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St Andrew's Church

St Andrew's Church

This tiny chapel, built of flint and stone, with a tiny weatherboarded bell turret, has barely been altered since it was built in Norman times. The inside is simple, bright and beautiful ? with uneven limewashed walls and a flagged floor…

St Andrew's Church

St Andrew's Church

This tiny, charming church, which overlooks the River Till was built mainly in the 13th-century, of flint and stone chequerwork with two large Perpendicular windows…

St Andrew's Church

St Andrew's Church

St Andrew’s is built on the Roman site of Viroconium, the fourth largest town of Roman Britain, and the evidence for the ancient town is everywhere. The gateposts are made from two Roman columns; the walls contain massive Roman stones; and the huge font is made from an inverted Roman column base. The church is an archaeologist’s delight…

St Andrew's Church

St Andrew's Church

St Andrew’s stands in a large peaceful churchyard at the southern end of the hamlet…

St Anthony's Church

St Anthony's Church

Behind the turreted ancestral home of the Spry family, and looks across the creek to St Mawes. Look out for what appears to be carved woodwork at the top of the walls. In fact it is an ingenious use of Cornish tin, painted to resemble wood. In summer, the churchyard is full of flowers, growing wildly over pretty headstones…

St Arild's Church

St Arild's Church

This atmospheric church is dedicated to a little-known, pre-Norman saint, who is thought to have lived near Thornbury…

St Augustine's Church

St Augustine's Church

The rare and distinctive 17th-century brick tower of St Augustine is the only one of its kind in Norwich…

St Barbara's Church

St Barbara's Church

This remote church is sited on lonely uplands that drop away to the Fens. Nothing remains of Haceby Village save the old church of St Margaret and some grass-covered mounds…

St Bartholemew's Church

St Bartholemew's Church

When enclosures diverted the London to Northampton road away from Furtho, it became a deserted village with only a farm, a Medieval dovecot, a few lumps in the land and this delightful 900-year-old church remaining…

St Bartholemew's Church

St Bartholemew's Church

This tiny unspoilt gem of a Norman church stands on a knoll above Goodnestone Court, a half-timbered building from the 15th-century. Inside, part of the rood-loft staircase, two piscinae and a tomb which may have been used as an Easter Sepulchre, survive from Medieval times. There is a miniature 19th-century font, Willement glass in the east window and two 16th-century brass’ inscriptions to a couple who both departed ‘in the fayth of Christe’. A rustic tiled and timbered bell-cote crowns the nave, and the porch was rebuilt in 1837 after an earth tremor…