This little roadside church is the 13th-century chancel of a larger church which was a ruin until 1889, when the chancel was gently restored and a west porch added…
Built of colourful orange ironstone in the 14th-century, All Saints’ is delightfully located overlooking parkland…
All Saints’ church is all that remains of the Medieval village of Kedleston, razed in 1759 by Sir Nathaniel Curzon to make way for the magnificent Kedleston Hall. Today, the hall is a beautiful National Trust property and you can easily combine a trip to both attractions at once…
This large attractive church, with its quiet, peaceful churchyard, is a refuge from busy Leicester…
The tall, square tower of this marshland church leans dramatically to the west, as if trying to stretch away from the long, low nave below…
The spire of All Saints soars above a round of trees in the open country of the Wolds, visible for miles around…
A 14th-and 15th-century church with Norman origins, All Saints is known as the Cathedral of the Marsh a testament to its impressive length and spacious light-filled interior, as well as the quality of the interior carvings…
This handsome square-towered church lies at the edge of the picturesque village of Aldwincle near the river Nene - the pinnacled and carved 15th-century tower dominates the surrounding countryside…
Sir Christopher Hatton, Elizabeth I’s Lord Chancellor, moved the village of Holdenby when he built his mansion; the church now lies remote and isolated beside fields and a pond, beyond the gardens of Holdenby House…
Built in 1748, this riverside church stands proudly on lush marshland…