
St Mary the Virgin
Shudy Camps, Cambridgeshire | CB21 4RB
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Search for a fascinating place to visit, or see the variety of churches, chapels and meeting houses we have supported.
Shudy Camps, Cambridgeshire | CB21 4RB
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Llangwyfan, Denbighshire | LL16 4LU
A place of worship for around thirteen centuries this small, remote church on the ancient pilgrim route to Holywell offers outstanding views over the Vale of Clwyd.
Linton, Cambridgeshire | CB21 4JX
Whilst it is probable that a wooden Saxon church existed on the site of the present church, we can say for certain that in the 11th and 12th centuries there was a Norman church, built of clunch and rubble intermixed with Roman tiles.
Holme Pierrepont, Nottinghamshire | NG12 2LD
A church at Holme Pierrepont, dedicated to St Edmund is first mentioned in the year 1201, it was rebuilt in 1666 and restored in 1878-1881.
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Llandudwen, Gwynedd | LL53 8SR
This stunning ancient church, founded in the 5th century as a pilgrimage site to St Tudwen, is a place of solitude and spiritual refuge and is open all year round.
Gwytherin, Clwyd | LL22 8UU
Burial place of saints, an ancient and sacred pre Christian site, the 2,000 year old yew trees at St Winifred's are some of the best in north Wales .
Carrington, Nottinghamshire | NG5 2DP
A Victorian church, stone built, it was designed in the popular neo Gothic style of the 1840s.
Sealand, Flintshire | CH5 2LQ
A John Douglas church (1867), with Victorian glass and furniture, imaginatively re-ordered as a worship and community space.
Somersham, Cambridgeshire | PE28 3EG
This fine Grade I listed rural church is larger than those in other local villages and was built in the 13th century.
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Denbigh, Denbighshire | LL16 4ER
St Marcella was the site of a holy well where Marcella, of Celtic descent, offered meditation and simple refuge for travellers around 900 years ago.
Penllech, Gwynedd | LL53 8AZ
Set on the Llyn Peninsula, St Mary is medieval in origin but the font is the only survivor of this age, a roughly hewn monolith in brown stone, painted white on its inner face, almost sunk into the shaft beneath.
Carlton, Nottinghamshire | NG4 1BP
Built in 1958 by the architects Broadhead and Royle who wrote ‘the style stems from the early Christian columned halls of the 4th century but cannot be honestly placed in any historical style other than mid 20th century'.