A ring of spectacular cemeteries, developed at the edges of London in the decade from 1832, have long been referred to as The Magnificent Seven. At the time, they set a new aesthetic for the burial of the dead, & remain rich in social history & beauty to this day. It was entrepreneurs, rather than the religious authorities, who responded to the squalor of the City`s brimming churchyards by fi nancing seemly, hygienic concepts of burial in the rural outskirts, now embraced by inner London. The Seven became showcases for neoclassical & neo-Gothic architecture, matched by splendid
- sometimes eccentric
- memorials recording Victorian society, & the sweep of London`s history to the present day. From grand Kensal Green in the west to modest Tower Hamlets in the east; from heady Highgate to charming Norwood & Nunhead; & from the military influences of Brompton to the Non-conformist woodland of Abney Park
- a host of characters & stories are visited in this distinctive coverage of the subject.