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St Nicholas' Church

St Nicholas' Church

This delightful stone church has lovely views across rolling countryside…

St Nicholas' Church

St Nicholas' Church

St Nicholas’ is one of two churches in this large straggly village on the edge of the Fens…

St Nicholas' Church

St Nicholas' Church

Delightful, secluded flint church of Norman origins, with a distinctive short round tower; very much in contrast to the soaring towers of neighbouring Salle and Cawston and the flamboyance of Booton, a nearby Trust church. Large clear glass windows (some with Medieval stained glass) illuminate extravagantly carved benches in this church, which has lain almost untouched for over a century. The north aisle was originally the nave and contains traces of 12th-century work…

St Nicholas' Church

St Nicholas' Church

This impressive church, with its rare 13th-century octagonal tower (one of the finest of Norfolk?s five wholly octagonal towers) sits peacefully surrounded by trees and fields close to the River Yare…

St Nicholas' Church

St Nicholas' Church

There have been churches on this site for centuries - the Domesday Book mentions a church here, but the walls and roof of the current building are 13th-century and the windows and chancel screen are 15th. The interior was remodelled in 1703 and its character today comes largely from that period. The church has an early fifteenth century wallpainting of St Christopher partly covered by a Stuart Royal Arms, and a colourful, magnificent 17th-century wallpainting monument to Sir Richard Powlett, with an image of Time and Death on either side. There is also a colourful and intricately carved Jacobean monument to Sir Richard Powlett, who died in 1614 - the monumnet would have once sat in the middle of the wallpainting monument, an early 18th-century reredos, two hatchments and a Royal Arms of 1701 and a pretty bell turret…

St Nicholas' Church

St Nicholas' Church

Brockley church developed from a small Norman building in the 12th-and 13th-centuries. Its fine pinnacled tower was added in the 15th, but it owes much of its present furnishings and atmosphere to a thorough and graceful restoration in the 1820s. The south transept has a spacious family pew with separate entrance and a fireplace, added by the Pigotts whose association with the parish lasted 300 years. There is a Norman font and a stone pulpit of c1480 and a pirate?s gravestone in the churchyard…

St Nicholas' Church

St Nicholas' Church

This hillside church stands in a pretty churchyard and is a convenient stopping point for Wylye Valley walkers with wonderful views. There has been a church here since Norman times and the font in the church today dates from that period. However, the current building was built in the 14th-century and then largely rebuilt in the Medieval style in the 19th-century, using the original materials. The outside is built in a chequerboard pattern of flint and stone, typical of many churches in this area. Inside it is light and airy. There is an elegant screen which dates only from 1912 - the architect F C Eden was commissioned to design it, as well as other woodwork in the church…

St Nicholas' Church

St Nicholas' Church

A solitary, partially ruined Norman church, stands alone on a hill above the Roman port of Axium…

St Nicholas' Church

St Nicholas' Church

Situated by a farmyard to the north of Avebury and near the Ridgeway, this modest church is essentially 14th-century in origin, although the font suggests an earlier structure…

St Nicholas' Church

St Nicholas' Church

This Medieval church on the Cotswold Way near Broadway in Gloucestershire has a tall and slender spire, which can be seen from all around and is a notable landmark…