The rugged remains of this Medieval church sit dramatically on a cliff above Stoke Bay…
Becket himself is said to have preached in this small Norman Wealden church…
Set in a pretty village with the River Chew running around it this 14th-century tower stands against a dramatically backdrop of railway viaduct arches. The rest of this church has been converted to a home…
Located in Bristol’ city centre, this handsome late 18th-century church was designed in 1789 by local architect and carver James Allen to replace a Medieval church deemed unsafe for use…
This spectacular and romantic mid 18th-century church is built in the ‘Gothic’ style…
Much of the church we see standing on a ridge of the Mendips dates from an early Georgian rebuilding, but its shape and site suggest Saxon origins…
The setting of this 13th-century sandstone church with splendid views across to the Iron Age fort of Chanctonbury Ring on the South Downs is lovely, but the building itself surpasses all expectations…
This small solitary barn-like chapel of Norman origin stands in the middle of a peaceful field. Without a tower or even a bellcote, it exemplifies simplicity and charm…
Designed in 1660 for Puritan worship and virtually unchanged, this little Chapel of Ease is simplicity itself…
This elegant Medieval church sits next to the great Baroque stately home of Burley-on-the-Hill built in the 1690s, but the church itself dates from four centuries earlier…