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St Mary the Great with St Michael, Cambridge

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On the right, St Mary the Great with St Michael Church marks the centre of Cambridge.
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On the right, St Mary the Great with St Michael Church marks the centre of Cambridge.

St Mary the Great with St Michael (of the Church of England), also known as Great St Mary's Church, is the church of the University of Cambridge, England. It plays a minor role in the University's legislation. For example, University Officers must live within 20 miles of Great St Mary's.

GSM hosts University Sermons, and houses the University Organ and the University Clock. The latter chimes the Cambridge Chimes which were later used by the clock tower of the Houses of Parliament ("Big Ben").

The first church on the site of the current one was built in 1205, but this was mostly destroyed by fire in 1290 and then rebuilt. In the Middle Ages it became an official gathering place for meetings and debates for Cambridge University, but this ceased in 1730 when the university's Senate House was built across the street.

Various leading philosophers of the English Reformation preached there, notably Erasmus. Martin Bucer, who influenced Cranmer's writing of the Book of Common Prayer, was buried there. Under Queen Mary, his corpse was burnt in the marketplace, but under Elizabeth I, the dust from the place of burning was replaced in the church.

The church has long been host to weekly University Sermons, which are sometimes still given, and still at the same location.

The Tractarian movement in the 19th century prompted the removal of the east and west galleries, and the north and south still stand.

A plaque at the base of the west tower marks the datum point for distances from Cambridge, which were originally marked with the first milestones erected in England since the Romans left.
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A plaque at the base of the west tower marks the datum point for distances from Cambridge, which were originally marked with the first milestones erected in England since the Romans left.

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