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Keith's Chapel also known as Mr Keith's Chapel and the May Fair Chapel, was a private chapel in Curzon Street, Mayfair, London, operated by the 18th century Church of England clergyman Alexander Keith. Keith had been the first incumbent of the Church of England's new Curzon Chapel, built in Curzon Street in 1730, where he began to perform marriages without either banns or license until he was excommunicated by an ecclesiastical court in 1742.〔Geraldine Edith Mitton, ''Mayfair, Belgravia and Bayswater]'' (2007), (p. 28 ) at manybooks.net〕 Keith then went to prison and remained there for several years. However, he quickly established his own private chapel very near to his old one on Curzon Street, where he and his curates continued clandestine marriages until 1754, when the Marriage Act 1753 came into effect.〔〔(Promenades Through London: Mayfair ) at edwardianpromenade.com, accessed 24 November 2011〕 The marriages at Keith's Chapel were perfectly lawful, as until 1754 the only indispensable element of a marriage in England was a Church of England clergyman. At its height, some six thousand marriages a year were taking place at the chapel.〔 The chapel's business was promoted by frequent advertisements in newspapers, such as this one in the ''Daily Post'' dated 20 July 1744: When his wife died in January 1750, Keith combined the announcement of her death in ''The Daily Advertiser'' with an advertisement for his chapel's services.〔James Hogg & Florence Marryat, ''London Society'', vol. 4, (p. 549 )〕 The chapel's weddings included those of the Duke of Chandos and Anne Jeffrey in 1744, Lord Strange (future Earl of Derby) and Lucy Smith in 1746, Lord Kensington and Rachel Hill in 1749, Sewellis Shirley and Margaret Rolle, widow of the Earl of Oxford in 1751, the Duke of Hamilton and Miss Gunning in 1752 and Lord George Bentinck and Mary Davies in 1753.〔〔 ==Notes== 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Keith's Chapel」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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