Church | | [62] | | | Methodist Church | | |
Wesley Methodist Church | | [63] | John Wesley | 1913 | Methodist Church | | |
| | [64] | | 1687 | United Reformed | | Founded from a merger of Emmanuel (1687) and St Columba's (c.1891); building dates from 1891 |
Jesus Lane Quaker Meeting House | | [65] | | 1776–7, 1884 | Religious Society of Friends of Britain Yearly Meeting | | Originally found a meeting house in 1777, discontinued as meeting house in 1795, and then reused as a meeting in 1884. [66] |
Hartington Grove Quaker Meeting House | | [67] | | 1983 | Religious Society of Friends of Britain Yearly Meeting | | |
German Lutheran Church | | [68] | | | ? | | Aligned with the Protestant Church in Germany (EKD) |
Cambridge Salvation Army | | [69] | | 1914 | Salvation Army | | |
Cambridge Seventh-Day Adventist Church | | [70] | | 1920 | Seventh-day Adventist Church | | Permanent building 1962 |
North Arbury Chapel | | [71] | | 1976 | Partnership UK | | |
Roseford Chapel | | [72] | | 1959 | ? | | |
Queen Edith Chapel | | [73] | | c. 1960 | Partnership UK | | |
King's Church Cambridge | | [74] | | | Assemblies of God | | Building originally Tenison Road Baptist Chapel (opened 1897). Previously Living Waters Church. |
C3 Church | | [75] | | c. 2015 | ? | | Formerly Cambridge Community Church. New church built on the site of St Stephen's Church, previously used the Free Church in Trumpington. |
Memorial Unitarian Church | | [76] | | 1904 | Unitarian Church | | Permanent building 1927, designed by Ronald Potter Jones |
Cambridge Chinese Christian Church | | [77] [78] | | | | | Castle End Mission (URC) until 2014. Built 1884 |
Christadelphian Hall | | [79] | | 1954 | | | |
City of David Church | | [80] | | 2005 | Redeemed Christian Church of God, Pentecostal | | Worship Centre located on Cherry Hinton Road |
First Church of Christ Scientist | | [81] | | | Christian Science | | The building shows the date 1866 |
Kingdom Hall | | | | | Jehovah's Witnesses | | | |
Name | Image | Refs | Founded | Defunct | Denomination | Location | Notes |
---|
Michaelhouse | | [116] | 1324 | 1908 | Church of England | | Combined with parish of St Mary the Great 1908. Now used as a cafe with occasional services. |
St Peter's | | | c. 1150 | | Church of England | | Managed by Churches Conservation Trust. Forms the Parish of the Ascension with St Augustine's and St Giles's. Member of the 'Church at Castle' partnership with St Giles's, St Augustine's, St Luke's (C of E/URC) and Castle Street Methodist Church. |
All Saints | | | 1863 | 1973 | Church of England | | Previously stood opposite St John's College in what is now All Saints' Churchyard; pulled down and rebuilt in current location 1863.[117] Redundant 1973. Not used for Anglican services; joint benefice with the Holy Sepulchre (Round Church) parish which meets in St Andrew the Great church building[118] |
Holy Sepulchre (The Round Church) | | [119] | 1130 | | Church of England | | Managed by Christian Heritage. Now a joint benefice with St Andrew the Great, where the parish's congregation meets |
Leper Chapel (Chapel of St Mary Magdalene) | | [120] | | | Church of England | | Defunct and managed by the Cambridge Preservation Society. Oldest complete surviving building in Cambridge. In a united benefice with Christ the Redeemer and used for occasional services. |
St Andrew The Less | | | 1190 | | Church of England | | In a united benefice with Christ Church and rarely, if ever, used for services[121] |
Emmanuel United Reformed Church | | | 1874 | 2020 | United Reformed | | Congregation merged with St Columba's to form Downing Place URC. Building now belongs to Pembroke College. |
Trumpington Free Church | | | 1899 | | | | Formerly used by the Cambridge Community Church (C3 Church). | |